The evening world. Newspaper, March 23, 1903, Page 4

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The debian § Stabbed for Championing Girl in Trolley | Car Has High Fever and Is in a Critical Condition. BLOOD-POISONING IS FEARED Too Early Yet for Symptoms to Develop, but Physicians at His Bedside Are Watching His Case \ mith Apprehension. peseanowe rte) ‘The Iife of Assemblyman Frank Tl-| fich, who was stabbed by William Getteys, a bank clerk, whom he re- buked for arinoying Miss Caroline Hetteshelmer in a Reid avenue car last ‘Thureday night, hangs by a slen- ded thread. , When an Evening World reporter galled at his.home at Do Kalb avenue and. Stuyvesant streot, Willlamsburg, to-day two physicians’ and a nurse were in attendance at Mr. | Asemblyman's chances’ for life, as the |tme for symptoms of blood pisoning \ to appear had not arrived. | Many of the stab wounds Infiicted | | py the bank clerk are of a character | that usually develop gangrene, as the | ienite was driven in deeply and then | turned, tearing the tissues and mus. ‘eles, When Mr. Ulrich’s wounds were dressed by an ambulance surgeon shortly after the attack forty-four stitches were taken in the gashes @pout his neck and face. After he was taken home !t was found nevessary to take out many of the atitches and cleanse the wounds to minimize the} @erger of blood polsoning, This waa ‘accompanied by excructating - pain which exhausted much of the young man's strength. abe, Divalclans said to-day that Ul- passed a restless night and fsa a high fever due to the inflamma- tion of the wounds, SURE WAR NOW OPENED SOFT-GOALSMONE Ei, MURDER Ch Indictment Against the Doctor! has got as to drive clouds of Diack amoke over until he has stopped Jt altogethe He sald to-day ‘to Tho Evening Worl nulsance, Without these complaints he and his corps of inspectors will not be able to proceed with half the rapidity they otherwise can, and he expressed the hope that complaints would be for- warded to him at once. At no time, even when the coal senre- | ity was at Sts gravest, did Commisaloner {1 lo let up entirely in his activity inst the nulsance, but tho realized and ib nu that the conditions were abnori he therefore proceeded with ¢: ty, He and his inspectors, in charge jef Inspector H. E. Bramely, did a great deal of kindergarten work in the chimne Une of Soft Coal. Many factor t uhat thes: learned | thie might 8 nt be done, if care was taken in 1 ahers is no objection to! the sto thelr so doing, he law doas not con- teniplate foroidding the ves of watt coal. nuisance, whether {t arises from an- thracite ‘or bituminous. using soft coal UbHc ralse Jegtion. ‘They decide grin and bear it fot. comment tude of the Board of I game reason, The smoke nutsance, which {8 still with}montha, Spring has com fn burning @oft coal In auch a manner | the city, and he Intends to keep it a that he would weicome the complaints of | ¥3 citizens who were being subjected to the /{" teaching firemen how to use soft coal! so that little 1f any smoke escaped trom | it aims merely to prevent the smoke So long as there was any necosslty for | he E favorably hy the “atule fealth for the| 3 ‘The strike haa now been over for lit was before the wuriie bi ee ees “THER WORLD: MONDAY EVENING, MARCH 23, 19035, Health Commissioner Lederle Declares He Will Vigorouly Enforce the Law} Against Those Who Persist in Con- tinuing the Nuisance, mand hu H iders ‘and of a is coal ‘should be Urn of} = titittes an $n directed Me ely. free from a great mar up. xcuse for It when coal 16 as cheay) | 0 it Is now. Mow He Fights the Evil. “Tt should de understood, though, that the law ts not directed soft coal as 4 commodity. It ia directed morely at the nutpance caused by roft coal when d. Our mode of proc is When an inspector discovers a geae he reports it to the main offices, artinent then Ji an order of Eight hundred of these or- have been Lesued In the past your. Since March 1 we tvave had a ecore more of suits, where the orders have not been obeyed, and In almost all of them the courts have returned judg ments against the offenders. This has $50, Gost them in the neighborhood each. Generally speak’ howeve: orders are rnadily ode: “Phere are wo kinds of nulsances aniaing from thle smoke: One Iw where the smoke pours out and enters almost e still using soft coal |directly into the windows of houses |which” are inhabited, The other Whore the smoke somes rom factor n the sp and Wil only wend’ t ldepartment. ‘They rit will be ther own fault. fs to be no let ttude, n and to get the clty right LOOK OUT FOR YELLOW TICKETS iH You Expectorate on the Floor of a Street Car You Will Get One and Probably Won't Like It. 10 REBUKE A BAD HABIT. Tf you chance to ee when on a street ear to-day the conductor go up to a Man and pass him a yellow Ucket about three Inches long and an inch and a halt ‘mide, don't make the mistake of Uhink- ing that the railroad company has changed the color of tts transfers. Don't ask for one, If you want ono you can get it by, Just spitting on the floor. These yellow tickets are ‘spit- cards." \'Phey are’ warnings: Here Js ‘whatithey ery: You are violating the Jaw aguinst spitting. You are subject to a fine or imprisonment or both, By order of the Mie A Every time a person spits on thes floor of the car it is the duty of the condi tor to step vp, without a word, and| hand him or her one of the cards. It) will not only warn the passenger of his crime, bat it will notify every othe peesenger in the car that the individial fhas just offended against the law and against ducercy ‘Av yellow ticket is to be the cera 08| shame. Many a m: Jn the face as re see fers looking at him while he reads 8 Kolng to get red The tickets have just been distributed companies tn shis| Not all the to Dorough and in Brooklyn. eonductors have keen su Witty thousand more of the t being turned out at the printers, Dr. Lederie expects to have them soon in the hands of every ch in the city, He hopes to keep them out but the | Tatiroad companies have given thetr | men orders to pass them out to every| fellow who spits, and a good many of of the hands of the paxseng them are b It is expe to be distributed, ted that stra Of whirkey and mouths full of tobacco. FE Mill then be up to the volloe and the care of the situation created by the new method of ful thet the hospital authorities tot Feform in th Leder! auaineot the yellow Weer it heip fo'oure the evil and. as the street “¢ len have expressed shat. willin, news to 6 give the experiment a falr trial, partioula: very, hope! ting develoomenia’ with von: he is siderable interest, SHIPPING NEWS, ALMANAC FOR TO-DAY, Sus rises.. 6.01/8un sets. 6.15|Moon ris the other passea- y| shock has evide: things may happen on the Belt line cars and| @uqp other lines as are used by sturdy but unpolished citizens when the 1%] pound conductors begin passing out the curds to 200 pounders with stomachs full FELL TO DEATH IN FIRE PANIC. Woman Plunged from the Roof Down an Airshaft in Seeking to Escape from Trivial Flat- House Blaze. ‘One woman lost her Ife and another is in dagger of losing her reason as a result of a fire early to-day in tho five-story flat-house at No. 11% West Sixty-fitth street. The house was originally numbered "48," but the owner could find no one Promise numer. break the hoodoo, the tenants sald to- day, lamp exploded in the third-floor apart- ment of Mrs, Edna Wallace. Her hus- band was not at home, and she ran of the hous plunged th and fell fainting on the floor, Frank T Craig revived h and as Polle: fainted in his ari could not be rev! Hospital ambulance was summoned, off into hysterics, mind. Ki ryon, house, Miss Price led the way, and es sh plunged down an airshatt, of the alr well. | WRIGHT CAN'T GO Withdraw Extradition Proceedings and Permit Him to Return, | has declined to adopt Whitaker Wrigh suggemion that it withdraw the extr: dition proceedingy and allow him to own accord. ANOTHER MAY LOSE reason.| to live, rent free, in ft under that enumeration and he persuaded the Street Department to allow the com- The change did not At 4 o'clock this morning a kerosene screaming to m rear firc-escape and climbed down to the second-floor landing, ‘All the time she was screaming hyster- feally and quickly had all the occupants aroused. In her fright she ugh the window of the Kitohen of Mra, McCahe's apartment ney and Policeman an Craig handed her a glass of water she | This me she , and a Roosevelt After an hour's work Dr, Bull suc- FIREBUCS PUT SCORE IN PERIL. Women and Children Narrowly Escape Death in Furious Blaze Which Started in a Williams- burg Saloon. incendiary, reated and were arraigned in the Lee for life, Wooden structure was in flames, Henry Schwartz, of No, 1st avenue, was turning the corn non avenue and Middleton str and run down the street front window of the saloon, to Policeman Freestone, who was etand- ing on a corner about a block uway, and an alarm was sent in, The floor above the sa‘oon was cupled by Willlam Le. and ten children. ‘Th ceeded in reviving her, but she passed In the apartment of Robert Casey, on | the fourth floor, were two strikingly | Handsome young Swedish girle who stepped across she disappeared, haying | saloon. Her body | been dwand Martin, (we somersaulted down five stories and waa | dashed to pleces om the concrete paving BACK A FREE MAN. British Home Office Declines to LONDON, March 23.—The Home OMce tura to London from New York of his} Bamuel Untermyer, counsel for the privoner, has returned here from Berjin| No dam to him. Bhe did nd he caught tt | children. A Ket pant the Led on the fire escape, that the throm: nto help ers, After th ne sealing lac only a short t Fire Marshal tout tho fire rags. Schwarte told him of see The men are al eight, prietor of the saloon, and Brown, twenty-two, 2 Fire Mars! ried an ins pany. ———_—- but No Cae Was Hur was in ¢ » to-day with the Rule. The Columbia was the boat was siruck, but on erowded wh: the shock was not severe, . and the de- ing | miased ito-day by the object of our attack. ‘There {iT of the Court ot Ganieral Seastone, ‘The dismissal was granted on application of y Inhabited, outlying dis- The. former js of course oe poets n i : will ‘be attended ts at once. Tf the people don't complain TWO MEN HELD FOR ARSON. Twenty women and children narrowly escaped death early to-day in a @re at No. 119 Harrison avenue, Williamsburg, which the Fire Marshal declares was Two men have been ar- Avenue Police Court charged with ar- Son in the frat dogree, for which If jeonvieted they may be sent to prison ‘The fire started in the saloon under the building and was not discovered until the entire lower part of the he saw two men rush out of the saloon He stopped and waited for a few minutes, when he saw a sheet of flame burst out of the He called derman, his wite fund that the avenue of escape was by the fire- rrcape in the rear of the house, on ‘the blaze was rapidly encroach: Mrs. Lederman ts stout and as she to descend the Moe-cacape with her Phe physicians say the | S€Ven-montha-old baby she tripped and ly affected her so! 4#) decply that she is Ikely to lose her | When she recovered Policeman Free- |mtone calted to her to throw the baby two floors above the Ledermans | wero occitpted by Mr. and Mrs, Lemoke came to the place only a few days ago. | "nd thelr four three children and James Vhey were Eleanor Price and Aunie|and Catherine Schlepp and thelr tour Their peril was so great, es Whou aroused by the erlos they ran to) they could 1 a rear fire escape, climbed to the apart- ment apove and entered it through a| to abandon fighting th kitchen window, gained the hallway and! thelr at followed a number of tenants who were | making for the roof, ‘They reached the! roof, but were so frantically bent on e3- | caping the flames that they attempted!eq behind the var in a small closot, | to crows to the roof of an adjoining which was stuffed with kerosene. orn} lender. ‘I'he | ya learned that Martin car- | 9° une policy of $1,000 on the, sypposed stovk in tho place, which he jeased from the Congress Brewing Com- 'FERRY-BOAT RUNS INTO TUG. | (Passengers on Columbia Scared, doat Columbia, bound from| trouble returned. t, Brooklyn, to Grand street,! up Postum Food Coffee for my morn- Halon in mid-| ing beverage, and the heart trouble . T find Postum aids my digestion and has helped to build up e ioe ihe y my whole system. the fom the tig was moving slowly and iY ihpes'itienes to Ldaet was done to the Columbia, {und give it to my children, with the and is engaged in an exhaustive ra-|The passengers were alarmed and ex-| knowledge that It Is a powerful, de- search of the English law, in connection | cited for @ few moments, wih Wright's case and extradition | ugboat Golden wount of | The Golden | Helous liquid fo Rule backed away and was lost in the) Mictous poiso: fos, "spparently aot seriously damaged, Postum Oo Battle Creek, KENNEDY FREE OF Charging Him with the Mur- Last Dismissed. | Two Jurles then Disagreed and the Dismiseal of the Indictment by | Him from All Suspicion. \ The {indictment agatust 1 | Kennedy, who was tried th the murder of Dolly Reynolds tn the Qlutal on Aug. 16 Judge Cowing in Part Lawyer Robert Moore. Dr. Kennedy wag arrested for the murder of the Re: detectives had asc © acquainted, on the body of the woman was found jm check for a kirgo amount drawn to favor of Dr. Kennedy and signed with of Gideon, ory was that Dr, Kennedy had woman to. the bludgeon w the walstband of his tro coloration on the side of the leg Aiawers was ascribed by to this leaden ‘ludxeon. motive was to fecure possession of the oheck which the di said Dr Kennedy had given a year, beside “him, Another trial resulted, greement_ and Dr. aged on $10.00) ball rged ane \ ast foster dis- Ks ago und absolyes Dr. Kennedy "rom sus) LOST $7,000.00 BY CHANCED WILL Cut Off Relatives Owing to Financial Tangle and Left Property to Found a School. Arloch Wentworth, the Boston real es- called the Arioch Wentworth Industrial School. Mr. V Willoughby Stuart, and two grandsons, W. H, Stuart, jr, and Wenworth Erles- their nafather’ men ts awanted an annul will Js dated last Octobe The action of Mr, W his property to his daugh ing the disposition of hi tributed to trouble whic vertain flnancla his son-in-law ing as British Vice wealth 1s at- volved while |waa sent to the McLean Asylum for | treatment for mental trouble, Mrs, Stuart will contest the will BETTER SHOW For Her Children Than She Had, ing little ones, A lady of Atlanta, Ga., says: “My | mother was a slave to the whims of| tid the fire atart-) her children and let us € nything we called fo} coffee, Postum was discovered, was pertectly w “Beveral years later, | stimulant of coffee might benefit me, ) disappeared, “I now wu der of Dolly Reynolds Is at) CONVICTED AT ONE TRIAL.) Judge Cowing Legally Absolves Samuel J. | times for | was ds: | ds woman after | ened that they | In the corset cover ie detectives | eupposed | Boston Real Estate Magnate! TO FIGHT FOR THE MONEY. 308TON, March 23.—By the will of tate millionaire, which has been filed for probate in Salem, the estate, esti- mated at. $7,000,000, with the exception of a few annuttles, goes to found an tn- dustrial school. The institution 1s to be patworth left a daughter, Mrs. son, Thelr mother by the terms of annulty of $12.00, and eaok of th youn | y of $6,000, Nhe itworth, who | previously had made a will leaving all r, in chang- resulted from ‘onsul in Boston last | year and because of which Mr. Stuart They will do it because they don't think carefully, but parents who give coffee to children reap their own punishment in the puny, sickly look-| Mapy and many a child has been | started on the road to disease that | fended in death by being {mproperly | "| fed and given coffee, which is a rank poison to many a highly organized | down | human being. t it took t and drink| ticularly aked she gave us coffee, and lots of it, “1 grow up delicate, nervous, halt-| ing the two men rush out of the | sick and miserable, When I was| wed to have | jabout grown I began having serious | Pro- |epells with my heart, and my co ward ‘dition became so bad my frien cided I could not live long. At a} consultation of physicians one of the} |doctors proposed that | discontinue This was years ago, before I quit the coffee, and in a year or two my heart | nen | had a! jbome of my own, I iwagined that the jso I started in on it, and in a few | ‘days the old symptoms of heart I quit it and took inetead of a per- Name given by Mich. LOWEST PRICED STORE IN NEW YORK FOR FINE GOODS, Ehrich Bros. 6TH AVE,, 22D AND 23D STS., NEW YORK, The Millinery Continues To-morrow & Wednesday, Openin ————SS— W JHIEN the triumphs of to-day will be repeated } to more hosts of admiring women. The unequalled beauty of the Hats and Toques now on display here is drawing words of warmest commendation from all beholders; they recognize the creative genius of Paris and Lon- don in these masterpieces, and all are delighted at the very low prices prevailing, Magnificent creations imported to sell at $45.00 to $75.00 we offer during this opening at $25.00 to $45.00 each, Two days. more—Tuesday and Wednesday. The Enamel Ware and China Sale : which started to-day with the greatest vigor imag- inable, continues to-morrow and all this week. If you read of our phenomenal offers you will have some idea of the tremendous possibilities here for you in Enamelled Ware and China. In any event, a visit to our big basement will richly repay you. Enamel Ware—first qualities—going at about Half Regular Values. Chinaware at such prices as will aston- ish you. Other Tuesday Bargains Which are intended to transform that usually dull day into one of the busiest of the week. The offerings tell their own story; words cannot better them. Qc, for 15c. Madras. SPECIAL FOR TUESDAY—Madras—This fabric comes in white ground, with pretty biack dots and spots; it is this season's 9 greatest favorite, and usually sold for 15c.; to-morrow...... 76 39c._for 59c. Etamines. SPECIAL FOR TUESDAY—BEtamines, all wool and in a full range of colors, including Royal and Navy, Blue, Tan, Castor, Slate, Cardinal, Reseda, Pink, Light Blue, Cream and Black; value 39, 58c. yard, at..... sys c 2.95 for $4.50 Silk Waists, SPECIAL FOR TUESDAY—Fine white natural China Silk Waists, front prettily trimmed in lace insertion and small box platts, back has cluster of tucking and fancy stitching, large full sleeve 2 9 with lace-trimmed cuff; value $4.50, special.........es.000. oe 5 20c.for Babies’49c. Short Dresses —————————————— SPECIAL FOR TUESDAY—Bables' Short Dresses in Victoria Lawn, Mother Hubbard, hemstitched tucks and beading, with ribbon OQ, on yoke, sizes 6 months to 3 years; value 49c., f0F......06++..@7© Drop Ornaments at 1-3 Value. SPECIAL FOR TUESDAY--Stylish Drop Ornaments In a large variety of styles that cannot fall to satisfy alltastes—black and white silk in crochet and Milans, jet, spangle, black and steel mixed, &c. GROUP 1, regular price G0c. per dozen, at, per dozen. 15¢ GROUP 2, regular price 10c, and 1 each, at, each, 5c GROUP 3, regular price 15c, and 25c, each, at, each 10c GROUP 4, regular price 26c, and 50c, each, at, each.-+..-- 15¢ 1.00 for Boys’ $3.00 Suits, SPECIAL FOR TUESDAY—Several hundred Boys’ Suits, including double-breasted styles, ages 7 to 15 years, and natty Sailor Suite, ages 3 to 6 years, all colors, reduced from $2.50 and $3.00, to sell | .00 to-morrow (none sent C. O. D.—no mail orders) at,.. 88c. for $2.75 Corsets. SPECIAL FOR TUESDAY—C. B. a la Spirlte Straight Front COR- SETS (seconds), made in very fine white coutil, bias cut, lace trimmed Lop and bottom, some with low bust and long over abdo- men, low bust and short hip; all the latest models, but not all sizes in each style; quite a variety to select from; also the “NEW COR- SETS,” made in coutil, with dip hip and garters attached, 88 in white only, value $1.50 to §2.75 I} 21c.for Women’s 75c, Neckwear. SPECIAL FOR TUESDAY—A lot of net and Point d’Esprit Ties ‘and Bobs, about 25 styles to choose from, Worth 60c, to 21 7c. each. Your cholee. (4 15¢. for Women’s 25c, Hose. — OOO SPECIAL FOR TUESDAY—Women’s and Misses’ Lace Lisle Hose; the women’s hose are made with double soles, full fashioned; a large variety of the latest lace designs; the misses’ hose are of mercer- {zed allk, in lace open work, with Ince down the toe and double soles; all sizes; would be cheap at 25c, = pair; 15¢ COPMOFFOW crrecceessnereeee vaeeresepesesens oe 79c. for $1.25 Petticoats. ——$$<—$—$————————— -— CI14L FOR TUESDAY—Hlack Sateen and Spun Taffeta PETTI- BTCOATS. full width—in various styles, some trimmed with deep rau ted accordion-plaited flounce finished with small tucked rufie —others trimmed with 8-stitched ruffles—and numerous * 79¢ others—values $1.00 and $1.25, for.......+ 1 5¢.for22c.Satin Taffeta Ri bbon. —————— HCIAL Ryd TUBSDAY—2,500 pes. fine quality satin taffeta RIB- bass ches wide, soft finish, colors white, cream, light 15¢ blu pink, cardinal and black; value 22, yd,, at. SPECIALS FROM OUR GREAT THE RAINY DAY SPECIAL UMBRELLA, MEN AND WOMEN, 26 AND 28 INCH SIZES, Warranted fast black cotton—English Gloria and Mercerized Twill—with cas are plain wood large and goods cannot be duplicated anywhere in Americ: EXCEPTIONALLY FINE CLOSE - ROLLING SILK UNBRELLAS FOR MEN AND WO! INCH SIZES, AT ‘ Tea Spoons, dozen.,1.85 Table Spoons, doz. Medium Forks, do Pickle Forks, each Sao 108d) Table Spoons, per doz 3.80 Spoons, Triple Plate, per| go Dessert Forks, per doz. Orange Spoons, per Orange Spoons, Gilt, Table Butter Knives, Pie Knives, each Romanesque Frui Engraving done while you wait. ere eran te os ee ON SALE TUESDAY MORNING, MARCH 24TH. 150 Men’s « Youths’ o Coats «» Coats « Vests Broken lines from suits; all sizes 34 to 44 in regulars, The materials are blue and black and fine fancy dark mixed Cheviots and Cassimeres. Coats *3°° MEN’S and YOUTHS’ TROUSERS, in fine Cassimere, Black Thibet and Fancy Wor- sted, 30 to 50 waist measurement, at, per Pall. ce vere cene seveesicerececccs stouts and slims. Garertnecerenenentnenenenene: onene: Mail orders Dry filled, Adamse.Co: 6TH AVE,, 21ST AND 22D STS., N. Y. UMBRELLA SALE! FOR AT “Paragon” frames and steel rods—handles nd “fancy silver trimmed—the assortment ¥ + 26 AND 28 , tape edge—Tatte Ik Serge, hemmed edge-—the men’s carry-all eight-rib ’ frames and the women's are serviceable umbrellas. for personal use. Box, Furze, Wei Root and fancy bends. in fancy imported and domestic designs. WOMEN’S UMBRELLAS, MADE OF PIECE DYED TAFFETA SILK ON “PARAGON” FRAISIES, Neds STEEL RODS..... ‘The handles are of pearl and Sterling S bends, with mounts of partridge wood, The cost of the she ae to import is equal to the price we ask for the complete umbrella. a ee er arene eer eee re os eer eres Set Silver-Plated Tableware|: including the famous 1847 Rogers Bros,’ and the celebrated Meriden Each and every article is stamped with the maker’s name and trade- A sale of these well-known makes of goods at regular prices would attract widespread attention at any time. THAN WHOL E Spoon Holders, &c., at Dessert Forks, doz.3. 30 Berry ROSES: doz. ‘Sugar Shells, each. “0c 1847 Rogers Bros.’ “Lotus” Brandf! Tea Spoons, per do: “3:80 [Medium "vor er ots | Medium Forks, riple "3. 30 oie Spoors, :4.00 | Coffee Spoons, Gilt, per doz SAVOY AND ROMANESQUE. > per do Coats & $ Vests eee QUAKER GUARAN: rus PAINLIS EXTRA ecy department, avery modern appliance ‘Seomot atte f" nd quick "hou Sets of Teeth sx Gold Crowns Quaker Crown, Bridge and Plate Work Hours: 9 A. Mto9P. M, QUAKER DENTAL “SOCIETY,| ” 44 East Adth Sto | NEAR B'WAY, N. Soeur $3/Gold Filling Sundays 9 to 4. ORL -MANAS nc vy lopedia ib “Paragon” frames. This is the style that a man or woman will_purchas§e: he handles are plain and rich—made of tine imported ichsel and selected English Ash, in Prince of Wales, There are also some Sterling Silyer mounted handle gd Serelat a Britannia Co.’s_ goods. This sale AT LESS COST jis creating a great sensation. througt excepti Pip energetic efforts that we are enabled to make The quantity ot goods is I:mited, hence the necessity of making an early Selection is imperative. Tea and Coffee Pots at 2.951, | Our Special Lot of Meriden Britannia Co. Tea and Coffee Pots, in various assorted designs of chased and engraved patterns. One lot of Individual Casters, Marmalade Jars, Small Tea Pots, Caddies, Sugar Bowls, Cream Pitchers, 1847 Rogers Bros.’ “Portland” Brandt? Tea 1. Po, Sugar Sifters, each. Salt Spoons, each Fish Knives, cach. .1« ‘5 per | Ice Cream Spouns, Gilt, per doz. 00] Ice Cream Spoons, plain, per doz. Triple Plate, eac hoe Ice Cream Spoons, Gilt, Triple Sugar Shells, Gilt, Triple Plate, each 50c per doz........ Sugar Shells, each. 0c] Fruit Forks, per doz. 1847 Rogers Bros.’ “Vesta” Brand! pe aes poe ee = . +, $1.00) Dessert Forks, per doz. Savoy Asparagus Tongs, pé Three script letters free of charge. atnanenenene 7.00 it: THIS WEEK ONLY OUR RULE Perfect Work Painless Process Popular Prices s-- = QUAKER hep rete ae raee Pause ARSE i ear QUAL Hite dited “wih QUAICHR DOUBI muperior to aay 2s $3 Bridge ‘Work em 4 % ‘ts @ lifetime. Ali Work Gusramt German Spoken,

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