The evening world. Newspaper, March 12, 1903, Page 2

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UADICK'S WIDOW SAIEVES FOR PENNELL “Has Not Left Her Room Since the Ob- _ ject of Her Infatuation, Suspected of Complicity in Murder of Her Hus- band, Was Hurled to Death in His Automobile. Friends of Pennell Say He Was Made Desperate by the Police's Suspicion that He Was Implicated in the Crime ---Mrs. Pennell Spoke No Word Be- fore Her Death. ' BUFFALO, N. Y., March 12.—Arrangements for the funeral of Mr. and Mrs. Pennell have been practically completed and the wishes of the friends | afid relatives that the services be quiet and simple will be followed by those The bodies will be taken to the late home at No. 208 Cleveland avenue, ) ptobably this evening. ‘The services at the house will be h@d to-morrow Dr. Frank S. Fitch, pastor of the First Congregational Church, _ Will preach the sermon. The interment will be at Brunswick, Maine, None but the immediate relatives and a few of Mr. Pennell’s closest friends will Mrs, Burdick is reported to be prostrated by the fate of Arthur R, Pen- ) nell, with whom {t is admitted she was infatuated. She wae not told the de- tails of the automobile accident, but her attorney, who has been an inmate | of the Burdick residence since the tragedy, informed her of Pennell's death. She retired at once to her room and has not eince left it. by the news, which came as a shock to her nervous syatem, which was al- Teady in ba dcondition. It was learned to-day that Pennell was almost crazy on the day he and his wife took the awful jump in the automobile that caused the death of both. He told a personal friend on that tragic afternoon that he was so Upset by the police espionage and the repeatedly expressed opinions that he knew something of the Burdick tragedy that he would be glad if all were _ | ended somehow. BURDICK INQUEST SET FOR TUESDAY. dudge Murphy, of the police court, announced that he will hold the tn-| Quest into the death of Edwin L. Burdick next Tuesday. oe “1 propose to make it the most complete investigation ever conducted } into any death’ in this county,” sald Judge Murphy. “I ha _}} everybody whose name has been mentioned in connection with this case. There are too many persons lingering under suspicion of causing Burdick’s death. “Only one person could have kille@ him. If 1 can find who that is I propose to do so. At any rate I expect to eliminate the names of innocent | She {s prostrated ee “I have set the date for next Tuesday imorder to allow the police and | District-Attorney four more days in which to investigate the case, ought to be long enough to bring out the truth: 77} innocent persons ought to be under suspicibn. ‘Names have been in every- } body's mouth since the murder was first reported.” |" “The hope that Mrs. Pennell would recover consclousness and make a ) statement that might clear the mystery which had linked her husband's ; name with the tragic fate of his former friend, the murdered Edwin Bur- dick, ended when she died at 8 o'clock last night In the Sisters’ Hospital. Relatives and police officials hung over her bedside in the expectation that'she would open her eyes and speak, but for hours she lay as if dead Until her breathing ceased. DEATH HANDICAPPED POLICE. Her death destroyed the last immediate hope of the Buffalo police of Ufting the veil of mystery that has settled about the case. Though the authorities have now yeered around to the accident theory, there are many circumstances which make it appear that Pennell's automo- bile plunge over the quarry cliff was the result of a prearranged plan, Henry Peacock, a resident of Kensington avenue, declares to-day that Pennell and his wife passed and repassed the fatal spot several times before the machine veered out of the roadway and carried them to death. Chertes Toy, another resident of the locality, insists that he saw Pen- geil on Monday last get out of bis machine and examine the spot where bis automobile was wrecked. Frank 8. Babcock, Vice-President of the Buffalo Blectric Vehicle Com- pany and a friend of Pennell, insists he was mentally upset on Tuesday. He came to the station for his auto through the driving rain without an overcont, and would have gone riding in his wet clothes on): him dress sultably. POLICE HOPEFUL OF SOLUTION. \Se-@ay the police are as insistent as ever that the mystery will be @ived. They now declare that Pennel) was not the object of their suspicion, 1} but thet al! along they have maintained the theory that the Murder was : The investigation will continue along those lines. dmit that a thorough search of Pennell's Anyway, it is as long as ly Mre, Pennell Im the same breath the offic! Private papers will be made, | A CLASH OVER PROPOSED SEARCH. Indications are that there will be @ bitter fight waged when the time comes for the searching of the effects of Arthur R. Pennell and his wife, Medical Hxaminer War! G. Denser, who took charge of Pennell's body imme- after the terrible accident occurred, made the following statement to id reporter at the Morgue this morning: “I wil! make @ search of the personal effects of Arthur R, Pennell at all | ‘This is an exceptional case and if it is necessary to go to the Bu- Court I will search the dead man's personal effects. d with the Burdick tragedy in a way and | will investigate the case,” Bx-District-Attorney Thomas Penney, who was a class-mate of Arthur i, at Yale, and who has taken charge of Pennell’s affairs since the ace it occurred “merely as a friend,” as he says, will do everything within nis power to prevent the medica! examiners from searchin, ® Pennell’s per- ®ay there will be no search,” declared Attommey Penney, By'& World reporter of Medical Examiner Danser’s statement. "Take | |? for that. Pennell was never under arrest and now that he !s dead See to it that the authorities do not probe into bis Personal will I prevent authorities from ransacking his effects, Mewapaper men or any one else will see the body. guard over both bodies. The members of the family yet, and I don’t know that they will,” M, Lauib, father of Mra, Pennell, is on t #. Mrs. Pennell's two brothers and her sister City, where she had been studying before she died, but they received no ‘are domiciled at the Pennell bave not looked et way here from Nellie, who came up vocal papal visited their 1g Of recognition home. Mrs, Abbie Y, Pennell, fad his brother, J, Fred Pennell, who came from iso at the Pennell home. FO BROOKTLN Engineer Parsons Has Prepared Comprehensive Plans for the Relief of the People of that Borough. Subways to Intercept Tunnels and Bridges, and Third and Fourth Tracks to Be Laid on the Ele- vated Roads. Engineer aPrsons has completed a comprehensive plan of rapid transit for Brooklyn, which he presented to the Rapid Transit, Commission to-day. Tt caila for the bullding of a subway through Fourth avenue to Fort Mamil- ton, connecting with the two tunnels to be built under the East River, Another | branch of the proposed subway dor Brookiyn is planned to tep the ap- preaches to the blg bridges and import- ant atations of all the clevated railroads, In this seheme Williamsburg gets one artery of the underground system. Engineer Pargons also proposts the butiding of a railway to be carried under the Beet River from Nassau and Orange ptreets, Brooklyn, to Matden Lane in Manhattan, with @ station near Wille fam street. “In connection with the Brooklyn end of the Manhattan bridge,” says the en- gineer In his report, “the city authort- se to construct a new tho along the axis of the bridge produced to the intersection of Fulton street and Flatbush avenue. Buch a street Intersects or reaches all the ele- vated lines now running to the Brook- lyn Bridge, When the Manhattan Bridge fs completed spurs from the elevated lines will be run over the bridge.” Showd his plans be carried out. the engineer says the Borouga of Brooklyn will be connected with Manhattan three bridges carrying aix elevated and ten surface tracks. n approximate cost of the improve- uggested by the plan 1» about 52,000,000, ‘The ‘total roponed is number of miles of new road thirty-seven and the total proposed. whether additions to existing roads, 1s 120 mi TO.COMBINE ALL ERSEY ROADS To-Day at Conference of Representatives of the Trol- ley Lines to Investigate Plan. A CAPITAL OF $50,000,000. At a meeting of representatives from the directorates of all the trolley lines (n Hudson, Bergen, Passaic, Union and Essex counties, New Jersey, held this afternoon in the offices of the North New Jersey Street Railway Company, in Jersey City, a committee of five was ap- polnted to further investigate the plan to lease all the trolley Ines in theae counties to one immense corporation. ‘These men were named for the work: A. J. Cassatt, John D. Crimmins, E. F. 7. Young, Randall Morgan and John T. Waterbury, They are to report to an- various roada, to be held probably next Monday afternoon, While none of the men at the meeting would talk with definiteness {1 was said, and It seemed to be the general im- Pression, that the gigantic deal would go through, The big leasing company is being iengineerad by (Thomas A, Nevina and EB. B, Gaddis. Gaddis is sald to represent United States Senator Joan F. Dryden and Prudential Life Insurance interests, The capital of the new company, It ts waid, will be 50,000,000. Tne promoters Plan to pay $6,000,000 dor the lease with aranteed rates of interests on the stock of the different companies accord- ing to their past earning capacity. It thowe behind the holding company is to consolidate all the trolley lines between New york. nd Philadelpala and run care. tl unnel now Battal und the anon to the foot of Morton reat, As the ‘op0 ty a men of the y and ¢) tn the Street Ratlwa, Compan int a bt 1 on of Re Kew as ao jon Ww New York rosde.ts\ aleo inchid possibilities of the future, | M’ANEANEY IS ON TRIAL. Allewed Accomplice of Tebin itn Marder ef Craft Faces a Jury. Alexander McAneaney, who was in- Glcted for murier in the Afet degree with Thimas Tobin, for the mui Capt. J, G. Craft, in the By i ive, be craa ar a thet ane 8 b wae Px PURO nit a Bi Davis, ron ial Branch of the Buprems O t toda: y, He is defended by John F, McIntyre, who that he woul ‘ove that Mo- Aneaney was only @ witness to the |crime, which wee committed Tobin, Tobin i now vad sentence of de, \o PH Pik, ¢ day Wes occupied in ge ; TITLE BY VACCINATION, Mr, and Mre. Bimon-fmolineky, who also call themeclves Mr, and Mrs. @imon, are frult dealers at Var Rockaway. They use thelr mames interchangeably and have in both, wee | ALL LINES TO BE CONNECTED} other conference of the directors of the.| ie ald that the ultimate purpose of Echt ate weelige vberam, SMR RAPID TRANSIT |BRIBE OF $2,500 N FOR TITUS, HE SAID (Continued from Firat Page.) expressed no regret that the docor had caught himself in hie own trap. eaid he never saw Capt. Titus or the $2,560. DR. R. C. FLOWER ARRESTED ON CHARGE OF SWINDLING. ‘The first warrant for the arrest of Dr. Flower was issued by Magistrate Barlow in the Centre Street Court upon a atatement made by Assistant District-Attorney Garvan tg Magistrate Barlow, in the Centre Street Court to-day, that there were 1,900 per- wong ready to charge Dr. R. C, Flower with grand larcenny for inducing them to invest in his mining compantes upon false representations. Dr. Flower, who ‘was present in court in response to a summons, was placed under arrest. His bat wae fixed at $2,000. Only a week ago Dr. Flower was called upon by the District-Attorney to tell of his relations with the late millionaire Theodore Hagaman. It stated that Dr. Flower had atten Hagaman during his last {llness in the capacity of physician, though he had no license to practice, and that after his death he came into possession of Nearly $200,000 of his money. As a re- sult of the District-Attorney's inquiry Hagaman's body will be exhumed and An autopsy performed itn order to dis- cover if his death was not due to un- toward causes. Dr. Flower was being arraigned before Magistrate Barlow on a simmons ob- tained by Mrs. Belle Gray Taylor, the author and leader in womens social and political organizations, who alleges he Induced her, through mlsrepresenta- tions, to invest $500 In one of his mining compa: Pald Two Dividends, The gist of her charge is that when she heard from two of her friends that their investments in the Arizona, East- ern and Montana Mining Comp: were Paying dividends of 2 per cent. @ month she called upon Dr. Flower and was Induced by his specious arguments to invest $500 in the mine. She got two 2 per cent. dividends, Then Dr. Flower per+ suaded her to exchange her etock for that of the Lone Pine Company. She did and the dividends ceased. Mrs, Gray ts Vice-President of the Professional Woman's League, a mem- ber of the Minerva Club, of the Na- tional Soctety of New England Women and the Soclety of Political Study, ®he is also the author of “Sardonx '@ book of verse, ‘Captive Con- celts’ and ‘Doris Plunkett.’' ®he was accompanied to court to-day by her lawyer, W. 8, Hart and Defec- tive MoConville, sumimoni case, Your Honor, Moss. fabricated out of this woman's cise. It {s @ matter that must necessarily come before the civil courts.” who had served the @ obtained upon Dr. Flower. Dr. Flower entered tho court-room with Lawyers Mose and Mills, of tho firm of Mills & Flower. later Assistant District-Attorney Gar- ven’ arrived and announced to Magis- trate Barlow that he would appear with Lawyer Hart for Mrs. Taylor. He then read the complaint telling of Mrs. Tay- lor’a investments. ‘ + ‘I can prove,” he said, “that the dividends paid out mining company were taken from the capital of the company, which was not earning @ cent at the time, this by Andrew D. Meloy, president of the vorporation.”’ A few minutes by this Arizona I can prove who was “That you can," spoke up Mr, Meloy, who had just rushed into the court- room. Dr, Flower turned upon his former co- worker in organizing mining companies aud You are a fine one to come here| hing tablets, was In the room. The against me after you have been ousted! bottle was empty and evidently all had from the company by a vote of the| becn plnced In the needle. stockholders.” ta: “There is absolutely nothing in this interposed Lawyer “No charge of any kind can be “That is not true,” returned Assistant Distriot-Atorney Garvan. This woman ts ‘only one of 1,200 pérsons who have been victimized by this man. whelming evidence that he induced this great number of persons to invest in his companies by faise representations. 1 ask that Your Honor issue a warrant for h ceny.’ We have over- arrest on a charge of grand lar- The bondswoman was Cornelia Storrs, of No. 8 East Thirty-ffth street, who js one of the largest stockholders in one of the Flower mining companies. She gave the property at Nos. 101 agd 108 Mulberry street as surety, Dr. Flower had furnished bail his ex- amination was set down for March 16, criminal Courts Building Dr. Flower went to the offices of Abe Hummel, hia counsel. It said that he would immediately bring eriminal 1 0) confirmea Flower returned to. the Disthietea tion: ney’s office and had a conferences with gape in the course of After After leaving the proceedings against Meloy, which he n affidavit against Meloy. M: HIS BACK BROKEN Louis Brodzak, a Wealthy Man, Before Falling Into Uncon- sciousness Accused a Trolley Motorman. HE’S EXPECTED TO DIE. Lying in Hudson Street Hospital un- conscious is Louls Brodgak, forty-five years old, a travelling salesman and a wealthy owning his own house at No, 2% East One Hundred and Eleventh Before he became unconscious he accused Motorman Henry Gleeman, of No. 147 Amsterdam avenue, of pushing him wolently off a south-bound Sixth street. avenue car at North Moore street and West Broadway to-day. The motorman and the conductor of the car, William Lee, of No. 876 West were arrested and Elghteenth street, locked up in the Leonard street station. is liked: “o have been broken, Before h: talcen to the hospital he told the that he had boarded the car a: Ho said ‘he was carrying « r tnt by the m Brodgak said, at the next corner, was North Moore a word af wernipg. he throwing tim into th EIGHT INDICTED ON INSURANCEFRAUDS Band of Italians Are Acoused of le, Swindling in Life Whole Policies, Indlotments were being those of mem. on whom insurance had been obtained. Four indictments were returned against Joseph Trepani, # Harem un- Gertaker, who is sald by the District- Mice to be the ringleader of the gang; four against Cirano, and one each against Dr, Fran- ceaco Mucol, Dr. Albert Lowelt, Loulma, Cloone, Cassameoro Cicone, M, G Pasca ooachman, Lawrence Gassney, ut between two ca: At the ‘hospital {t 1s said that Brodzak to die, as his spine is believed ‘ was tee each street. Then Without wold the returned by the Bartolome Moo pain At the rat H Cars at 125th Street, but She Jumped and Escaped Serious Injury. ‘ COACHMAN BADLY HURT. Mrs. John Lowery, sixty-five years old, f No, 21 West One Hundred and Twen- | | ty-firet street, suved herself from serious Injury to-day b; | presomge of mind and remarkable agility when ber carriage was overturned on West One Mundred and Twenty-fifth street by a collision with a trojley car, the dlaplay of great ‘The carriage, which was driven by her of No. East One Hundred and Twenty- nth street, was rounding the corner Bighth avenue Into One Hundred and ‘Twenty-fitth street, when it got caught ‘olng in opposite di rections. Mra, Lowery saw that an acl eldent was imminent and succeeded {/) Jumping out just as uf car struck th Tear wheel of the carriage and turngs it over, As It was, she fell to the ground between ‘several wagons standing in front of a market, and was badiy thrown from the carr badly about the head th taken to the J. Hood Wrigh | Mrs. Lowery was driven to her home in a cab, that were coachman was and cut so he had to be Hospital. bruised, Her re MRS, WHITING ILL; CAUSE MORPHINE, Artist and Literary Woman Taken to Bellevue in Serious Condition from Use of Drug. Mre. Charlotte Waiting, artist and iMerary woman, who has lived with her husband at No. 263 West One Hundred nd Twenty-seventh street, is vue Hoppital suffering from morphine poisoning, i taken b iT fee wae taben o be, heepltalaias the result ef en ovesdos intl) for gett **| Miss Anna M. Hildebrandt, Who | Was mentioned to him that Mi Pr, Gai would not disclose the nature of the affidavit. HRS. LOWERY’ CARB. UPSET Caught Between Two Trolley oeretiiers TOOK MORPH Shot Her Sweetheart and Was Deolared Guilty, Found Unconscious in Her Room. pa ay? Ra, DOCTORS SAVE HER LIFE. Though She Had Been Found Guilty by a Jury in the Essex County Court, She Had Not Been Sen- tenced, (Special to The Evening World.) ORANGE, N.J., March 12.—Miss Anna M. Hildebrandt, the trained nurse, who was convicted yesterday of atrocious aseatit and battery with Intent to kill her sweetheart, Benard J. MoCalllam, war foind in her room at No. 12 Oak- wood avenue, Orange, at noon to-day overcome by morphine, By her side was a large hypodermic needle, containing a portion of the poison In solution. An ompty vial, which had contained twenty quarter-grain mor- Miss Hildebrandt boarded at the Oak- Wood avenue house. It happened that Dr, Thomas W, Harvey had nh patient In the place, and when he called this morning shortly before noon the fact Hil- debrandt had not been seen during the jMorning, The physician advised that the police be notifed as her door was locked, Policeman Reinhardt picked the look and found the nurse clad only in her jmight dress lying on the couch. She jWas apparently asleep. | worked over her for a few.minutes and Dr. Harvey then had her sent to the Orange Me- morial H; tal. She has since revived, Mise Hildebrandt shot McCallam on July 1 last. She met him during the morning, asked ‘him to get her umbrella, which he had borrowed, from his board: ing house, and accompanied him there. Ashe was coming down the stairs with the umbrella she drew a revolver from ‘her bosom and shot him in the abdomen. He recovered and her trial has been held this week. Last night dict of ginity, the jury brought in a ver- = TANK EXPLODES: 3001N A PANE Employees in Brooklyn Hat. Fac- tory Rush Madly from Build- ing When They. Hear Loud Report in Basement. ALL ESCAPE UNINJURED, An explosion in the basement of the six-story hat factory of Samuel Men- heim, Flushing and Carlton avenues, Brooklyn, to-day, sent the 200 employees to the street in a panic. All of the basement windows on two aides of the building were blown out, a huge hole was torn in the floor of the basement and the ceiling was, punc- tured in a dozen places. The absence of employees from the vicinity of the explosion explained the report that none was injured, One of the frst employees to leave the bullding notified the police at the Claremont avenue station, and Sergt. Tracy, with fifteen policemen, ran to the bullding, While the employees, all of them men, pushed and shoved ¢ach other in their eagerness to leave the building, the police reported that there was no fighting and that all got out without injury, A clerk in ti ments were being made with a gas tank d that it had exploded. The police id @ gas engine in the basement had exploded, When the workmen saw there was no danger they returned to the factory, ————— SO ASKING QUESTIONS, An tuquiry Changed a Man’s Whole Life, When you ge’ man to recogni: that his bad feel: come from ime proper food and that he can get well by using sclentific food, the battle is palf won. One of New York's busi- it men says: ‘I was troubled for a long time with indigestion, headache and stom- ach trouble, and had taken various. medicines, but with no good results. T concluded to see how a change of food would affect me, I never cared particulesiy for cereals of any kind, ut ate meat and pastry continually bay Arak oars “I found on inquiring that Gre; Nuts were highly spoken of and Be. wes surprined atthe ies wes surp al result would not begin to do justice to my feel- ings. My headaches left. me; my brain became clearer and active; my attacks of indigestion grew. fewer and fewer wath they ceased entirely, e office sald that expert. | Tired Mother’s Touching Story of Anxiety and Suffering.’ Cuticura Brings Blessed Cure to SKin Tortured Baby and Peace and Rest to Its Worn Out Mother. {t is no wonder that Mrs. Helena Rath wns taken sick. Sin| handed, she did all the housework and washed, oooeen and me! for her husban to keep on her fee! took to her bed, Hans, and their six children, rs. Rath had to at followed she to! Pe ph 0 ield, and early in 1902 ai dita's visitor, wha Abd a8 her tidy home, No, 821 Tenth Ave., New York City. 1 “T hired @ girl to mind the chil- dren and to do whatever else she vould, Leouldn't stay in bed long. Sick as I was, it was easier for me to crawl around than to lie and worry about my little ones. So I got up after a few days, and let the girl go. I had noticed that sho had sores on her face, hands and arms, but I paid no attention to that until Charlie, my youngest, began to pick and seratch himself. He was then ten months old, and the girl ‘ad paid more attention to him than toany of the others. Charlie was fret- ful and cross, but as he was cutting teeth, I didn’t think much of that. Even when a rash broke out on his face I wasn't frightened, because everybody knows that that is quite common with teething babies. Sey- eral of my others had it when little, and I thought nothing about it, ‘But the rash on Charlie's poor little face spread to his neck, chest, and back. I had never seen any- thing quite like it before, The skin rose in little Tumps, and matter came out. My baby's skin was hot, and how he did suffer! He wouldn't eat, and night after night I walked the floor with him, weak as I was. Often. I had to stop because I felt faint and my back throbbed with pain. But the worst pain of all was to see my poor little boy burning with those ung sores. “I believed he had caught some disease from, the girl, but some of the neighbors said he had eczema, ‘and that is not catching, they told me. Yes, I gave him medicine, and it salves and things on him, I Boa't think they were all useless. Once ina while the itching seemed to let up a bit, but there was not much change for the better until a vote across the street asked me why idn't try the Outicura Remedies, Xi fold, her Epes 20 keer rae those things you about in the papers. She. said she didn't want me to go on faith nor even to spend any money at first. She gave me some Cuticura Ointment—[ think the box was about half full—and a Piece of Cuticura Soap. I followed the directions, bathing Chartle an@ putting that nice Ointment on the sores. “TI wouldn't have believed-that my baby would have been cured-by a Tittle thing like that. Notallofa sudden, mind you. Little by little, but so surely, Charlie and 1; both got more pence by day, and mort sleep by night. The sores sort dried up and went away. .1.shi never forget one blessed night whem I went. to bed with Charlie, beside me, as soon os I got the sup) dishes. out of the way and the older childrea undressed; when I woke up the sun was streaming in... For the first time in six months I had slept through the night without a break, a4 “Yes, that. fat little boy ‘by the window is Charlie, and hig skin is as white as a snowflake, thanks to the Cuticura Remedies.. L think everybody should -know about .the Soap and also the Ointment, and if it fs going to help: other. mothers with sick babies, Ro anoed and Dpub- lish what I have told you.” Aye MRS. HELENA RATH. The agonizing, itching and burning of the skin, as in eczema; the frightful scaling, as in psoriasis; the loss of hair and crusting of the scalp, as in-scalled head; the facial disfigurements, as in pimples. and ringworm; the awful suffering of infants and anxiety of worn-out parents,’as in'milk crust, tetter and salt rheum—all demand a remedy of almost superhurhan virtues to successfully cope with them, That Cuticura Soap, Ointnfent and Resolvent are such stands proven beyond all doubt. No statement is made regarding them that is not justified by the strongest evidénce. The purity and sweetness, the power to afford immediate relief, the cer- tainty of speedy and permanent cure, the absolute safety and great economy have made them the standard skin cures, » blood purifiers and humour remedies of the civilized worid, CUTICURA REMEDIES Resolvent, c.. er" bo: the Blood, Skin an at Lon sold throughout form of Chocolate nd Cuticura Soap, 26e, Scalp, and How to and Directions in all Depot, Bole Proprietors, Cutieurs ore civilised world, PRICES: ‘Be. per tablet, c ry Picea a "Testimon: h Laundry Wants—Fema'e. COLLAR GIRLS experienced in by hand; goed pay; regular hours. yt anied. Willow Tree SOLLAR AND CUFF G: Pallas fiaam Latur. 218° Us aves Hin stsshif? leo stcoug eitt to'work jnon's ean Laundry, hi) adehor ‘Sioa Laundry, Gat” way Hosery at ry CARL to weed the couster tm MMEYE 6TH AVE., COR, 20TH ST. | Closing Out Women’s Glove Department. 1,000 dozen, Women’s Finest:Gloves, Trefousse, Perrins, Adlers and Kayser makes, at less than half cost. Women’s Trefousse and Perrins Gloves; regular pricés- The Sita Glove, for Women, real kid, suede and mocha; ‘Cammeyer Princess Gloves, for Women, in fine import- ed kid, suede and cape skin; regular $1.00 stock........ Women's Cape and Dogskin Gloves, reduced from $1.25, ISO ONE BABU ADs soc carcancccetcrcenvcaceed sae Kayser Silk Gloves at half prices. collars ress Ry irri met be irsed erin. Lunde, ba’. ‘ino’ OY PERE SE eae 10 8 tone loveder, we 98 | Rattench, Ma

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