The evening world. Newspaper, September 23, 1903, Page 5

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2 ea OR SEER Se | | ONE IBY OW HERE EVERY FE MINUTES 4 Dx. Louis Haupt Strikes This Average for Greater New York—fLower East Side’s Record Is Fifteen Infants an Hour—Mutrray Hill Section Only One Each Month. “Fifteen babies an,hour on the lower east side! One baby a month in the exclusive Murray Hill section and along Fifth avenue!” These astounding figures, taken from statistics by Dr. Louls Haupt, Commis- stoner of the Loard of Education, give the average of bables born in New York every hour as cleven, or one baby every five and a half minutes for the whote city. And that is not the limit, for every month the percentage is increasing. “1 don't know where it will stop, this increase in births,” said Dr. Haupt in discussing the problem with an Evening World reporter this morning. ‘When { made a statement to Dr. Maxwell, of ths Board of Education, some time ago, that & baby was born every quarter of an hour in New York, it seemed to cause some wonderment, but that only.represented the state of affairs for 1902, Statlatics for the first quarter of the year 16 show a decided increase—the average being one child born every five and a half minutes—over than of 1902—one every fifteen minutes, THE EAST SIDE FULL OF CRADLES. “The births of New York, however, are not evenly divided over the city, and the eleven-an-hdur average is far from being uniform in different sections. The east side, of course, Is the birthplace of the greatest number of children. Below Tourteenth street the birth rate is, generally speaking, confined; unless we take * into consideration the Bronx, where the Italian element is filling in rapidly, and Little Italy, in Harlem. “New York's great breeding-ground for humanity {s confined to the small district bounded by Houston street, the Bowery, Catharine street and the East River. Here the fifteen-an-hour rate may cast joy into President Roosevelt's heart. Still greater, however, is the rate in certain sections of the great east side. In the neighborhood of Division street a baby is born every three minutes,”” pays Dr. Haupt. “The Russian Jews abound in this neighborhood, though the Jewish inhabitants of New York are encroaching on all purte of the city. From Houston street to the bridge and from the Bowery to ast R'ver the Hebrews are filling in,” continued Dr. Haupt, “but they are thicker in and around Division street, and it is here that the birth rate is the highest. Next to the Russian Jews in point of being pro- Whe come the Italians, and in the small section west of the Bowery arourid Mul- berry Bend children are born on the one-every-four-minutes schedule. “As the birth rate {s not kept by wards. as {s the death rate, it Is diMficult to get Ayures wifich are exact in tabulating the prectse statistics of districts or nation: ities, but the wards where the children are born fifteen to the hour and in many Instances even in a greater ratio are the Seventh, Tenth, Eleventh, Thirteenth and Seventeenth. “Above Fourteenth street and over on the west sie the birth rate ig far below fifteen to the hour. Sixty per cent. of the children born in New York are Vorn of foreign parents, co this shows in a way that they are nearly all east siders. BIRTH RATE LOW IN HIGH CIRCLES. “The rate of births In the exclusive New York sections Is, as we all know, ex: tremely low,” sald Dr. Haupt. “In the Murray Hill section an approximate estl- mate would be one every month. In fact, the birth of a ebild in the exclusive cir cles {s of so much moment that the ndwspapers make news of it for weeks, “Along Riverside Drive, where the fashionables live, thé birth-rate may be a little higher: one every three weeks, though, would be a liberal estimate. In the quarter ending March 31, 1908, there were 28,780 births in New York, and 2 per cent. to the thousand were in the Bronx." / Dr. Haupt has not calculated the percentage of birtinerte in the Harlem and} Bronx sections tn exact figures, but approximately there are nine children an hour. in the Bronx, where the Italian colony. fs growing, while for Littlé Italy ten an hour {s a sufe estimate. In the apartment-house section of Harleni, especially on the west side, the birth rate deccoases, and an average of four an hour would in some localities be extremely high, BOARD OF EDUCATION ALARMED. ‘The ever-present crop of babios.in New York City’s growth {s, In Dr, Haupt’s estimation, one of the biggest prottems that fy menucing the Board of Education as the increase in the last year, with only the three months’ statistics to go on, fives alarming predictions of the future. ; "THE WORLD: WEnieebay EVENING, SEPTEMBER a. 1908. -- MAP SHOWING RATES OF BIRTH OF CHILDREN IN VARIOUS DISTRICTS OF NEW YORK. a STATION = Mf s it Sow [rvs vA ore iano Y\ Uh Parkhurst Society Lawyer De- nies Statements Made by Po- liceman in Interview—Writes to Him for a Retraction. Frank “Moss, of the Parkhurst So- clety, has written the following letter to Police Inspector Walsh: ‘Sent. 21, 1908. spector Richard Walsh: ‘Dear Sir—The Pvening Worki to- night contains this statement attributed to you! “Down in West Trwenty-ninth street is a house of ill-repute kept by Tillle Price, of which Frank Moss, of Park- hurst Society fame, is the agent.’ “Assurfing that the statement was made by you, I demand an immediate asad public retraction. “I am not the agent of the property, nor of its owner, and never have been. I knew nothing of the making of the Jease arid never collected any rent, and never entered the premise or had any- thing to do with them, You have no business to jump at slurring eonclu- sions and give them to the public press, The facts are all within your knowledg and therefore there is no excuse. “Some time ago Capt. O'Connor wrote me that —— West Twenty-ninth street was a disorderly house and-that its own- er was Mra. Sisan Q, Chambettag,. and that he understood I was her counsel and hoped I would assist him to vacate the property. My answer and communi- cations to him were prompt and to the effect that I know nothing whatever of the house, but that Mrs. Chambettaz was my client and I would inqu.re into the matter and do wnat I cuuld to as- sist him, “It was absolutely no business of mine, except to belp Capt. O'Connor, In the Lying-In Hospital, on Seventeenth street, more than. th bables a month are cared for and all of these children some fea tha albert below Forty-second street amd nearly all of them from the east side. Here the steiatten: stom the Russian Jews as feading in the birth rate. “In 1909," sald Dr, Haupt, “when all of the bables which ar ic In New York are presented at the schools, there will bs need indeseapr see room. The fact that one-third of the babies never will reach th, ft diminishes the number consklerably, however, aa 2 “When the statistics of the next three months are mad ‘ ; je out it wil Erise me to have thé average birth rate, which for the first three monies 1S reached eleven an hour, increase to the ffteen-an-hour rate of the east side."’ es a, DECIDE KILPATRICK |POLICE ACCUSE COMMITTED SUICIDE) A BUSINESS MAAN Letter and Check Written for They Arrest Prominent Young Woman Who Is Accused of] Merchant of This City on Blackmailing Are Found by) Charge of Being Responsible the Authorities. for Death of Lena Moshinsky. While the autopsy performed on tne| body of John David Kilpatrick, the By the arrest of & prominent New | ", young man who was found dead with ‘a, bullet in his heart in the Hotel Mar-| tinique on Monday, Indicates that he was elther killed by accident or mur- dered, his relatives now feel convinced that It was suicide. ‘Their reason for so thinking is that’ a letter and check written by him and addressed to a woman were found torn to. bits in his room, They were patched (ogether and showed that he had been biackmalled by the woman and had written, her saying it was the last money he would send her, Tho “letter read: “{ send you herewfth $200, It is the, last money I will send you, I will not lét you blackmail me any longer."* J. Edward Lambie, the stepfather of Mr. Kilpatrick, since the letter has been found, feels certain the young man com- mitted suicide, Tho letter was written to a woman Kilpatrick had met in the Tenderloin. She is not married, nor is she prominent except among a certain circle of women who frequent the various notorious re- sorts in the Tenderloin, Neither Coro- ner Brown hor Inspector MoClusky will reveal the woman's name. ‘The police have learmed that Kil- patrick, with his friend Lindley, called At @ house In West Forty-fourth street on Sunday night and remained there until 11,90 o'clock. The house is one in which several aciresses reside, It was nen pe lett there he was in the r ts, Shortly after the death of the you: called at } Monday tw ‘Union ‘Railway jumped the tracks last mae an, aaa, ta oman sated Re te oul Of her abgorus | NaN and eats ae fear cechouay bud patrick. When told be wea not there) eéndition, ne att fconpiterabie distance before they 4 Dr, 101 helm, of No. 263} coming to a stop. Mr. Lindley, who found hia friend Syne ng to & : end. has lett tile “ity. He, bas lately Moskdnsyes the Lee hg want, Mina atin Seaouels Wha car ae recovered. from iness and ‘went faniu told Go ner ler i frmly in the . John Babbard, e po The mater of Mr, Kilpatrick, Mrs, John the fir! came to him wuffering from sep, | Uceman attached to the Wakenleld sta 4 ning, ion, was on the back platform . Cook. arrived in city last night, bee! atcondea by . s yon, throws into the ) but sus and too charge of iy. ee came to. Cay fom serine rey cs) serious ine iy knee cap wren 5 pe a an ian ho ls fespone rahayleer ere aledir rans, LONDON, Sept. 23.—Ifoitr tourists who Moat” 1Set the trav, het eke Pushes were. climbing ¢ y i “rag he dostor Red on ¢ glbitorm. ne, injured, her away fo. spend i to the ham York pusiness man connected with the sad ¢ate of Lana (Moshinsky, the young rlwho Was taken to a sanitarlum on Lexington avenue and who died early to. day, the police expect to unearth a sensation. ; Just before the girl's death phe made statement to Coroner Scholér and th police were brought into the case im- mediately. Deteotives Devlin and Daly were to Brooklyn to apprehend the Buliness ‘man who is charged with the Tesponel- bility of the death of the young girl. He lives in Brook place of business ts . Caroline Brandt, titer an operation had been performed upon her. Mrs, Brandt refused to give the names of the persons who sent her there and will make no statement other than that which she has already @iven the police. About two weeks ago Miss (Moskinsky, who at that time was living with her parents at No. 2% East Forty-eighth street, told her mother she was going away on a vacation, which her employ- ers had allowed her for long end falthful service. Tne mother heard nothing of her daughter from that time until yes- terday, 4 ‘There was @ heartrending scene bde- ‘tween the two in the sauitarium, the daughter bidding her mother good-by and to ald Mrs. Chambettaz, who was absent In France, and who I believed was ignorant of the character of her tenants, I did not even know that sho was the owner of the property. I wrote her in France, and after some delay received a request tu proceed against the tenants, The procedure uf the po- lice had been absolutely abortive, and on Mrs, Chambettazs account, and as her attorney simply, I started a dls- n sublet by the original lessee, had to dis- continue the proceeding and begin over again. I laid the case before the superintendent of our soclety, and ob- talried through our officers there the evidence that was necessary for the case—the police evidence alone being IAN tae, trad the cane led » fecided in favor of the land- aie nas been !ssued formed, rd for its execution. ergs n trled the officers of the society have had the house under ob- servation, and have reported that no disorderly businees bas been done. ate tattle gant eur est lo as CCF be} yen eu) uly, “FRANK, MOSS." ATH PENALTY Gf FOR CURTIS JETT. Prisoner Unmoved Expects Reyeraul by the Court of Appeals, CYNTHIANA, Ky., Sept. 23.—A jury here has found Curtis Jett guilty of the assassination of Thomas Cockrill, ‘Town Marshal. of Jackson, and gave him the death penalty. Jett heard the verdict. Later he sala: “Of course they would hang me. My witnesses were intimidated and afraid to come here. The Court of Appeals won't do a thing to that verdict." Jett's mother nad gone away, under the impression that no verdict would be reached. Col, Blanton, Jett's lawyer, ‘will file a motion for a new trial to- day, and i the motion is overruled he will appeal the case to the Court of Appeals at Frankfort. TROLLEY CAR JUMPS TRACK. oliceman and Woman Passenger Injured in Beoker Aven While turning a curve on Becker ave- nue @ northbound trolley car of the "| Bronx, early to-day. ACT A CROWD Mrs. Gertrude Miller, Seized with Hysterics in Coroner’s Office at Jamaica, Declares a Man Is Trying to Kill Her. a Seized with a fit of hysterics, Mrs. Ger- trude Muller, widow of Henry Muller, who was scalded to death recently in the dye works at Long Island City, caused much excitement {n Coroner Ruoff's of- fice at Jamaica, Long Island, this morn- ing by screaming that a young man was trying to kill her, The frenzied woman wan placed on a street car bound for her home in Astoria. Mrs. Muller called at the Coroner's ‘Office to obtain a copy of the minutes of the inquest into the death of her husband. She sald her attorney desired the data in preparing papers for an action to recover damages for her hus- band’s death. ; Suddenly, while conversing with Martin Mager, the Coroner's clerk, the woman began to scream that her papers had been stolen. She ran out to the steps in front of the town hall and attracted crowd She was led to a point where she could board a Flushing car for her home by Henry Guptil, the janitor of the town hall. Instead of boarding the car Mrs. Mul- ler returned to the town hall and con- tinued her ravings. this time declaring that a young man was trying to kill her, Officer Kessiér finally took her to the Flushing car and placed her in ‘&@ seat, telling the conductor she wanted to go to Astoria, The woman appeared more calm after getting on the car, and it was thought she would reach home all right. FIREBUGS: SOAKED DOORMAT IN OIL Then They Set It on Fire in an Effort to Destroy Fleetwood | Athletic Club, in Courtlandt Avenue; in Bronx. According to Sergt. Hayes and Patrol- min Bissert, of the Morrisania Station, an incendiary tried to destroy the bulld- Ing ocgupled by the Fleetwood Athletic Club, at No, 941 Courtlandt avenue, in the Leonard Wiegand, of-No. 989 Courtlandt avenue, detected the odor of smoke and keroseno and gave an alarm. The policemen went to the rear of the! athletic club and saw smoke poarng out of the windows, Patrojman Bisgert climbed in and found a mat ablaze. He threw the mat out »f the window «o2) Gergt, Hayes managed to extinguish! the flames, . It was then discnyerel that woe mat | had been saturated wit kerosene und | the police Immediately vtarted an 1n-! vestigation, The Fire Marshal was nov fled and he will maxe a special inquiry, ‘Lhe damage wan slight. HAS HIS FIANCEE ARRESTED. Hlectrical Bmgineer Charges Young Womas with Larceny. Charles W. Hoadley, an electrical en- winer, appeared to-day before Magis- trate Baker, in the Morrisania Police , tompted robbery. Court, charging his flancee, Lillie Smith, with grand larceny. (Hoadley said that Saturday night he gave Lillie % to go out and buy things for a party. Lillle did not return with either the articles or the money. Hoad- ley went to work the following day, and when he came home that night he found several valuable personal articles miss- ing. Detective Tierney, who had been put om the case, found the girl on Third avenve last night. She pleaded not guilty, asserting that the action of loadiey was due to a “soreness in his heart’ because sho had left him, ——— KILLED BY JUMP FROM KOOF. Frank Owens jumped from the roof of the house whel he lived, at No. 4 Jackson street, early to-day, and died in Gouvernour Hospital a few mintues later. His skuli was fractured, his left arm broken in two places and two ribs broken by the fail. Owens had been drinking heavily and was belug watched closely by members ot hs family and friends they asked to assist them, fearing that he would be- come violent. ne house is a three-story structure, BveF on the top floor, Breaking aw is ore, Cony tg ran ee ens roo! ry reach bim he smped. DED BY GANG Police Arrive Too Late at Foot} of West One Hundred and Twenty-ninth Sireet to Catch Toughs Who Held Sway. What the police of the East One Hun- dred and Twenty-fifth street station be- Meve to have been gang work in Har- lem wes responsible for the clearing of the recreation pler at the foot of West One Hundred and Twenty-ninth street last evening. A crowd of young men rushed the pler and drove women and children away in fright. Then they swooped down upon the music'ans dad hustled them from the band stand. When the recreation pier was deserted the gang mebted away Jugt as the police began ‘to arrive to disperse them. Later in the evening Policeman Ew- ing arrested Matthew Tewey, thirty- two years old, of No, 0} West Forty- eighth street, at One Hundred and ‘Twenty-ninth street and the Boulevard on a charge of holding up John Jar- mos, of No 93 West One Hundred and Twenty-seventh street, and Arthur Cut- ler, of No. 423 Amsterdam avenue. Tewey drew a revolver, according to Ewing, ard it was oniy after the latter: had clubbed him until he was sense- legs that! the pollceman got him to the station-house. In Harlem Coyrt this moming, Police- man Ewing told Magistrate Zeller that Tewey was the leader of the gang which had terrorized the One Hundred and Twenty-ninth street recreation pier. | Magistrate Zeller fined Tewey $10 on a charge of carrying a D.stol with out a permit, and held him for examination to-morrow on an affidavit charging at- SAS HE KILLED HS SISTER'S CHILD Drunken ’Longshoreman Stag- gers Into Oak Street Police Station and Tells Startling’ Story that Is Investigated. A burly ‘longshoreman, drunk as could| be, staggered into the Oak street police’ station carly this morning and de-/ | manded to be locked up. “I'm ® murderer!” he shouted; “the meanest kind of a murderer, I killed my sister's child, a little girl three years old, and burned ner body in a stove.”” repiled the man, “and I haven't had a decent night's} sleep since.” | ‘The man sald he was Daniel J. Burns, of No, 3% Atlantic avenue, Brooklyn. He sald he had killed the child in Shafton, Pa. Policeman ‘Hubbard arraigned Burns In the Centre Street Court before Mag- {strate Mayo this morning. Hubbara told the Magistrate that Inspector Mc- Clusky had communicated with the Shafton police and had recelyed no an- swer. Burns was sent to the Tombs) until his story can be Investigated. ————>___ NEGRO FLOURISHED KNIFE. '} —_—< Barher Shop Was Cleared and He Was Fined §5. It was not the fault of John Davis, @ negro lving at No. 189 Bleecker street, ¢hat the patrons, barbers and bootblack In the barber shop at No, 664 Ninth ave- nue thought he was on a rampage when he appeared at the door of the shop! flourishing a large butcher knife. The spectacle was such a terrifying one that quicker than It takes to tell it Davis was in complete control of the! barber shop, the black being the last to leave, exclaiming as he went through a back window: “this ain't no place for me Davis was arraigned in the West Bide ( Court before Magistrate Deuel morning. "Deed, Judge,” he sald, wasn't going to’ cut no one. T ‘Jest bought the knife and wanted to ask for a plece of paper to wrap It In, Those fool_men thought T was golng to out them and ran out the back way.” Th pollceman who arrested Davis told . different etory, He sald Davis had stolen the knife, but aa he could rodace the man who was robbed Magistrate Deuel settled the dimculy by fining Davis $5, which was paid. —— Germans Indorse Mayor Low. At a meeting last night of the Ger man-American. Municipal, League in Arian Hall, Brooklyn, Mayor Low was indorsed for renomination, and it wi ivocate the candidac: Pets Achidge for the office of County Clerk. not [be true. (MOSS DEMANDS AN WOMAN'S SCREAMS 'RECREATION PIER SEEKS FREEDOM © {BABY KILLED APOLOGY OF WALSH) ATTR BY WAY OF FRE Girl Tries to Escape from the Wayside Home, Brooklyn, by Means of a Small Blaze in the Bathroom. The life of the Wayside Home, Bridge street, Brooklyn, became altogether too monotonous for Wealthy Kennedy, a comely girl of twenty-three, and last nigtt ehe and friends whom she had en- listed in her schome of escape started a fire in the bathroom of the hous- and put into operation a deeply planned plot to free herself and her accomplices from the restraints of the institution. Wealthy found Coney Island to her liking a week ago, and in the fervid whirl of affairs at that pleasure ground provoked police interference. She was then sent to the institution. Chafing under the restraints placed upon her, Wealthy suggested to some of the other «irls to get up some excite- ment. She and five others met in room on the third floor of the house yes- terday afternoon and there worked out the details of the plot. As the ringleader, Wealthy was to procure the only matches in the house. Those were in the room of Mrs. Davis, the housekeeper. A bundle of papers was to be collected in the bathroom and ignited. Down in-the hallway two girls were to give an alarm of fire. ‘Iwo Other girls were to be stationed in the front of the nouse, and they were to call for the Fire Department, According to we story told by Weal- thy's accoinpiices, they would ngt encer Inco the pio until safety was assured for all in the buslding. When the tire was startea in the bath- room last night the two girls in hallway gave the alarm premature), rs. avis heard \t.¢ commotion an rushed out foto the hall. In a twink: | ng she hot the fire in the bathroom eauinguished, The is: —“torits had ho daring rescues by fremen— T the excitement wa sip away in the crowd, the night would not is io 0 one, give the verisimilitule to the deyt theory. they had dressed je! selven in the most proper alghtrates the Inst.tutlon affords Fire “Marshal and Clara Knowles, the matrou the Wayside Home, appeared in Ad Court’ this morning, Ing cn against Wealthy Kennedy for vagr They wish her taken toa safe piace. An investigation will be made ard the Proper place selected for the young girl, GEN. HUNTER STICKS TO IT. EBritinh Officer Still Belleves Shoot- th Was Baa, Sept, 2.—In an interview to-day on tRe subject of the demand made upon him through the Admiral by Rear-Admiral Lamoton for an apol- ogy as a result of his reflections on the shooting of the Britsh cruiser Power- ful's 47-inch guns at the slege of Lad. smith, Natal, Lleut.-Gen, Sir Archibald unter, commanding the forces in Scot- land, sald: “The South African War Commission was appoluted to elicit facts and opin- jons. 1 am no more infallible than any one else; but. right or wrong, in my evidence before the Commission I pro- nounced the cpinion, which I believe to that the shooting of the naval uns at Ladysmith was bad, So far as am concerned e matter resis there.” SEA CAPTAIN SUSPENDED. LONDON, Sept. 2.—The certificate of the captain of the British steamer Holm- lea, which went ashore at Pot Belle Isle Strait, N. F., on Aug pound from Montreal for Fleetwood, Been suspended for three months, A natura! saline pur- | gative of the most efficient kind. THE WORLD-FAMED CURE FOR i CONSTIPATION Can be used by the young as well as by the old. a glass on ris- ing gives prompt relief. When asking give full name Hunyadi Janos (NOT HUNYAD! WATER ONLY) and you willget the genuine in place of worthless impo- sitions—often harmful. IN A RUNAWAY Falls from a Carriage nd Is| Crushed Beneath the Wheels —Policeman Stops Team At.) ter Being Dragged a Block. Two horses drawing a carriage con- taining seven Itallans became fright ened in Grfield place, Brooklyn, this carriage, was run over by the rear * wheels and killed. Policeman Steinway stopped the run- away horses and was dragged for nearly a block. His uniform was torn to shreds. ‘The names of the persons im the car- |< ringe could not earned, with te exception of John Dulleo, ‘the driver. An ambulance from the Seney Hospital was summoned. but the baby was dead when t arrived. It is saldthe mother of the child lives at Coney Island. No other persons in the carriage were injured. ‘ —<—a——__ FIRE SWEEPS VILLAGE. BUFFALO, Sept. 23—The industrial ¢y _ the Township of West Seneca, was a a atroyed by fire to-day. Chanles 4. Schoepfloin, former Assemblyman, was the owner of the buildings destroved. /) ~ hey Seing Schoepfloin's chair factory, «1 power-house. foundry, offices and thy morning and during thelr wild dash an eleven-month-old baby fell from the Gardenville Post-Office. The loss, whic! | is estimtted at $100, is well covered — | by Insurance, Fall Weght C. Garments, Just One-Half Women's and Black Cheviot 6 Covert Cloth Jackets, , formerly $10.00, at $5.00 each. : ‘Black Broadcloth, Cheviot & Covert Sachets H formerly $15.00, at $7.50 each. z English Covert Cloth & Line Black Jackets | formerly $25.00, & Girls’ Reefers —4 to 127y “ FancyCottonesL Women's Fall Weigh “ a ——— ‘Glasgow Wo Established Grand Circle, 59th St, 8th Ave, 3d Ave., 58th St. (Proctar’s Theatre.) N06 8th Ave., between 26th and 26th Sts. 113 Nassau St., near Beekman, 4$ and 46 Nassau St., corner Liberty St. Marlborough Hotel, 36th St. and Broadway. 256 Broadway, opposite City Hall, b) General Clearing Up Sale Women’s, Misses & Children's At Half Price, preparatory to our showinz of our Winter Importations of entire balance of Fall Weight Covert and Cheviot Reefers, formerly $5.00 to $10.00, at $4.50 each. Covert, Cheviot and Silk Reefers, formerly $12.50 to $15.00, at $0.90 each. Also Entire Balance of ‘Misses’ Silk Shirt We Silk Eton Coats, For Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Fifth Avenue Entrance Now Open. Lora & Taylor Woolen i 481-483 Fulton St. (opp Abraham & oats & Fackels armeuts, at ecent Prices. Misses’ Fackets, wi ae t $12.50 each. and Fackels, ear sizes,— aist Dresses, tinzn Dresses, t Silk Coats, 61 Years 51 Broad St. Tid ‘Tremont Ave. es Headquarters—1ath Floor, Park how Mullis) 9 ing. . i, = 4 BROOKLYN. A fi

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