Download - AMMAN TheSTiStory ofMySUN WEDNESDAY MARCH 18 I nl I THE D a i 1o8ly 1 r HERBS AN ANGRY AMMAN rTTIltS Of A CHICAGO DUNNING pare Von neerltetl Through the Mall n Maniple roplw or the

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Page 1: AMMAN TheSTiStory ofMySUN WEDNESDAY MARCH 18 I nl I THE D a i 1o8ly 1 r HERBS AN ANGRY AMMAN rTTIltS Of A CHICAGO DUNNING pare Von neerltetl Through the Mall n Maniple roplw or the

SUN WEDNESDAY MARCH 18

I

nl

I THE D a1i 1o8ly r

HERBS AN ANGRY AMMAN

rTTIltS Of A CHICAGO DUNNING

pare Von neerltetl Through the Malln Maniple roplw or the MM

hold JiiMl and Got LetterMiamllnK That You Pay Ip or Be Sued

The Ouaranlco Collection Companyan office lout week on the fourth

door of tho Templo Court Building atIt announced the openini

by pulling thus lfn on the doorCiuirnntec Collection Company Marks

4 Marks counselIt also let people know that something

rise doing by sending out a few hundredmylx a few thousand oople of the fol-

lowing typewritten letterDFAII Mm You have neglected tbe op

pnrtunity titan you to settle without coststif tMm of thn HoMtthotd Gun against

you for subscription and It hat now beenplaced In our hands with Instructionmare n Immediate settlement

Morniint been 6ertln d your orIglnal order of subscription U on fUll

U hereby made upon you for paym nt At this demand U Indisputableill the coctn of would be assessed againstjnu ro fully prepared to enforce colIfdlnn by law If necoBMrr You will pleaswild the amount or settle at our office st onceand nve yoiir elf trouble and expense Mean-while ne remain yours truly

Multi A MUllIn onn corner at the top of the sheet

was Marks it Marks attorneysatlaw430 Temple Court building Isaac MarksHarry M Marks In the other a

amount In which the addresseewax Indebted to the Household Ouett

One of those letter went to Mrs FrankThorp of 1233 Pacific street Brooklyn

of hU family Mr Thorpa few

had come to them through the mall marked

The collection companyC Hawkes

accommodating didnt know anvthlnabout that of the business When

fide debtnut how about Marks ft Marks

do they come In And how are conthe Guarantee Collection Corn

Marks A Marks Mid Haw Icesthey dont come In on this end of It

cues afterion the eerie We do all the preliminarywork know and use nameWere a collection know Wocome from Chicago where we do a bigbusiness

Other Well no we dontresent other papers or periodicals liNow York at presentlinen running a few you knowwe carne with the contractto start with That In itself knowl n pretty We to picksome right away thoughcant why wo go back to Chi

Marks k Marks have an office inWorld building have been there

Alderman Marks Is one ofirm He was surprised to hear that

were down at theCourt Buildingsaid we neror authorize

end I wereso until now About two months KO

a letter from the HotutholdIf I would act as their counselYork I said that I would but I havenact for them expected of course albusiness through our officethat we would havo theof affairs and that all mall would come to usBut wait a minute ho added Idthis Temple Court office of ours Ill godown

Mr Hawkes said that he was glad toAlderman Marks when TUB reporter

must be some misunderstanding-Yea said he there must

some misunderstanding Yes of courseIll have your name off the door

Of course yes Certainly MrMarks Use your name anmom Well not No sir therelinen a

Well beYen yes indeed we will well havefirms name off the door before naming

Mr Hawkoss desk wasenvelop addreMied to Marks Marks

one corner of the desk waa a of cheekall favor of Marks Marks

tiriiR nmonv MARRIED

Meant to Keep It Beerrt for the Prrteahut a Woman Told II

The marriage on Dec 2 last of Benedict-S Rrixly to Miss Alvenla T Wulfdaughter of Christian Wullf former Judgeand a flori t of the Bedford section in Brook-lyn wan announced the parentsif the liriiln end a honeymoon trip to

aonto in the Temple Bar Building

He U will known InInns i ctlon where ha hasianiit at SJ7 Putnam amnue for many

yean IU waa ronsldem a

ll of the was rvwivedI-V tin incMiltHrii of the liowllng livenlk iiig nb of which U a star

laa andiM il lihli will IM chargml up to till

UUt

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I U IMII lied IJMII oUaliMtl II-Iwli i of It bring

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said he had Thorpaname from In Chicagono reason to that a bona

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TOPICS AMour TOWN

An observant BrooklynJt hidally across the big Bridge has notlowmany queer and interesting things among

cltya U nowto hb friend his latest discovery

Is only anIllusion but when seen appears to be a fine new church with osteeple rising from the centre of IU low

roof It m y be seen

the promenade at a point just east ofNew York tower

The spire of St Augu tmo chapelEast Houston street looms up directlybehind pie Mills Hotel In street

hotel Is teller than the surroundingbuildings and 1U white walls

under the dark roof and wideshelflike ornamental cornice The lines

risingabove meetof the church aa the colorthe cornice and roof exactly matches thatof the dark gray churchtwo structures seem to be one

The illusion Is dispelled when themoves on a but no perfect

is It that he usually goes back forlook

Several of the city departmentsthe present administration are more favor-able to the employment women thanthey used to There are three womenIn the office of Park Commissioner Willcox

Ml has been the rtnnogfor several years The present

or the man who was formerlyof ft

Robin hue appeared In flocks outthe country during the last few Themade their appearance In Centralseveral days ago and about the samethe all over the Park showed greenOld weather observed thatthe birds found plenty of earthwormsthey said this was a sure sign that sprl it

comi to stay

Lady Constance Mackenzie who has jutworn a remarkable costume to a fancyball In Cairo Is well remembered heroher eccentricities In drew She was aof Mrs Char Dodge who in now InDakota for several months last TrlnterLady Constance revealed her original Idemon the subject of dress the first time shwent to play golf at Txiwdo She foundshort skirt Inconvenient after a whilealthough the links were coveted with

her escort If he would object to carryher skirt To let her

not expected to her with Itshe the encumbering draperyand kicked herself loose of itplaying she Intrusted It to the

the skirt over his armyoung Englishwoman In her knicker

hath at Palmused to be the event of the day for LadyConstance took to the water clad ayouths bathing suit

Fatty Grot was loaning against theBroadway railings of St Pauls Chapel afew days ago engaged In selfcommunionand a friend approached

Hello Bill said the man amon this side of those railings

It aint right-Why It Whats the matter wills

nw here if I want to askedFatty Grote

on the aide thats nilreplied the cheerful friend Your place

on inside a unI that s about right too mur-

mured Fatty aa ho ambled away

In looking over the Board of Health Build-ing to a good place to build a fireproofvault in which tor keep the vital statisticsHealth Commissioner Lederle found onealmost all ready built foY him In the barement The building was formerly the homoof the New York Athletic Club The oldswimming tank waa In the basement Tintank was M feet long 20 foot wide and 10feet deep The were thick and well

on the inside To make nn Idenlvault it was only necessary to on n fire-proof roof been finished

which could Dover bo re-placed will be taken to the new vault this

Since the Rapid Transit CommlMkmthe construction of the subway It Ims

been subjected to a lot of litigation andhas had to fight In the courts many peculiarclaims One of these suit had the liti-

gant succeeded would have involved the remodelling of many of the stations on tune

subway-A man named Carpenter who had

a scheme for what he called a hltransit railroad contended that the

Island in the subway Infringedon his becauseplatform was one of the distinctive feature

Counsel to the com-mission contended that there was nothingpatentable In the placing of a

sets ofTbe United States Circuit

peals has Just handed down n Inof commission Tim rae linn

been before the courts for about thru

odd looking little old mUll whoreU by a coon skin toque

runs a oandy stand on busy Broadwaynear Wall street In addition to life ownpersonal claim to recognition through shirroddity he ham the further distinction of beingprobably the only sidewalk vendor of tIllunlvers who customers aro mostly mil-

lions res On has only to stop Uwldnstand after Htn iit

day to this fact A lungprou wi groomed portly mentorn a iLit deposits Minnie or

tU ball gumdron

In the rank am rasa who litnuuiw-WM I greater that tliv odd lltilu-n s yearly

A ft ua In years arilI fan All up worry rtu

ut ix4 iniMleu r IIIMT lime w al Iulk-Uid jU rt c lit odor day U SO MM

iltfiii k 4 at tk 4 vaU r tsarM tl 4i U rM l

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MI M ul Hilda u 4-

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In

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the root thoseof

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Commissioner a young womanstenographer to the clerk a

In

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South

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to on the man with whom was

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CROSSINGS LONDON

SCflOOL OF iNSTRUCTION A-

CAAL AD nitOADWAY-

Tapt Piper Rends Patrolmen There tlearn of Cottlgsn flcheme It toTrucks and Can on One Street atTime Plan Worked Well Yesterday

Deputy Police Commissioner Piperstarted yesterday to teach the policethis city some of the things he learnedLondon about handling street traffloCanal street and Broadway which comespretty near being the worst comer In NewYork he eetablUhed a sort of schoolinstruction under DanielCostlgan who is on Capt Pipers staffand who has been In London himself

Squads of men from various precinctwill be sent to that point fromtlroetotlmand Coatlgan will teach them how tocars out of the way of trucks and trueDout of the way of care

CoilIganhad fits patrolmen at the orosnIng yesterday and oldtimers neigh-

borhood said that things were never keptmoving at such a lively rate before at thisparticular point

Costlgan stood In the centre of Broad-way with tho policemen at the differentcorners At a signal from the rounds

whistle tho police would stop altraffic over one thoroughfare absoluteand let tho trucks and cars on the otherstreet go ahead

would stop nil traffic going east orCanal street while a stream of cars and

vehicles would rush both ways on BroadOno toot from the whistle and every-

thing on Canal street was started moving-All wagons and cars that were stopped

while tho was beingcleared wore compelled to halt

crossing for was reached-In this way the made the Inter

streets was kept free of the tangleof trucks that has aat this The most difficultthat confronted the was avehicle was to be turned from one streetInto tho other In the past this has causedmost of the trouble difficulty wasovercome leavingfor such a contingency The driverturns the street among the blockedvehicles and then goes on the rushwhen traffic on that street la released-

It has been said that our truckmen wouldtie harder to handle than are the ondondrivers who draw at a wave oftho hand However theunder Roundsman Cost I gan were obeyedIn shape

at Broadwaygood a to the truckdrlvers an Itto policemen

The had a long con-ference the of the MerchantsAssociation on Monday afternoon at whichhe told of Isis attend for theircooperation in the hoped

William F King ofI to draw n letter to

business houses embodying Capti PipersKuggcstiotis-

If ItS LA HElt fllKF OF

Committees of tier Person and of HerF t tc lloth IMseharged

Supreme Court Jurtlce Oaynor In Brooklyn yenterdayslRnod an order granting theAbsolute release of Mr Alma Loulfio Lamerfrom tho private sanitarium of William-D Granger at Mamaroneck to whichInstitution she was committed on Ma 18-

ItOO an a habitual drunkard Mrs LamerFirst husband was tho late Clifford Coddlngton a banker who died leaving a largerotate She again married but her secondhusband died and then she married AlbertE Lamer Mr Lamer has an estatevalued at about IMOOOO

On Juno 15 ItKi on A writ of habeascorpus she produced before JusticeGaynor and she alleged that she lied fullyrecovered and was being restrained of herliberty Justice discharged her In

of Dr onand appointed Henry L Toodwln committee the Farmers LoanandTrun Company commit of her estateShe won to thecourt on the second Monday of last Novemlx which HIO

now that she lies not re-Lapsed Into her former condition of

and her counsel moved for hernboluto discharge Tho motion was

and the of her personwere aiM discharged a

Lamer It was found won ableto taro for herself and property

MUM flV IIQLon TAX

lavnt Told AnjlMMly Thai He Mould NotApproe till to Inrrraie It

tlm IJquor DealersAssociation IB mjiorteil to have said that

Ixiw had a re tfM ntatiei-f tine organisation that the liquor men

mil no ruid to worry over the outcomeif tlxi to increase

UcunMi fees1 havo nut riviii to

ota the Mayor yesterday Howould not lull otonxl Inrriaw 1 A rninntlttoo fromIM I aUr AfM is to all on

Mayor tomorrow to ak Win to use hisnon tint bill

For Womans EyeThe wweMUiit-

Maliijr pitrirylftf-

M tiuiw ut MM rutiriiia 60 r-

MUiiil ly IUIIUM OiMMixr I-

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For toots the whistle

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just

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hopes that thestreet be nil

members

RESTRAINT

Dr

before

nOR

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assured

then such assurance

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STYLI

mans

instance two romwest-

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problem

food testrill

was

with

asso-ciation

S

was

Iran cr

arson

andest

Mayor

i

uptlf allIia111Hrlar preporllg Iakwsreap MIWIts lroula

t cesium

Llullyn5t err she t1M IIsu tiesd t hhisig till Saa-

ra4ildea n h4-LwGk a first Ial hs Ill Ihi-

Y1 s4 Lfw adwl4t Istrlihese

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ALILLEOPARDS

Nr Tlewrr Hln ittit

I I Wes 1a rgatt Nil a

55 t1arK rese eOW 4wIMN

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j BOOKS AND HdOKatAKINO

KlpUnc will sail fromtown for England in monthhb Doubleday Page A

authorised to that his newwill be for publication

before the end of the year

George Ado baa shown that hewrite clever fables and a successful coralopera libretto Now he has entered

field His first book ofstories will be published by McClure

k Co under the title of In BabelFor Babel read Chicago All of the storiesdeal with phases of Jlfe in the town whichMr Ade calla home

Cheeter Bailey Fernald haslittle elnoe The Cat and the Cherubhim a reputation but the Century Compannow haa In the pree a volume of

by himJosephine Dodge Datkam has ilgnl

desire to be known In the futureJosephine Dakar without the

In view of the fact that Is soon tomafried to Mr Belden Baoon itseems worth while to bother aboutmaiden name

Gates Tully author ofBiography of a Prairie Olrl smiledother day when a famous critic

praised the purity and finishher English

Queer Isnt it she said I went U

the University of California and to LelandStanford for special course butI had no high school degree they wouldnadmit me to any of the higher Englishcourses 1 had to go Into newspaperand get my English training in that school

Apropos of Western women and theirbooks Pauline Bradford Maokle who It

not a Western woman but who lived fortime in Tucson has written novel called

The Voles In the Desert It is said to be

a remarkable story of the desert and Itspell and an abrupt departure fromauthor previous manner Pauline Macklfis In home life Mrs Herbert Hopkins witof the author of The Fighting Bishop

Alice Hegan Rices lucky star U still In

ascendant Last weeks record of bestselling books showed lAver Mary firstwith Mrs Wlggs four notches below butstill among the first di

Macmillan ft Co a new three volumeedition of John Inglesant made a timelypublication by the death of the bookauthor Joseph Henry 8horthous MrBhorthouse spent twenty years upon thisromance of English and Italian life in theseventeenth century and achieved a peceof work that will live The modern novelistmight ponder over this fact with profit

One of the most agreeable bits of newsthat has filtered through book world thisreason la the announcement that Margaret

has another volume of ChesterTales almost ready and will hand It overtoher publishers before her departure forEurope next month

Mrs Deland rays that last storiesare bettor than their predecessors Thereading public only that they maybe as good

David Graham Phllllpss Golden Fleecewhich Is soon to appear In book form con-

tains certain characters to whom Bostonand Chicago will have no difficulty fittingtho names of actual personages Aboutthe othlcsfif such personality there U roomfor discussion but the story la a good one

Reviewers are somewhat tangled In re-

gard to the George Douglas Browne me-

morial volumes There are two RichmondIn the field McClure Phillips A Co areannouncing a memorial volume Issuedunder the direction D 8 Meldrura thelegal literary executor of the Browne estateThis volume I brought forward u thnonly authorized one and Mr Meldrum andhis collaborators are the only persons whohave had access to the Browne paper andmanuscripts

Tho other memorial volume Is publishedunder the auspices of Cuthbert Lenoxand Its appearance U said to be the resultof some disagreement between Mr Lenoxand the Browne estate-

A Spanish translation of Andrew Carnegies The Empire of Business Is to bepublished in Madrid

Clay Emery author of Capn Titusand In private lire Mr Clayton Mayo ofNew York says that he hunts copy and localcolor with decoys On the shore of a littlebay on the Massachusetts coast he has aboatliouse equipped with comfortable chairand settles A very ancient mariner inthe neighboring fishing village knows theplace and has a pipe market with napeIn the cupboard that tangs on the boathoima wall When Mr Mayo Is at homehe hoists a big lag to the top of a sixtyFoot and then the sailor folk lock down-to luau IwathouM levy on host tobacco

find their special pipes and spin yarnsby the hour

Tit Identification of the author who wrotename of J P Mowbray with Nym

Crinkle was a to many readershad tmjovrd A lu Nature

tad Tint Making of a CountryI M V troves Tangled Up In

Und Ian Un dramatlu hy the authornut will IM pruducml in New York

onA iuthuiiious novel relied lit Con

tuvrlng of list will l MiblUltedDoublrday Tag A Co rasa south

JUMUS Mlle rurinan U vratiU youngrll lutr Jul ii iuatUiaji tf U a

riur of siorUj and uuvU Juur-i End U BikUvIng iWlded u x wII I with U org HruadhuriK dramaiulug isle 4MU r itovvl fur u by AuUvy-MmHtk ull annul all Itiii IK al work

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IuitricAr1eNL

TheMARCH 2-

STiStory ofMy LifeBy-

1C iutkt kn uA Ufl-W I J

mt thai uou navl VlHx-

r rn di llttA

HELEN

KELLER

An autobiography witKselected letters andstudy of Miss Kellerfrom letters and reportsof Her teacher Miss Sul-

livan by John AlbertMacs

llfn ls rljv

itlnt lrle-u J

This unique autobiog-raphy a 20 portraits views and fan

and pathos similes j Urge octavo about 500that is irreawtible anrational achievement quite

I Riductd raolmlli of to rbllllp Brooka WithoutlerB of how after

left blind and deaf by an illness at the age of nineteen months she has learned tocommunicate with friends to read to see statues feeling to on the typewriterto French and German as well as in a word to thebetween herself and the outside world is of profound

DOUBLEDAY PAGE CO Publisher Union Sq N YTHE FIT by U tht big not of 1903

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the Ice quest thegirls may meetDavis strolling together day Usweek only these two great odesC D aa well were in the frockcoat group and only the masterly fashionin which the police handled the femininemob prevented casualties

The story goes that the highest rate erepaid to any author for his work hasoffered to Conan Doyle An Englishan American house offered him 180

each fortweve stories of 10000 words eachThis payment will be at the rate of about

X per 1000 words and certainly eatab-

llshes anew bogey score

Mine Louise Belts Edwardshas become familiar from herand novelettes has been working for two

a more ambitious tale which willpublished by Henry T Coates i

Co of Philadelphia She ells itT s Tower and It has to do withBoxer uprising of 1000 in ChinaEdwards U anewspaper woman but shehas resisted the prevailing temptationIntroduce newspaper life Into her novel

VARSITY SKTTLKMEST NOW 16

It TTIII Celebrate Its Annlvenarr WithMeeting at Wierrys on Hatnrdsy

The annual meeting of tho UniversitySettlement Society is to be held next

at Sherrys and promise to be theImportant meeting the society hashad This meeting will mark the endthe sixteenth year of the work of the Uni-

verslty Settlement tho first settlementbo established In the United State

Especial interest is attached to this meet-

ing because Miss Jane of HutHouse who s tha most settle-ment worker In the world will be onethe speakers Addresses will be de

de Forrest JamesSpeyer president of the

thehead worker

The annual report of the settlementwhich will soon shows adevelopment In tho settlements activities

touches directly to somefrom 1SOOO to 20000 persons Its

attendance ranges to10000 In 1887 the

was started In a street basement there were three whichhad perhaps fifty members

PUHUCATIONtk

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CHARLES SCRIBNERSOriginal Noel Contribution to the Science of

Political Economy

THE PRINCIPLES ofMONEY

By J LAURENCE LAUGHLINProfessor of Political Economy in the University of Chicago

This most important work b the first of a truly monumentalseries of by the author perhaps the first Americanauthority in this branch economics on general subject of

this volume he dears the field for discussion of practical details such as metallic money and its history in the

here and in estab-

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300 at Pottage 21 cents

The great Moslem world bisaalfaed for the first time forModem Readers

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SCRIBNERS SONS New YorK

LADY ROSF3 DAUGHTERIS QUITE SURE TO BE THEMOST WIDELYAND MOSTHIGHLYCONSIDEREDHOOK OF THE YEAR

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By Mr Humphrylulkvref Miner tut

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