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R GRAFTED ON PATIENT, DR. NELDEN DECLARES foung German Who Sold His Auricular Ap- pendage Will Lie Twelve Days Beside Millionaire Who Bought It. ate hospital here, where J was asnisi- PHILADELPHIA, Noy. 18.—Dr. An- w I, Neiden, of New York. to-day)ea by a Philadelphia physician and formed the operation of grafting an|/from New York. I think they will be 7 upon the head of a Western milllon-| willing to have their names known ine, whose name the surgeon says he! later. CONERS HAD OYNWNITE H Counterfeiting Moulds Say—Woman Charged with Trying to Pass Bad Money, FULMINATING CAPS AND under bond not to reveal he two men were placed in opposi Dr, Nelden advertised for a man vie directions upon an elongated bed, One- | sell an ear for $5,000, and of 39)! half of the volunteer's ear—the upper plicants he selected a young German,/yaif—was cut off, together w.th about ye conducts a restaurant in New York.| tour inches of the skin behind the ear » Nelden sald to-day: “The opera- | srhis was twisted around and fitted to tion has gees | pertocsigd pend Derniaes hly prepared wound upon my Wee cael Waney Goss iatto) evant tia) POvense Mena Tee eT aN oe isee name of my pattent. In piace by bandages and the two men bound so they cannot move thelr heads. “Generally speaking, he is a wealthy | hey must retain this position for at man from the West. How he lost one twelve days to allow the circu- ear I don't know. It appears to have/ lation to come through the flap of skin been out off with a sharp instrument, | b still remains a part of the volun-| Tibelieve hho says it was accidental, but | FET SID. Inever asked him to explain. Jierigt the tiower “The operation took place at a pri-/ grafted in the «i er, MRS. WEST LEAVES NEW JERSEY FARM. (Continued from First Page.) arts tou) “Mrs, West" frequently drove into town be- Sometimes she ‘people to have as customers. | hind a fast horse and ordered provisions for the farm. paid eash. Other times she ordered the goods charged Peck and ‘West’ paid $10,000 for the stock farm two years ago. It is now valued at $12,000. Louis Peck said that “Mrs. West's” son, a lad of fifteen years, waa attending a boarding-school in New York City and that jhe had been to the farm only a few times. His first name is Richard. THE WOMAN DISAPPEARED, * Mrs. Mamie Kipp was a member of Father Sander’s parish. She put her} husband, Joseph Kipp. out of her home two years ago and soon after that disappeared, taking with her her thirteen-year-old son, Richard, Joseph Kipp is now living with hie mother, Mra. Margaret Kipp, a dressmaker, at No. 316 Evergreen avenue, Brooklyn. Kipp was not In con- dition to speak intelligently to-day, but his mother said: “My son’s wife put him out of the house butween two and three years ago because of his drinking. Soon after that she and her son Richard dis- appeared. She was a member of Mather Sander's church and advised with him concerning her family troubles. ago, and she is now thirty-four years old. Her mother, who ts living with a gon-in-law, Peter Seibel, at Union Course, near Jamaica, has been here fr @uently seeking information concerning her daughter. The last time she ‘was here was two weeks ago. “Then she said she had been to see Father Sander and had asked him to do what he could to help her to find Mamie, She sald that Father Sander thad told her he had heard nothing about Mamie, but that ff he could learn ing as to her whereabouts he would let her know, “A few months ugo | met Mamie’s aunt, and she told me they had Jearned that Mamie was in New Jersey somewhere, but Just where they had been unable to learn. | “bThat picture The Evening World prints to-day of Mrs splendid likeness of her, I recognized it in a minute. she had it taken, a few months before she disappeared.” In Brooklyn Father Sander has been known as a hard-working and decidedly popular priest. He has labored in the parish eight years, and through his efforts 4 magnificent new church has been begun at the corner ~-oi Jefferson street and Hamburg avenue, Since 1901 members of his parish | have noticed his frequent absences, and they were at a loss to account for them. Sometimes he has remained away from home over night as many as two or three times a week. FOND OF FAST HORSES. Kipp is a fulmi 1 remember when mala for the FUSE COIL THERE TOO. ‘Josie Biondo Tendered a Spu-| rious Quarter in a Harlem Store, Proprietor of Which Caused Her Arrest. Arn renult of the arrest of Josle Blondo, forty-seven years old, of No. HK First avenue, charged with attempt- >» pass counterfelt money, Secret Agents Helms and Brzezinski, Hirections of Chief Operator Flynn, {ded the flat where the woman lived and found evidence of a counterfeiting husband, Salvator, who was arraigned United Shields to-day ing. Hesides the evidence of count@felting which the agents found, they made the outfit also arrested the woman's vefore States Commissioner charged with counterfeit- unusual discovery of four big sticks of dynamite, weighing six pounds, on he top of a closet in the room. With was a coll of fuse and a supply of ting caps. The explosives were mt to the Bureau of Combustibles, Heflee According to n on Police, Chief Operator Flynn, | bis men, while not wishing to cast any) Mection on the police, followed up the se where the police left off. The woman went into the store of Mrs. Rache! Goodstein, at No, 225 East One Hundred and Fifth street, yeater- day afternoon,” said Mr. Flynn, “and asked for a spool of thread, In payment for wile) she tendered a supposed sil- ver twenty-five cent ptece. “She was Mamie Obermeyer when my son married her eighteen years) Mrs. Goodstein told the Itallan woman | th the coin was false, and Mrs, Blondo red her a ood quarter in place The prontiess of the store kept and followed Mis Biondo out and i her arresved ov the flest policeman at it beth h shu met. With Mrs, Riondo was are rested John \uams, siateen years old, of No. a8 West One Hundred and Fourth street, who was waiting outside for her, She sttempted to throw away two other bad quarters when arrested and the boy was seen to try to pick them out of an ash barrel, Magistrate or a 4 both taken before Com- oner Shields, who held the woman 4) bail for farther examina Formula in a Bible, and Braezinski went up to house and found there all us for cousiterfelting. ‘There al moulds and the dynamite most curious tind was a for- somy mi in $2. “Holms search the the mat were m “put the ert ad 1 a Bible. In the At Far Hills, N. J., “George West" was known as a travelling man, (etcelt cone written ina lime tm Ut é fond of fast horses and owning a half interest in the Peck-West stock farm. 11. making of a sllver-plating solution He alwayg-Arossed fashionably and tad a genial smile for everybody. HIS ‘nye was no other machinery but the frequent absences were accounted for by his business, and both he and his.) yay supposed wife became popular with the tradespeople ané others with whom yy camé in contact at Far Hills, “Mra. West" kept louse for the two men on the farm. Joseph C. Peck, ‘West's’ partner, is not known to be married. t the Peck, who is a breeder and racer of trotting horses, and Father Sander first at the trotting races in Albany in 1901, The priest wore the garb of a citizen, was a keen judge of horseflesh and a good | H6w. Their love of horses established a bond between them, Later in @ season they mei again et Baltimore. Peck informed the priest that he had just sold a stock farm at Milling- , N. J., and was thinking of buying another, Sander proposed keeping | Jointly. He said he had a mare, Ethel Burns, with a track record of} 1-4 and a trial record of 2.16. He proposed to furnish a housekeeper id share the expense of the establisitment. ‘He informed Peck thut te was the guardian of a Mrs. Mamie Kipp, who had some trouble with her husband and wanted to get away from ‘ooklyn, She had a young son and would bring him along. A reporter visited the stock farm at Fur Hills and was shown into the On an easel in the room, which was comfortably ‘ parlor of the farm house. apd even luxuriously furnished, stood a large picture of a beautiful woman When Peck entered the room the reporter poiuted to the picture and asked, “Is that the picture of your sister “No,” replied Peck, “that 1s Mrs. Wast.” “Isn't her real name Mrs. Mamie Kipp?" Peck began to look troubled. The reporter told h about Mrs. Kipp and Father Sander were known. He then admitted the truth. “Yes, itis M Mamie Kipp.” In reply to another question Peck ansivered, “Mr West 18 the Re’ YFather Sander, of Brooklyn, aud he placed her here as our housekeeper. FATHER SANDER AWAY. . An Evening World reporter who called at the rectory at No, 199 Jeffer- fon street to-day to obtain a further statement was told that Father Sander had left the house and was not expected back until this evening, The Rev. Father Bettinger, chief of the three assistants to Father San- der in the parish, saw the reporter and said: | “Father Sander said 6 o'clock mass this morning and while I was saying! 7 o'clock mass he left the house. 1 suppose he has gone to Jersey, He| said nothing about a reporter having been to see him yesterday, and he knew nothing of the story that is published to-day, It js not so very much of a shock regarding his horses, us we all knew, not only the priest but the members of the parish as well, that Father Sander was very fond of! horses and that he owned thrice of them. Up to about a year ago he kept) Ethel Burns, the mare, aud her enit rt a stable up the block here. Then the mare began to show signs of illness and he sent her and the colt to Jersey. Later. he told us he had hought another colt that showed signs of great speed and which he thought would prove even faeter than the mare, “As to the woman spoken of in the story, I don't think she will prove to be Mrs. Kipp. When the story was told me I looked up the .ast census of the parish, made by myself two years ago, and I could not find any such| name, I do not know her I see Father Sander is said to have told the} reporter that Mrs, Kipp’s muther called here two wecks ago and asked him| to-help hor find hor daughter. 1 do not know who her mother {s, don't! Know her name or anything about her. If I did 1 would tell you, so you 4 gould see her. I know nothing more about the affair, and you will have to ~ ‘Walt until Father Sander returns.” STORY OF PRIEST'S BROTHER. William Sander, a brother of the priest, who is an undertaker at Ni , aid to an Evening World reporter to-day: » “I knew this whole thing would come out, but much of ‘Pknew that something was wrong. - “My brother was a classmete of Bishop O'Donnell, and through him he need in the clergy faster than other priests, Eight years ago he ven the choice of two parishes, and took St. Leonard's, He paid off phish ae ten months and since then has . jurch, a8 had thirty collectors going every week amon, e id parishioners, and through them he was able to gather ean ave heard rumors for some time among the members of the church it is news to me, | fellers securing Jefferson street, Brooklyn, a few doors from the rectory of St. Leonard's, raised $87,000 to build} Salvator Hiondo was arraigned before Commissioner Shields and held in $5,000 ball for further examination, in default of which he was committed to Ludlow Street Ju eee STEEL TRUST TO BUY. ockefeller in Cnotrol Cor- por Take Plants. You Ohlo. Noy. 18—A conference was held here between A. W. Thompson, President of the Republic Iron and Steel Company. and Charles J. Guthrie, formerly President of the ATmerican Steel Hoop Company which it Is said, was in regard to the purease of the Republic Iron and Steel Company properties by the United States Steel Corporation, It ts sald that following the Rocke- control of the United States Steel Corporation stock that 1t is the intention to take un the ReRpub- He plants brie would be the head of the fini 1 part and Thompson of the operative part of the Steel Trust. SS BRIDGE CONTRACT ALL RIGHT Justice Clarke Hefuses to Enjoin Work on Blackwells Inland, wtice Clarke, of the Supreme Court this afternoon dismissed the application of the Sanborn {njunction restraining Bridge Commissioner Lindenthal from letting the contract for the construction of the Blackwells Island bridge across East River. The contract had already been award- ed when Sanborn applied, but the Mayor advised that the Board of Estimate re- train from approving until Justice arke decided, The work may SHIPPING NEWS, a now Ko ALMANAC FOR TO-DAY Sun rises, 6.50/Sun sete. 4.40/Moon rises. 6.02 THE TIDES. High Water, AM. PM Low Water. AM.” P.M 7 Dok Tod Wet “Lot 1 Parry oo wy Governor's Islan THO ASS 134 Galveston ve Laguna Hremen Ma n Dei aie... America INCOMING STEAMSHIPS, DUE TO-DAY Laurentian, Glusgow, Nord Americ TAverpsol, Fes Amery | ‘a. Naplee Teutonte, | Qeean: Ainate ‘borrowing money from the church funds, but that {s untrue, od” and a short time ago our mother died and left each io little sum, her had sole charge of the finances of his church, but rectly accountes for, . A Guaranteed Cure for Piles, Liching, lind, Biee Bizo ontna PAZO OL" ‘4 dave, We, tn fatla to cure you In GIRL’S AUTO RIDE sition of the coun- | Sigal vis 2) ai 1 ENDED | | | the body as that of Francis Duzek Also! was employed as a nurse at No. 1190 Madison avenue, and that Sunday she Found, Secret Service Men | 2d been one of an automobile party. The District-Attorney now hat the woman was murdered jkr ne ty work on that theory, ‘The moth ao made a statement to the persons with whom her daughter went Away in an autotnobile and being sought The theory prevails now Miss Duzek refused to comply with the demands of the other persons she wa plied with drink and dumped out on the 1allroad station platform, so that the indications would be that she had been struck by a train, Inquest Wan Postponed, | he Coroner's inquest into the cause hee death wae in progress when the vic- thm's mother and prother arrived and |went to White's undertaking rooms. | "They recognized the body at once and | word was sent to the Coroner, The In- Jquest was postponed and the District | Attorney, who had taken an interest in the case, sald, after viewing the mother, that he had no doubt murder | had been done. | That the young woman was not a res- [ident of Amityville or the neighborhood |was proved when the residents failed to identify the body. From her hand- believes yu and has | that when | | | appearance, it was evident that she was | not a working girl To delude the followers still more a} | whiskey flask was placed by the side of | |the woman, The autopsy, however, showed that there was very little whiskey in the stomach and that (Continued from First Page.) they are|} |morning. and then, a some clothes und her neat and refined | EM! IN DEATH TAMMANY LEADERS | Former Sheriff Tom Dunn Gets Invitation by Telegraph, and The mother said that her daughter ustomed to A blood clot was found on oh ain, and from this it was con- cluded that she had sustained a severe blow on the head Making Will Now Begin. Frances Dugek was employed as a maid and coox in the family of! Tammany Lender Charles F, Murphy He ions, in the Kingsoourt apact-|,Twmmany Leader Charles F, Murphy fnenta, No. 1190 Madison avenue, She| #8 invited former Sheriff Thomas F went out Sunday afternoon and since| Dunn ¢o visit him at Hot Springs, Va. then had not been seen by the family, r. Dunn received the message by tele- Arrested for Intoxication, ph at Lis business office to-day. He When the voung woman was found the| announced that he would make the constabl2 bellowed that the whiskey Mask! journey to-morrow | indicated that she was drunk and he carried her to the town lock-up, where he kept her in a cell over night. She did not revive from her stupor Monday fearing that some- hing worse than intoxi n Was the matter, he called a physician. Other doctors were called, and they all agreed that the young womap was not drunk, but they were unable to say what ailed The departure of the former Sheriff will be followed by that of other prom- inent leaders who stand in the good graces of the Tammany boss. It is un- derstood that similar telegrams of in- vitution have been addressed to the favored few, including John T. Oakley. IMURPHY SENDS FOR’ Report Has It that Slate-; The Regin. Music one. young and old enjoy sie” ‘Neyo wwearles date musio is alwa: F M. Bishop of St “I cannot speak musteal qualities of EASILY PLAYED. Call and have explained and hear ite for information. Slege!-Coo r Co., ANHATTAN Hahne & Co., SEWARK. her: Th sudden invitations to Tammany tes eataence of n hoopltal they |leaders are accepted as an indication that | ransferred her to the home ot lam | Mr. ; cane ea transferred her to the home of William! Mr. Murphy 1s preparing the municipal Mondey slate, It is believed that Mayor-elect 49 revive her, she di night without gaining consciousness. The autopsy showed that netther the whiskey nor any known drugs had caused death, but that the blow on the head and the consequent blood clot may have done so. Vincent Duzet, of No. 48 Fifteenth avenue, Long Island City Is the broth- vho went to Amityville to identify stor's body He has a brother in an insane asylum at that place and his sister went there ery Sunday to see him. Nelghb sald they had heard no story of an au tomobile party, and did not belleve it ‘They were more inclined to belleve that ) \n will join the Hot Springs del- | exalt In this event Hot Springs will be the scene of the slate-making, for it | is Known that Leader Murphy will not | return to New York for two weeks at joast WEBER & FIELDS WIN. Court Permits Them to Play “The | Sigm of the Four.” “The plaintiff has made out no case. | LOOKS LIKE WAR NOW ON in Its power to save any equities Colom- bia may have in the Isthmus, Should Get # Share. Thus it ts recognized entirely proper that some part of t $10,000,000 which the United States Government is to pay over to Panama upon the ratifica- ton of the treaty should be allotted by the Government of Panama to Colombia | in payment of Panama's share of the | | Colombian national dept. | | t is stated, however, that the United States Government would not offer J affront to Cy by tendering in the nature of a for the separation of Panama, and whil @ J1U' could not specify in its ‘agreement with Panama that any part of the $19,- 0,000 Was to be diverted to Colombla there would be no concealment of the oper “it the United States in’ that Several of them already’ have opened | $00 ON DELIVERY %) UNITED STATES MARINES | $ H a e) LANDED AT SAN DOMINGO!: | ny * | g| | SAN DOMINGO, Tuesday, Nov, 17—| naval station there, It was added that setae se ee Ae thBaea | Severe fighting took place Jast night! the Baltimore would leave Santiago in| @We will send any rug to your home, [around this city, but the rebels were | prevented from entering the capita), ‘he loss of the rebels is not known The United States crulser Baltimore | landed marines to protect American in- | terests. Guards were placed at tho | American Legation and Consulate and | the Clyde Steamship agency. The sit uation otherwise is unchanged. All is quiet to-day, but a new attack ts expected at any moment. According to a despateh from San- | tiago, Cuba, yesterday the United | States cruiser Balumore had just a rived there from Guantanamo, where sho officially assumed sovereignity in the name of the United States over the | DEITRICH GOES TO ROOSEVELT United States Senator An- nounces After White House Conference that He Will Go Back to Nebraska for Trial. | i | WASHINGTON, Noy, 18 —Senator, etrich called at the White House to- ay and had « long interview with the President concerning the action tnatl- tuted against him by the Federal Grand Jury at Omaha, He declined to discuss his interview as he le{t the Executive! OMces, but said that in a few days he| would go to Nebraako formally to meet) the charges brought against him. Correspondence tn the Dietrich case made public to-day show dictment against the U ator was ordered by Atorney-Gener Knox after delay in the matter in Ne- braska, HOT ATTACK IK CONGRESS ON WOOD Representative Fordney- Repub- lican from Michigan, Accused General of Treating Badly the “Poor Starving Cubans.” | esc ouseresesaal | WASHINGTON, Noy. 18.--Congress- | an Fordney, a Republican member rom Michigan, In discussing the Cuban | Reciprocity. bill to-day made a hot at- tack n a Wood. whom he accused eatment to “the poor stary- “Ob, what action by a high offoialts} ntinued Mr ney. “He claims that the Cubans were starving and then reached his long fing treasury and hand and here Mr. F which) might mtlexed awh ‘§ Into the Cuban $29,000 to this" — idelous (Continued from First Page.) names | the young woman, who was very fond | Injunction js denied,” is the way Justice of her insane brother, had gone there to| Clarke disposed of the application of commit sulckie, Charles Frohman to restrain Weber & Fields and Walter Edwards from putting on “The Sign of the Four,” fh/ which there is a character, Sherlock | Holmes, at the West End Theatre, Har- lem. ——— O'CONNOR SAILS FOR HOME. PARIS, Nov. 18.—' Winnie" O'Connor. the American fockey, left Paris for the United States to-day, He will return | next year wear the colors of the Rothschild stable. ISTHMUS States Government 1s to include in the ————— Beri treaty, pean Lorieeee payment | of 1,000, to the Repubile o! ‘anam, ' End toons obredlwoverpraene “!TWO KILLED IN EXPLOSION. patllad bshictins FRANCE FORMALLY Bollern Blew Up and Destroyed | Shop RECOGNIZES PANAMA,| xewatarker, Ont, Nov. 18—The end blew out of a boller in the cane . . a factory of the United Factories Com- WASHINGTON, Noy. 18—M. Jus-| pany, Limited, to-day, wrecking three serand, the French Ambassador here | other ‘6 ani carryin away the called at the State Department to-day | engine, room and macsine, shop, in ey : : which 2 men were employed. id notified Secretary Hay that the| Wich % men were employed | | ch Government had fully and form-| jured | ally recognized the ifew republic of —- | Panama. Other nations are expected! ~ = | REREEEES EEE SAEEEDESEESSSS to follow the same course, and, In fact, | Honsend Tor booklet, “Oriental Rugs."* FB ORIENTAL IMPORTING CO. & THE rect Importers of Oriental Rugs. $ s8"Fourth Avenue, New York® | (Near 2ist Street) ® Ld hic’ tehechadadhdaaachchdadidad the afternoon for Kingston, Jamaica, and thence would go to Bahia Honda, Province of Pinar del Rio, which {s to be made a coaling station of the United States. —, SITUATION DESPERATE, WASHINGTON HEARS. WASHINGTON, Noy, 18—The State tment to-day received a cable- grain from Minister Powoll, dated yes- terday, In which he say “General attack on city of San Do- mingo lust night eaten ablegram, dated Nov. 16, to-day, Minister Powell New York's Best — Family Cough Medicine Cures Any Kind of a Cold, ituation desperate and unchanged. is constantly under fire of insur- Rents ond shells are falling in the city. An assault is monentarily expected, Le Boutillter Brothers TAILOR-MADE SUITS AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES, For Women— Tailor-made Cheviot Suits—Black, Blue and Brown— Coat satin lined—Skirt anlined—several styles—all sizes— 15.00 ana $20.00 Were $22.50 and $30.00 For Women—Long Coat Broadcloth Suits—tatlor-made—Black, Blae and Brown— satin lined and velvet trimmed— "26:/a DRESS SKIR TS— For Women—Black and Blue Voile Dress. Skirls--sith trimmed—a number sith lined— 411.98 Value $40.00 Were $25.00 Also Wal S ».3 in English Mixtares, | $ FLANNEL WAISTS. For Women—JIn Flannel, all winter colors—doeskin ftnish— 2.00 and 53,00 Value $4.00 and $5.00) dn addition, For Women—Some thirty odd Suits—discontinued lines—taken from regular stock and marked to $ 2 7 5 About half price. e Boutitlier Brothers bi CARPE their excellent style, easy. superior wearing the largest sales o: the world. ualities, achie any & gat Brockton, Mass., the largest in fine shoes, and show you the infin understand why Douglas $3.50 sh shape, fit better, wear longer, and and sells more men's Goodyear manufacturer in the world. $25,000 Reward will be paid to anyone leather made. BROOKLYN: Jersey 1367 Broadway, cor. Gates Ave 421 Fulton Street, cor. Pearl, 494 Fifth Avenue, the Eas; WORTH $5.00. W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes have, by -fitting and 50 shoe in Just as good as those that have been costing you from $5.00 to $7.00 — the only difference is the price. If I could take you into my factory world under one roof making men's care with which every pair of Douglas shoes is made, you would realize why W. L., Douglas $3.50 shoes are the best shoes produced anywhere in the world. Af I could show you the difference ig between the shoes made in my factor and those of other makes, you woul cost more to make, why they hold their of greater intrinsic value than any other $3.50 shoe in the market to-day. This ts the reason W. L. Douglas makes ‘elt (hand sewed process) $3.50 shoes than any other ean disprove this stat . ‘That Douglas uses CoronaColt proves there Is value in Douglas 8,50 shoes, Corona is the highest grade patent City: | 708-710 Broadway,c. Thornton.| 18 Newark Ave. Newark: 7865 Broad Street.| 520 Willis Avenue, Bronx. $1 DOWN. Box entertains every- Moderate spenders can the same music that pleases the million- for the most up-te- ready. Louis Mo. writes too highly, of the the Regina.” EASILY PAID. -Payment Plan the ‘Rog ina play or Frederick Loeser & Co, BROOKLYN. The Furst Co, JERSEY CITY, ved the nite oes are Shoes by mail, 2c, extra. Writ for Cntalog showing. the later. Fall and Winter styles, W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass, who 433 Broadway, cor, Howard St. 755 Bi oor. Bth St. 1349 Broadway, cor. 86th Bt. 95 Nai 142 Enst 14th Street. 250 Vest 125th Street. 974 Third Avenue. 2202 Third Avenue, cor. 126%h, 336 Sixth Avenue, 845 Eighth Avenue, Li g It will benefit you to see the Specials in all our departments. Our space will not permit us to enumerate them. convince you. Special for A visit will Thursday. Untrimmed Millinery (Main Floor.) Women's Hats, of Scratched Felt, in all the leading shapes and colors; value $1.00, Shaded Plumes, in all colors, including black and white; 16 inches long; value $4.50, 59¢ 2.98 Kimono and Wrapper Dept. ¢21 rioor) Women's Eiderdown Dressing Ss cheted edge; all colors and s ques, cro izes; value 6ge. 7c WEST 125th St, 7th and 8th Aves. TS WILTON VELVET CARPETS $1.00 per yard. (Reduced from $1.65.) emiaetly small patterns, eome Oriental | LEATHER COUCHES, $20 & $28, (Reduced from $28 and $38.) LEATHEREMTE COUCHES, tt, (Reduced from $15.) All. tufted. “LONG ORBDIT" gives inn Fosseasion of every furnishing tial. @weerriwair 104, 106 and 108 West 14° St. “NEAR GAN Brooklyn Stores Flalbusb Ay, near Fulbn st. CANDY) SPECIAL FOR WEDNESDAY. Molasses Cream Lumps Ib. 100 Chocolate Pineapple Jely.1Ib. 150 SPECIAL FOR THURSDAY. ‘Tatth Frutt! Cream: be Cream 10¢! pper. stb, 15¢ 54 BARCLAY ST. COR WEST BWAY 25 eiiers | Weak eyes should be seen to. Otherwise they grow worse. The trouble becomes chronic—may become the inheritance of your children, Our oculist will advise you. Glasses Only if Needed, $1 up che OPTICIANS—41 Years’ Practice, 25 BROAD ST.—Arcade, Broad Ex. Bldg 217 BROADWAY—Astor House Block 223 SIXTH AVENUE—Below 15th St 1345 BROAD WAY—Eelow 36th St PILE OIL A Laundry Wants—Female. 315 Cents Per Line—14 Word Ad. 26 Conte, WAN A for rectal diseases § anteed to cure. Price, WwW. B!b—An_ experlenced operator on om machine; one that can do neck-ban ly Regent Laundry, 429 Classon ay Brooklyn, ca hd BOSOM IRONBR, on Hagen machin ‘over Laundry, 1 Wallabout st., ARKER AND | ASSORTER, Maitvemont Laundry, P881 Broadwa Wa >, at Hureka Laundry, 105 West 88th ‘a Kood plain family Ironer, Laundry Wants—Male. 15 Cents Por Lin WANTED x00 e—14 Word Ad. % Cents, Watiach's Laundry, 4 ryt i rr | reference undry, The thoughtless man witn land t sell Finds no one who will buy. does not think of printer’ nd al) World Wanto inpiy, tok