The evening world. Newspaper, March 30, 1903, Page 3

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, be AVS WIFE OF |WOMAN SLEUTH [MISS LOFTUS HAS SCAMP HUSBAND; ‘ON THIEF HUNT.| LICENSE TO WED Relative of ex-Mayor Van Wyck, \ Who Was Deceived in Man ‘She Met on Steamship, Can- not Be Freed from Him. (NAME FALSE, STORY UNTRUE. MaoLean Holds that, While \\ Man May Have Been a Scoundrel, ‘That Fact Alone Does Not Justify @ Legal Separation. ——s ‘Mrs, Elizabeth H. Freeiand,” @ rela- Ave of ex-Mayor Van Wyck, who dis- wovered that the ‘‘Nelson U. Foster, son ‘ef @ Callfornia millionaire,” who had : assembt- ‘age, wes really “Captain” Albert N. “Freeland, with a record In South Caro- ‘tina, was denied an annulment of the marrage by Supreme Court Justice Mac- Lean to-day. ‘Miss EMzabeth H. Wickes, of Orange, . J., while returning from a trip ‘around the world last summer, was fas- cinated by a tall, soldierly man of mid- | @le age and distinguished bearing, who S twas a fellow-passenger. He introuced Qimself as “Nelson U. Foster, of Call- fornia,” and high up in railroad mat- ters—a magnate. They were married in Grace Church Oct. 16 by the Rey. Poe Dary, the incited guests including Mr, and Mrs. Augustus Van Wyck and the Misses Van Wyok, ex-Mayor Robert A. ‘Van Wyck, the Hewletts, the Newberry Lawtons, the Olier Livingston Joneses, and. Brooklyn and Manhattan soclety- at-large. | Brother Discovered Deception. (4A few days later the bride's brother, ‘Albert E. Wickes, discovered that ‘‘Fos- ter” was no other than “Captain” Al- ‘bert N. Freeland, a former road master fm South Carolina and a widower with rown-up children. He disappeared, and the stricken bride brought sult for an- pulment of the marriage for fraud and Meception. Justice MacLean denies a decree, say- Rng ft is not a material deception to say you are of good standing in the railroad ®usiness when you are not; in this free fountry to say you are a bachelor when roe are are a widower with a lot of chil- to strut about like a mililon- ig you haven't got a cent, or : “even to travel under a fictitious name lous mili! title in a Ss eel en laws peehl individual ‘olces, de, according to Justice ma: “the conduct of a scamp,” but not ufioient to warrant an annul- marriage on, the petition of the ot eels aiacienn eos in his decision: Judgment Not Warranted. “Making the zooet ss of the evidence # far ex-parte, sufficient shown to warrant e judgment the marriage. The defendant's ‘ag not in of a very high character, and that wiew of Ciecaed relative of the plain- oo was man of ver proposing ‘ s looked tke a thorougi’ nnd man of the world. who had of means to support himself and wife, are only showings of the ‘which truly, according to! and even high ecclesiastical the world's poopie commonly fact; but ‘which cannot be counied as } it iu the courts, which might ren- . e' “Conduct of vn pan “The imposition practiced of aname other than that bis parents and barne during his le’ previous career, cannot be con- ‘an offense in this forum, ‘where- ‘under a ‘iiberai statute’ individual and change are recognized even trary assumption of names, gon in matiers of y facts which in y have passed his wife in ing way, are . but not incl- sin; jerives lions of sub-di- of the Code of PUT UNDER BONDS, aN _ Bondition of Woman He Run Down with Automobile Said to Be Very Serious. (Albert B, Gallatin, of No, % Gramercy , who ran down Mrs. Mary Cusick, eight years oli, with his automo- at Madison avenue and Forty-ninth yesterday, inflicting serious in- wes arraigned to-day in the forkeville Court, ‘The young man declared that he was unning his machine at reduced speed at ae secident aad had called to the woman to look out. to stop the auto before 4 y fa feolier Ran Into Wagen and Vic- | tims Were Huried trom Senta, Me Third avenue car collided with an She Captures One Man in the Belief that He Stole Her Silver Wedding Gifts, but He Goes Free. WILL SEE CAPT. M’CLUSKY. Police In Her Precinct Are Not Ac- tlve Enough to Suit Her and She Is Determined to Lay the Case Before the Inspector. If Commissioner Greene had a fow de- tecttves in hie department as persistent as Mrs. Marie L. Ryan, wife of a broker, of No. 11M Franklin avenue, the number of crovks who escape the law Woun! be lessened oonaiterably. She turned sleuth lest Tuesday when her home was robbed of $100 worth of wilver wedding presents because she thought the police were not showing the interest tn the case she believed they shoul. As @ result of her Sheriooking Richard Ahlert, a young glazier, em- ployed by Marx Bros., Third avenue and One Hundred and Fifty-thind street, was arraigned for the crime to-day in the Morrisania Court, but wan @s- charged. Mrs. Ryan says that she will take the case to Inspector MoClusky and find out $f he can't do something more with it than the police of her precinct. Police tn Ne Harry, Mrs. Ryan declares that when she tn- formed the Morrisania police of the crime they received !t with such equanimity that she decided to turn sleuth. She got a line on a man Ine fumes thd Mavens ME Tea naae After that every one wearing those ar- ticles of apparel or anytht: ike een wae the object of Mrs. ‘Ryan ne ing glance. “Hind bim, get the burglar,’ she ar sued. hor_{ tions in the block a mh hes pvesten: in peste coe man of this desor Tne’ Greil leading from the house next | eral ocr. No. 1194. fe had called there on afternoon, of the burglary and told he tenants ced he en sent the agent to re-putty all the windows. After working for upward of an hour he lott, saying thet he had made a mis- take in the He should have gone to No. 114. feiaia, Bg,” He promised to satura ee in fay and replace Pp y Bigeian day, _— in « Slonch Hat. ai aes aetag feat, iad 61: sh jumper ing mmr noch a Ae ite yeceraay and pte) she went for a poltceman, her companion remained to watch-the work- man. by Cer oe. first eal chance of her A few minutes later bills from the basement door “tl with a funeral procession, pened to be Mrs. ig aie. Site "The euspect to his heels and alled. for help! ]usily. A Het ee olgeman inowien Mars ide, that the led. Marx Bros. fisoner Was, employed by them; that hey had sent him to No. 1144; that he for " ee ar not beltevs or 1194 an could not jeve that he was guilty. their evidence he was discharg “But ‘Il hot mt stop here with the oase.’ as she left the ore Headquarters now ani can't do something. Mrs. room. ae if Tin going to eet my, sllverware and that's all, ps npn eo or no pose HIS RASHNESS COST Hd LIFE. Deputy Register Bohmer, Was on the Way to Recovery When He Exposed Himself to the Elements. hg 11 go 30 0 to CAUGHT A FATAL COLD. Deputy Register Ferdinand Bohmer died to-day in the Presbyterian Hos- pital, where he had been for several weeks, having gone there to have an operation performed for appendicitis. The operation was successful, but Mr. Bohmer presumed ¢00 much on his strength and went out on the roof of the hospital a few days ago. It grew cold quite suddenly, and when Mr, Boh- mer returned to his room he was selzed In It Appears the Mysterious Name “J. H. McCarthy,” and the Actress’s Friends Won- der If He’s Her Ex-Husband. SHE GOES TO BALTIMORE. “l'm Not Golng to Get Married at All,” Quoth She with a Blush and Then Adds that “She Can't Help Liking Justin.” Hugging © marringe Meanse and @ weoret to her breast, Cecelia Loftus, leading woman with B. H. Sothern, has taken herself to Baltimore, leaving her New York friends to wonder whether the J. H. MoCarthy with whom she im legally Noensed to wed is her for mer husband, Justin Huntley McCarthy, the playwright, or some other similarly ‘nittalled MoCarthy with whom Mise Loftus te not eo well acquainted, Tt ts argued by perplexed friends of the erwtwhile ‘‘Cissy’’ that tf she ae- cured the lioense for the purpose of once more gaining possession of the author of “If I Were King,” she evidently in- tends keeping it in cold etorage for ewhile, as tt ts said the ex-husband Moesnit happen to be in this country. Before leaving town Miss Loftus was provokingly mysterious concerning her matrimonial plans, “I'm not going to get married at all,” she pares ae she blushed as she bar thia an: pulled down her When e ake it the Ratt aiked "her former ie husband, “Avy, of ooures: ‘No ‘one could help Wing Justin. He was really very nice to mene in mi ys." of these ways, it 1s remem’ ered Wer ti Gediteen er Leta Hi Tain eet tottan tae oat ne! tiful woman in the world'’—or words to that Miss Loftus and Mr. thy eloped wien, te they were married at Kdin- burgh, . 98, 1893. ‘Thet followed in Nore Yori on “Apri a Yee, Mies Lottus the decree Binoe thelr thelr. eparatlgy it has been gen- eral ced that Miss Loftus should ‘gon! pear in the play wi Bir. MoCariny mrote for er. He" saeo career, before her identification with th Tending feminine role in “If 1. Were she was chiefly y, noted for imitations In’ vaudevi prominent actors and actresses. IRON STAIRWAYS AS LIFE-SAVERS pbs es Grocer Dropped Match in Oil Can and Tenants on Floors Above Had Narrow Escapes in Fierce Blaze. «:|FIRST CAME AN EXPLOSION. Stone and iron stairways and landings 4n the tenement-house at Nos. 220 and 222 Sullivan street prevented heavy losw of Tife in @ fire that occurred in the duflding to-day, The dullding ts five stories high and when it started there were thirt, women and chtldren in the various flats, Pinias Giddeno had a ¢rocery store on the ground floor. A matoh broke as he Mt and the burning end fell into a can of o!l under the counter. There was an explosion and the whole store was atlaze In a minute, Pottceman Devan- ney, of the Mercer Street Station, was on the corner, After turning in an alarm ‘he rushed to whe fire and started up the stairway. Meantime the stock of Giddeno's grocery store was produc- ing, a thick smoke that smelled like vapor from Gehenna. Mre. Camilo Roger and her infant were in the flat directly over the gto- cery, Devanney heard her screaming and had to break the door to get to her. fe fonna’t her just about to jump out of the window, her baby in arms. After carrying her downeteirs he ‘went through the bullaing, helping the ten- ants to safety. None was injured. All at remains of the grocery of Giddeno thet oppresses the entire an odor Bniivornon COURT THINKS HE'S with @ chill chat developed into pleurisy, which, with other complications, resulted in his death, The news of his demise came as & whock to hig associates, as It was sup- posed that be was well on the road to recovery. Mr, Bohmer avas about fitty-five years old, and for years had been a resident of the Bronx, where he took an active part in pubic affairs, He @ veteran of the Cill War and eli known in politioal circles. He Deguaee to eave to geve: organizations and was t thi vee leaves a widow and three deugh: TROLLEY OFFICERS PLEAD. |W ive of the Men Indicted for the Newark Wreck Say Not Guilty, NUWARK, N. J., March 30.—Five of the men indicted for manslaughter in gonnection with the trolley car wreck on Feb, 9, which resulted in the death of nine High School pupils, appeared before Judge Skinner in the Court of Sessions this afternoon to answer the change against them, ‘They were of the North Jersey Street Railway Com pany; Dayid Young, vice-president end THE TOUGHEST BOY Frank Haley, Out on Parole, Makes Vicious Attack on Policeman and Probationary Officer. Frank Haley, sixteen years old, of No. 16 Leroy street, was pronounced by the Justices of Special Sessions to-day the boy ever brought into that toughest court. A week ago Haley was arraigned in Special Sessions charged with petty lar- He was paroled with instructions ceny. to report Graveur. ve to Probationary Officer out Graveur caled a polloeman, and when the policeman atetod the box” knocked (e) i wn and then | upon the Raton cliger wiih s chne it hid two If an hour to subdue him, ww to fot Criminal) Court boy, bandcuffed He did not repo and Gra- er went to his home this afternoon. We found the boy who told him to get out of his house er he would He thrown OK fnaine ul between | sic ene CIRL'S SUITOR STABS UNCLE Young Italian, Thrown Out of Place, Draws Knife and Fa- tally Wounds the Man Who Ejected Him. IS CAPTURED AFTER CHASE. Dominick Carmacin!, forty-nine years old, a well-to-do baker, of No. 836 Hast One Hundred and Sixth street, was ta- tally stabbed this afternoon by Salvatore’ Seni twenty-seven years old, efter & quarre!, in which Senat accused the older man of having blighted his life by not allowing him to press his sult for the hand of Marle Btaccat!, the baker's niece, Marte, who is eeventeen years old, came to visit her uncle several months ago. It was not long before all the young bloods of the Italfan quarter were flocking to the bakery. Salvatore, who, according to Qarmacini, wes a ne'er-do-well, was the most ardent sultor of them all. A short time ago © was forbidden to come near the store, and in order to avoid trouble Marie was sent to her home in Pater- gon, To-day the young man called and asked to see her. ‘The baker and Ms son4n-law, Anthony Dragatelle, ejected tim. When ‘he got out into the street Benat drew a knife and stabbed Carma- clint in the left side, inflicting a mortal wound. Then he fled toward iis home at No. 68 East One Hundred and Fifth street, pursued by @ crowd of several hundred. He was caught just as he was entering the house aye Polfeeman Str: of the Bast One Hundred and Fourth ‘Street 8 i Carmicini was taken to the Harlem Hospital, and when he recovered con- sdtousness identified the young Italian a his assailant. The doctors at the hompltal expect him to dle any moment, TOLD MAGISTRATE HED KILL MAN YET Arrested for Attempt, Susso De- clares in Court He Made Vow to Avenge Wrong Done Sister. Vincenszo Susso, twenty-six, of No. Thompson street, was committed to the Tombs to-day by Magistrate Pool ia the Centre Street Court in $1,000 ball on a charge Jonious assault, ‘The complaint was made ‘through Po- icoman Henerman, ‘of the. Mulberry reet Station, who declared that he ad seen Busso go up to Joseph Estarto, of No. 311 Thompeon stroet. = (4 and attempt to cut hls hrc ith a razor, arto is in Bt ent's Hospital “That's ent Your Honor,” said the rigoner, I had been looking for him for ame ‘ears to kill him. He brought Bt dingrace. 0: on our amily, ruining the'iite of my sister. 1 yowed that | would Will him, and I will.* a WOMAN SHOOTS AT FRENCH WRITER. Marcel Prevost Faced Several Shots from Revolver, Aimed by His Assailant, LONDON, Merch .-A spatch m Paris announces that a qwomap fired several shots from a revolver to-day at Murcel Prevom, the well-known French writer, Marcel Prevort le @ brilliant writer won tf also as dramatist He reported | he American canaeee wie wa of the specia! de WHO HAS CHARGES UNCLE WAS MURDERED J. C. Pardee, of Brooklyn, Offers $2,000 Reward for Convic- tion of Slayers of His Rela-| tive at Tarrytown. BUT HIS STORY IS DENIED. J. C. Pardee, of No. 1242 Fulton Street, Brookiyn, has offered a reward ‘of $2,000 for the arrest and conviction of the murderers of his uncle, Ezekiel Bevier, an aged and wealthy farmer of Millwood, near Tarrypown, Weet- chester County. The offer of the reward is the first who was buried Feb. 27 on a certificate indicating that death had resulted from natural paralyais. Mr. Pardee says that instead of ahing fram paralysis his uncle was muniered; thet his head was crushed, and that when found in his house, where he lived as a lone bachelor, ‘ne was un- conscious, and there were Indications that the house been thoroughly searched, Mr. Pardee believes that his uncle was beaten, left for dead and then robbed. He has notified the Tarry- town and White Plains officials of his offer of a reward of $2,000 and has lald| before them the facts he has secured. At Tarrytown it was sald to-day that | Bevier was brought from the farm of which be was caretaker to a, private h ital in that city, where he was at- Dr. Preeiand, He had sus- troke of apoplexy, and aye there Was no evidence of ra> Camille Devo, of No. venue, Tarrytown, a coumin of the dead man, who went tothe farin when she was notified that Mr. Bevier needed attendance, showed no signs of having been as- saulted. THE WORLD: MONDAY EVENING, MARCH 20, 1903. |MISS CECELIA LOFTUS, A MYSTERIOUS LICENSE TO WED PRES, ROGERS EXPLAINS BILL Resents Mr. Conkling’s Charge | of Double Dealing Against Board. of Education in Regard to Teachers’ Removals. WHY AMENDMENT OFFERED. Designed to Improve Methode of Ad- ministration, but Was Not Re- garded as Vital and So Was Sacri- ficed When Opposed. Henry A. Rogers, President of the Board of Paucation, gave out a state- ment today regarding the Contdling bill. He declared that he had not Intended to say anything for publication in re- gard to the moasure, especially na the Board of Education hed approved it, but wes tmpelled to break his silence by the statements attributed to Mr. Conkling charging the Boar! of Educa- tion with double dealing. The proposed amendment enlarging the powers of the Board of Paucation in regard to the removal of teachers ‘upon charges was prepared at his dis- cretion, says Mr. Rogers, with a view to Improving the methods of adminis- tration. Under the Consolidation Act of 188, any teacher could 6e removed by the Board of Bducation upon the recom- mendation of the City Superintendent, or of @ majority of the trustees of the ward, or of A majority of the inspec- tors for the district, by @ vote of three- fourths of all the members of the Board. “T had not supposed,” said Mr. Rowe In his statement, ‘until the recent crit!- clsm that anybody bdelleved that the Board of Education could rot be trusted In my experience of many year IT have never known a teacher to be removed un- justly, and the present Board as well deserves confidence as any of its prede- cessors, and could be entrusted with the function of passing reasonable by-4aws providing additional grounds for the re- moval of teachers. It was in view of these arguments that the letters reoom- mending the bill were written and the re- Jquest made for Its Introduction. Al- though the arguments referred to appeal forcibly to me I do not regard the mat- ter as one of vital fmportance, and on learning that the amendment was eo @enerally misunderstood, and that so much opposition had been developed to t. I wrote Mr, Conkling authorizing him to withdraw the section of the bill to which exception had been taken. I also wrote BICAMY COMMO CRIME THEY SAY Philip Schneider Is Charged with; AsZack ig Having Four Wives and He- brew Alliance Says There Are Many Such on East Side. CRUSADE IS NOW BEGUN. Women Are Ignorant of the Law and Do Not Know that They Can Have Deserting Husbande Punished, Philip Schneider, although only thirty- elght years old, is charged with having four wives. He was arraigned before Justice Mayer In the Court of Special Sessions this morning and held in $2,500 ball for examination on Wednesday, The arrest was made by three men from Capt. Langan's detective staff after the oMcers of the Hebrew Educational Alilance had complained of the case to the District-Attorney’s office. Leonard Rabbino, a lawyer for the Alliance, told the District-Attorney that he and other educational workers had found an alarm- ing number of bigamists on the crowded Bast Bide, and he asked that this case be taken up as the first step toward @ genera! prosecution. Mrs. Schnelier, the first, appeared against him in court this morning and will continue to press the charge. She lives with her four children at No. 98 Willard street. Her story to the officers of the Alliance is that she was married to Schneider in Austria nineteen years ago. ‘They Myed together for six years, he says, when he came to the United States and ‘left her behind. She followed some years later and has been making her own Hving, not knowing that she could prosecute ‘her husband by “law, Wite it ts said, lives at No, 599 Rast Twelfth street, with two ohildren, The detectives say she was deserted several yours ag to live in Madison s dren, while the pr= lvea' with him at No, as @red and Thirty-tfth street, Schnelder pleaded not guilty arraigned. Justice Mayer heard the testimony of the detectiove and, placed the ‘bond at $2,500. had no bondsmen and was Famanded to; the mids. Yhen the Hebrew Educational Alli- ance started its Investigation several months ago its agents found an alarin- ing condition. It ls sald by them that hundrede of women and thelr chikiren pe been deserted by men who take tves and go to live in another part oe the olty, In most cases the women are ignorant and do not know that their husbands are compelled by law to care for them. ‘They often suffer great privations and the ohildren almost starve. It is to put to the Chairman of the Cities Committee to the same effect. Subsequently the Board of Education unanimously adopted @ resolution approving the bill in all bs and recomm that this seo- ‘ton pe witndrawn. Statement. sald y Mr. I and other officers of ucation ‘importuyed’ him to In- troduce the bill is erroneous. I have had no correspondence with ‘Mr. Conk: lng exoept a telegram sent ‘one received from him on the section oot the bill’ re- to the apportionment of the special echool fund, anda letter, which IT sent him on the 23d instant, asking him to withdraw the features of the bill objected to.” CASE AGAINST MELOY IS DISMISSED BY COURT Conklin; the Bi The cape witch has been pending for several weeks against Andrew D. Meloy, who {n 1903 was President of Andrew D. Meloy & Co, brokers, at No. 2 Broad street, was dismissed by Magis- trate Crane, in the Essex Market Po- Mee Court to-day. Several weeks ago charges of larceny were made against Meloy on complaint of John B. Manfull, The undertaker who had charge of the body betore It was taieen ‘to the New. | easurer of the Meloy concern, charg- baits Cemetery for interment. rms| ing him with witbostine corcastes the statement of Dr, Freeland and Mrs. PE wtook Ot the which, ier ad were = ae pean of the ne tmp, in his complaint, alleged that other stock of this same ‘company had been purchased by Richas Hower SOUGHT 10. LYNCH GIRL'S ASSAILANT. Police Save Archibald Bealler from the Wrath of Angry Neighbors. Arohtbald F. Bealler, twenty-one yenra old, of No, 97 Ninth etrect, Jersey City, was held for the Grand Jury without ball by Judge Hoos in the Gregory Street Court to-day charged with an assault upon Dela Roberts, twelve years old, of No, City. The gist said that Beailer, whem #he seen before, met her in Hen dereon street and told her that a wom- an at No, 661 Henderson street wanted "The girl unsuspectingly en- tered the house, and was followed by who dragged her into a room and threatened to kill her if she made After he had left her she bad nm to see her. Bealler, an outery. went home and told her mother. Bealler was captured by Detective Lee in & swamp near Elghteonth street, He was threatened with lynching by some but the police man- of his pursuers, aged to get him safely to the station- house. The police say that Bealler has married, KILLED WHILE ROBBING, Shot Negro He NORWOOD, R. running fight ac the farm of W. H. Earl trere early to-day Henry Cole, « negro, wee shot and killed while in the act of 172 Higbteonth street, Jersey made a full confession, The prisoner ts) a8 snemipers ot Bia family, a oneph who appeared as coun- gel for Manfull, had @ conference with strate Crane to-da: sod asked to wit aay the charge. mate Crane, comp! wi request an > missed the complaint, a —— olds Jersey School Law. (Boccia! to The Brening World.) TRENTON, N. J., March 8.—Justice Dixon this morning filed an opinion tn the Supreme Court declaring the New Jersey school law constitutional. The Was passed last year and known as McKee act, UD Ouenalf glass HUNYADI JANOS takes on arising gives prompt aud pleasant retiel from Coustipation and Liver Complaint, TRY ITS an end to this evil that the Hebrew Al- Vance has become active. BROKER ELLINAN RELEASED FROM JAIL}, Woman Who Accused Him of Ap- propriating Her Stocks and Bond Withdraws Suit. Wmilem 3B, Ellinan, a Manhattan iprokee,, ls on Maple avenue, Flush- Was arrested March 2 on com- pinto of Mary I. Nichols, who acctised of having converted to his own tse stacks and ponds belonging to her. was released to-day from the Queens County Jaf] by Sheriff De Bragga on an order invued by Supreme Gourt Justice Green- R. H, Macy & Co.'s Attractions Are Their Low Prices. atyS Bway at 6th Ave, Visit Our New Dressmaking Dep't Under the Directions of a Parisian Modiste. Tuesday, Ma Mi arch Eh Sale a # ; he A, 3,000 Yards Imported Satin Taffeta, 4-inch, IQC., value 256 A 24C., vs 2QCH 2,000 Yards Mousseline Ti affeta, 6 inches wide, ; IQc., value age “ ws «“ “ Ne ON 39¢. Dressmakers’ and Millie ners’ attention is larly called to this sale. Lord & Taylor Le Au! RAL HOUSE FURNISHDRE, Cor. 46th St. and \ Open Saturdays Until 10 P.M, RIGGS DISEASE (inflamed Gama, Loosening Di. COLTON’S SPECIFIO Astrl it el heals Mt cleaneen eeP RED BY B. G. COLTON, Ml. D., Dental ST, S1L FULTO) PILE OLS so0'w: Stet Bley 34th to 35th St. We give certain assurances, a no woman who has had an a rience in having Dresses made to| order can consistently ignore th Many models for you to seé— our own designs—others frog Paris, If you've seen a novel € fect anywhere, or if you've anf original idea of your own, you think is becoming to your} style, we'll transmit it to your) costume from yourfdescription or rough sketch. Being fitted by theaverage Dress- maker is a heavy tax on your pa. tience and time, The ordeal rs more ear isos each repens Werequire wo others demand five Pasi ing—long delays—a succession of excuses—are tiresome and disap- pomnting lays from the date of your order we deliver the gown. The Dressmaking de-' artment is now it, and wish | you to

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