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STARVED TOCA THEHGHER LIFE Joseph W. Sheppard Sought Ab- solute Spiritual Enfranchise- ment by Denying Himself the «. Physical Satisfaction of Food. SILENT FOR TWO YEARS. ’ Studied Oriental Philosophy, Accept ed Brahministic Beliefs and Ut: terly Ignored Warnings of Friends and Lived on Uncooked Grains. Merely a formality wil! be the tn- quest whioh Coroner Scholea will hold into the death of Joseph William Shep- Pard, whose monomania for attaining absolute spiritual enfranchisement through denying himself even the physl- cal satisfaction of food, led to his death from starvation. Mr. Sheppard was bur- led yesterday tn Wood n Ce by ‘his son and two rs, who hur- rled here from Atlar ty when In- formed of their father's death Though the gentlest men, whose Brahministic beliefs allowed him to harbor no unkindly thought nor the ut- terance of a harsh word, Mr. Sheppard was not happy in his fumily relations, Neither his wife nor his children were in sympathy with his absorption tn the farely spiritual aspect of things and his peculiar aversion to cooked food, which was an outgrowth of his :@uim- inistic beef, In 1873 Mr. Sheppard, who was a native of Kent, England, married in St. Louis a daughter of Dr. Ludwig Bauer, one of the most noted physicians in the Mississipp! Valley. Bhe was an educated woman and a pianist of note. Sought for (Higher Life.” When Mr, Sheppard, who had been an inventor, became absorbed in th ‘ult of the “higher life,’ he ne his business and very often disappeared for proionged periods from his home. Mrs. Sheppard maintained herself by teaching music and was usststed by her daughters tn concert work. + Finally Mrs. Sheppard and her family came to New York, where her brother, Otto Bauer, had entered the interior decorating business with A. Dudley Bramhal! at No. 1123 Broadway. In 1901 Mrs, Sheppard secured a divorce from her husband, and ten days later mar- ried Mr, Bramhall. They had an elegant home at No, 235 West Seventy-ffth street, where Mrs. Bramhall’s children lived with young Sheppards caused some friction, and one day Mr, Bramhall left home and went to a Broadway hotel, He re- turned, but later his health failed, and he went to a sanitarlum at Stockbridge, Conn. Shortly after his return he dls- , Gppeared completely, This was just @ year after his marringe. Ills disap- pearance left the affairs of the deco- Tating company in bad shape, Mr. pBauer,-his Junior partner, had not been ‘in oharge of the company’s ‘financlal affairs, and he was unable in the ab- sence of his partner to carry on ‘the business, Creditora took charge of the place: and nothing more was heard of Mr. Bramhall by the public. Mra. Bram- hall, however, had expressed tye confi- dent bellef that her nusband would turn jip all right and rurnish a eatistactory explanation of his absence. Her con- "1 fidence was rewarded, inasmuch as she id hear from him and left the city to > join nim. Mr, and Mrs. Bramhall are running & hotel at Woodberry, N. J. Mrs. Bramhall'e children are “again with ern, ‘\ Two Years of Silence, +. In speaking of his father, Wiillam Sheppard said the old gentleman had gome to New York and Ilved at the st. Denis Hotel for two years without epeaking to an inmate of the house ex- gept the clerks. He was then placed by MMs children inthe care of Mrs, Mad- den, at No. 159 West Eighty-third street, where he remained unt he died. Lat terly he had enjoyed a large income om a patent window, used lapgely in ‘proof buildings. “Dr, Julian Thomas, who was with Mr, Sheppard when he died and enjoyed his confidence, said that for fifteen Yeara Mr. Sheppard had subsisted en- tirely on uncooked grains. H\s principal diet was raw rice. Latterly he bad al- most entirely given up the use of food, and though warned by Dr. Thomas that he would dle, he persisted In refusing food, ‘Two years ago, Dr, Thomas says, Mr. Sheppard tried to prove that he could Mve without food and almost died, Mr. Sheppard |s sald by friends who knew him in the West, to have become interested in Oriental’ puilosophy with his friends, Celsus Prize and Dr, J. C. Nidelet, of St. Louis, hoth of whom dis- Appeared completely for several years ghd were said to have gone to India to Wecome disciples of Buddha. They re- turned after many years, but to this day have never uttered a syllable that would reveal where they had been in there mysterious wanderings, MOTORMAN GAVE THE FIRE ALARM. Then the Quick-Witted Flame- Fighters Managed to Save Sleeping People in Tenement. The three-story frame building at No %87 Liberty avenue, Kast New York, in which Jacob Heltman ran @ saloon and lived with bis family, caught fire to-day and the Heltmans narrowly «s- caped burning to death. They were saved by the ready wit of a street-car motorman and the courage of firemen, A motorman on a Liberty avenue car was passing the house at dawn when he saw the flames. He ran his car to Engine House No. 12 and the wiarm. When the engine company Teached the fire they found that tho ininates of the, bullding, consisting ot Heltman, bis wife and five little chil. dren on’ the second floor, and some boarders un the top too, were stil asleep. Fireman Thomas Smith broke the door and running upstairs gaye ihe alarm, He yrabbec two children and With the rest of the Heltmans stagger fng half dead with the amoke, vehing him, Rot out sufely. Phen he went back _ Biter the boarders and routed them aut, . thelr night clothes, down them. The presence of the| MUST EXPLAIN GIRLS DEATH. Four Persons Under Arrest from) House Where Beautiful Young Austrian Died After Leaving Home of Protector. TOOK POISON BY ACCIDENT. John Weinberg and his wife, Emma, and Adam Lewicky and his wife, So- phia, were arraigned in Yorkville Court to-day and remanded to the Cor- them for an Ja oner, who will call upon explanation of the death of Anna rusalnka, a utiful Austrian, who | said to have taken accidentally a large Quantity of cantharides the day sho became a boarder in their home. The prisoners were arraigned before Coroner Scholer late in the day by the detectives. ‘The Coroner remanded all four to the House of Detention to await * reault of the autopsy on the dead gin. ‘The attention of the poll to the case hy Anton: keeper for the firm of Gollovk & Smith, concrete contractors, in whoss family the girl had lived since her arrival from Austria several weeks ayo Molesha claims that the quartet under arrest induced the girl to leave his phice for no g90d motive. ie had given her shelter because she and he wife vere schocimates in Austria. Anna Jiaruszinska was a beautiful girl of twenty-three years. She had two sisters in San Francisco, and their earn- ings supported thelr widowed mother and ltt ter In Austria, Anna was 2 was called Moleska, a Look- employed and had lived with the family of Tony Moleska at No, 138 Essex street until Wednesday of last week, when she moved to the iiome of Mrs. John Weinberg at No. 123 East Third street. Wednesday evening she went to make herself a cup of cocoa, but put into the pot by mistake the contents of a can of cantharides, which had been used for making plasters. She swallowed mouthful of the burn- Ing substance before discovering her mistake. Dr. Leveln was called In, and with Dr. Cish as a consultant, they succeeded in bringing the gir! out of danger. Police Make a Strong Denial. Capt. Dean to-day made a strong de- nia, of the statements of Dr. Levein and Adam Lewicky. ‘Ihe charge that police went tothis girl's bedside to en- force the collection of a civil debt is absurd,” he sald, ‘Ihe facts are that ® woman rushed into the station Satur- day and reported that the girl was dy- ing from poison. I sent a policeman to investigate and he came back with the facts. ‘Dr. Leveln came later and sald he had the case in hand and didn't want any more police sent around to bother the girl, as she was likely to be frightened. No more police were sent. The only investigation likely to come of the gin's death will regard Dr. Levein's action in not reporting promptly to the police and the Coroner." Told a Queer Story. Moleaka says that he went to Wels- werk’s to ingulre why the girl had left He was refused admission. He learned from the nelghbors that ‘the girl had been taken suddenly til, and he forced his way Inte her room.’ When he saw her condition he reported to the police, and a olain-clothes man was sent to the house With him, Then thoy weut to Dr. Leveln's and were told that the girl wae out of dan- ger. A policeman was placed on guard outside the house, as Capt, Dean was not saUsfled that the girl had taken the polgon aceldentally, When. she died the Welnbergs and Lewickys were arrested. They told ® story about Moleska and the police having frightened the girl to death by golng to the house and demaading ray- ment of $16 owed to Moloska fo rent, ‘The latter denies this and 4 he was giving the girl x home until eke learned the langiage and found em- ployment. Coroner Goldenkrana will hold an inquest to day. WIFE AND CHILD PLEADED IN VAN United States Marshal Has Pa- thetic Experience When He Goes to Arrest an Alleged Embezzler from Germany. WAS CASHIER IN SAXONY. Alexander Edmund Reiner, who until two years ago was cashier of the Government Bank in Laumstein, Sax- ony, was arraigned to-day before United States Commissioner Alexander jn the Federal Bullding and accused of having committed forgeries and embezzlemenis aggregating 39,000 marks, The arrest was made at the request of the German Consul-General Karl Buenz, and pending the extradition hearing, to! be held on Wednesday, Reiner, who is forty-three years of age, was committed without bail to Ludlow Street Jail, Beforo the alleged forgeries were dis- the warrant says, Reinor fled, but through letters whioh he wrote home to friends he was finally traced to this clly. @hen Deputy United States Mur- shal Frederick Hernhard was put on tis track, and on Saturday night located Reiner at No. # Ralph avenue, Brook- lyn. He was iying there, Bernhard Says, with his sick wife and ten-year- ad son, and Was working as a bouk. keeper in Manhattan When the former bank cash covered, F realized that the German roment cflolals had found him out at last, Bernhard says, there Was an affecting scene in the ‘Brooklyn hd Mr. Reiner, a hopeless inv wed Bernhard and et her husband go, and the little his knees and with loar-filled eyes pleaded thut his father be not taken back to Saxony and prison, ‘On his Way 10 court to-day Reiner told Bernhard that after leaving Saxony he came direct to New York and got a position as bookkeeper with @ Broadway gio! fia, 1 4 THE WORLD: MONDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 2, 1903. YOUNG WOMAN WH 9HOO}OOOH:-H:HDHOHHOM AFTER POLICE FRIGHTENED HER. O DIED SOHOHHHHDHHHHHGHHHHOHOHHH © DODODOHHHELHIHHGOHOHOHHOHHOH CILLED ANAL BESIDE WIFE Jealous Man First Made Her Leave House and Promise, Under Threat, to Make No Mention of Occurrence. SHE TURNS TO THE STATE. Although threatened with death by ter husband {f she betrayed any knowl- edge of his crime, Mrs. Mary McDowell, of Harrison, N. J., to-day told the Coro- ner of Essex County how ter husband, George, forced his way into the home she shared with Walter Ramsey at No. 44 Fourth street, and killed her lover before her eyes. Confession was forced from the wom- an with difficulty. ‘The shock of wit- nessing the sleoping man murdered by her infurlated husband, the dread in- splred by the latter's threats that he would serve her in like manner, and the fact that her shame has become public at a time when her nine-year-old son les dying at the home of her sister, have wrought upon her until she Is in @ condition bordering upon hysterta. Fear was the only motive which in- splred her to protect her husband, and for a long time she stuck to the story she first told the police. Finally she ad- mitted that McDowell broke into the house, threatened her Mfe if she made outery, and then going to the bed where Ramsey was sleeping, placed the revol- ver to his temple and fired. turned to his wife and bade her put on her hat and accompany him. She obeyed and they left the house unmolested. Across the bridge to Newark they walked, the man, revolver in hand, warning her as they went that unless she did as he ordered he would follow her and murder her, too, in her sleep, where ho told her to sleep until morn- ing. She obeyed, and McDowell got a good start on the police, Tenants in Mrs. Mary Kenney's hous, where the murder was done, heard the shot, and going to Ramsey's rooms saw him lying dead on tha bed. ‘They made no report of the murder, It was not until § o'clock in the morning that Mrs. McDowell summoned courage to tell the police of Newark. She said her husband forced his way into her room at mid- night, She was reading a paper and did not speak to him. He passed into the room where Ramsey was sleeping, and a minute later reappeared, ordered her to put on her hat and accompany him, She claims she had not seen the mur- der, but he told her of it and forced her to walk the streets of Newark with him all night, ‘The pollee found the woman had been with friends in New- erk from 1 o'clock in the morning, and then ty break her down they forced her to go back to Harrison and look at the murdered body of her lover. Mrs, been separated for sc husband and 5 employees. 'T found his wife a resort eDowell and her husband have Her months, Were stock: @ weeks ago McDowell nd Ramsey toxet ark and beat Ramses Mrs. McDowell thirty years, atives in New- KNICKERBOCKER 250 VARS OL 1-0 Anniversary of New York’s Birth as a Municipality Marked by Display of Stars and Stripes. | ‘This ts the two hundred and fiftioth anniyersary of the birth of New York }as a municipality, The day was of- ficlally observed by the disp over cach borough hall of the siars an os, Mayor Low issued the order] h Was sont over the official wires|! early to-day by etary Reynolds. A grand new flag floated from the main peak of the City Hall Originally it Was intended to have a rouring official celebration to orate the day, but the Aldermen, with rare ingenully for affairs economic, de clded to kill two birds with one biow- pmmem- owt. They appointed 4 committee to devise a Celebration for May 16 next, on which date the foundation stone y Hall vullding 1 hi place just one hun years, Thus will two important ee be Atlingly celebrated Before his victim had died, McDowell | He took her to the house of a friend,| FOSTER FAMILY’S SECOND TRAGEDY Tiana Bay, Where Clarence and “Dimple” Lawrence Met Death, Now Claims Life of Foster’s Brother. DROWNING WAS ACCIDENTAL. (Spectal to The Brening World.) EASTPORT, L. I, Feb. 2.—From tho waters of the same bay In which Clar- ence Foster and “Dimples” Lawrence met thelr strange death last summer, the body of Louis Foster, Clarence's brother, was dragged to-day. He had been drowned as those other two had been, but not under such dark tragic circumstances. So far as can be ascertained, Louts Foster's death was purely accidental, while the fate of Clarence and “Dimple” Lawrence is still shrouded in mystery. Louls Disbrow has been acquitted of the murder with which he was charget and of which so many belleved him {gullty, and therefore the story still re- mains scaled, Louls Foster was Clarence's younger brother, was nineteen years old and very athletic. He was fond of all sports and loved the water, On Friday afternoon he went alone In a boat to gather oys- ters in Tlana Bay, While busy with his i work he neglected to nofe the high wind ;which was coming up, and when he started for the shore he found himself in j difficulty. ‘The wind was very high Friday night, |Tiana Bay simply raged under its ‘lashing and Foster struggled in vain} | to reach the shore. When he was a few| | hundred feet out nls boat was capsized, Anticipating this, he had taken off his/ |voots and made an effort to swim ‘ashore, but the heavy icy waves beat | him about and sapped his strength #9 to give up the | that he was obliged sirugele. Hs boat was beached during the night. Saturday morning fifty friends and! neighbors ventured out into the still] stormy bay in search of the body, They dragged the bottom all that day and all) day Sunday with trawls and nes of barbed wire, without success, They kept at it into last night, and early this morning one of the boats caught the body with a traw! and dragged It ashore, The body was sent to the home of the parents, at sympathy js expressed for them owing to the Iil-luck which has pursued the family. ‘The fact that both brothers should lose their lives in the same bay has caused great comment and has agdin opened the Disbrow case discussion, 's grandfather died on Saturday round, His funeral will t norrow at the same time as ace t that of his grandson GONE TO FINAL INTERLOCUTOR, Addison Weaver, Old-Time Min- strel Man, Dies Amid Painful! Surroundings. Hosts of old frienda and stage asso lates will attend funeral sery of Addison Weaver, an old-time ming va actor, who died in the the th Infirmary, at New Brighton, 8, ufter an iiness of & month at the tors’ Vund Home A gradual breaking down tn health is the way the doctors describe Weaver's death, Few came to see him, and the old memorles of his former stage career F ‘anted fully with his later} vundings Weaver belonged to the old school of comedians and was a contemporary. of | Willan Warren, of the fai Howton Museum ( y, which tourlsied tn the W's 0%. Born ( a | County, N. Ys dp IS, Weaver adopted the stage as his profersion at an early ppeared in many minytrel troupes din INH produced the skecch entitled A Young scainp.” which made a hit from Maine to Callfora'a, He y tin is ekit for almout twenty years, visht ing varlous cities to the country and finally joined & small travelling. com jpany, with Which he cont'nued unul ten] years ago, When he revired The mohey he had laid by gr a ratny| ‘day soon Vanished, and #ix months ago lhe’ appl! inn 0 the Actors Home M Will be held “at th Actors’ Home, in West New Hrighton, | to-morrow, and the Inter ent will take | broke and Doran's scat lwon sent back to Guttenbueg to as ure own Hall, Tant was the last ecen of Paulman or the stranger Doran's condition 1s extremely crit \tog}, de lost #0 much blood before his NEW SERIE ON ‘BEGINS TONY Two Hundred More Trains Put! in Commission and Accom- modations Are Greatly In- creased for Passengers. EXPRESSES STILL CROWDED. there will be an increase of 277 trips, | whtch will Include cara, giving ac- commodations for 175,88 more passen- gers. Besides all this the managers of the “L" roads promise to furnish seating room for $87,072 persons, to aay nothing of the standing room. Secretary 8, C. Mead, of the Commit- tee on Frenchises and ‘Transportation, which has been investigating surface and elevated railroad transportation tn the interests of the Merchants’ Associa- tion and the general public, issued the following statement at noon to-day: “The new schedule went into effect this morning on the elevated ratlroads, according to an authentla report received by us, About two hundred new men were added during the past week to the operating force of the Manhattan ‘L’ oads, While no new cara have yet been re- colved by the company, we are informed that all of the old ones are in service this morning. ‘The new scheditle ts work- ing very smoothly Indeed, considering that all changes of puch a nature re- quire some time to be successfully worked out.” It was further stated by Gecretary Mead that the Enigneering Committee of the Merchants’ Association has mapped out plans for a most thorough investigation of the situation. Close tab will be kept upon the “‘L roads in an effort to see that the officials live up to promises made to the State Railroad Commission. When the new schedule goes into ef- fect on the Third avenue branch there will be 3,387 trips made hourly on all four lines. Travellers on the Sixth avenue local trains during the rush hours this morn-) | ing enjoyed the benefit of the new ar- rangement, but those on the Ninth| avenue branch and persons who used the express trains rode downtown in crowded cars, | The express trains in the early morn- | ing were delayed because of fog, and that was the excuse offered by the man- agement for the crowded cars, Many of the oars were only halg full as they passed Fifty-ninth street. Some of the electric trains on the Sixth avenue branch hed etx cars, but on the Ninth avenue line no train hed more than five cars. Altogther there did not appear to be any great improvement on the Ninth avenue iine or in the express trains. ‘The increased facilities for the Ninth Avenue by to-day’a schedule are sev-:| enty-six extra trains in the local service | and five trains on the express time table, “GLOOMY CUS” NEARLY LYNCHED He Had Seriously Injured a Gut-| tenburg Man, and a Crowd of Two Hundred Followed, Clam- oring For His Life. SAVED AND THEN ESCAPED.) | The quick wit of @ policeman prob- | ably saved August Paulman, of Gutten- | burg, N. J. from being lynched last night, and then the stupidity of the| same policeman allowed Paulman to ed-| cased from custody after he had been arieated for serfously injuring James Doran, It is supposed that Paulman is in hiding in this city. Doran, whose home {is in Hermann avenue, near Fifth eureet, Guttenbure, | was standing on @ atreet corner last fight, when Paulman, who ts known locally as "Gloomy Gus," sneaked up behind him and hit him on head with @ soda-water bottle, The bottle was filled with glass. One of his ears was almost cut off | Paulman ran, chased by a crowd who knew Doran and thought he was dead By the time Paulman got half way to Weehawken there were 200 persons his heels, and one man in the crowd had stopped at a saloon and borrowed a long hitehing str ‘The crowd caught Paulman at Wee hawken, and had him ready to be strung up to # tree when two policemen came ‘along. ‘They were told the cause of the disturbance and warned that they had beat not attempt to fere nt “How do you know the man is dead?” asked one of the police The crowd did not know. A committee tain Doran's condition and Paulman was left in the custody of the two policemen while the rest of the crowd adjourned to & saloon | A man came along who represented himself to be attached to tae Gutten burg police force, He yolu' 4 to take Paulman from the two Weehawken men and escort him to th ste wounds could be attended to that he has| ry, in Brook: place at Greenwood Ceme! ; ya 5 » not been strong enough to rally from! the effects of the assaults it IAD PREDICT After Nursing Her Sister, Mrs. Lawrence, Through Fatal | hess, Miss Montgomery Said She Shouldn’t Survive Funeral STRICKEN DURING SERVICE. At the Most Remark Men's $2. Women’s $3.50 and $3. button and lace wi sizes 11 to 2+. Misses’ $2.50 Large Size Black Kid, B Misses’ $1.50 Black Kid Button and Lace, Sises V1 £0 QDerecevscrereerereres : Little Gents’ Satin Calf Lace, sizes 10 to 13; peeneernnnaas Boys’ and Youths’ $1.50 Satin Calf Lace, sises Ut toes: this unprecedented sale, 50 Box Calf Lace Shoes, $1,50 | Men's $2. id, button with kid tips, Be Bish and Box Calf Lace...+ -- Women’s $1.50 Black Kid one strap Sandals, French heels....+++- + Women’ Patent Leather and Black Kid Colontals, all sizes and widths. . Child’s $1.50 Patent Leather Button and Enamel Leather and Black Kid Batton and Lace, siges 8% to 10a ...1+++esereeeee Misses’ $2.00 Patent Leather Button and Black Kid, Button and Lace, $1,25 to-day while the funeral services were being held over the body of her sister, Mrs. Lawrencs was the wife of Joseph Van Horne Lawrence, of Long Island City, and a daughter of Richard W. Montgomery, of Huntington, She Itved at No, 66 Wardell street, Astoria. When taken goriously tll a week ago sho sent to Tfuntington for her sister Emma, Miss Montgomery was continually at the bedside of Mra Lawrence during the four days of her Illness, Despite all that medical skill and loving care could do, Mrs, Lawrenoe eank from the time sho was taken {ll and on Monday evening she passed away. ‘Before Carrie ts in her grave I shall be dead,” safd Mise Montgomery, She was taken ill on Satuntay night and grew worse steadily, While the funeral services were being held to-~iay sto was !n a room in the uper part of the house in charge of a nurse and aome relatives, She died before the ceramon- Two hundred more trains were put in} When Mrs, Carrie W. Montgomery | io, were conctuded, and the undertaker | service on the Bixth, Ninth and Second) Van Horne Lawrence died in Astoria} was called trom the coMnto take charge |avenue "Ie" roads to-day when the new [lest Friday evening, her sister, Miss] of another corpse. schedule ordered by the State Railroad | mma Montgomery, of Huntington, 1../ Both bodies were sent. to Huntington 1, who had nursed her during her last|this afternoon. Another funeral service Commisstoners went Into effect. iMiness, eaid that she, too, would dle] will be held there to-morrow, and the By this new schedule from now on |pefore Mrs. Lawrence's burial, She dled | sisters will be buried in the same grave, Wale MAXWELL FAMILY? Edgar Comes to Manhattan in 4 Search of a Mother, a Sister and a Brother. Edgar Maxwell came to Manhattan for the first time in his life to-day, moved by a strong desire to find his mother, Mrs. Agnes Maxwell, his sist Katherine Maxwell, and a brother. mothet he has not seen for nearly seventeen years, and the Inst time he laid eyesion “his sister was four ye ago when she, reading of bis mai In a newspaper, went to Philadeli ‘Ovhen nis, elater a a, M, en, his slater departed. | Maxwell discovered that an address sn had write lived in this Since then he ten, telling where she city, had been misiaid. hag searched for her without result, i krows that, one: brother 3 daho, but where the rest Maxwell in Gem, the family ts he is at a loss to tell, Tremendous Doubie Triumph. Two Great February Sales Going on at Once. 75,000 PAIRS. OF HIGH CLASS FOOTWEAR IN THE BASEMENT able Reductions This Year. ).00 A:Pair. light soles, 0 A Pair. ith patent leather tips, Also Most Wonderful Sale ON OUR MAIN FLOOR : 10,000 Pairs $5.00, $6.00 and $7.00 Shoes FOR MEN AND WOMEN A $3001! Women’s in Glace Kid-and Patent Leather Button and Lace. Wax Calf and Enamel Leather Lace. Finest Quality, Bench Made, Winter Shoes, No Better Shoes at Any Price. This double event in our Basement and on our Main Floor is uneq) History. No man, woman or child in the City of New York or vicinity she Before Sold at These Prices. Men’s $3.50 Box Calf, Black Wax Calf, Velour Calf, Black Kidand Pat- ent Leather Lace, Women’s $2.50 Black Kid, Button and Lace with pat- ent leather and hid tips, heaby and utton and Lace, stses 2; to 6, patent leather and hk No Such Shoes Ever 00 Satin Caif Lace Shoes,$1.25. and black kid $2.00 $1.00 $2.00 $1.00. $1.50 $1,00 8c. $1.00 id tips, M:n's in Black Calf, mn ed.