The evening world. Newspaper, March 28, 1904, Page 9

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» Detectives Moody and Glouster on MANIAC FATHER |SEVEN SHIPS BRING [WRECKED SCHOONER RAVES OF CRE Arrested’ for Murdering His _ Young Wife and Baby, Victor Milward Beats Cell Bars and Rehearses His Awful Deed. SUDDENLY BECOMES VIOLENTLY INSANE. With tron Bar He Slays His Wife and Crushes Infant's Skull, Then Sets Fire to His “House. : SARATOGA, N.-¥., March 23.—Vietor Milward ts mad and raving in his cell, Where he hug been placed after mare dering his young wife and baby. The man's nadvese {x such. that he fights at the bats aha screams “Fire! Fire!" At such times he 1s rehearsing the mur- 0. ‘8 sudden madness cannot be, ted for. He is only twenty-two Years old-and was happy with his wife &nd children. fis’ position afforded a food living, and apparently there was | nothing ing in the litle household. Within an hour of the murders Mie Foard talked with uis-wife and played with the baby. ‘The family then retired. llardly: had the wite sind baby fallen asleep when the young husband and father arose from his bed, and, seizing @ heavy iron bar, he rained blow after blow on the sleeping wife, The first blow stunned her and deadened ‘her cries, so that no noisé was made as he continued on his work of murder. ¢ By the mother’s/side lay the baby. A How trom the martlac. father crushed Mts syull, and then Milward, thinking. both were dead, set fire to his home. F he took kerosene and poured st uit the room, saturating furniture and carpets, When the fire was lighted.a gleam of intelligence seemed to ‘come to the young man. With a frantic cry he ran to the street yelling “Fire! Fire!” ‘Then the police came, ‘The neighbors smelled the smoke from the burning apartments and they broke ‘Mthe tudconsclous and dyl and child aiteady were badly burned, ‘The fire was put out and Mrs, suward | las and her baby were taken to Saratoga ‘Hospital, where they died an hour later, Since has con- . No for Milward's He had no worries of any kind. WAS AN EX-CONVICT, SO HE WAS JAILED Magistrate Rebukes the Police for Locking Up Man When They Had Absolutely No Evi- dence Against Him. ‘The police practice of indiscriminately, 6,062 IMMIGRANTS Arrived Yesterday, but Were Compelled to Pass Another Night Aboard Owing to 4,941 Others Waiting at Ellis Island 12 SHIPS DUE WITH 3,800. Total for First Nine Months of Fiscal 1 Year Shows Increase of 5,0°0— Emigration Heavy from Mediterra- nean and North of Europe Ports. The police on duty at the Barge Office gate to the Ellis Island ferry. boat are having their troubles to-day with the crowds of pass-holders clamor- ing for almission to the {sland to meet incoming frlpnds. Seyen ships, with a total of séingers tq pass through are in port t& ay, The Attivita, from ‘Naples? with 402; the St. Doufs with 704, the Patria with 1,012, the Eutraria with 623, the Moltke with 1996, La Gascogne with 1,120 and the Columbia with 600. Some of these ships arrived yesterday, but owing to the fact that’ already others were waiting with 4,041 steerage passengers to be landed, It was impos- sible to handle them at the Island and they were compelled to pass another night on ship board. As a result several thousand pass- holders were gn hand at the barge office long before the 9 o'clock ) boat carrying .the day force to the. landing | depot. had put th an appearance,on thé Manhattan side. A limited numper were. ullowed to go over on that boat, but the majority were held for the 10 and Ul o'clock boats, — Although the months of January, Feb- ruary and March nave shown ench a decrease ‘J the total imber of immi- grants arriving. here over the same months last year, the total for the first nine months of the fiscal year shows an dnerpase up to to-day of 5,000 i first nine months of the last fiscal year, ‘With still threo days of this month to hear from, There® are due this twelve ships with a total of 3,540 age passengers. ‘The total number that passed through Ellis Island during January this year was 22s, a decrease of 2,000 fron the of the total of 61,246 than the total for March 3 The next four days will probably cut this decrease down by sev- eral thousand. Steamship men say that the emigra- tion from Mediterranean, Scandinavian and North of Europe ‘ports will be heavy during April and May, and they think it will equal that of ‘last year. This, they say, 18 due to seyerai causes, one the cutting of rates from Scandi: navian ports by the Gorman line In their fight with the Cungry, and another the exodus from Russia to evade’ mill- tary duty, CUT IN COTTON WAGES. Two Thousana is. 9,000 less it Operatives Feel Slash of from 5 to 10 Per Cent. LAWRENCE, Mass., March 2,—A reduction in wages varying from 5 t> 10 per cent. went into effect at the Ar- lngton Cotton Mills to-day. The chi applies to 2,000 of the 4,00) operatives, Upward of 600 worsted workers have been Idle since March 2 on account of @ strike which followed. the posting of ver the |: FOUND AT SE Hamburg Liner Von Moltke Re- ports Abandoned Vessel with Mainmast Gone—On Stern Was Name “James W.” ‘The Von Moltke, Hamburg-Ame: line, which arrived, to-day, O88 A wrecked two-masted schooner | on March 44, Her mainmast wag gone and the waves were washing ayer her decks from stem to stern, There were no evidences of life aboard. The schooner was found in longitude 42.50 dnd west latitude 46 Intemperance, 1n my opinion, ts the curse ;]of the world. There tx not a Iqtor-dealer but what will-ndmit this, Jt is the causo of nearly all poverty. of most murders and of much sickness. It has filled more insane asylums, {t has broken more he: wrecked more lives than all other causes comb! “ “How can cured @ question which should engage the most serious attention of all right- minded men. It Hin been demonstrated tha prohibition does not correct, does not pro: long as a man has an appetite for liquor be will get it, either openly or by stealth. To do away with the liquor habit we must do away with tho appetite. Now, I claim that the appotite for liquor is as much a disease of the stomach and nerves ‘as con- sumption ts a disease of the lungs, To cor- fect the habit we must correct the disease. A man with a healthy stomach and norm horves has no apnetite, no yearning, no 8} ‘e for alcoholic stimulants. A man fomach {8 weak, whose liver is slug- ish, whose blood ts thin: whose nerves are shattered. who is unable to digest whi food is put into the stomach, * ne ulant or something to lift him out he despondency which his ailments pro- duce. I firmly believe that Paw-Paw will do ‘the notices, but there has been no trou- ble thus far in other departments, MUNYON’S PAW-PAW CURES DRUNKENNES! ls and | | intemperance be | hibit. It has been clearly proven that so) ‘a craving | wi Munyon’s Paw-Paw Tonic for sale at the druggists’. Paw-Paw Laxative Pills—the best Stomach and Liver Piils on earth—25c, a bottle. t. Leithauser, of the Von Moltke, tA boat ouc to ascertain the kentity ne schooner. On thé stern names James W, ‘The Inet 1 Washed out excepting the “town' | oe te “MONK” TO BE TRIED HERE. | Juatice Traax Refuses a Change of | Venae In Baxtman's Cane, i | oMonk’ Rastman wilh have to stand! trial under the tment charging at-| {iempted murder in the Court of ne in this county, Justive to-day the application of East-| | man’s for a change of venue, |to ‘some other county. | The app’ was based on propositi the newspapers heen giv nk Eastman a bad rep- Utationsand In consequerfee a fair trial htor him weuld be Impossible [dusts wax sald he thought the) nt © were mistaken er heard. of + lietle trouble a few months ago,” dented the! had Monk Eastman wer in New rald he, Jerse I claim that the’ craving for. Alcoholic Stimulants ts| a disease of the Stomach and Nerves just as much as Con-| sumption ts a disease of the fangs. —MUNYON. {more to correct intemperance than tons of tracts, thousands of temperance lectures or all the prohibitory Jawa that mankind can vise. It will do moro because it will re- | the cause: {t will take away the a ft will give a physica mor one to the whole system: i will lft one into the bigh altitude of hope and hold| \t ere, It will cure dyspepsia and e: p trouble, It will cure! eplessness and vi-| jmoy petl nervousness, ¢ talize his wholu eystem. Strength ts what he needs, and If vou give him a clean stomac! & good, natural appetite and tone his sys- fem up gene-ally he will havo strength. -Paw will do this for him, and .do tt P quick! ‘The deadly drugs that are now being used |to correct drunkenness are more pernicious than drunkenness Itself, They weaken the | nerves: they dethrone reason: they take the manly ‘part of © man away from him. Let us build up manhood: let ux build up truth Jet us be honest one to another. T call upon preachers and the workers of tempers to test my Paw-Paw remedy. If they know of a person who 1s addicted to drunkenness and las not the physical or moral strength to resist they should advise hinr to try Paw- | Paw instead of resorting to. beer, whiskey |wine or other harmful beverages. It will | make hix stomach well, It will strengthen his nerves, It will enable him to sleep, It 11 take away all necesrity or desire for Jelcoholic stimulants. It will give him exbil- aration without Intoxication, satisty bis [Craving and give him strength and courage \to resist. -MUNYON trresting ex-convicts and locking them 3p on the charge of being suspicious versons was denounced to-day by Mag- strato Furlong, in Adams Street Police Court, Brooklyn. Magistrate Furlong’s ire was aroused when Michael Hurley was arraigned by “suspicious person’ charge. tect aid they had arrested him on the station at Bridge street and Myrtle avenue, ‘ “What had he done?” asked the Mag- Astrate. “Well,” sald Moody, ‘there have been @ lot of complaints of people getting their pockets picked on that station and this man done time. once. i “Was he loitering on the station?’ asked the Magistrate. The detectives said he was not; they | had spotted him getting off a train, | fogked him up overnight, and although | they had no evidence of wrongdoing | Bgainst him, forced him into courts Hurley admitted that he was an ex- convict. but offered to produce evi- ence that he hua been ‘ving honestly Gince he was released from Sing Sing. He sald that he was engaged to be married and that in another year he intended to petition the Governor for a Festoration of his rights to citizenshi, in the* Ryggues’ Ga: y." said Hurley, “and I am often picked’ up) but no charge has ever been made against me since I got out of prison, I am in business and living an honest life, but it 1s pretty hard for me to realise when I walk the stroets of Brooklyn. or New York "na tece tive Is Mable to walk up and take mi In any time simply because I have spent @ term in prizon.* Magistrate Furi Jey and soored thi toate (lt they would expe same &mount of energy in picking out men who actually commit crime that they fo in dragging, in -ex-convicts, against ‘whom ey have no evidence, their Fecords would appear better. ——_— FIVE YEARS, FOR. WATSON: Mls Story that He Stole ti Family Is Unter Frank Watson, the ex-convict, who mst week told Judge Warren W. Fos- er, in General Sessions, that he was wrced, to steal to save his family from tarving, Wag to-day sentenced to Sing Ung prison for five years. Watson on the morning of March 14 went Into a jewelry store at No. 108 Rast Tenth street and de was pursued and arr ettetectiva ‘ged. Hur- ect He said CHOICE on all GROC ERIES 4 18 New IL **Triumph’ ’Cocoa Nutritious, rich, full * 10C Prunes — Highest grade, Santa Clara Valley fruit, 55 250 or Xicr ‘ a Y Starch pkge. (a best, a packag Breakfast Ribbon, sterilized, dainty and wholesome, ‘a delicious breakfast dish, large Jc package Ate 1 12¢ Food— Fig’ Newions if ie © kers nna Crimp Golden. Cris Jonutes St. Louis’ ity excellent milled front rin Crackers te acan L2C brand, plump and tender, a can Codiinh Threads—"Peorless” brand, hite and tender, a pack- ga age Codaah Threads with everything we sell, The prices show what ‘a 4. be gathered by thrifty ho: Laid On Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, of this week, we are giving away DOUBLE s. & 4. GREEN TRADING STAMPS: Purchases of 10 except on C, harvest of 0. D. i} | Butler’s Teas. NEW EASTER IMPORTATIONS | | Indian’ Teas, t Ibe SOC Tea. the holcest very fine! Golden * 850c Chotee J 171 ro} y Formosa, Black, ete ray 35c Chotce No, 2 Mixed Tea. 3 kinds, puve and good, a ib 25C Butler’s Coffees. Best Mocha and Fr nd Jj Best Maracaibo, Dest Santon, « Ib ee AM 7 id the Week’s Washing Done In no time, and do y select from this fists, Nel When you Dutler’s Beat Borax Soap, o: 251 cels all other si . 7 cakes for: Cc Fairy Soap, in oval cakes, each....4c XLCR Washing Flaid, a bottle. Be Butle: ‘oncentrated Am- | monia, large bottle Good, Strong Ammonta, |arge bottle if 5c Rest Fren B! ae, 3 aquares,.5e Asia Ball Blaing, %-lb box. Butler's Potash or } Melb, Concentrated Lye S$ jargesi 100 Clothes Pins for, Chloride of Lime, in %-Ib. zinc cans, each.. i Hams. Mild Sugar Cured, lean and tender, cents or more to everybody bargains usekeepers On these three Eggs for At all of Our 124 Retail Grocery Stores—Buy at the Nearest. _ <<<, | “East View” brand, Codfish Tablets—I i JAMES N HCHOIC RH GROCERIE 25 cts. orders, oan Tomatoes “ Essie’? brand, ex- tra large high cans, solid, hand Packed, 2 for }4 cn 13c can solid packed, ripe, red, 3cansfor 25 String Bew with the cans fr wn pikin— ra York State packed, Ni don Pumpkin, § (> pints, 86c.: half pin Demestio O11- Absolutely: ody 3 Jel equal it for m ing dainty desserts, a pki Hictously 10c fender, each CHOICE GROCERIES TONDAY EVENING, MARCH 28, 1904, T° via Third Avenue Elevated, means that this York jor Brookixn shoppers. 0 for Women’s $12.5 14 kt. Gold Hunting Case Watches— Hand. | 5 somely engraved; also | plain polished effects; worth $25. | $5. 25 for Women's Ha ““ Enamelled Watches with pearls; fitted with jewelled Swiss movements; good value at $12. Cleared Ovul To-Morrow Here! And the prices quoted below will do the work in short order, for booklovers who haven't all of these works in their libraries can- Thinking $3.75 for Watches. pin to match; ric delicate shades; sold in very hand. Store Brooklyn People—Do you know “at wt takes ony elghieen minues from the Brookwyn Bridge, to Bioomingdaes'’? Tt is the best ocated mn Women's Enamelled | chatelaine | hly enamelled tn Have some case; worth at least $10. $13.95 * Elgin £25, not atiord to miss this great clearance sale. As a headliner we make a special of one of the new books— movements ; lor Women’s Solid Gold Watches — Hunting styles; with American, Waltham and values up to cD STEPS aes . More Book Shelves to Be jHere Are the Most Charming New Hats for Women al $4.98! “Nothing to come near Bloomingdales” “The Mississippi Bubble” al 39c. These books are nicely bound in cloth, with embossed stamped cover. Then these others follow: 2 Vol. Book Sels, 65c. | Each set in two volumes. Cloth | bound, Gilt lettered, | Kipling's Indian Tales, Emerson's tssays. Doyle's Tales of Sherlock Holmes. Dumas’ Count of Mont: Cristo, Dumas’ Three Guardsinen. Cariyie’s Wilhelm Meister. Hugo's Les Miserables. 2 Vol. Scts, $1.65. Bound in half calf. Neatly boxed. Conquest of Peru, Conquest of Mex- ico, Carlyle's French Revolution, Irv- | ing’s Life of Columbus, Montaigne’s Essays, Sue's Wandering Jew. | 5 Vol. Scts, $1.18. yard Kipling, Corelli, John Ruskin. Works, Each set in five volumes, printed on fine paperand strongly bound in cloth, Conan Doyle, R. W. Emerson, Rud- 'N. Hawthorne, "Marie Sets of Books in Cloth. Plutarch’s Lives, 3 volumes $1.35. Shakespeare's $2.95. Thackeray's Works, 10 volumes, $2.20 12 Victor Hugo, 10 volumes, $5.60, Thackeray's Works, 10 volumes, $8.75 Dumas’ Works, 15 volumes, $16.25. Mcnte Cristo, 4 volumes, $6.45, Main Floor. 80th 8t New volumes, Section, of Buying an Easter Giff? This Watch Sale Solves the Problem. We purchased a specially large lot for this sale, and through the price concessions we got, you get these extraordinary values. Every watch is guaranteed, $2.75 for Women’s Solid Sliver Open Face Watches, with chatelaine pin to match; fitted with Swiss movements: each watch in Both sides ornamented with pearls; chatelaine pin to match; very beauti- Se tee her $17.50 for Men's and $16.50 Boys’ Watches—s kt. solid gold; hunting case and open face styles; Waltham and Elgin movements; values up to $29. case $4.98 charm Visit Prices so remarkably small think of an end of a season of the very beginning of the new Spring season. Here’s a Sale of Handsome $6.95 for Young Men Pure Silk Umbrellas for $1.95! And if you're on the books to give an Easter token’ let’s tell you that nothing is more acceptable than a handsome umbrella—and with this great price-saving you'll get a splendid bargain. on Paragon fr: They're in 26 and 28 inch sizes for men and women; made with steel rods; cases-and tassels, Those for women have beautuul handles mounted in pearl, : ivory, horn and sterling silver. ‘The men’s umbrellas ar mounted with horn, ivory,buckhorn and natural wood handles, and women, Reguar $3.50, $4 and $5 values. “Tron-Clad” Umbrellas, 95c. Regular $2 quality; made of silk tattetz; have Paragon frames, steel rods, tight roll, tine selected natural wood hindles; | 26 and 28 inch sizes, for mz “Gladiator ” Umbrellas, $1.25. mannish in cut; sizes 15 to 19 $10.95 for Young Men’s Suits—Very well made; single anddouble breasted styles; sizes 16 to 20 years with white linen collar and ti Suits—in a large var! Regular $2.75 sort; made of yarnedyed silk taffeta; have tape edyes, Paragon frames, steel rods; roll tightly; cases and tassels; 26 and 23 inch sizes, for men and women. One of the finest u: brellas manutactured; thousands have been soid as high as $3 Main Floor, 50th St. Section.. Smart New Tweed Suilings, _48c. a Yard Instead of $1. No barga copies of Irish and Scotch Tweeds, There are tans, mixtures. Black Dress Goods, Fine Black Broadcloth, 52 inches wide; splendid { rench Voile, fine quality, crisp and wiry weave that will not wrinkle easily, 50 inches wide; $1.15 | quality; special, y: | Crepe de Paris, imported; silk and regular price spec 93 Imported Sik inciuding fancy voiles crepes, &c.; former fri were $2 to'$2.75 yard, now marked at, yard. ! handsome cut glas regular selling p! order to make this 8 In. Bowls, worth $5.00; special $2.98 9 In, Bowl worth $7. special Athans oe Seceecss $409 Others at $5.49, $6.75, 87.49 and $9.49. | 5 in. Nappies, worth $1.49; special 8 in, Napple: special at 6 In. Handicd Napples, worth $2.34: specialat.. ...- Bre. Wine Decanters, worth $9. cial at. cial, yard... Jar si, Cheese bi speci pies ize; abat full special at Spoon Hi A Great Easter Sale of Beautiful American Cul Glass. We've gone through our stock and marked every piece of this ire frony 25 per cent. to 50 per cent. below our s (Which were in themselves remarkably low) in| aster sale a record breaker, They are all in beautiful designs, with deep cutting and brilliant finish, Ice Cream Tray, pretty shape, regu- worth $7; special at $4.98 shes, medium size; full cut on cover and plates special at.. Airc. Celery Trays, fullsize; worth $ é .. $2.09 | Sugar Bow! and Cream Jug, worth $4.50; $2. cut worth $3.00, spi dozen.. n in a dress goods way that we could offer could be more opportune than this. These handsome new mixed suitings are 56 inches wide, guaranteed strictly all-pure Australian wool, exact It's a medium weight and particularly adapted for travelling and outing Suits, because it’s light enough to be worn comtortably even in warm weather, rays, blues, browns and di Select to-morrow at forty-eight cents a yard, In Colored Fabrics. . New Fancy Cream Waistings, in plain and fancy corded stripe i worth 39 | Crepe Etamines, ail wool, 44 inches i inali the most desirable colors as cream and black; worth 69c., Special, yard, ns of other handsome special, yd., French Volle, 42 inches wide, in pearl, biscuit, royal, helio, brown, cream and black worth $1.10; worth 1.49 Spoon Holders, with elaborate % ting; worth $4.50; special at $2.98 ‘ $2.98 ‘Third Floor, 69th St. Section, In time, too, for the housewi commodities at the family sprea during this sale will be hemmed free dice; haif bleached; s $1,00; special, dozen. Dinner Napkins, heavy Scotch linen; in six new designs; size 22x22 have sold at $2.00; special, dozen *s ize 18x18; valu 25¢ Only 50 in the lot—so be early 35c Good Black spe- 75, Sold more silks this spring all of their spring and summer sil forty-nine cents a yard, It's ex durable. Black Taffeta Silk, 19 inches wide extra tine quality: wear guaranteed reguiar yard, Black alfe! Ss * heavy quality; high gr: $3; 78 50: for waists; regular S cial, per yard.....:, Order Your . quality; spe two » 98 $2 up. so yet—it’ll be a revelation to you! In this asseyiblage you'll find every new and Smart shape, with plenty of trimmed turbans, flare hats and the extremely modish “ bebe" hat—and there isn't any one of them that couldn't hold own with the smartest ten or fifteen dollar you've seen anywhere, A Special Easter Sale of Young Men’s & Boys’ Clothing. $2.95 for Eton Suits—In sizes 3 to 7 years; made of serge and mixtures, $2. Q5 for Spring Overcoats—Of splen- did materials; sizes 3 to 14 years. $3 95 for Eton Sailor Suits—Sizes 4 to ° 10 years; made of serge and mixtures; with white linen collar and tie. c $4.95 for Norfolk and Double Breasted tures, serges and cassimeres; sizes 7 to 16 years. To-Morrow’s Special LinenSale. Opens with MarKed Bargains! Here are the best of linens at the least of prices—and all napkins bought Mercerized Table Damask, extra fine quaity; in six distinctly new designs; 58 inches wide; pure white grade; made to sell at 60c.; special, per yard. sees cee tee 35¢ | Dinner Napkins, extra fine double Damask Napkins, all pure Irish damask, lish make; many patterss linen; size 18x18; value $1.39: spe- $3.25; cial, dozen.. coeee SLOS special, dozen + $2.49" Restaurant Napkins, heavy Scotch eee 923s 098 per 21.39 Hemstitched Dinner full bleached; cloth size, 8xt10—and one dozen napkins to match. For 35c. a Yard To-Morrow. this that has brought hundreds of women to Bloomingdales’ to. buy This black taffeta is 19 inches wide; a grade that usually sells for special, per yard. 2 48¢ 6 inches wide: extra e lustre; regularly sold at 89c.; special, lustre; $1.00 is the regular price; Per yard cree sesere ee +» 69¢ special, per yard, ....e.ucesee 9c Pe rot res Black Peau de Cygne, 19 inches wide; soft messaling inish; suilab.e 65¢ Quickest service now before forMen’sCalendarWatches | $6.85 —Gun metal; dial shows sec | onds, minutes, hours, days, months, changes of the moon, etc.; perfect timekeeper; sold in Paris for 100 francs or $20. $IL75 for 14 kt. Gold-Fitled | Watches — Manufactured | by the best watch case Caley in America; every case warranted for 20 years; all sizes; fitted with fine Waltham and Elgin movements. Main Floor, Front, Centre. 2 . hats in beauty, style, or distinctive ” is the word everywhere this Spring. the millinery section—if you haven't done Second Floor, sath St. Section. make you ‘ance, instead as cl oN 's Suits—Very ears. es. ‘iety of Scotch mix- Second Floor, 60th St Section. ife who may run a little shy on such id on Easter Sunday. : of charge. Dinner Napkins, of all pure Scotch linen; size 21x21 Inches; all new de- signs, including the spot effect; have sold at $2.25; special, dozen. .$1.49* | for selection; have sold for | | Towelling, 20 inches wide; e cial, per yard. we: 8%c Lunch Cloths, with colored borders and fringe; have been selling $1 special. Sels at $4. for the bargain! They're all pure linen; | old all along at 1234c.; Spe- Main Floor, Near Rotunda. Taffeta Silk than ever before, and it’s value like ks, you'll agree. ceptionally good quality, strong and , Black Peau de Cygne, 21 inches fy wide, regular 98c. grad serial bee . 79¢ Imported Black Loulsine, 20 inches wide; soft finish; extra high 20 he grade that regularly sells inches + special, per yard O5¢ Main Floor, Near Rotunda. | Awnings Now! We call special Cheese Di ' Water Jugs, three pint size; full attention to our patent fixture for awnings which saves the wood- ees! ge cut; brilliant tinish; full ih k sing marre: exclusively ours, Ci ting on cover and plate: $8. speciulate. fe $o78 @ Work from being marred. exclusively ours, and cannot be. obs special at siseeesesees $8.75 | Water Tumblers, diamond and fah @ tained on awnings bought anywhere else. Water Carafes, cut patterns; worth $4; special at, We make a first class awning fron the rush begins! | A postal will bring our man with estimate. one, Oiih St, Section. | sampies and i ia ini ani SN a at aes Oa wa libel.

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