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i ij | i 4 y ALONE IN NEW YORK tn Her This — FIND ASSISTANCE? d Day’s Quest of Shelter and Work in Great City a Young Woman Obtains a Real Offer of Aid. Qf a young woman coming to New York to make her way in the world finds herself stranded in the great ity, what shall she do? To whom shall she go for assistance, and what kind of assistance will be offered to her? This question has been asked in two articles in The Evening World, and a feporter told of her efforts to obtain shelter and employment, It was Pointed out that thoro should be somo @rle’ home nor ‘a “mission,” not a agency, but a place where a inetitution that is neither a working- woman's hotel, not an employment rl, ordinarily self-supporting but out of work for the time, could be boarded and given practical help in her search for Sew employment, Some of the readers of The Evening World probably have had the har- FELL T0 ene nee SRLS EnE Rene Data STREET FROM BRIDGE Trying to Recover Hat, Young Fireman Returning to Car Plunges Headlong Through Trestle and Fractures Skull. In a frantic effort to recover his hat, which blew off while he was riding on f trolley car crossing the Williamsburg Bridge early to-day, Joseph Riley, a fireman attached to Hook and Ladder No, 62, Bedford and Myrtle avenues, Brooklyn, fell through the open trestle between the Manhattan terminal and Manhattan tower, plunging down into Delancey street, He landed in @ snowbank and was taken to Gouverneur Hospital suffering from In- ternal Injuries and a fractured skull, The fireman, who !s twenty-one years old and of athletic build, seemed bent upon capturing the elusive hat regard less of his peril, He was standing on the bask platform of a car of the Nos- trand avenue line he had boarded at the Manhattan terminal of the bridge. When fhe car had arrived midway between the Manhattan terminal and headlong | FOUND RIVAL IN SEARCH OF PIRATE'S GOLD Capt. Morrison, Who Went with Earl Fitzwilliam to Cocos Island, Is Back. Capt. B. W. Morrison, who com~- manded the Cocos Island treasure hunt- Ing expedition fitted out by Barl Fita- willlam, of England, which failed after the mysterious blowing up of @ cliff, was a passenger on the City of Wash- |Ington, which arrived here to-day from Colon, Panama. He refused to talk about the search for gold, The chief foatures of this famous ex- pedition are wrapped in mystery and Capt, Morrison was not Inclined to throw any light on the effort of the Harl to add the buried millions on the treasure island to his already vast wealth, His search for the hoard of a hundred pirates is at an end, “The expedition has been abundoned,’ | sald Capt. Morrison, “and our ship the he say who the six or seven are aré running the Board? past year the members of this have been criticixed by this same col- | league and in an ungrateful and: un- | Qualified manner, Tt ts plainiv up to the complaining ‘member to tender, We resignation to the Board of whlel® he jis @ member and of which he has pen biy Snel) spoken s0 slightingly.”” who Gen, Sickles was not present at the meeting, He has not attended recent sessions of the Board, |DRINK AND WANT KILL DERELICT. McCall, Angered by His Hints of an Aldermanic Bood!e Syndi- cate, Declares He Should) Name Men or Quit the Board, Peter Mart, Said to De Member of Proniinent New York Family, Dies Minerably, Alderman John ''. McCall, Tammany lwader in the Boamd of Aldermen, sug- gested in a speech at the meeting of | the Board to-day that it was “up to” Gen, Daniel Sicklos to tender his reas Hart ignation as an Alderman for haying | Wealthy New York family, but owing criteised hia colitagues in a recently | '0 8M unfortunate weakness for drink printed Interview, Gen, Blekles had | 8&4 for five years beon estranged from | declared that the Board was controlled | "8 relatives. He eked out a mixorable | by "six cr seven" members, and that | existence splitting wood and doing odd | those members were not honest, Ho |J0bs for the shopkeepers along ‘Third | avenue, | Plainly {ntimated that the legislative | During the past three months he spent | powers of the Board, as controlled by | moxt of his time in the saloons In the the six or seven men, was employed for | }elehborhyod of tho lodging-house whero private gain, ae Re tue iltue td, ai aeryatenaes f | drink, , po! “T sald Alderman McCall, in i that while he was crawilng up the stair- prefacing his arraignment of Gen. pee Ui ads ier Jogging house he “y i antes n Wenlness due to exposurr, Blekles, ‘any member of this Board) ghnk and starvation, and died petare | knows any of us {is not honest, why doesn't he mention names? Why an early riser among the lodgers scended on his way to work and stum- doesn't the complaining one state open- ly that this or that member Is dis- Peter Hart, fifty years old, was found dead on the stairway of a lodging- house at No, 28 Third avenue early | to-day, Hart was connected with a| bled across his hody, | Hart was an educated man, Tt 18 sald | rowing experiences described in the articles on this question that have been Printed trom day to day. ‘They are luvited to doseribe for the benefit of their @isters in distress, just what occurred when they were confronted with this | Veronique now Hes at Colon, Sevori! persona were Injured in the blowing up of a cliff, but T kngW little about that, the west tower of the bridge his hat blew off. honest and show him up? Why doesn’t! inen In New York, ‘ordeal, To-day The Evening World reporter continues her description of her ' efforts to obtain uld and work. BY EMMELINE PENDENNIS. My experience at the Young Women's | Christian Association and the Charity Organization Society, as described in The Kvening World on Monday and Saturday, had proved to me that s0 Jong as a girl applicant for help had | @elends or relatives anywhere In or out~ Bide the olty the responsibility of pro- viding for her would be shifted to them. She would be “sent home.” In atarting upon my third quest of shelter and employment, I decided to force Whatever institution I victimized to , Undertake the entire rospunalbility of My safety and welfare by presenting myself as a young woman unencum- bered by family connections, By wholesale homicide mother, father, gisters and friends elept peacefully in . the village churchyard; there survived only one—my aunt and foster-mother, ‘whom fast developing conaumption had exiled to a Sullivan County sanatorium, The whole of her small income was Deeded for her maintenance there and she would be quite unable to come to my rescue, She Sees Mrs. Grannis, Tt was in the person of this’ last of @ dying race that I rang the bell of the Christian League Women's Indus- trial Club Hore, The doors opened, end I was confronted by Mrs, Elizabeth The Grannis, of Social Purity fame. y nis, 1 knew world knows Mrs, Gran dy Mrs, Grannin, but as for me, ranmis had not that pleasure; ‘htm Jooking for the Ch—Chr—Chris- | flan League Industrial Club Home,” J explained, “Step in,” sald Mra, Grannis. This encounter with this partisan of purity and woman's suffrage was un- premeditated. An interview with woman In the public eye who ts un- eonsclous of belng Interviewg) 18 un- usnal, It ts one of those rare instances when the reporter has the advantage. Mrs, Grannis led me into her stiff. bucked parlor, furnished in the style of | forty years ago, I sank dejectedly into @ chalr and found that the springs be- neath its crimson velvet wore also stifbacked, “Can vou help me to find work?” I asked her, “Humph!" eald the lady with a grim and searching look through her gold- rimmed spectacles Mrs, Grannis impresses one as being @ littig woman of great force and energy and of old-time New England primness jon, When she ejaculated | " the word was fraught with Biyuniwance, otld her briefly that I was home- leus; that the | pyblishing company for which I had been reading proof tor the pase five weeks, had failed two! days before, leaving three weeks' wages Mupald. I had come to New York fron! Rochester to take this position, and I knew no one in the oily; and in answer ty her Inquiry about friends and rela- tives at home my face grew even longer, and I told of my dying aunt, Then I tried to» bear up and look brave, The plan of sending me home was at least Torestalled, “What financial statement can you make?’ sald Mrs, Grannis, “Cash, 2h cents; Habliities, $20," T sald, ‘Then 1 told hef how I owed my land: Jady that sum, and that T had lett her | hoiine the dav before, when she Mad re- velved an offer for the room I was occu- Pyne. “Who sent you to me?” It had been the Home column in the elty directory, but J told her the ma- tron of the lodging-house, “You had to pay for your bed there— how much?” “Mfteen cents; night.” “Tt was good for you," sald the lady, with the tone the Inquisition might have used toward a martyred saint, "Very good for you, Indeed. Hereafter you'll have real sympathy with poor rirls. Now what do you expect me lo do for you?" “Help mo find employment." Told to Help Hernelt, “You'll have to help yourself, young woman, But I'll co what I can," I told her of a two days' unsuccessful Fearch for work arene the large puo-| Ushing houses, Then Mrs, Grannis was) Kindness itself, She offered me shelter lt was then Saturday morning—until tt was a dreadful Monday, but with the understand that 1 should provide for my own meals, She recognized the need of my | getting some work to do that would five money for food, ‘an you sew?" she asked, ie jereupon I was despatched to the! Or every price and kind O: every size and location Misy'te found through World's Want Directory | containtng | “To Let” and “ Boarders Wanted” ads, Charity Organization Society, and, if they failed, to the Soclety for Improving the Condition of the Poor, to ask tor sewing to take home, ‘You tell them what you want and that I sent you," said Mrs, Grannis, “They'll tell you they don't give work to any but women with homes, But roe tell them anyway and make them elo you, When you get something come back here In the afternoon, and Tl look after you until Monday,” T left my adviser and made for the United Charities Building, But the Charity Organiaation Boclety and the Soclety for Improving the Condition of the Poor would have none of me. 1 made a Piteoun Plea for sewing or some work that would bring In enough money to keep body and soul together for a few days, but they were inexorable, In the first place, I was not a woman with 4 home, and therefore, 1 inferred, nelther respectable nor deserving, They had a EGULATION that — only Worthy women with homes could be given sewing to do. Moreover, 1 would hot be sure of shelter after Monday, and surely—and here an indignant flush ‘pread over the application clerk's face =I could not have the profane intention of sewing on Sunday, 1 told her that was my hi there fs something about David's eating the shewbread on the Sabbath—about plucking ears of corn and pulling one's Sheep out of the ditch, If need be, The Charity Organization is so hedged about by rules and regulations that Work which would be of utmost value to a deserving girl in extreme financial straits cannot be given to her because oO unfortunate as to without @ home. The temporary gshelo% offered LY bet Grannis could not be recognized The representative of the Charity Or- ganizalion was so good as to vo as the addresses of certain employment agenctes—then closed for the half-holl- day—to which I could apply on Monday, t 4 o'clock I ugaln docosted Mra, Grannis and told her of my fatlure to secure temporary work from the chari- table Institutions, or any permanent po- sition from various firms I had visited, Bhe reterated her intention of keeping me until Monday at least, and of send- ing me on Monday to men in the pub- lishing business with letters of intro- duction, She mentioned about seven Ae, some of them well known to e, Advice from Mrs, Grannis, I spent the afternoon with Mrs. Gran- nis. We sat by her fire while she lec- tured me like a DORR girl, on almost every subject conceivable, “There are lots of people who wouldn't hep you simply obcause you can give no proof of veracity," she sald, “The world ts so full of scamps, But I belleve your story to be true,” T felt a keen twinge of mental pain. "It has been my life work to help girls," she went on, "but one-fourth of te aren't wor what do for them, omen are such weepy-pe viny> ‘twiny things, they make The pick! “And they get themselves in such ailly crapes, “Now look at you! If you had had tho oper @ort of parents and they had rought you up to be self-dependent you would never have found yourself in such a predicament, I belfeve in the Aelt-supporting woman, I've been self- supporting all my life, You don’t know what that means—what persistency, what unending vigilance, It takes a woman to keep herself without ever falling upon others for support. But some day, if you have the right stuff in_ you, you'll find out,"” T could have told Mrs, Grannis a thing or two myself, but I held my peace and piled her cat's tall Instead, “What is your religion, are you a Christian?" asked my bengtactor, This was a stumbling-block, T owned up to having been a back-siiding Episcopal- fan, and afterward I wished 1 hadn't, “Well, of all the sects they are the most blameworthy T know of," she sald, “What do they swear? By all the hol vows In Heaven they renounce the world, |I the flesh and the devil, but do they ever have the slightest Intention of abjuring even one of these three? Never! T had fallen even more from grace, but T istened to a very earnest exposi- tlon of the duties and fovs of a Chris- tian until I wasn't sure if I were in a front or back new. I had cause to re- pent the hardness of my heart. “Have vou ever married?! asked next, No," T was On the Question of Marriage. “Well, I'm glad of it, Don't you ever murry until you find the man who 38 your intellectual and moral affinity, Never sink marriage to!the base plane of the means for a lasy woman's sup- port. Why do you suppose so many women marry? Por love? No; for lazi- ness, They are too Indolent to provide for themselves, They marry, with no sense of their responsibility, bring chil- dren Jato the world, rear them In tdle- nevs, ind there we are, You know I think the basest woman, the’——— but here Mra, Grannis lapsed into meditu- tlon “You know If you show any sort of ability you might some time get work AR a reporter,’ “But women reporters are such queor persons,” I ventured faintly, T was asked for an account of my ex- Ponditures, what money 1 had brought at the start, here, and how much I pald for board, Mrs, Grannis thought me ex- travagant, “Reonomy, economy," sald she, em= phasizing her words with sharp snips of her scissors Ina stint she was ripping. “Maybe this will teach you, No one can make her way before ‘she realizes the value of money,” . ope, and wanted to add that! Chases Hat Along Roadway. Tho wind whirled tho hat along the Icy roadway and Riley leaped from the car and gave chase, The hat bounded over the tles, skipped several girders and spun around ‘the interlacing Jron work. Paying no uttention to the ice and sleet on which he slipped several times, the fireman continued his dan- ®ervus chase, Both the conductor and motorman of the oar called to him to be careful, but he paid no attention to thelr alarms, Several passengers got off to call him back, but he never ceased sprinting after the rolling, twisting hat. The car was stopped for him as he had climbed out on the trestle work In a last effort to get the hat, He almost had It In nis grasp when a puff of wind blew it up and out beyond the rim of the bridge. Then the young man started hack, picking his way gingerly over the ice coated tles and ironwork. Every one in the car was watching him breath- lessly, as every now and then he would bend almost jn two to maintain his balance, Plunges Sixty Feet to Street, He was within 100 feet of the car when his feet were seen to shoot out from under him and with a faint cry he shot down through an open space between the Iron girders, Two women in the car fainted as they saw him disappear into the canyon-like depths below the car, his cry of terror reaching thelr ears, All of the men passengers leaped from the car and looked down into the snow covered street below, where they could make out the blue uniform of the young fireman stretched out In a snowbank, He had dropped sixty feet, and ac- cording to Policeman Bayland, of the his body did not turn, but continued head downward until it etruck the snowbank, Skull Fractured; May Die, Bayland and Policeman Barton hur- ried to the man’s side and found him sul conscious, The snow bank tnto which ‘he had fallen was three feet high and crested with ice. He was cut and bruised aboyt the face and hands, and before an a’nbulance arrived from Gouverneur Hospital sank Into coma, The ambulance surgeon said his skull was fractured and that he @ould die, He lives at No, 221 Roebling street, Brooklyn, ‘The car from which the young fireman had gone after big hat walted until the man'a body was dug out of the snow- bank and carried to the ambulance, All trafile to Brooklyn was held up for half an hour, CN ed POOL-ROOM CHIEF GOES 10 EUROPI’. Mahoney, Alleged Hend of Syndl- cate, Avolda Service of Sub- poena by Jerome, District-Attorney Jerome Issued a statement to-day In whieh he says that the pool-rooms of New York are prac- tleuly closed and the few which are operating are mostly of the handbook variety, This follows a discoverey by the District-Attorney's offlce that James § Mahoney alleged to be the head of A. pool-room syndicate, has sailed for Burope to avoid a subpoena, which the District-Attorney was trying to serve, “The pool-room men got busy closing thelr shops,” said Mr, Jerome, “when said that I would show them no leniency, The situation is now practl- cally under control." Mahoney is said to have been one of the largest operators in the city, He was an organizer on syndicate {deas, acooriing to ths District-Attorney, Whoever showed talent and ability could always get the muney from Ma- honey, Who saw to it that he was pald hack with Interest, The service was in Mahoney's management, et 23,009 STRIKE IN BELGIUM, CHARLEROI, Belgium, Feb, 7.—It | was announced to-day that 22,957 min- REPOSE IN Shown to a Cozy Room. At about 6 L was shown up to a cozy Mtule room, Conselence pricked pretty strongly, “Here Was a good-hearted woman taking me Into her home and bothering about my future, I went downstalrs and explajnod that I thought I'd run up to my old hoard Ing place and get my tooth brush, Mrs, Grannis seemed to think a few things of that nature n y to my comfort, 80 T made my g xit ‘ Mrs, Grannis certainly faced the situ: ation Ilke the good woman she is, She was prepared to give me a temporary home and find me work, But a girl in my position would have met with her by pure accldent, as Ta t was chance, not the ordinary channels of inquiry, that brought me to her door, 88 | Served and So! 32 Fifth Avenu bridge squad, who had seen him fall, | ers out of 39,442 employed in the col-|puisory upon the corporation to permit lerles of this district are now on] New York Subway motormen to have strike, fifteen minutes’ rest between trips, | RY CROP OF 1892 | It’s Pure—That’s Sure, NEW YORK @ KENTUCKY Co., Sole Proprietor, Cor, {Iam not at liberty to tall of the sev- eral Incidents of our search,” When the Earl arrived at the island he found a countryman of his already “on the works,” to use an expresnive Americanism, This was Harold W, 8, Gray, a rich society man of London, to the Island some months ago with his | yacht Ros Marine and a concession \from the Costa Rican Government, A little gunboat ts-also part of the Gray 3 expedition ‘hat some blood was shed on Cocos Island when the expeditions of the Bo- jety mun and the esrl clashed comiinon gossip in Central American ports, though no one tn authority In elther expedition will talk on the sub- ject. Whether knives and revolvers Were drawn and blood was spilled, or whether more pacific argument, settled the divpute, the Veronique sailed out of | Water Bay’ sylth her bunting hanging in wilted folie and steamed into Colon for repalrs Mr, Gray remained master of the sit- uasion, with the guns of the lite gun- Wout ready to bark for him at uhe next intruder. He is digging and blasting | in the nurthern part of the isiand in the hope +1 dragging to lignt some of the | | fabuluus treasure buried by a host of buccaneers, When the Veronique arrived at. | Panama she transferred several men to the hospital, All were #eriously wound. ed and for a time fhe lives of some {req of, Barl itawilliam home to England. He alone offered toe how the mon came by thelr hurts, He declared in dia- patches sent to this country that the members of his expedition had sought to dynamite a cliff, and that a prema- ture explosion had injured his men, ‘The lips of all the other mombers of the expedition have remained sealed, and as a consequence the rumor has gained credence that the two expedl- tong engaged in bi pirates’ Island, eee MAN DIES OF POISON, were des) had sall WIFE ENDS HER LIFE. |; |Bodles of Mr, and Mra. Williams Found in Their Room tn Brooklyn, The bodies of John Williams, of No, | 276 Van Brunt street, Brooklyn, and his wife were found to-day In thelr room, | Clreumstances, according to the police, Indicate that the woman poisoned her husband and then killed herself, | Catherine McNabb, the landlady of |No, %6, roused one of her boarders, {Thomas Horan, this morning and told jhim she thought that something was | wrong with Willlams, The last that |had been seen of tim was on Sunday \night, when his wife, who had been |separated from him for some time, called at the house. She had previously heen forbidden the use of his rooms | }and whenever she called was obliged jto see him in the hallway, | Mrs, MeNabb had knocked at Will- 8 door yesterday morning, but re- 4 no response. When he failed pond to-day Mrs, McNabb went for Horan, The two forced open the door, On the bed Williams and his wife lay, | side by side, Both were fully dressed, At the side of the bed was a pitcher with the dregs of beer still remaining, | In a glass which stood near the pitcher was about an inch of the same stale Mquor, The contents of the pitcher and the glass have not yet been analyged, but the police think that Mrs, Williams placed poison in the beer to kill her | huaband and then drank some of it her- | self, An analysis will be made to-day }and an autopsy verformed upon both | bodies. rd [BILL GIVES REST TO SUBWAY MOTORMEN Senator Marks Wants to Make a Fitteen-Minute Stop Between Trips Compulsory, ALBANY, Web, 7.--Senator Marks to- |Gay introduced bilis to make {it com- BY 10 YEARS THE WOOD. i qy % » Id Everywhere He had gone | ly battle on the |e? John that several of his sons are business AND CO’S, | MARSHALL PIBLD gt, MANAGER Cured of Catarrh of Kidneys by Pe-ru-na. JOnN T, SHEAHAN, Jobn T, Sheahan, who has been for seventeen years manager of Marshall Field & Co.'s wholesale warehouse, und is Corporai zd Heximent Infantry, N. G., writes the following letter from {753 Indiana avenue, Fiat Six, Chicago, Ill, «I caught a cold which seemed to settle in my kidneys and affected them badly, I tried a couple of kidney remedies largely advertised, bat they did not help mo any. One of my foremen told me of tue great help he had received in using Perunaina similar case aud J at unoy pr.cured some, “1t was indeed a blessing to me, as I am on my feet a large part of the day, and trouble, suc as I had, affected me seriously, but four bottles of Peruna cured me entirely, and I would not be without it for three mouths? sulary.’? ‘Tho ureters are emall tubes that convey| Whenever the kidney is affected by cay from the kidneys their excretion. tarrh it Is known as Bright's Disease, The pelvis of the kidneys is a sort of] Poruna ts the remedy for catarrh wl reservoir into which all of the Ittle tubes | ever located—whether In the kidneys, tl tof the kidneys empty, head, the lungs or the pelvic organs, ‘All these tubes and cavities are Mned| Backache {s usually tho frst symptom with mucous membranes vory much lke] of kidney trouble. At the appearance of the membranes of the nose, throat or | he first symptom, Peruna should be taken, |mladlo ear, The mucous membranes of | elays are dangerous, often causing fatal the kidney Is subject to catarrh tho samc | -csults, as the mombrane of any other organ, Addyoss Dr, 8. B. Hartman, ‘Tho catarrh may be acute or chronic. | ot The Hartman Sanitarium, Jt may be of the dry or humid variety. adv: ee, ee President Columbus, ‘hylo, for free ™ do Constable ge ‘FURS ANNOUNCRMENT IS MADE THAT THE SALE OF HIGH GRADE FURS AT HALF PRICE WILL BE CONTINUED ON WEDNESDAY. Q TAFFETA SILK PETTICOATS, black and colors, Values $7.50 to $9.00.....s00+s0s. veseee 5400 to 7.75 FANCY TAFFETA PETTICOATS, value $8.00.,..4. ...+ 6,00 TAFFETA PETTICOATS, deep flounce, | white, black and colors, Value $9.00. seen Mee TAFFETA PETTICOATS, extra size, various styles, | black only, Values $7.50 to $13,50...... 5,50t09.50 | | : i NOTE; —These Petticcate are made from ex'ra quality materiass, . tn 35 and 38 inc ths, and are exceptional values. Kroadway A 1916 Street. 86™-ST. & 322-AVE, OFFER STAMPED LINENS, 27th Sty New York, in Trays, Scarfs and Squares, Hemstitched and drawn, at .45, .78 and 1,25, Values @ thixd to @ half more, ill OME Tt eT ee \ 15.00 frcpiportarend ‘stented WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY, bow foot, Bold regularly at §26,00. 19, 50 for aime, ba with face SPECIAL SALE . 1 bow. footi ’ iy acd oa Mohair and Silk Petticoats 26.50 fear Meominugus. pooig and handsome eae ealer MOHAIR PETTICOATS, deep silk rufe, sea 1S. Inch a! value $5.00 seseversrservneee ove veee 375, for Brass Beds, with 2- | OTHER store in New York has famous Patriclan Shoes sunt he sheaceesenecconessaceoeooooonqeseees tn ee re The Prettiest Compliment That Could Possibly Be Paid to the Patrician ($3.50) Shoefor Wo for women at a lower’ price than, established one of $3.50,, |) ‘These particular shoos—whil been advertising a sale of dn their day—were ejected fh ‘own stock many months ago becaul styles had beenme ant’ yd atid ni in keeping with Patrician LUT--LISTEN TO: WHAT THIS: SAME PATRICIAN ‘alking-—a satisfactory const'uu.ed ‘auince & Eplnney, of Lydn, Mase, “the makera—this ‘giarantes of “workmanship and atyle, latnn etna ind ace AND AGAIN THEY SAY: ‘nee's more significance, 1 atriclan than the ordlt gel tl and we appreciate it. Thanks! Greater New York, and carry'a THE NEW, STYLES. 1,000 Pairs of hangings. ORIENTAL STRIPE CURTAINS—Nicely fringed at tom; sold regularly at $4.75 the pair. for to-morrow at ..sssseseeree Demonstration in Basement: Sanitary D These Sanitary Dust or Cleaning Pans erly enamelle against rust, tion offer them in a special sale at 25 Cents To-Morrow on 4th Floor, 45.00 inch posts; large Hard with fancy scroll and upright lateral, Sold regularly at $60.00. IRON SPRINGS, 1.65 from §2.50—Bronee iron frame, +V) woven wire. 2.95, sin Nelieal ape end; woven Ww! 3. 65, from %-+Extra heavy bronse .9) iron frame, with woven wire cable support on side, FOURTH Froor. February Sale sc 0c Canned Goods Corn, Peas, String Beans, Lima Beans cannot afford to miss the chance of eying amok f Canned V Su of Canned Vegel rene standard binds dozen, 88c. Youth Brand Sugar Corn, C. C, A, Strin, TBA, COFFEE. | ie PRUNES. a meat} iio fea Oitey "Fru, 28 Ibe. a w Extra hin OH ie nae are among the shoes that net a - Pretty laudatory comment, we think. But it's fair Justice to the Patrician, We are SOLE AGENTS for the Patrician Shoes. in. We have ‘none of ‘the fo season styles to offer you—at any price, i The Best $3.50. Shoe in the Worl Nottingham Lace Curtains Thirty different, patterns of Nottingham Lace: Curtal Renaissance, Irish Point and Floral efects, all at ‘ ONE DOLLAR THE PAIR, © They are worth every cent of $1.50—and a good many worth $2, Full size and length; the most substantial of ust Pans, and promise to revolutionize old meth ods of sweeping and cleaning. They are made so that the édge cannot get out of alignment with the floor or carpet; take up everything, even water; contents can- not be upset or blown out: Pans are Jay made of sheet steel prop- fitted with handles (de- tachable) and can be used as an ordinary dustpan is used, or with handle to avoid bending over, ~ ™ We demonstrate them in our Basement, and during thelr dem Brass and Iron Beds IRON BEDS, | Combinati gare stripe me tables to-morrow, Think of buying well (sold at 10c. can in every store fh eel New York) for only 714¢, the can, Case of two dozen for tary Peas, Seminary Lima Beans. All new pack. STORE ‘HAS ‘TO SAY SHOES IN GENERAL: and are particult se Who ‘iro on. th te are full assortment of/AL big In a Soe Tome all top Just a hundred pairs: Take’ Up Everythi are a decidedly new in A to insure X They are. Each At 1-4 to 1-3 Ri Lt a aie ie J 1x th © emulatly iv 4 ¢ in an entire season's gless Beans, Silver Key or Sante CRACKERS, Nabisco soma 19¢ Waters; nacknee,. needa din Wiss: IS pashnee, Be: ena HAMS, wits ¢ * ante | frames ‘icone “eiieee Ca very 2c! 1