The evening world. Newspaper, January 27, 1904, Page 4

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“SUP AEA ee bes 2, SIDE LAW AVES WOMEN IN SLUSH Storm and the Foolish Car Ordinance Combine to Bring. Discomfort and Danger of Disease to Thousands of * PdsSengers—Public Hearing Soon on Repeal Agitation. The most exasperating experience since the foolish near-side rule was put into effect by the Interurban Street Railway Company followed the snow and rain yesterday afternoon. The thousands of men and women on their way home from the shopping districts and from thelr work were forced to endure conditions ttle short of crimi- nal, An inch of snow followed by a down- pour of rain left the streets covered withr's!ash anklé deep, and through this Pheumonia-breeding mixture the pa- trons of the cars were forced to walk fifty feet from the crossings to the rear Platforms! Any to whom the thought- Jessness' of the new rule haa not before appealed realized it then to the full extent. SluhjWan Ankle Deep. Business /#omen and shoppers who had come {from their homes in the morning when the sky was clear and the weather ideal, were entirely unpre- pared. Phelf rubbers “had been left at home irfithé expectation of a few days of pl t weather, Complaining women struggled in the crowds ins to take the street cars, their skir€ssdraggig in the cold slush of the st: Few, indeed, waded their way throug the snow and water from the oi to where the cars stopped withou: ing their feet wet. ‘The slush klo deep. The Si leaning Department made some ei to relig¥e the conditions. Men we} int to clean the crossings in the own district. They were |’ far too cope with the unexpected conditlo d they made no effort. to clean bh bin the crossings. The dis- | tance f @ narrow pathway across the stro 'cleaned by the “white wos,” $& the point where the car | manned spbunthucte. tg Officin! the Interurban knew of the coni . Tf thé state of affairs a week escaped their eyes they hé Evening World. crowded to the doors inky patients, many of} Ta ae because of tio t se pr “ih “Cdnseauepee. protect Its oansed by the terrible va tt Me who demand the repeal of the ob- noxious ordinance. Alderman Goodman, the Republican leader of the Board, and a member of the Railroad Committee, declared tn- day that @lthough he was in the mino: ity he was prepared to promise every Republican vote in the Board for tho repeal of the “outrageous ordinance.” "I stand ready now,” he sald, youch for the vote of every member of the minority in support of the repealing Measure as urged by The Evening World. the ordinance in the first place had not opposition to it then threatened to a feat the entire set of new rules of the road which were under consideration at the same time. WretchedgMenaure. “Bince the ordinance went into effect it has clearly in shown to be a wretched measure and one which ope- to the detriment of the public th and comfort and does not in any agtinst accident. I shall personally urge the members of the committee to get together at the earliest possible hour and give the public a chance to he heard. Then I have no doubt the ordi- nance will be reported out, with the majority of the members of the com- mit of the ‘Tammany leaders board in not allowing Alderman Reginald Doull to reintroduce the re- pealing resolution at the meeting. yes. terday {= that tho board will be placed in 4 foollsh and ridiculous light by re peallng an act of its own of but a fe weeks standing. ordinance must go when It han not been given a fair trial?” asked Vice-Chair- | man Sullivan to-day, "I recomménd | that the matter be allowed to reat for | a week or two and then if the public sUll demands the repeal of the ordin- ance the Board can act promptly. Per- | sonally T believe that It will work out | all right, but then T won't stack my opinion against that of the majority, ad [seem at present to o@ hopetessiy | in the minority.” No Other Reasons, What other reasons prevent the hoard from - taking decisive action on the repeal?” the Alderman was asked, “T now of no other reason. We can't repeal an ordinance which has not been given trial. No one is going to be the delay.” eived any instructions political or otherwise, experiences. In. ie ing to thelr homes suffered by Avohidn’ and men alike last | evening can only be estimated, Hun- | dreds are absent from thelr places of “ante * 1O-ay. With skirts wet al- | most to the knees women were forced ae he only ahead cars during the Ip to) By the time warm } ‘ wqs avaijghle, they were chilled | ious " ana tte! seeds of disease | we mi When the ico in the streets to-dny | meits the same conditions will exist. | No preparations have been made to| Gkam the streets back from the cross. i ra women will be forced: to amg -Mo iro. ‘t id more ‘Bick= ROR Heune Ria ts tape tk | the ‘The: 1y repeat of the silly ordinande, Binéety toviay-are a glare of foe, ind’ eg ie ‘dous undertwk- | do all that I can to effect the repeal of A NS ine Guarside rule had done | tho ordinance if that 1g the decision of its deadly work. a the publ, I can’t tell thi yet until pold wave froze tl | fnow ond ice, making ‘the conditions | evey -warae tuin.thoy were a week age. | \ J i0iven the Worst Sufferers, i ore, the. worst sufferers’ were | Hi catty Tel being mor to- Miculty and all deliveries are | Tato: Everywhere in the streets fee down and it in almost im- : hein on thelr feet, 40 pavements. The So- clety for the Rrevention of Cruelty Anlinals hag amomicaiied upon in, sev= ny accidents, eral insta koe peoot the suffer mala. gemeretenat rhe "eghdition catise of n £0, persons whose ‘The hospitals re- alls for peor were scores et up with- the of the sido- Es Sn = abplance . pains out aid, Poblig Hearing Next. Within a thw days the Railroad Con | mittee of fhe Board of Aldermen will decide ungh @ date when a public hear- ing will hecBiven-on the suggested re- As “néar-aide ordinange, That) : ended by large dele- "s clubs and. as: id Proper ty-Own ejations and other organizat in- cluding citizens among the great pub-! Drondway cars were forced to! creep along at such a slow pace that | they were practically blockaded, Th croasings the most slippery of all, | pawed tn th | and more than one dray horse was shot | after to delay action on the adoption of a re- peniing measure?” “Not in the least, While tt | fn the Board, T that T have ‘Kom nody and cannot hold do not control the off legislation when It ts the desire of action be taken, We the members thi have done what Is regular in this’ mat- to the Rail- ter, We sent ‘esolut! Fond ‘Committee, aad the | Committee must «ive a public bearing. T would not regard Jt courteous now to Interfere with the plans of the Cormittee,” “Ho vou put public comfort and con- venlence behind etiquette?” “I can say that the present ordinance will be given @ trial and at the proper time the Committee will act. I am as anxious as anybody for results and will true we have heard from the people public hearing, ——— em TRAFFIC DANGEROUS FROM ICE ON STREETS| ata A sheeting of ice covering the streets of tho city has made all traMe danger- our to-day, Pedestrians find the foot- ing precarious and horses can hardls get a hold on the icy asphalt. All oy town the animals are dropping in their shafts and many have to be raised dy | the combined efforts of many men. The and it fs there the animals slip and fall, | After once on the ground the rising is | a matter of doubt. Some help was) given tho horses by ‘the teamsters: pli ing sacks over the tee where the horses ir efforts to rise In many cases the results were serious a fall which resulted in broken legs, ‘The veterinary vans were kept busy all, day. KNSER GREETED “OW HIS BRTHOAY Street Throngs Cheer Him at ‘the Palace and Notables, In- cluding Amrican Ambassador, Proffer Good Wishes. BERLIN, Jan, 27.—A great crowd gatheréd In front of the palace early to-ray to saulte Emperor William on his birthday and get good places from which to see the members of the royal fatilly and court and other officials ofter <4r_ congratulations to the Emperor. ‘Bes Tatter,surrounded by generals, ap- Defere.a window overlooking the saguare) and. adknowledged the acclami- Rom tint hour carriages defied. in pliNtle ¢olrtyard, containing those Fank..suMclent. to permit them (to fey their good wishes, beginning with feembors ofthe tamily and their ; the Cabiset Ministers, the heads aad navy, visiting Kings zea. and the Ambassador, among ‘United ‘States Ambassador Tower. Tecelved the callers ih the ie M until midday. Hing Oscar of Sweden and Norway @ Emperor William First Her Of the new Order of the Lion way. in commemoration of his hirecognition of German \the'sufforers by the ‘fire WFAN VAL HE HANGS HIMSELF Before Ending His Life Peter Gebhardt Places $112 on Kitchen Table and Deeds to His Plot in Cemetery. Peter Gebhardt, sixty years old, hanged himself to-day in his own home, No, 1223 Myrtle avenue, Willlamsburg. His body was found dangling in the doorway between the dining-room and the kitchen, P ‘The suicide was deliberate. Before ending his life Gebhardt placed $112 on the kitchen table, wrote his name and address on a card and placed the deeds to his plot in the Lutheran Cemetery hear it, He left no statement. When Gebhardt failed to open his delicatessen store, which is a shor: distance from his home, the neighbors feared something. was wrong with the old maa, who was well known in Will- jamsburg. A policeman was told of the hon-appearance, and witht several of the neighbors went to the house. They Knocked at the door, but recelyed no onawer, Then they forced an entrance. Gebhardt had driven a hook in the I would never have voted for | manner prevent or offer a guarantee | if not all, voting In favor of the | “It took the committees six months to | frame the rules of the road and to se- | cure thelr Now how can we in! a few days decide that the near-side | | N os ‘A ie. SoTL ITNT i} pies CENE FROM “THE YOUNGER MRS. PARLING,” HAD ITS FIRST NEW YORK PRODUCTION LAST NIGHT. es) THAT a > ) PRETTY GIRL GONE “PARENTS FRANTIC Father Searching Hospitals and Morgues for Nellie A. Fiegel, Who Went to Baker's, but Failed to Return. The police have been asked to help find Nollie A, Fiegel, a tall, pretty, Guburn-huired girl, nineteen years of age, who has been missing from her | home, at No, 974 East One Hundred | and Thirty-third street, since lest | Wednesday, ‘The father is a foreman in the Mott Haven yards of the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad, Nellie had been nursing her mother and left! the house to make #ome purchases at! the buteher shop. She was dressed carelessly in a black skirt, green waist, | black shoes and stockings, a tan rain- coat and brown hood, She had only a dollar in money and was accompanied by her four-year-old slater Julia After making the purchases at the butcher's she told her Ittle sister to yun home with the puckages and tell her mother that she was going to the baker's and would be home ‘shortly, She has not been seen since. f The father has visited all the hos- pitals and the Morgue and has searched night and day for the girl, MA Pelgel ts one of the prettiest girls in the Port Morris section of the Bronx. is tall and slender with striking sand hair of a most popular shade red. Sho left her home last Wednesday morning to do some shop- ping fa her mother, With her was her sister Julia, four years old. Mrs. Felgel told Nellie as she left the house to buy meat for the day, but not to go to the baker's, Nellie bought the meat, but when she She blue neared her home told Julia to run along to the house, as she was going to the bate far Julla left her elder sister, So as ts known Nellie has not been nen since by her family or her friends. Mrs. Feige) said to an Evening World orter. to-day: can't account for the disappearance of my girl, She always took an in- terest in her home and as far as I know she knew no young men. She Was always a good gifl. When she left the house she had on a long ulster over her house dress. She did not have a hat on at the time.” Mr. and Mrs, Felgel are nearly frantic with grief over the disappearance, They personally have made a canvas of all the hospltals and stations where the girl might have been brought {f an ac- lent had befallen her. r. Felgel ix foreman of t 4 yards of the New York and New Haven line at Mott. Haven. STOLE BROOCH AND CANARY. Horglar Pawned Jewel, but the Bird Flew Away, © burglars who stole a canary bird, @ brooch and @ allver thimble from Mrs, Ellen Gilbert, a dresemaker, while she was away from-her home at No. 1129 Second avenue, were arraigned to-day In the Yorkville Court. Detective Hammond saw Frank King , trying {0 pawn a pair of pearl opera- | #lnssex In a pawnshop at No. 1137 Sec- ond avenue and arrested him and Will- jam Brown and ‘Thomas Cragin, who were waiting for King outaide. ‘Through King’s confession it was found that ho traded the brooch for the opera- sex I a ‘Third avenue store, t wis this way,” explained King. knew the Widow Gilbert was out working ind we broke {nto her flat. All ve could find was the brooch and the framework over the door. He ted a around his neck, got on a chair. ed it from under nim, and thus acted as his own hangman, Some time: ago Gebhardt neighbors that he was dei eause hii bey told his ondent -be- wife was in a sanitarium, and, matter how much money ‘spent her recovery, it availed naught thimble. in goin’ out I spled the canary, and thinks T could sell it for maybe a quarter to a bird store, The cage was too big, so 1 puts the boird in me pocket, And just as soon as he got a whift of the fresh air out on the street he climbs away.” examination dut of me pocket and ‘The three men waived and were held fur trial, ‘atter that, at every performance until | the show THEATRE ROMANCE EADS AT THE ALTAR Jersey City Girl Becomes the Bride of Leading Man She Fell in Love with Two Years Ago. The marriage of Miss Florence Meyers, daughter of Louls Meyers, of | No. 60 Wayne street, Jersey City, to Arthur Fenwick, leading man in tho melo@rama ‘Across the Pacific,” has ended a pretty romance, The ceremony was performed by Rev. Father Wahl, of St. Boniface’s R. C. Church, at the home of the bride's father. ' ‘Two years ago, when ‘Across (the Pacific’ was produced at the Bijou | Theatre, in Jersey City, Mr, Fenwick | appeared in the role of Bud” Stan- ton, the villain, Miss Meyers occupied 4 front-row seat at one of the per- formances. When Mr, Fenwick made his appearance on the stage his eygs met those of Miss Meyers, and it wan 4 cage of love at first sight, After the performance they were in- troduced. Miss Méyers was present, left Jersey City, A. corre- spondence Was kept up between them while the show was on the road, and wach tine ft came near | New York Mr, Fenwick was a visitor at the Meyers home, | |. Last Christmas Eve he asked Mr, Moyers for his daughter's hand, Christmas Day a pretty diamond ring adorned the left hand of Miss Meyers and announcement was made that the wedding would take place in January. | The hew bride is u sister of Mrs, James J. McLaughlin, daughter-in-law of ex-County Clerk and ex-Democratic Leader Dennis McLaughlin, of Hudson County, N. J. Saved Fifty “Theatre Hoi CHICAGO, Jan. Hospital, her swathed in band t the Iroquois brief during the Ul to-day, fourteen-year-old it was who, entire left side flames, caught t this Indder many dren scrambled to She was In mother, who was at the ‘theatre, of the Show N. J, were last ‘night, ing to y20,00. ‘T but it is though! smoking, on the blaze, Th surance. Mr, Fenwick 1s considered a clever actor, It was only recently that he was selected to play the leading rol Joo Lair. in “Across the Pacific." Mrs. Fenwick will accompany her husband when the show leaves Jersey City. HOME-MADE ALARM SCARS BURGLARS Fires Several Shots at One of Him. Three times in six months have bur- Blara tried to rob the liquor store of John Meshai {Street. After the first attempt Meshan fitted up the windows and doors on the ground floor with a home-made burglar- alarm, and to this the burglars owe thelr discomfture on thelr second and third attempts, Mesban Ives with his wife and son on the second floor of the bullding, An alley runs alongside the store leadtog to a teneinent-house In the rear, All the attempts of the burglars have been made at a window In the regr, Tt was just about dawn to-day that Meshan, his wife and son were awak- ened by the ringing of the alarm. They armed themselves with revolvers and crept downstairs, ene burglars had evidently heard the alarm, for one ju failed to hit thi ‘ ae ake ented] + head ‘Through the ste: were saved on the fatal afternoon, despite the fact that her the the CHICAGO'S CHILD FIRE HERO KNOW Fourteen-Year-Old Girl Who Lives at Iroquois rror Is Carrie An- derson—Mother Dead. 27,—At the Samaritan and left side ages, Mes Carrie An- derson, the child whose deed of heroism fire was recounted in Coroner's inquest, but whose name has never been learned un- adfast bravery of this girl at least fifty lives Bhe was belng lapped by he end of the ladder thrown across the alley from the North- western University bulding and guided it to a firm resting-place on the fire- escape of the second balcony. Across men, women and chil- o sat baicony with her employed as @ cleaner and while she escaped her mother perished, not know yet that her mother is dead, The child does —— BOYS SMOKE; BUILDING BURNS, ‘The electric-lighting plant and the grand stand stables on the grounds Monmouth Association, destroved Count; at Horse Hollywood, by a fire [ANNIE RUSSELL HAS A WALKAWA “The Younger Mrs. Parling’ Walks Out of Intolerant Hus- band’s Life and Into Hearts of a Sympathetic Audience. When poor, downtrod Mrs. put on her hit and, without a. word, walked out of the door and out of her | husband's life, at the Garrick Theatre last night, an unconventionai play came to an unconventional end. It was a walkaway for Annie Rus- sell in a double sense and a credit to ©. Haddon Chambers, who found ex- cellent material out of which to build his play in Henri Bernstein's “Le De- tour.” Miss Russell, in a role quite difter- ent from any she has played, was splendid—silently so at times—though, goodness knows, as the patient, tor- tured young wife she suffered enough to make her shriek to Heaven. ‘Be- fore I'd stand half she's put up with there’d be an ambulance backed up in front of the house and most of the furniture would need repairing,” re- marked one woman in the audience | whose wrath rose with every curtain. In the first place, staid James Parl- ing shouldn't have marricd Jaqueline Carstairs, and he shouldn't have been recreating in the “secluded villa’ of Parling | “It Was Like a Kind Blessing. “Cheerfully—Gratefully—I Join My Voice with the Thousands Who Are Praising PAINE’S CELERY COMPOUND” WAS CURED AFTER YEARS OF ‘ “STOMACH TROUBLE. Milwaukee, Dec. 18, 1903.—"Through a frietid I was advised to take Paine's Celory | Compound for stomach trouble, with which j 1 was afflicted for years, My food had lost taste, . “I bad no appetite and my system was entirely out of order. “There was a sudden change. “I wondered; for it was like a kind bless- ing falling on me. “It surely performs {ts wonders in a mar- yellous way, and cheerfully and with grati- tude I join my voice with the thousands who are praising Paine's Celery Compound. It has made me a well woman,”—<MRS. MARY KENNEY. Dyspepsta—th: and bap tent, i feat destroyer of ‘health faites many forms. Discon- temper, low spirit, despondenc dizziness, sick headache, heartburn, palpl tation of the heart, dirtension of the stom- Ach—all of them are dyspepsia. ts dark influence throws ite the happiness of many homer lying cause of all dyspeps ane of dixestion have not y itrength to do thelr work properly. ‘The true cure must be a cure of the which govern the digestive inner nerve: organs and the entire human aystem. i Paine's Celery Compound ts eprtn Ny spepticn every tayras soneibie and wclentine as tt is way, as sensl mat vellous. | Sick bendache, palpitation, iszl- ness and heartburn are usually relieved b; a single dose of Paine's Celery Compoun “IT 18 WONDERFUL” Her Weak Nerves Are Fed and Re- ailt by Paine’s Celery Com. pound. Philadelphia, Pa., Sept. 25. 1908.—"I was oa the verge of heryous prostration and couli not sleep for any length of time. When I did finally fall into a doze it was only for & short time and I always awoke feeling unrefreshed. “T had no’ appetite and I was rapidly Jos ing weight. I heard about Paine's Celery Compound and after taking two bottles of it [ could sles all Aimee “My health Is now fully’restored. Paine's Celery Compound is a wonderful remedy and. T advive everybody suffering from headaches or nervousness to use jt.”'—MRS, Li2ZiE RAITNER, 1443 8. oth St. el ite time on SYMP- the CAUSE—the E. Phelps, M. D., LL. D., of Famous Prof. E. Dartmouth | University, ise coverer of Palne's Celery Compound. the unfortunate young © woman's “shady” mamma, And in real life a| prosaic, Purttantcal duffer lke him | would have been pretty apt to have | kept away from both temptation: i Only Insults and Slights. | It was easy to understand how grati- | tude and a craving for the bread-and- | molasses of respect moved the hungry | sirl to gobble him up, ‘Thanks ‘to her precious mother, whose one worry was dressmakers’ bills Jaqueline, up to this time had recelved hardly anything but insults and slights. She saw in Parling’s honorable of-| fer a means of escape, and, as ninety- | nine out of a hundred girls in her shoes would do if they had the chance, she selzed the opportunity. | In this play the woman hasn't a past, but her mother has a present, and her father appears to have been lost In the shuffle. She 1s continually reminded of this. | When she goes to live with her hus. band's parents, her father-in-law, a pompous, preachy old “party,” speaks of her, in’a spirit of tnistaken ‘kind- ness, ds ‘the little flutterer,” and ‘a bird’ with a trailing wing,” and she ts fipally driven from the house by the blunt accusations of Busan, the preco- clous daughter of the household, who unblushingly acknowledges she intends to marry @ young man for whom. she cares nothing in order to make it easier for her to carry on an intrigue with a@ man already married. Runs Away with Husband | Insulted by her selfish stster-in-law, and snubbed by Southsea society as represented by two self-sufficient dames, the heart-sick wife runs away and lives with her husband in a pretty little house by the sea until her mother comes to see her and ts told in pluinest Parlingese to get’ out and stay out. i} While Parling is away ‘rejotcing his | rents with news of his noble action yril Martyn, & young chap who has loved Jaqueline from the first, comes back and talks sense instead of “duty” to her, and tells her that she 1s going to London with him on the 12.40 train. | Jaqueline looks at her watch, after | she has pinned on her hat, and the| urmige—as well as the hope—ts that she catches the train. i It is left for you to imagine whether | they live happily ever after—and it! thelr future was’ left with you, they would, With winsome, pathetic charm, Miss Russell played ‘the part of Jaquelin perfectly. She inspired a feeling of gret that you didn’t have a brick or two in your pockets to throw at her} rmentors, tortense don't!” implored rare old Mra | Gilbert, raising her hands at the storm | of applause which almost swept her oft her feet when she made her en- | tiance. Hor heart must have been made | young again by that greeting of sincere | affection, more marked than usual, per- | haps, because of the knowledge of her nt accident, As the older Mrs. Parl: | he was littie more than corrobo- testimony to the profound Mr. | x—hbut it was enough just to sce; ‘able to be around’ again, cellent performances were John Mason as James Parling; Lewis as Jaqueline's fghty mother: A Bberle as Samuel Parling; Oswald | Yorke ag Cyril Martyn: John, Glenden- ning as Sir Philip Mallaby, and by Oliv Murray, who, as young Susan Parling, gave an amusing caricature of Ethel Barrymore. ing ratiy damage amount- the cause is unknown, t that boys who were premises caused the e buildings are covered by in- Mra. Glendenning, equally, excellent as Mrs. Pringle, a’ haughty — “‘soctety y "" nearly broke up the play by re- marking, in’ reference to Pringle’ health, “No, he has not begn at all well since I had my last baby!” 245 WeBIBIE Lp et Vee Gor 43 2274908, Gem. Aerncl. (rma gh ey ge. een Liquor Dealer Rushes Out and tha the Thieves, but Fails to Hit| Orsedcdesee? CAL rorsecZ WwW. $3.5° SH L.DOUGLAS Ce) = WORTH AMERICA LEADS T! FASHIONS OF THE WORLD. 7oc2 ite in Brockton, the manu- fine shoes in this country. Styles Originated by My Expert Model Maker Are Copied Everywhere. Ww. las $3.50 shoes have by their excellent style, easy any other beweee vie and retail profit on shoes made in my factory the principal ete The result fs, you get better ice than are retailed elsewhere. My Own Secret Process of Tanning t more flexible aud longer-woaring leather than any other i SPREE $3. ile é Aa a 3 tices in i and sol : : duces nnage. Bottom Soles ” Every Gentloman should have Three Pairs of Shoes to Dress His Foot properly on all occasions. He should have a pate of Viscoltzed wet weather; a Button shogs for Don’t as much style, comfort aad W. L. Dougles High Grade Boye’ Shoes, $2.00 and $1.78. Corona Colt is the highest grade patent Teather made. ‘That Douglas ures it proves thoro 1s value in Douelas £8.50 Bhoes, 15 IN DOUCLAS STORES 433 Broadway, cor. Howard. 755 Broadway, cor. Sth St. 1349 Broadway, cor. 36th St. 05 Nassau Strect, 142 BE, 14th Street. 250 West 125th Street. 974 Third Avenue. 2202 Third Ave., cor. 120th, 356 Sixth Avenue, = 3 pleasant days, and a 'y $15 to $18 for these t ice fn three pairs of Douglas shoes for $30.50. terprool, heavy double-sole shoes for hie Hidde prop se sorrel Pot three pairs; you can get Fast Color Eyelets Used Excluslvely. have the largeat men's $3.50 Shoe Mail Onder nsinesr in the world, No matter where you lye. Dougan ra. prepays. " ABs. ge, W, L, DOUGLAS GREATER NEW YORK; 345 Lighth Avenue. 620 Willis Avenue (Bronx), BROOKLYN, 708-710 Broadway. 1367 Broadway,cor.CatesAv 421 Fulton St. cor. Pearl. 494 Fifth Avenue, JERSEY CITY, 18 Newark Ave EWARK, 785 Broad St. FURNITURE BARGAINS. » REDUCTIONS FOR DINING-ROOMS, GOLDE N OAK EXTENSION TABLES, $9.25, $15, $23.50 ~ (reduced from $1 '2.50—$20—$31). SIDEBOARDS, $14, $18.75. $31 (reduced from $18—325—$43). CHAIRS, $1.15, $1.75, $2.75 (reduced from $1.50—$2.2, Cane and box seat: $3.75). Also Special Reductions in bomestic Rugs—txtra Velyets, Wiltons and Axminsters Long Credit Enables you to “charge” all bargains. COWPERTHWAIT 0. 104 To 108 West 14% St. NEAR G®AY. Brookiyn Stores. Flatbush Av near Fulton St 4

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