The evening world. Newspaper, November 7, 1902, Page 3

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re “MY HERO AS | KNOW HM” Little Danish Wife of Big Motor- man Telis with Pride How He Saved an Old Woman from Death. He just set his teeth, and with his big strong arm ground down the brake until the car was almost within touch of the old woman. “Then he did what I am sure no motorman ever did before.” Here she leaned forward and acted out her de- scription with vivid enthusiasm. ‘He leaned forward over the front of that var and with one hand gently, but ‘irmly, grasped the tottering form and RAISED HER WITH ONE HAND. mxer yacobson Leaned Far Over the Dashboard, Seized the Trembling Woman and Lifted Her to Safety on His Car. Not even tn the dark ages of chivalry and heroic deeds did a loving wife ever Msten more proudly lord's valor than did Mrs, Andr: Ben to the modest narrative of hi husband, big, flaxen- Axel Jacob- sen, a humble anh, Joan ogel woman f1 very Jaws 0! Ceath, Ordinarily, the story might see @ammonplace, but whe told in toner trembling with pride ar love by this Worshipping Iittle Danish housew!fe {i her apartment at No. 29 Colum avenue the tale has all the color flavor of the days ef tho and Joust. ~ can see ft all, just as if I had been there," said she to evening World Feporter this mornin ar Ww rushing up that awful street of lights and noises called Broadway. Axel wa brake and lever guiding his car | when all of 4 len out of the falling shadows of evening he noticed the form of an aged womiin blindly pleking her way across] pulled her up over the dashboard, land- the strect,"* ng her safely upon the platform of his Aged Woman ent Danger. GAM in a Day's Work. “The car was alt pon her before he waw thar she was headed direvtiy| “There was a shout from the street. across the tracks. Men and women |‘ Cheer from the passengers In the car, from the sldewaika were shouting to] wt Axel did not turn his head. He imply waited for the conductor's signal her to take care, Hut she did not seem to hear until ahe reached the centre of | #74 then released his break and guided Apia Kuea me tenu suaretanned his car ondits way. The passengers in See cay hauie Heres The iCal wo he car came out and asied to shake voleel broke andishe jooked\ outioe (hella nen: Herald not turn veven, then . that T know so engaged. you must but da his graft vy nddw with glistening eyes—"he wall t he could net siop the car, and he| q, must have thought of me and the lite} replied: pothing. ft was all in a day's work.” “My hands are us and, anywa one that will soon be prattitng in our] Tae 9 n that the big Danish motor- arms. man had saved from a horrible death | by a display of extraordinary ¢ olness “But there was no fear in his heart./and strength, was Mrs. Rose Dale, of HER TROUSERS “SQUEEGEES” NOW NOT IN SAFE, T CLEAN STRETS Commissioner Woodbury Will Tut Expert Worked Two Hours) Experiment with Them on| Opening It in Bank Vault for; Fitth Avenue. Edna Wallace Hopper, Who i Had Lost the Key. | Commissioner Woodbury is going to! employ “squeegees” for the cleansing of Fifth avenue. “DEEDS, DEEDS!” SHE CRIED. They will be operated both by hand and compressed alr Rubber compres- | sors will follow the “‘squeegees” and dry off the surface of the street. What are squeegees? Why, they are a sort of sprinkler) equipped with a combined towel bf rub- ber cloth which when applied to the wet surface effectively wipes off or dries off | the street surface. That Js the Commissioner's explana- tion of the “squeegee.” He so stated before the Aldermanic Committee, which gave @ hearing on the protest of citt- zens that the constant washing of up- town streets has occasioned an unde- sirable condition of affairs. He Is going to try the squeegee on Fifth avenue to-morow, the Commis-| sloner stated to the committee. He sald \t is a great thing. He will have a couple of automobiles of dif- ferent makes on hand for experimental purposes. These autos will be shot over the “squeegeed” surface, and If they slip or fail to answer the helm prompt- ly, says the Commissioner, then he will be greatly surprised. The Commissioner's scheme to wash dry the streets at the same time ruck the committce as a novel propo- sition In the street-cleaning line. Seve eral of the committee stated that th Would be present to-morrow to witness the “squeegeeing” process and the co- incident auto-slipping test. ‘To the protest of the Street Sprinkling Association the Commissioner said: “The Street Sprinkling Association doesn’t sprinkle the streeta on the side. I do It. I wash them dally. scrub them, virtually. Nobody benefits y the sprinkling by this association uniess they pay.” Lresident Shattuck, of the Automobile Club of America, " suld wet streets caused many auto accidents. Robert Winton, Secretary of the Cab Drivers’ Association, and James Brown, e of the New York Haskmen's ve Association, spoke in favor nding the asphalt streets. Pree{- ynes, of the Soclety for the Pre- Edna Wallace Hopper reached In West Fifty-fourth steet last night afsr the performance of “The Sil- ver Slipper” she found that she had lost tng from which depended all her keys, ludiny one to her safe deposit box in Amsterdam Safe Deposit Com- pany’s vaults at Thirty-ninth street and Broadway. Miss Hopper sent for her manager, Mr. Fisher, and Mr. Fish sent for his press agent, George Cross, and George Cross used up as much as 80 cents in telephone calls to the news- offices. ne was whon the loss of a key would not have made so much difference to the petite actress, That was when she kept her valuables with those of rly ail the other aotresses and actorn town in Charlie Gale's safe in the But now that she Is rich and a woman of affair. she has to go to her bank every day Just the same as Hetty Green. It became necessary to open the safety deposit box to-day because there are title deeds there to property in British Columbia which 1s involved in a lawsuit to be tried in a short time In Victoria, The first thing thie morning Judge Coyne, Mrs. Hopper's lawye: sent for those title deeds, The actress hurried to the bank and asked that the box be opened with a duplicate key. She was informed that there was no duplicate key. “Pull it open," commanded Mra, Hop- per, “Push It open, kick t open, blow Mt open. I must get my papers out of the safe to-da: “Nothing doing until the bank closes,” announced the Cashier, So she had to wait. It took an expert from 3 o'clock to 5 o'clock this after- in back room of the Casino cafe. a noon to drill the safe open. Ail the} vention of Cruelty to Animals advo; 7 caivd sanding a8 a preventive against Jewels, bonds, deeds and other valu-} he“ eauent. falling of horses, San‘ ables were found Intact. There was a cruel rumor in Broad- way that the diminutive actress keeps the trousers she Wears In ‘The Silver boxes, he eald were placed at various points In the city but these on Inves- re invariably empty, as then closed. ring leper He the satel spate eeu —— Fisher and the press agent. ait she | DEATH INTRIGUE CHARGED. had in the safe was about $1,030,000 worth of stuff, The trousers she keeps in her dressing-room at the theatre. Dinclosures in Bulgaria Threaten Cabinet Overthrow, SOFIA, Bulgaria, Nov. 7.—A_ sensa- tion was created here to-day by the publication of alleged fac-similes of cor- respondence relating to the organization of plots against the late Premier Stam- buloff and the Government, which re- sulted In the assassination of M. Stam- buloff and two other members of his Ministry on July 15, 1895. Friends of Michael Stavreff, alias Halju, who was found guilty on Oct, 2% of the Premier's murder and was sentenced to be hanged, ary responsible for thelr publication: They claim that Stavreft was only a tool. According HOTEL MEN ASSIGN. Attachment Forces Fallure of For- mer Gerard Proprietors, George E. Korst and Herman C. Loh- man, formerly proprietors of the Gerard Hotel, In West Forty-fourth street, made an assignment yesterday to Henry G. Wintjen. They began business last March assuming, it was sald, chattel mortgages on the furniture, etc,, of $68,- 000, and they sold out thelr interest in the business at midnight of Oct. 31 to Jonn F. Marsh, ‘The assignment was precipitated by an attachment obtained againat them by B, Salomon's Sons for $41, on the ground that they had disposed of thelr property. Holm & ith, attorneys, sald Riateene et the “ ign eat Apes poor usiness. ‘They, could give no figures as to assets and jlabilities, to the correspondence, M Ludskanoff, the present Minister of the Interlor, 18 alleged to be directly re- sponsible for the organization of the plot, and holders of important posts u der ‘the present Government are Imp cated. The name of Count Ignatie mentioned in connection with the In- triguea. |The revelations are expected to lead to an upheaval of the Cabinet. Gon WouLD: biiDAy |MOTORMAN JACOBSEN, WHO SAVED AGED WOMAN, AND WIFE, WHO CALLS HIM HERO. O45 West Sixty-fifth street, It was thought at first that she had been 1 ured, but she refused the ail of an am- ulance surgeon and, though consider- iy excited, walked to her home sisted by a young woman who had wi nessed her wonderful escape. Knew Something Was Wrong. “When Axel came home lost aignt £ could see by the rather gulity smile with which he received my curess that something had happened. a his wife. At first I was fright-no4. but when I looked at him again. ud see by the twinkle In his eye an* his vlushes that he had something to cell that any wife would be glad to hear, But oh! It was hi oO get the story out of hin, but I and the little woman sunk back’ in her chair with A triumphant sigh. After resting for a minute she prat- tled on: “But {t was really nothing for Axel. Why, back in dear old Denmark, when we were boy and girl lovers, h was always a hero. I remember one day as we were cyorsing a beautiful meadow hand in “hand we sudden came upon a big, Ugly-looking bull. ‘The; was no fence within quite a dintan and the bull, as soon as he saw us, low- DP'TRACK [ered his horns and witha snort of rage rushed at us. “I screamed and began to cry, but Axel simply put his arm around my | He did not} waist and held me tight j AXEL JACOBSEN until the bull was so near “his hot, panting breath. Then like a flash Axel ralsed me from the ground and jumped to one side. The bull dashed on and smashed his gainst the fence. ) Axel was twenty-one he had to the army, and though there was no war he did many brave deeds. e when there a sham battle move a step that I cc ng on a fuse attached to hundreds of pounds of powder caught fire. It Was a very short fuse and all the of- Ifcers and men ran away as fast aw they could. But Axel—he Is always xo cool, so calculating—he knew just how long that fuse would take to reach the powder and he calmly walked over to it and grasped tt within an Inch of the barrel and put it out, “He was in the army three years, and two years ago he came to this country and went to work on a farm tn Staten Island. Then he got a job as a motor- man and sent over to Denmark for me to come over and marry him. And no one but us knows how happy we are. But Axel will not always be a motor- man, Some day he will be rich, for he never loses his head and always knows just how to do the right thing at the right time.” NO LONG ACRE POLICE STATION, Commissioner Partridge’s Plan for New Headquarters Disap- proved by Board of Estimate. : Commissioner Partridge’s recommen- dation for the purchase of a site on Long Acre square for a new Police Headquarters stands disapproved by the Board of Estimate, A committee of the board has already expressed Its disap-— proval of the suggested site. Similar action was taken with refer-} ence to the offer of the Misses Stokes to sell the Stokes homestead in Madison avenue to the city for $100,000 less than the appraised valuation. 7 Fearful of a visitation of smallpox, which is always more or less prevalent in cold weather, Commissioner of Health Lederle applied to the board for an in- ed appropriation providing for the ment of eighty additional yacel- nators, The board authorized the issue to cover the needed additional expense, TWO FIREWORKS VICTIMS. MAY DIE All the Others in the Hospitals Recovering from Injuries of Fireworks Disaster. At Bellevue Hospital it was sald this morning that all of the twenty-four pa- tlents who were victims of the fireworks celo- the Hearst ison Square a mht, wei ing well with the excep- tion of two, Thi THOMA DAVIN, forty-nine years, Rast Twenty-third street; right tee death Is expected at any momeii JAMES FENTON, © twenty-two years, oft No, 98 Clinton street; akull fractured; Is in a critical condition. Other patients whose injuries arc serious, but who are in good condition, election explosion at bration in are: DANIEL DONOHUE, No. 432 West Fitty-stxth street :back bruised; fractured skull; Improving. MICHAEL MAGEE, policeman; Day Twenty: At street, Bensonhurst; fractured thigh; im- proving FRANK O'CONNOR, No. 60 East Houston street: depressed fracture of skull: Improving NORA STARR, No. 53 East Ong Hundred and Thirte-firat street; left foot amputated; im- proving. te BOY BREAKS HIS LEG. Joseph Drawfortune, a lad of fittee who lives with his parents at No. Oliver street, was found by the police of the Old Slip station early to-day in a, hallway at No. 12 Stone street with his leg broken. The boy, almost unconscious from pain, was take to the Hudson Street Hospital, ——— KING THANKS PRESIDENT, WASHINGTON, Nov. 7.—The Presl- dent has received a cablegram from the King of Slam extending his earnest tnanks for toe kindly reception accorded the Crown Prince on dis arrival in the ‘United States. CHARACTER OF HIGH PRIESTESS 1S AIRED Katherine Tingley’s Theosophy Ranch in California Under Discussion Again. ' } The character of High Priestess Kath- arine Tingley had another alring before the Bills Island tmmigration authorities this afternoon In regard to the deten- ition of the Cuban children consigned to her Theosophical plant in California, Lawyer Beckwith was the only rep- resentative of the Theosophists who ap- peared. A. G. Spalding was not present, nor was his wife, nor Dr. Van Pelt Mr. Beckwith sald that after a consul- tation with Edward M, Shepard, who has been retained by the Theosophists a statement had been prepared which he desired to submit to the Board. Commodore Gerry objected, but the Roard granted Mr. Beckwith permission to read the statement. It was a long typewritten brief, reviewing the whole case up to date and protesting against the Ine of examination to which Mr. A. G. Spalding was subjected at the last hearing at the hands of Commo- dore Gerry. After reading the document Mr. Beck- with withdrew from the room and Ver- non M. Davis addressed the Board and offered a brief on the side of the Sovlety for the Prevention of Cruelty to Chil- dren, The first witnets was a Mr. from Boston. He sald he met Katherine Tingley in Chicago some time ago in connection with the quarrels which broke out among the Theosophists in 1897. Parker rr UNIFORMS AT BELLEVUE? loyees? Salaries Cat and for Suits Taken Out, Pay The attaches of Bellevue Hospital are In a condition of do because of the action of the Depart- ment of Charities with regard to the attaches of the Morgue, which adjoins the hospital These latter were paid off to-day all cases where the salary exceeded per month, the sume of $1 had | been deducted for a uniform, This gave rise to the rumor that the rule, which has fallen Into disuse, th all attuohes of the hospital shall wear uniforms, was to be enforced. Supt. Rickard sald: “The matter has| been the subdject of discussion, and 1| believe it has been decided that cer- taln classes of attaches will be re- quired to wear uniforms.” | AMERICAN LINE WINS. British Admiralty Court Sustains Claim for Waesland's 1 LONDO} Nov. 7.—The Admiralty Court to-day on the appeal of the own- ers of the American line steamer Waes- | land, which was sunk In collision with the British steamer Harmontdes in | March last, against the Registra uation of $6,000, confirmed the owne: valuation, $155,000 The owners of the Waesland sued the owners of the Harmonides for damages | in April last, and the Court found that| the Harmonidies alone was, blamable. It was announced on May 12 that the| owners of the Harmonides had paid into court $135,640 In respect to her collision | with the Waesland, This, it was added, | was the’ full amount of Tabiiity, which the Merchant Shipping act limited to ‘0 a ton, Dye ¥ uy LNG, “COE ME BACK WY POOR WIFE.” Westerman, Husband of Pretty Girl Who Drowned Herself from Ferry-Boat, Crazy with Grief at Her Loss. NOW IN BELLEVUE HOSPITAL. Rernard H whore wife tng npoint Monday night under very tragte efreum- » Be fs not certain We the ommitted suicide by rman walter Jump- from a Gre ey, WAS sont thls morning t Pavilion It suffering Insane whethe coholis the man trom al resulting from or acute manta the loss of his wife. Westerman, who ts thirty years and claims to be the son of Baroness and Col Von Plessman, of Koenigs- burg, Prussia, marriod his wife, td about nine months ago, while she was employed ax a servant by a wealthy real-estate dealer with offices on lower Broadway. hortly after her margaxe sexed to her hueband that her employer had ruined her life and that in her own che was not worthy of an hon Ida con- st_man's love Her repentance was evidently sincere, and Western gave her. But she again fell under her former employer's influence, and after a bitter scene with her husband, who had dis- covered her falthlessness, she jumped Into the river. The husband heartbroken whe he heard of his wife's suicide, and told the st of her Ife, which was pub- lished exclusively in The Evening World. He sald that he had no money with whioh to bury the body, if it should pe found, and grieved to think that his dead love should go to the Potter's Field. in spite of all her faults, Last night Westerman was walking down Broadway at Thirty-first street, when to all appearances he suddenly be- came demented. He has been in a ter- rible state of mind since his wife's death, and fear has been entertained for his sanity. He started off towa the Tenderloin station, waving his arms and shoutini “Give me back my poor wife! back my little girl!” He ts still raving about his “little wife, who never did any one harm.” His de- lusion points to insanity resulting from grief. After being in Bellevue for observa- tion this morning Westerman was dis- charged in Jefferson Market Court this afternoon. In court he was very much dazed. He was hardly able to recognize sequain- tances and had nothing to say. Vincent Victory, a lawyer of No. 99 Nassaa street, appeared to defend him. After the Magistrate heard the man's story he let him go. Victory refused to say by whom he was retained but It was reported that the man who was guilty with the dead woman In her unfaithfulness sent nim to the husband's rescue. was Give me NOVENMBES. 7, 1902. ferry-boat on} HELO ICH WDD FOR HER MONEY Charge Made in Case of Mrs. Louise Beauchamp Hughes, an Involuntary Prisoner in a Sanitarium. COURT ORDERS HER RELEASE re | Mra Hughes is eighty-three years old Jant is sald possess a fortune j amounts 0. The petition filed [by Charles Rlandy charged th octogenarian ix detained and con- Jin the priv nitarium of Dr. H. Kellogg, at Riverdale, in Mrs Hughes is the widow of David Ho Hughes, df Washington, D.C. He left a very large estate for life to her: Jit Is in the hands of th 1 States | Trust Company, and the income Is $12,000 a year, She was a gifted woman And spoke several languages In many trips abroad she and her daughter collected # vast accumula- tion of rare. old manurcripts, early books, pletures, china, Jaces and other antiques, which went as @ gift to the orgetown University on the death of the daughter, ten years ago. The petition sets forth that a Wash- Ington jawyer Interested himself in the old lady a year ago and that he re- moved her from her home, No. 2,04 R atr Washington, to this city with- out notifying relatives or friends and kept her whereabouts a secret ull David Michael Grassl, a relative of her hus- band, traced her to the Broadway Cen- tral Hotel, this city, and finally to the sanitarium to which she had been com- mitted by a Putnam county judge on the certificates of two local physicians of Cold Springs, This was June 90, 1902, The lawyer, Edward G. Niles, the pe- Ution says, applied to the Supreme Court in Putnam County to be ap- pointed committee of Mrs. Hughes's es- tate and was appointed. Grass! says in his petition that he found the sdnitarlum one sunny day hidden among the trees tn Van Cort- landt Park; that he waited till the old lady came out on the porch. She glad to see him, and asked Itke a_per- Tectly sane person about her friends In Washington, but some one came out and drove him off the grounds. Then he visited Mrs. Hughes's former attorneys, Blandy, Mooney & Shipman, end after Mr. Shipman had been denied the right to see Mrs. Hughes this writ of habeas corpus was secured from Juatice Scott Judge Southard, of Putnam County, counsel for Dr. Kellogg, submitted an aMdavit stating that Mrs, Hughes had been regularly committed as ineane and Incompetent and that it would be dan- Berour to bring her to court t the conclusion of the argument, {: which Mr. Blandy charged that Nuey had connived to get Mrs. Hughes’ money from her and Justice Keogh had been deceived Into the bellet that Mrs. Hughes was a penniless and friendleas insane old woman, Justice Hall the theration of Mra. Hughes aed signed the order on the spot. Afr. Blane dy hastened to Riverdale at o1 BALDWIN & CO. CLOTHIERS, 241 Broadway (Opposite City Hall Park.) From Manufacturer to Consumer Direct. Save Middlemen’s Profit. ‘ Friday and Saturda: Special! suits*knp “overcoats $10.00 $8.00 Men’s Suits. Fancy Cassimeres and Cheviots, Black Cheviots, in single-breasted Sack Suits, also the new two-button double-breasted Sack Suits, strictly all wool good serge lining, big value 8 00 $1200 5 vas 5 $: Fancy Cheviots, Cassimeres, Black Chev- tots and Thibets, single-breasted Sack, allo the new double - breasted Sack Suits, well cut, well tailored, serge lined; big 1 0.00 value $1 Worsteds, finished Worsteds, single-breasted Sack Suits; also th: new two-button double- breasted Sack Suits; equal 12 00 ° in valuz to most $20.00 suits Car Fare Paid to All Purctasers These Prives Speak as Only Good Values BALDWIN & CO. Special! $12.00 | Men’s Overcoats, | Men's Heavy Winter Overcoats of extra quality all wool Frieze, in | black and Oxford: special 8 00 ° | men's Winter Overcoats of excellent qual | ity Frieze, in black and Oxford; also the | new long, loose overcoats; | nicely tailored,serge lined; 1 0 00 00 . splendid value $15.00... | Men’s&Winter Overcoats of fine all-wool Cheviots and Friezes ; nobby cut and elegantly made; three - quarter length and the nobby, long, full, <= 12.00 Can Speak, broad shouldered coats, $18.00. . 241 Broadway (Opposite City Hall Park.) Who Present This Advertisement. PrICOsseeee oe Astonishing Values in Furniture In Our Extensive Stock Now on Sale. rl Quartered Hay | Oak, Polished, FADD | Full Swell eM Front Dresser, Vat the special | value, 3.98 | White Enameled Grib. value 6.50: special at 44,75 }L_CAsi on crepit, ] | je=e3| Gollen Oak Extension | pio. Table, 3 leaves,worth l "| 6.5: dlsseseers ++ 0,4025 AHome Completely Furnished, $115 The Goods Included Are Good Va! When you conclude to buy Furnit prices; we undersell all downtown Stores. | 6th and $th Ave, El. Stations at 104b F l S H E R BROS. tose 104th Sts, Jue at $140. List on application. ure and Carpets allow us to quote M. | Saturdays Until 10 7. Columbus Ave.,' St. Open Satistied that Mrs, Loul#e Beauchamp Hughes, an aged and wealthy willow, was Illegally committed to an Insane | sylum, Justice Hall in Supreme Court day signed an order for her immedia bid St c ee” ihe ‘ 7 —_ KING’ BALLIETT SENTENCED.| CAN A SOLDIER SHOOT? — Su Cony 4 hae Alleged Mine Swindler'x Convie= |‘pennsylvanin Supreme Court all tom Afi by High Court. Upon to Decide Legality, DES MOINES, 1 Nov, 7-Judge | PprTTSRURG, Nov. 7—Private Asthup’ Munger, of the’ United § 4° District | Wadsworth. the Eighteenth Regie, iy Court, to-day refused to grant Letson|ment. N. G. P., who shot apd se Ballett, known as the “Mining King, ey Ham Durham = whilo the Ri new trial, and sentenced him te REDE EAM GL al, and sent nD cool fields at Shenandoah, was placed 9. a fine of $1,000 and to spend one year in| ana rest to-day by Constable Wile the county: Jail fam Shorall, of Schuylcill County, who |” | i was convicted of using the | has held one wi , = y finding of the Coroner's jury on the ted States malix for fraudulent pure | 500% of pusham ° Hasbent Immetiately upon the opening of the — | In 1) he purchased what ts known |state Supreme Court Deputy Attorneys / ; the "White Swan” mine in Baker, tz presented a petition for @ v which had been deserted: by s corpus, stating thet ginal owners, and ¢ jately began | Wadsworth illegally restrained, — to explol same news-|the shooting having been. done while pADerAworlisemente land: wold vatoci) oni | Netto cs ectiie tm thea Jthe mont ing | Syke Court’ and e monthly payment plan, receiving rt ordered a. reheariny Jover $iyi0m) from small Investors from nt to be held the first Monday’ lalsover=ine inuary in Philadelphia, and ot er ee ee not a dotlar | WAdsworth's release In $500 ball, tations housh | ahe Sunday World 19 reat Suinehte mas everybody. Sunday World | ‘The case has be twice and has | Teach all eyes and cover the entigg Joost th t fully $50,000, Geld. | woot “Buzz— Zip!” says the circular -sawzin Regal store windows, “T am after you, Sir Hemlock -Sole,+and you too, Mr, ‘Yankee Oak,’ “Tl show you up, for-sailing under false colors, hiding your brittle.cheapness under an expensive finish, and masquerading as Oak! “ll show the people your scrubby insoles, —your cardboard toe stiffening — your pieced toe caps—your substitutes-for Oak soles, and your general hypocrisy ! “Pm the avenger of The Regal Shoe, which is made of what it claims to be, and pretends nothing-which ( Layee the “Window Sold only in 45 Regal Stores from New York to San Francisco and London, ‘Also by mail tan District. MEN'S STORES. BROOKLYN. 357 Fulton St., opp. Moctague St. Ill Broadway, near Bedford Ave. ‘ay, bet. Ditmare St, & Willoughty Ave, NEW YORK CITY. bet Ann cor Reade St Beekman, | | | 14 Stores Metropo: | | cor: 1001 Hroadway, bet and 30th Sts, CITY: 68 Newark Ave, oadway 4 Hide NEWARK: S41 Broad 8t,, opp Central RR. of | 2087 Seventh Ave, cor, 125th § Sd. Depot | WOMEN’S STORES, | NEW YORK CITY: 785 Broadway. corner 10th S.t 1329 Broadway, opp. Herald Square 125th St. comer 7th Ave, A Great SHIRT Bargain For You.on a Slight Excuse One of our prominent shirtmakers has changed his method of laundering—his pres- ent method allows him to pack six shirts in- stead of three ina box. He gathered together all his shirts laundered in the old way—shirts that retail from $1 to $1.50—and closed them out to us ata price which enables us to offer ’em to you at 66 cts. each. The shirts included in this sale are of all the new fall designs — white grounds with small, neat effects —open front and_ back, Sizes 13's to 17. On sale to-day at 66 cts, each. Store Open Saturday Till 9 P. M. WM. VOGEL @ SON, | BROADWAY, HOUSTON ST

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