The evening world. Newspaper, May 3, 1904, Page 3

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~ ~ARROINES AT SEMINARY FIRE Brave Conduct of Some of the . Young Women Students and | Yeaohers at Carmel, N. Y., { Prevented Loss of Life. FASHIONABLE SCHOOL FOR GIRLS IN RUINS. Main Building and Memorial Hall Destroyed, Causing Loss of $125,000—Students Lost Clothing and Jewelry. (Special to The Evening World.) CARMEL, N. Y., May 3.—To the brave action of certain students and teachers many of the young ladies attending the fashionable Drew Seminary at Carmel owe their escape from death in a fire which destroyed the seminary and Smith Memorial Hall at 10 o'clock this! morn- ing. ‘There is no fire department here. but & bucket brigade was formed, and de- spite heroic measures both buildings were destroyed involving a loss of about $125,000, Many of the girls, who are @aughters of millionaire residents of {New York, Brooklyn, Westchester Gounty, Texas, Ilinois and other States, lost clothing and jewels valued at thou- sands of dollars, During this morning the girls searched the ruins for their diamonds and jew- elry, but could find nothing but melted gold. Drew Seminary was built fifty rs ago and the Memorial Hall was in memory of the late Prof. Smith. Last night the students held an en- tertainment called “A Japanese Wed- ding,” which was a mock ceremony, and afterward a fair was held. Nearly all the society girls were in costumes. ‘The stage was decorated with lanter and bunting, while the auditorium was .filled with inflammable material, The Japanese affair a great success and was attended by society folk from all parts of the country. The girls were sound asleep when Miss Frances Dough- ty, a teacher, gave the alarm. School Soon In Uproar, In a moment the school was in an up- roar, The girls had been trained in Nghting fire, and many of them proved themselves heroines, Miss Martha L, Hanaburgh, daughter of President Han- aburgh, ran from floor to floor and spread the alarm, Miss Gertrude John- son awakened four of her chums and then calmly packed her trunk. Miss Hanaburgh broke open a door of one of the girls rooms and shook a sleeping student until she awakened, ‘The she ran to the fourth floor and aroused her brother, Emory Hanaburgh, who might have perished but for her brave action. Many of the girls wko only had their walking costumes, left here this after- noon on a freight train, Drew Sem!- nary was known the world over as one of the most famous schools for young ladics in the Empire State. Girls came to {t from all purts of the United States, ard in addition to learning literature, art and mathematics, they took a course of physical training. It was a sad thing to see the pretty girls roaming through the fire ruins eearch- ing for heirlooms, jewelry, or some keepsake. In addition to Prof, Hanaburgh the school contained thirteen teachers and sixty students. ‘The school was fitted out with fire extinguishers and buckets, ire spread so rapidly that litte a > save the building. the gas yy bulld- ‘The build ings were frame and the Names spread with alarming rapidity. Carmel has no Fire Department and all the villagers cpuld do was to let the buildings burn the ground. All that remains of the seminary’ structures are two tall chimneys and the smouldering ‘Among the girls who. attended the seminary and who lost’ jewelry and clothing were the Misses Edna West- cott, of Lake Mahopac; Marlon Hogg, of Brooklyn; Lucy Phillips, of Deposit: Flora Perry, of Mahopac Falls; Blanche Kennedy, Dole Dale, Marion Bert- holf, Frances Grant and Evelyn Norris, y Hanaburgh said: the girls proved themselves hero- ines in eve sense of the word. ‘There is much to what caused the TC) rstand its origin, as ut Im the Memorial e the fire started when the to sl Somebody must ve Stopped on a match. I can ac- count for it in no other wa It was reported around Carmel that two students fainted and that they ed out by their companions, names could not be learned. BELIEVES CAUGHTER WAS KIDNAPPED sosephine McCahill Disappears When Playing in the Street with Children, and Mother | Thinks Her Child Was Stolen. were but their Because Mrs. Bridget widow, believes hor sx-y. ter Josephine has ben kidnapped the police to-day sent out ageneral alarm. Josephine, who is the youngest of six children, was last seen playing on the sidewalk in front of her home, at No, 4889 Tin? avenue. late yesterday after- noon, She was then with several other children but none of them noticed her disappearance ‘until her mother called for her, A negro family in the neighborhood Was disporsessed yesterday, and Mrs, McCahill thought they may have taken Josephine in revenge, as they believed that Mrs. MeCahill had caused them to be evicted. Securing two policemen, | Mrs, McCahill went to the house to which the _ ne family moved and searched it. But Josephine was not Mght an dress with a She has a gold ring. € gone, McCahill, a 1d daugh- ‘ound, ‘The child has large blue eye: short hair tled in a Lope Wis wearing a blue calico Russian blouse, ¢ with the settin; ALLS WOMAN, STABS HIMSEL If Koenig Recovers He Must Face a Charge of Murdering Mrs. Emma Kaufman, Young Married Woman. FINGER MARKS ON HER THROAT GIVE THE CLUE. a Other Tenants in the House Where the Couple Lived Also Tell of Quarrels During the Night. In the same room with the body of the woman whom he had taken from her husband, evidently murdered by strangulation, Adolph Koenig to-day stabbed himself in the abdomen in the fiat at No. 319 West Fortleth street. At first, when Koenig was sent to Roosevelt Tospttal in a most serious condition, he was charged simply with attempting to commit suicide, but the police said that later he would also be charged with murder. The woman was Mrs. Emma Kauf- man, a tall, slight blonde of unusual Good looks, twenty-four years old, and the mother of three children, the eldest of whom Js elght years old, About 1 o'clock this morning Koenig roused the flat-house with his cries that the young woman was dead. He was 80 excited that all he could say was that he had awakenod a little while before to find the dead body in bed beside him, After a consultation it was decided that Koenig should remain in his flat until morning, and then the police were to be notified. ‘The other tenants retired again, and until long after daylight all was still. The janitress, knowing there was a dead woman in the house, went to Koenig's door and rapped. ‘There was no response and she pushed the door open, Sight Staggered Her. ‘The sight which mot her gaze at first staggered her, and then she ran back through the halls screaming at the top of her votece, On the bed was the dead woman, but the bedclothing was smeared with blood. Near the bed on the floor where he had fallen was Koenig, unconscious from loss of blood, with a great, gaping wound in his ab- domen, By his side was a butcher knife. Koenig nas a butcher and had kept several of his sharp meat-cutting knives in his room. It was evident that after inflicting the wound on himscif he had thrown himself actoss the body of the woman. As he became weak from loss of blood his body slowly slipped from the bed and dropped to the floor. Kaufman, the husband, was now working with the detectives, who until this time had overlooked the examina- tion of the woman's body. When the bedclothes were pulled back the deep indentation of finger marks on the throat were apparent. The totgue protruded, the eye-balls were popped out and the face was dark. These were considered certain Indica- cations that the woman had been stran- gled to death in bed. Kaufman said that his wife had not been satisfied with the rather small wages he earned as n cab driver, and that some time ago she informed him that she was golyg to get more money. In thelr flat, in Fortieth street, where the tragedy o ‘red, Mrs Kaufman took in boarders, Koenig was one of them. Kaufman naid he frequently had occasion to condemn his wife's conduct, not only with Koenig, but with other men. It was when he was calling her to task about these things, he sald, that she Informed him that she must have more money than he could give her to dress and live the way she desired. Husband Forced to Move, An open rupture occurred in the Kauf- mun family two months ago, the hus- band says, and, as Koenig would not go, be himself moved Found Important Witnes: After finding a most important wit- ness to-day the police decided to make the charge of murder against Koenig. i ayes, employed In the Army and Navy Club, roomed with his wife in the Fortleth ‘street flat. He sald to Capt, Hussey, of the West Thirty enth street station: “When I returned from my work at 1 o'clock this morning my wife and my- self heard Koenlg and the woman quar- relling in thelr room, Stveral times wo. heard him say he would kill her unless she gave him more money. “During the quarrel he left the room and went to the kitchen, and we heard him moving the things around in the drawer where he kept his butcher Knives: Soon he went back to his room and the quarrel was continued, In a minute all was still and we couid hear her choking. We heard her gasps for breath, the struggle and finally the rattle in her throat. Both my wite and myself were certain that she was be- ing strangled, but we Kent still for fear Koenlg would come in and kill us. We. felt he had procured a butcher knife, CIRCUS POLE FALLS ON 2 SPECTATOR James Enright and Miss Ethel Estilow Severely Hurt When Tent Was Being Lowered at Burlington, N. J. BURLINGTON, N. J., May 3.—James Enright and Miss Ethel Estilow, a young couple of this city, visited a cir- ous that gave a performance here last night, The show was hardly over be- fore preparations were begun to take down the tents, The centre pole of thé main tent was lowered, it Js alleged, before all the spectators had hed an opportunity to leave the tent, and it struck Tnright and Mins Betilow in its descent. Both severely injured, were ARS. THE WORLD: ANNA KAUFMAN, WHO WAS STRANGLED TO DEATH. TWO IL FTLLY BURN Emil Andeion, Aged 5, and His Sisti| Clara, Aged 4, Wil! Protbly Die from the Effect offevere Burns. Vour-vear-old little brother E en Anderson and her five years old, were fatally burned His afternoon while building a bonfl in che yard back of their home on dnson avenue, Totten- ville. The boy, who a sturdy little chap. was bullding thire out of paper boxes that he had conanded his ttle sister to bring mother was Ine front of the house and they soon lia fine blaze to dance about, The little girlnally got a soap box bhat taxed and fire in a tumbled him im the cellar. Their ler strength to carry, attemug to put It on the ty the flames, Emil, with rare presep of mind for a young- ster, aught hisister by the feet and pulled her out the fine and in doting 60 set his owblothing ublaze. The screams} the burning ohildren attracted theiriother's attentlun who, seizing a biget, yard foot when tha parent endeavored to smother and before shau They burned of rushed into. the We afire from head to the ines in thelr clothing, uicceeded her hair was ff to ® sealp and her arms were te bly ar Dr. Royal lL. overs, a neighbor, wi called and coat rodles of bot children. wit! Bhote nette leus, armas and’ blister features a shysiclan ¢ ut Nttle MOTHER EAD, HE KILLD HIMSELF ——t Harry Clark, of the Former Famous R urant-Keeper, Grieved i Over the Loss of His Harry the son of John (rk, once the pro- prietor of a well bwn Sixth Avenue restaurant, ended Wife this afternoon by shooting himselln the head with a revolver. living for the patfew days in the apartment of Mrsfatherine Tidd, at No. 140 rent. I oo Clark, twty-five fears old, Tho yog\man had been West Ondfundred and Six- teenth street Ten vears ago hijister, Annie Clark, threw herself in fst of an “L' train Seventy-scondjtreet sstation and at was crushed lost his mother a to qth. - Young Clark k ago. He attend- ed her beside day jd night through a long MJlness and hqdeath plunged him in the deepest melcholy. ‘ Several days agthe Clark home on Madison and Bight) Harry Cla Hundred n up and er, and his 1o8 well Known In ‘leswent to lye with avenue \ar One Mrs. Tidd. The young miin f» in the real est- tate business on Mdison avenue, but since his mother'sjeath he has ‘done nothing and prem unable to shake off his grief over ‘This ufternoen turned to body of He had shot temple, Wright Hospltl, y ahd ben Instagtands When JohpClaf. suicide, wits he was repute to lived in a finy brd mother's death, Mrs, Tidd re- her aparpent she found the ‘ong Clié in the bathroom, aimg through the left Dr. Sverfee, of the J. Hood led, but death the father of the estaurant business e very wealthy. stone mansion on y th Weat Seyntv-trdftreet with his large family, maintinin/an elaborate estab- lishment, Sunday Wor { —a———_—_ Vants Work Melay Morning Wonders. ILTED WIDDW, NOW MUST PAY Mrs. Lily Carlisle Wins Her Suit Against “Barney” Whymper for the Recovery of $7,000 Worth of Bonds. “This suit is the revenge of a jealous woman. When the widow, Lily Car, Isle, found she could not have ‘RBarne: she wanted the bonds,” began ex-Judge Finney, in his address to the jury in the trial before Justice Howard, of the Supreme Court, of Mrs. Carlisle's sult tw recover $7,131.25 from Lionel Barnett Whymper ,the value of fifteen bonds She entrusted to him’ to sell. Whymper admits that he had the that she aqufesced and accépted his promise to pay for them.’ The testi- mony developed that Whymper and the pretty widow toured through Europe to- gether. She testified that she loaned $1,800 to him, and he swore that he spent $600 of his own money on the trip. Both admit that they were engaged to be marrfed at that time, and a bunch of love letters passed between them in which she addressed him as “My own dear Barney," She saya she discovered Jan. 5 that he had been married a month to another woman, and admits that she begun sult for her bonds ten days later and haa him thrown into Ludlow Street Jai! 26 Jast. That {9 my present address,"" Whym- per testified, ‘She sued me when she found out I had rounging married another ‘She locked the husband up in ,- se she thought she ceoutd piteh out of the wife, her successful al, auld Judge Pinney, ou are very kind, my dear boy, read Judge Pinriey from one of her love- letters to Whymper, “That's what this letter says from a Jan, widow to her dear boy. It was the money he rent her that kept her in Burope. that brought her home last September.” Hut in spite of all this the jury was gut only eight minutes and brought in a verdict for the widow for the full amount of her clal GHOUL AOBBED HIS BROTHER'S BCDY TUESDAY | Sauesiilippis m bonds and has sold them, but declares | EVENING. MAY 3. 1902, ROBBED THEIR FRIEND OF $3,000 Clad in Gay Raiment Five Ital- | ians Laden with Gold Coin and Jewelry Are Arrested at Steamship Pier. | STOLE MONEY FROM NEW NEIGHBOR'S TRUNK. | Armed with Stilettos and Re- volvers, They Were on Their Way to Sunny Italy with the | Proceeds of Their Plunder. \ | Loaded down with gold and silver! of United States and Italian coinage, | watches, gold chains and rings, and armed with four stilettos and two loaded revolvers, five Ttallany wer: arrested to-day on the Italtan Line pler at the foot of West Thirty-fourth atrect. The prisoners, who were fairly fwooped down upon by Detective Ser- geants Petrosino and Bonnotl, were charged with robbing the home of their friend, Tullana, at! White Plains, of coin and $60) worth cf jewelry: ne prisoners gave thelr names respectively as Lorenzo Stallito, thirty-elght years old; Domenzio Btal- lito, fty sears old; Luigi Sauestilippl, years old, and his three sons, hteen, Frank, nine, and five. All were taken to Police Headquarters, On March 16 last the StaMitos and ved to White Plain where they rented a small house. They became acquainted with Paola Juliana, and a m friendsidp sprang up be- | tween them. Told of Hin idden Wealth, In a burst of confidence Julfana tuld | his new found friends that he had drawn $3,00 from the bank and de- posited it In a tin box secured old trunk. ‘Though the trunk was ina state of decay It was fastened with an enormous padlock. an The occasion of the withdrawal of | the money was celebrated by Juliana | with his dear fricnds, the Iitos and | and Ju embraced his) guests affectionately when they left the house. He, his wife and his sixteen- year-old boy then went to bed, Upon arising the following morning Jullana to examine hia treasure irunk. ‘The huge padlock was still in position, but one side and the contents were gone, ‘Tearing his hair he rushed to tell to his new friends of his. loss, They were gone, but lying on a broken chair was the tin box that had con- tained the $3,000 in gold and more than $500 worth of jewelry Caught Thieves After Ten Dayn. Inspector McClusky was notified of the robbery and assigned Detective- rgts. Petrosini and Bonnoll to the For the past ten days the de- t ves, Juliana and his son have watched the French and Ttallan line pliers... To-day they came upon the friendly Stallitos and, Saueslllippi dresed in gala raiment marching down she pier, bag and baggage, and provided with tickets. to Palermo, ‘They were #0 amazed at thelr capture that they ot- fered no resistance and were taken to Police Headquarters. Upon being searched, $1,291 in United States coin and 1,000 If tallan money, were found on the prisoners. They were also laden with four gold watches, a half-dozen gold chains and scores rings. The oldest Sauesillippt boy car- Fled a big army revolver, as did his) fither, The Stallitos wore’ two stilettos | each, eoweey | OLDEST PRINTER IS DEAD. Jamen C. Cook Passes Away in His Bighty-xeventh Year, MILFORD, Mass., May 3.—James C. Cook, known as the oldest practical printer In the United States if not in the world, died here to-day of old age in his elghty-seventh year, Mr, Cook was the senior proprietor of the Milford Journal, At Bellows Falls, Vt, native place, Mr. Cook began learning the printing’ trade at the age of thir- tean years. He has set type in the within tw. fr. ¢ ried to Miss Marion FB. i Putney, Vt, in 180 and ha dren, two ¢ Sauesillippl. cs cane, ournal offi bertson fdur chil- NOT ON MEAT Man Couldn’t Regain Strength Un- Ul He Changed to Grape-Nata. It’s a common joke to say “He eats so much it makes him poor to carry it around” when speaking of some Detective-Sergeant Cuff Seeks Tramp Who Rifled Pockets of lelative Killed by Railroad Train. Detective Sergeant Patrick Cuff is looking for a man who Is said to have robbed the body of his: brother Michael Cuff, a foreman for the O'Rourke Con- struction Company, who was struck and killed by a train yesterday afternoon near the Highbridge station of the New York Central Ratlroad. Cuff was in charge of a gang of men who were engaged in filing in the bank nbhar the ratlroad com- pany's property, and stepped in front of a fast train. ‘The man aad bean subpoenaed to attend the Inquest yes- terday on a who had been killed in the same mer ay the same place over a month ago It was sported by a rairoad employee tower that, almost as soon y struck ithe ground at the side of the tracks, a man ran up and rifled the pockets, taking a revolver and & quantity of money. The robber is supposed (o have been a tramp, J.F.MOSS MADE MAGISTRATE Succeeds Lorena Zel Recently Appointed Justice. Mayor McClellan to-day appointed Joseph F. Moss as a member of the Board of City Magistrates to succeed Lorens Zeller, recently appointed a Jus- tice of the Court of Special Sessions. lagistrate Moss will fill the unexpired t ding July 1, 190%, with eats ans thin, scrawny fellow who eats as much as a horse, but it is frequently true if the food is not the kind the body calls for. A person might eat a ton of im- proper food and never get an ounce of nourishmnet from it, but put them on a Grape-Nuts diet and four tea- spoonstul of this food (which is all nourishment) quickly brings pounds in weight and a fortune in health! and strength. This has been proved} over and over. | | diminutive woman, grabbed one of WOMAN CAUGHT. A “GEER OP” Mra, Julius Stark, of No, 1991 Lox- Ington avenue, thought she saw thre men trying to search her husband's) | pocket in a One Hundred and Sixteenth street cross-town car Inst might, and when they got off at Lexington avenue she learned that her husband was $20 short, | They started after the car, and with ® crowd of several hundred following they overtook {t at Seventh avenue. Then the @ree men left the car and started to stroll away, Mrs, Stark, a em ESE a day. —and longer. 0c. a pair at $1.75. at17c. at 3ic. at $12.98. A German woman of Chicago gives) an instance in her own familly. It's briefly told but the truth 1s there: | y husband lost his left hand in| an accident and lost a_ terrgble amount of blood, kept getting weaker | for five months and finally got a ter-| rific cough. He would eat big meals| of meat and potatoes to get well, but didn't get any good from them. F nally I persuaded him to try Grape-| Nuts food, and from a ‘skeleton | of 83 pounds he soon regained his normal weight of 207 pounds and is strong and well and declares he wants no other food for the main part of his meals, As for myselt my flesh was flabby, I tired so easily and my memory was | so poor I could keep nothing in my head, but after three months of th Grape-Nuts diet | gained 12 pounds, my flesh fs hard and firm, | am) stronger and my memory has im.| proved wonderfully. I keep a candy store, but I sell Grape-Nuts, too, for I think it is the best thing to give the children.” Name given by Pos- tum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Look for “The Road to Wellyille’ in each pkg. ~ i at $1.98. | way and turned him over to the pollee, was tdentined na J 105 Henry ntrect, attributing reveral Jigwer a plokpocket who works on reads; “E dip" me crdan-town Witle M to the ¥ to Louls Wi i Third he offered sayinw Mor Mra. Bt pert arn, VM ty No. take mone von to come to went, and Mra, Bt to Gourt Officer atarted for on) down. star elevator. ‘The co! en ume SZ Don’t Miss The pening Week) Of the 14th Street Store All this week is opening week. Thousands upon: Thousands more are:com-4 Be here to-morrow. The Twenty-third Regiment ‘Bandit Hazey Natzey’s Royal Hun-: thousands have been here. ing. Want you to come. All the decorations are intact. is playing its spirited music on the sixth floor. garian Orchestra, Szakvary’s Vienna Orchestra, Duchatellier’s Parlor Onc! and other talented organizations fill the air with inspiring strains. There’s a great pure food show in progress in the grocery+depart- ment. New merchandise in every section from the sixth floor down to and | including the basement. . Store is so big it can accommodate 100,000.shoppers Street and Sixth Avenue 40 years ago. Boys. 50c. Madras Waists and ouses at Women’s $3.50 “Magnetic” Shoes, Gea Pique Waists, neat patterns, at WARD 75c. 2-clasp Kid Gloves, at Women’s 25c. 2-clasp Lisle Gloves, seeiJapanned Tin Bread Boxes, at $1.00 Engraved Tumblers, per doz., shonpecerated Lamps, Wednesday $2.00 Nottingham Lace Curtains, at ott Dress Shapes, all new, at 49c. them 240, ne nin ark while 25e. Mercerized Ginghams, yard at) Gallery hia ploture Is No, 8814, and after | It allases to him, dip Th und Mra, Stark were on tho | Harlem tontify. they who Pollee Court were Stark # 0 KO tO w Yr was dying, urt-room, Delaney, unl the Delaney latter took H Everybody Is Delighted with This New Store for the Masses. The 14th Street Store is decidedly a store for the people. Its loca- tion at the very hub of New York’s shopping district is the best in New York. It has been the best since Oswin O’Brien built ‘“‘The Palace” store at 14th It will be the best for 40 yearsto come There is abundant evidence of this, with The 14th Street Store. Saturday and Monday the people turned the opening event into a series of grand ovations. the good old corner—Sixth Avenue’s Busy Corner. erecting this mammoth structure they were unwé'lingly diverted to localties more difficult to reach, but now they are visiting their new shopping home at the old stand and taking full advantage of the splendid goods and the amazingly low prices that have been marked for opening week. Here’s Wednesday’s List of Good Things: Read every line of these bargain notes. Store opens with low prices for goods that are trustworthy. No other kind will ever be offered for sale at any price, and if, for any reason, you are dis- satisfied with what you buy, bring it right back and make an exchange or have your money returned to you. 25c. and 30c. Oilcloth, a yard for 17c.| $1.00 and $1.25 Ruffled Muslin Cur- Secs Brussels Rugs, worth $18.50, at Look : | tains, 89c. |Men’s Negligee Shirts, $1.25-values, at 69c. Ib., 14c. 69c. Wash Boilers, copper bottoms, | B $12.50, Sideboards, Wednesday at Me $15.00 China Closets,highly finished, 10¢c._ W at 5 Women’s Ae Hemstitched Handker- Ce |Black Lace Bebe Hats, values $1.98, chiefs, at at 98c. He ph Morrixon, of In tha Rogues’ to. t\a pound of cure.” «d| Hyomel! through the neat pocket In- hat want to | Inted him out y. Delanvy ran the ENRY SIEGEL All were so glad to return to Learn that The 14th Street Womens $15.00 Tailored Suits, at: | Women’s $5.00 Voile Dress Skirts, at $3.93. ; | Women’s $6.50 Tan Covert Jackets, $4.98, “ Peruna, full size $1.00 bottle, at 56c. a) fancy Santa Clara, per Ib., 2c. Early June Peas, sweet and tender, per can, 7c. : Porterhouse and Sirloin Steaks, per | joys’ $4.00 Norfolk Suits, sizes 7 to 16 years, at $1.97. n’s Fine $15 Hand-Made Suits, at ash Lace Galloons and Es- curial Galloons, yard at Sc. Sample Strips 25c. Embroideries, yard at 10c. Men's large size 10c. Handkerchiefs, Ce 'Protects the System Against Catarrh. | "eres Prevents Colds and Cures Grip and Catarrh.— Money Back If It Falls, “An ounce of prevention is worth A few breaths of haler that comen with every outfit will check a cold or the grip at the start, and prevent serious and lasting illness, Tn all catarrhal troubles and dis- eases of the alr passages, Hyomel haa a positive action not possessed by any other medicine or treatment, It {s pleasant and conventetit to use, Hegeman & Co,, Na. 200,Broadway, give thelr personal guarantes with every Hyome! outfit they sell to ro. fund the money {f {t di not. cure, (a Everybody is delighted During the process of 50 B. & M. Blue Trading Stamps Free, and Two With Every 10 Cents You Spend. During Wednesday, and every day this week, we shall give everybody starting a new book at The 14th Street Store 50 B. & M. Blue Trading Stamps Free—20 when the store is entered, and 30 when the Premium Exhibit room is visited on the Fifth Floor. As an additional inducement we shall, during Wednesday and every day this week, give two B, & M. Blue Trading Stamps with each 10 cents spent in The 14th Street Store. ca see r io ORE Lela selabeae 4 :

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