The evening world. Newspaper, December 7, 1905, Page 3

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SHERIFF READS WARRANT OF DEATH Od ave et a a re TQ MARY ROGERS Aged Official Trembles as He Performs| His Task and Woman Seems Not to Realize Her Fate To-Morrow. (Special to ‘The Evening World.) WINDSOR, Vt., Dec, 7.—The erection of the gallows on which Mrs. Mary Rogers is to be hanged to-morrow morning for the murder of her husband was begun thts afternoon in the prison not many feet from tho | block etther side of Eighth avenue, be- | condemned woman's cell, The death warrant was read to her thts morning by Sheriff H. H. Peck, ‘who arrived from White River Junction early. The Sheriff is venerable and white-haired, and when he approached the cell he trembled violently, As he stepped within the door, accompanied by Superintendent Lovell, Mrs, Rogers arose. “ b 7 been it for the past two days, du 1 pers one ve Mae bli Fone) when the matter {# simmered down It too steady. have come vy, | Mounts to political Influence. ‘The ac- ‘Yee, 1 know,” se interrupted. “You | tion of Percival W. Clement, of Rut- Gov, ooked upon Bell to stay the here 46 a jand, In aakiny have come to read !t to me again?” ; is . exe@oution Bho leaned against her cot to brace 6 wd move in Vermont politics, Mr, herelt, and the Sheriff read the docu- nt is the leader of he anti-ma- ment slowly and carefully, As he pr- Republioans, and vpos to iw sovern whe. re meee ceeded the woman gazed at him in a Governol Wien the Legisatite Hee vague way, a8 though she did not fully y, and If @ reprieve tx granted 0 of hi end tie matter at up to the Legisla- comprehend the awriul import MeL tune there ta litte question wat i will words, She was pale and pasty, and ber oO pute the sentense to life imprison: eyes had a dull, almost sullen glaze. awat. Larabie: (nBuenEe om chair) Gielen hay considera 0 ‘When he finiabed she sank Into @ chair) fiMite Governor, as Mr. Bell knows and and remained immovable for five mins jim be a eaberantinl Sone pele tious iuas, oe. | Tue attorneys or Mrs, Mary Rogers Execution, Will Appear (o-duy before Gov el} bi Gnd make one final appeal for another On caming from the cell the Sheriff reprieve. It aimed that 7 eaid he would not spring the trap, as he evidence rem the inune: a not | CUS Hor and the mental conditi thus heart disease and fears he would not his wife at the time he was killed has be able to w nd the ehock. Then | been alecovered, f sad er hearsal. It was a grue- An effort is being made to Induce he ordered a rehea some of the Jurymen who convicted some affair, Outside the walls guards \y/) paced in the bleak, wintry alr and kep! crew off ail visitors, even persons on off Rogers of murder in the first de- to go before Goy, Bell and declare errands. Inside Deputies MoCauley, froman's condition was such thet vent Pe should W Kiniry, Spafford and the rest went Goy Rell will return to-day from through their parts In automatic panto- Chicago, Kiniry tled the phantom hands, oe mime. Bpaffond adjusted the cap and McCauley sprung the trap which between 1 and 2 o'clock to-morrow afternoon wall send the woman into eternity, ‘This weird dress rehearsal partly un- SHE SHOULD HANG, SAYS GOV. BELL: nerved the shemffs. They wabbled tn SOUTH BEND, Ind, Deo, 1—"If ever their walk as they left the prison and @ woman should hang Mrs, Rogers o thelr kxigings 's that one,” Is the declarathon of Gov. went to thelr WNigings Bell, of Vermont, who was the guest Petition for Reprieve. of Aaron Jones here yesterday. A , The Governor added that all th Mrs. Blickersderfor far : remained in the case of Mra, Rogers to-day to aed v i , \ dcr dle WAS to see that the sentence be carried also arrived with @ petition 10 Into effect, He declared he was not con- meney signed by 1,000 Ohloans, or: neys for the condemned woman have) ,), ecided to petition the Governor for & | mone, let reprie Attorney-General Fitts went th here at 12:25 P, M, on his way w River Junction to his home in Brattleboro, He was joined by High Bhoriff Peck and Deputy Sherift (Special to The Evening World.) Kiniry, They are accompanying him) RUTLAND, Vt. Dec. 7Judge H. #1 for the purpose of golng over the final’ Powers, of Morris, one of three attor plans of tho execution, Mr, Fitts said nevs acting for Mrs. Mary Rogers, to an Fvening World reporter speeding westward to Intercept Gov. “Nothing that I know of has ocourred | Pell, who {s hastening to Vermont. At the close of a conference between cerned about the case at present. Bell left here night for Ver- ee le nk” SPEEDING WEST TO SAVE WOMAN, ite here to interfere with the programme of the State to-morrow. If Mra, Rogers Judge Charles A, McCarthy, of Hoo counsel has taken any new means to, fick Falls, N. ¥, E, B. Flynn, of atop her execution I do not know of It, Springfield, and Judge Powers last night, it wos ann J that the at- he will certaniy be hanged according The talk of ye eys were In possession of an accu- mulation of evidence which Gov, Bell ‘ould not to the onler by the court & final conference between the vernor, myself and Sheriff Peck !# rub- overlook, It is probable that bieh, Iam going home and shall not] Jtse Powers wiil Join the Governor's 09 Gov, Bell.” party at Rugalo or between Buffalo ary Clevela Expect Gov, Bell, Judge Powers |e a strong personal Mt ta expected that Gov, Bell witt| {lend of the Governor, reach White River Junotion at § o'clock | to-night and remain there until after | the hanging. He expected to be at! Montpelier, but now thinks that he had| Detter be nearer the State Prison. Mary Rogers awoke early this mom- DRIVER CRUSHED BY “Ing to her last day on earth, She was calm and apparently fresh, after a troubled sleep, and seemed more com- posed than Mr. and Mrs, Lukes, the guards who have been with her elnce ee eeemane the was placed in solitary confinement She has apparently given up all hope of @ reprieve and awaits death with the stolcism whe exhibited twice when she stood in the shadow of the gallows This calmness is not due to “nerve” or bravado, Mrs. Rogers te utterly in- capable of expressing either great grief or great joy. ‘The scaffold, now being erected for the third time, will be Armly tn position to-night. At present it stands in the courtyard just back of the superin- tendent’s office, half-bolted together, At was put in position that the rope might be tested and the trap sprung and resprung, The rope must respond to a test of 1% pounds, and this it will do, Mra. Rogers will be covered by a black robe, or, rather, a black bag, when * ‘ands on the trap. This bag is so} @round the corner from the engine- constructed that, lying flat on the scaf-| house, and tid just returned from fold, she oan step into it, her logs and | breakfast when an alarm was rung in ankles can be pintoned and then the} from the box at Second avenue and ‘ag can be drawn up around her to] One Hundred and Fourteenth street. her neck, gathered there and tied, This| At Second avenue and One Hundred plan was followed in the case of Mre,|@nd Fifteenth street the tender driven kmmoline L. Meaker, the only woman | by Dianent skidded and crashed against ever executed in Vermont, an “L" pillar. Little Sympathy for Woman. Dianent was not strapped to his seat, The As for any aympaity for Mrs. Rogers, Sey collsin, huried him. to Ey pa sdaadhai lie a snd bigs 40) the street. fad he released his grip that as the law, 18 on the state’, {on the reba he could have rolled to ook, it should be enforced, What It-|0ne side ane Poe thong Uo sympathy was created laat winter! Put, M08 HMindred and Bourteonh faded when the prison Investigation re-| gireet & Feet crowd gathered in front veaied the character of the woman] of 4 building from which smoke was While sUll In the shadow of death, | Pouring. He bnew that, hia powentul Diament, Hurled by Collision, Held to Reins and Went Under Wheels, larry Dinnent, driver of the tender attached to Engine No, 68, In One Hun- dred and Sixteenth street, nest Lenox avenue, was mortally injured to-day when the vehicle he was driving col- ded with a L' pillar, He was thrown from his seat, but pluckfly held the reine to avold a runaway. Dianent {8 thirty-two years old and wns considered one of the best drivers in the @epartment. He lived at No, 15 West One Huniired and 6ixteenth street, ‘Vhs Investigation waa primarily due| without a hi to, gulde them, dash tw the actlyities of the newspapers, | into the orowd and carry certain 1n- Whtch found at the prison much to] {4% aml perhaps, 6 a "of at pplng cause comment, the horees. He swung In frorit of the tender, the reins were torn from his grasp and he went under the wheels, Now Governor Bell declares that no nowepaper man shall be present at the hanging, The guard has been doubled; t youth at the peep-hole {8 con- stently on duty, and a triaty has been paces at he superint No Surprise Sprung. Daughter B Death, READING, Pa., Dec, 1—John Reedy, @ olvil war veteran, and hig daughter Ellen, were burned to death in @ fire Pather and a ty Rees Pea eee | blackamiths practicing the anvil chorus at the sentiment of the jury was that | THE WORT, Astonishing Chorus of Knocks] Heard Against the Ac- cused Minister, DWELL ON HIS BREATH, | Intimates that He Drinks, but His| Wife Will Defend Him | on This Point, All over the upper end of Greenwich | village, where the cross-town stre . t like #hoe-atringe and the corn uses are wedge-shaped, Ike cuts of | bie, the Baptists—and there are lots of Baptists In Greenwich village-are talk- ing to-day, with augm dd velocity, about the charges against the Rev. Ar- chibakl B. MacLaurin, pastor of the old Bixteenth Stroet Church, which are 0ing to be finally and fully threshed Out tonight at the meeting of the board of deacons | | Wherever you find a Baptist, for a/ tween Bleventh street and Twentieth, you find a partisan with loins girded for the fray. Whoever Ja not for Mr. MacLaurin !s against him, and the two hostile camps on this, the eve of the Geciding battle are going it hammer and tonge—mostly hammer. The sound of the mocking suggests a company of The tever has spread to the innocent bystander, Wor example, there's Joho Allison, the bullder and house painter, who lives next door to the church. On dinarily speaking, he would be classed 48 & non-belligerant, for, to begin with he {en't even a Baptist; but living, as he dor right on the edge of the vor tex that way—well, anyhow. he thinks the accused clergyman ie a mighty fine ian, and he doesn't care @ oontinental who knows {t. He was touching up the tron work of his front stoop with black hearth varnish to-day, but knocked off long enough to speak a word for the defen Talks as a Neighbor, ‘Far bo it for me to be dipping into this mess,” eaid Mr. Allison, who 's an oldish man with @ lange nose, as he aimed his varnish brush at the visitor, | “but when you are next-door neighbor to @ man two years you generally no- tioy him, don't you? I put it to you, mow, don't you? Of course you do. And | never saw anything wittng with the Ute dominie In all that thme—never a | thing.’* Mr. Allison was told that certain of the congregation accused their pastor of toting around a breath, which, to use the mildest comparison, suggested a highly flavored mince ple. may notice,” sald Mr. Allison, tapping the organ in question with the handle of the varnish brush, ‘but [ never emeiled Ay smelle on Mr. MoLaurin’s breath | excepting the smells which might belong on any preacher's breath—sueh as spring | onions and the Hike “But yonder,’ continued the painter, Pointing east, “yonder comes Mr. Me- | Laurin, Younz man, let his breath | speak for itself | The Rev. Archibald B, MacLaurin ts «| very small man to be charged with so| many thing®-with intoxication, with | frivolity In the presence of women mem- bers, with trying to get Miss Virginia Lord to sit on one of his kn to wit | the right knee, and with trying to tell | her funny stories that were not funny. Wouldn't Get Drunk, ‘he seemed to be seriously afflicted with | writton by Justice O'Hrlen and received “Mr. MacLaurin,” sald the reporter, |alcoholic exuberance. In fact, he seemed at the Court of Special Seasions to-day > you drink?" \to have been drinking, He spread out |“ : | fi Your mn,’ h . his arms, braced his kneeq and Invited | Completely upsets the law which ha ung nen,” said the preacher, Palx-)me to alt on one of them. kt was,” aaid | prevailed In this State for many years Ing hie right hand at half mast, with | Mies Lord, “the right knee: SEGUE. Gis ‘ale: OF loveoos io Ouitd All the flumers unfurled, “there ‘L, of courte, refused. ‘Then T tried | spans a enough money - pois an totum the subject, But ‘he insisted on | Under sixteen yea ® enough money In lower New York to [fciing some stories witon, he sald, were |’ Justice O'Brien holds that where t eelling | temmt ma to become Intoxicated. And |funny. I did not regand'them as funny | ehyiq sixteon purchase gare lyet 1 am a poor man, fighting the|storles at all lee clgaretaa fey Ge older persols Wi devils.’ Miss Lord told her parents about the| or clé SW , visit, and her mother wanted to invado| child ts the agent of the older person Who are the devila?” pursued the m-|the ‘pulpit the following Sunday and! and a dea held guilty of a borter, horgewhip the pastor hefore the con-\omtme if tie sells to sitld. | cvThe devil, T mean," corrected Mr, |Eresetinn. | Her husband eraunded her | Ta tot aunt Matlanen Up the service and cauise a good deni of |* ls to, pur T have no fear of the outcome,” he {tal —— —} Many hun¢ na have bee | "I have a pretty Kood ametior, aw you |” } church, ” Drink NEVER, EXCEPT FoR. MEDICINAL PURPOSES AH sald. “The good people of my flock are with me in this crisis, Tt 1s the ragtag , and bobtall of the congregation who aro trying to injure me.” Just before the interviewer went away | Mr. MacLaurin felt moved to pay a tribute to the press “I have been impressed,” hegatd, “by the activity which the reporters have shown in thie case. Their energy |s an éxample which we Christian workers might fitly profit by. I have nothing! but kind words for the papers In this, toy hour of trial.” Nearly every flat building in the victn- | {ty of the old, weather-veaten church holds at least one member In goat standing in the congregation, and there- fore one member in an ve state of convereationa) eruption. here is Mra. Kate Woodruff, who grows indignant every time she thinks of the pastors reference to her party as “the ragtag and bobtall element.” There is Mauric: M. Lewis, superintendent of the Sunday @chool, who alle January Mr. MacLaurin, while under the Influence of liquor, slapped him play fully In the face in front of the wh There is J. R. Smith, p fan Endeavor work. ¥ Y y imtuoh exhiiia that. to the best of his knowledge and belief, Mr. Maclaurin wae then and there under the influence of liquor. There is Joshua Van Pelt, the sexton, who aticks to the reacher, saws wood and says nothing for publication, butea good deal other- wine There Is Miss Maud Morgan, the missionary of the Sixteenth street Qn attractive-looking woman, | who Js defending him with geal, ‘Phere | Is, of course, Mra, MoPherson, the head and frmt and the good right arm of the ant!-Maclaurinites. And there !s Miss Virginia Lord, his chief accuser. Miss Loni te a small young woman with ‘red hair pied nigh on ener dead Court of Appeals Says It's. /:): and eyés that snap like whip-lashes, Sli #topped washing some bits of lace-be- decked feminine garb in a wash-basi Jong enough to tell a reporter for The Evening World about the time the preacher called on her, and, according to her aecount, did some cutting-up. — | Asked Her to Sit on His Knee, He seemed enthusiastic,” she said; "DON TCARE FORTHE J," aYS M4000 Commissioner Won't Stand in tion of Third Deputy Police Commis-| | sioner, but that he is withholding the | polntment so that it may not appear | that he ta trying to forestali the Mayor, | He asserts that the relations woen Mayor McClellan and bimself are as! pleasan as they @ver were. | The Commissioner denied positively | that he ever contemplated promoting hia private secretary, Mr, Howell, to the Third Deputy Commissionership, In oonelusion he declared that he didn't care particularly for his Job, and woutd| jnot raise @ finger to secure a per- manent office, Mo noon and promoted sixty-seven hound, men to be se Fome of the names high up on the eligible list were | skipped In favor of men with @ lower a rating, like Roundsman Coy n, wi | tt d Sergeant Megers as om, mander of the Vice Squad, WINS $23,000 SUIT FROM TAYLOR FIRM. A jury before Justice Dickey, in the Supreme Gourt, Brooklyn, tow award. ed A. N. Ridgely $23,000, being the full amount he had asked for, in a sult againat Talbot J, Taylor, James B. Tay. wr and Foxhall Kéene, composing the firm of T, J, Taylor & Co,, Wall street brokers. The palntif alleged that on Jan, 2, 1902, he bargained with the company to carry for him 10,00 shares of Southern Pacific stook on margins; that the stock advanced steadily; on Oct, 17, of the nare eer he red the firm to ‘but they n Fil. ected to do #0 led to return him the vwith t Ea “el and WOMAN BURNED 10. PATH WOW Mrs, Fanny Ring Screamed avenue, Brooklyn, She stood upright, ecreaming with almost her jast breath, until her clothing and hair were ,en- tively destroyed by the ‘flames. Mrs, Ring had prepared breakfast for her husband, who is @ walter, and then took her sixteen-montha-old son up- stairs to her mother, Mra, Gardner. She went back to her kitchen on the second } floor to wash the dishes, It is presumed that she ventured too newr the gas stove, Mrs. MoNair, living in the adjoining flat, heard screams, Running to her door, she saw a terrifying sight, Mrs Ring was fleting through tho hall: way, Wrapped in fire from head to foot Mrs, MoNatr seized a bianket and tried to throw It around the tortured woman, Aut Mrs. Ring rushed past her into the front romn and, seizing the window casing, hing there a few moments and then fell, entirely nude. She was doad Tong before an ambu- Janice from the German Hospital could arrive, INTERSTATE LICENSE | FOR AUTOMOBILISTS, WASHINGTON, Dec, 1.—Representa- | tive Morrell, of Penneylvanta, to-day | Introduced ‘a bill providing that all per sons desiring passing from one State must obtain a licerise, einah see | under the Interstate Commerce | to operate automobiles | to another jaelon, CHARGES ARE ABIOLUTELY FALSE,” granted after an Hie was chasin direction of the) across the Commit ‘hia balance and fell over. 1. THESE er D; THURSDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 7, 1905. ' “THERES NoT MONEY ENouc PASTOR M'LAURIN, THE “BOBTAILS” SAY, IS GREENWICH VILLAGE'S “CUT-UP” WOMAN ADMITS: | 1AM FIGHTING THE DeviL. ” LIFE STUDIES OF REV. MR. M’LAURIN, UPSETS LAW ON TOBACCO SAL 70 CHILDREN! eremoesipiainsiins '|MILLIONAIRE’S WIFE SINGS No Crime Where Child Acts as Agent. The Court of Appeals. ad in this ¢ tice O'Brien's dex practically all mnvie Were illegal, Many parsons were inclined t that Ju O'Brien's decision covered the sale of liquor to under sixteen This, however, the case. The Court of Appeals in t decision deals with the sale of to only, ‘The site liquor under gonaitions js amyl child, ts 1h on crete rund and ny 1a great d in a decision children is n taken care of by & a qin, of the Court of Appeals in the . ; 088 case A00UL Lites Months ago. the Way of the Mayor—Has | with Agony as the Flames of Appaiis takes an, exactty : jew to. tie a Man for Third Deputy, Swept Around Her. nee The decisions now | oonftiot | | “What the Court practi | the two decis that Tn @ atatement in reply to newspaper] Mrs, Fanny Ring, twenty-four years! liquor to A child {ssuedby Commlasioner Mo-! old, was varned to death to-day while) any conditions wha Adoo this afternoon, he announced that] clinging to a window in a four-story | ‘9 the monile of fy | he has selected a gentleman for the posl-| apartment house at No, 1644 Myrtle "is nol The case which this decision fs made arrested for selling clg Da The child xwore that he told! Zabor that his moth sent him for the olware and that they were for his favher, and {t was proved on the tria that the boy had got the clgara for his father, Nevertheless, he was fk gullty, Hla attorners riled the right up to the highest court in State Assistant Distriet-Attorney Taylor who is in charge of all appeal cases sald “Phe decision ts a fa Under it 1 don't see) who sens a mir gars or tobacco lanperiliing (hem how on wh be conv ehil to w , President Lind cuss the matt, a KILLED BY FALL FROM ROOF, thirty-five Samuel Rosen, a tailor, years old, of No, 251 Seventh was instantly killed today by ¢ Rosen had a v0f, and they n | from the roof of the building to the sidewalk below, cons which he kept in at on Recently he put some new pigeons In with the old ones given him considerable trouble of late, one of the new birds to-day when he lost street have Kg S$ OF HER DAYS OF DRUDGERY oo mized in verse last nigiit epit twelve clears spent toiling at a nal poem at a ) oip Song of the Cigar, eut Sumatra ue brown AM @ nut ely the welvage to-day Ne . ng my Way Roll ed front my pay M Ani i the ahon tn my woul é if t 4 reak them ‘in two, | <a FREE Alterations During This Sale 3 Jokes, nee Rose, Must fina my ts my back 6 Week of winck; may be fn my sou! * must emooth be, aitho? p emoothness A foe, ed fingers.do tremble eo. clip. clip! mvuee. 0, the Rauge must not slip! elghth of an inch cut away hundreds T've rolled tn @ day, me two-thinis of my pay » round with tobacco my sout! fore Lunas f with tts dust, win the springtime | mus T keen on earning my crust ro work amount? ty tly ts alive! N God thrive! Catherine 5 SE PLN CEA FS Fisher, De- tained on Ellis Island, Makes Confession, { } } } ' Unable to dear up any longer before the battery of questions poured at her by Immigration Commissioner Wetehorn — and the Board of Inquiry at Bilis Island Mra. Catherine Fisher, the handsome Engit#iwoman, who was taken from the steamship Neckar yesterday and dee tained on advices from the Swiss Goy- emment that sho was a notorious | swindler, broke down and made an amazing confession this afternoon, { Bhe not only admitted that shelhed | obtained $4,000 on a bad check in @ little suburb of Luzmne, Switserland, ‘but confesed that she had enteral |) into @ scheme to defraud « big London | ingurance ccmpany of $35,000 by having | & poltey writtea on her lite for the | benefit of Lady Therese Fitzwiliinms, one of the most prominent noblewamen | | in Great Britain, ho admitted that Lady 4 had no knowledge of the { swindle, and that her name had ‘ been used to help along the swinttie that was being enginesred bys BBn- | don lawyer, Commissioner Watchom | obtained this admission from the woman after dragging from het’ ‘the acknowledgement that’she had es i the fraudulent check in the town of, | / Betznow, nour Lucerne, The oun waa drawn on Barclay & Co,, mn | | bapieing firm. ‘i e ‘But I intended to pay this back,” deciared” Mray iiher, . fully, “1 knew T could pay | I rally did not mein to swt my || dvotel in Betznow.” v But when asked how she intended.to , | yay It back, tt was slowly drawn from * ner that sho had taxon out A polley | for £%,00 on her life with the Hoya Exchange Insurance Company, of Lon- don. he plan was," been ‘ally hams With oes. ‘to have ma lJenve Switverland, my name, and have it mail® to appea tT was dead name to Mrs, Constance Fan tid 1 sailed in that name on the NeéKar from Naples, taking my inald wlogg with mie, Other queries brought out that Mra, ‘ Fisher intended to go to the Hotel Astor, !f she was allowed to land dn this city, She said she had friends in Yonkers, and mentioned the name of Robert McAdoo, said to be a cousin of Commissioner McAdoo } Commissioner Watchorn said after # fis long crogs-examination of the Bng- lishwoman that she did not make at clear how Lady Fitawilliams, whe sya sister of Earl Bitzwilliams, ‘figured In the case. First she sald’ that Lady Fitwwilliams was a dear friend af hers and that she intended to jeave ber the money anyhow. Later she sald. that after she had disappeared, changed her name and {t appear that she Www Ay ation val had 2 = F% Ss = jriisiinaslNtbancitnencts dead, the mm) obtained on the life policy was to have divided be: tween her, the lawyer and Iy Fita- williams, though oman would have no know there |was any fraud in the transaction, | Toward the end of the hearing betu the Board of Inquiry which had Mates ill day the Woman and her pretty Hule matd broke down and wept hystericale ly maid crled that she wanted to go home to her parents in Londh from whom she had been separated againat taelr will for ov year, ha in Ai Durrington, elghteen years old, und according to a cablegram ad from London she had heen practically Kidnapped by Mrs, Fisher With other luggage, “M brouit. over two Blames are sald to be as ferootous s to strangers. Atte Is Island say that when tera the room where the cat ned in a basket they mak maro eat Coat Reductions? Sacrifice Sale Friday. Accustomed as they are to sharp reductions in January, ladies of stylish taste could hardly expect the sensational sacrifice prices for stunning new Winter Coats offered at the Bedell Less than Half Price 2,500 Stylish Long Coats Considering their extremely high grade, the price seems unbelievable, season—a line rich with novel $25—Luxurious English the year at both Bedell Stores, Ea low price, $9.99, shows the ample { fancy, popu evening end promenade wear, and is This price reduction will tion from ladies who desire the There is « charming individu draped lines, All the higher grade collarlens, some ail linsd evening coats late in January before coats of simile aad thes they will not be reduced to Sale At Both i le Sa ret Stores - GT a) > Cay —te QF UI YF YY IO $20—Finished and Unfinished Kerseys $22—Fashionable English Cheviots These wonderful reductions will make Friday the banner coat day of individual Reg of a custom tailored coat, lar semi-fitd Duchess con's and stylish loose back effect Swagger Winter Coats $30, $35 and $40 Reduced Friday to thirty days ahead of time, and this is the way to do it, Prince Henry Kerseys—Coats with Fur Collars, Broadcloth Evening Coats—New Theatre Shapes. 8 to get out and attack them. Gi | January Sale to-morrow, Every swagger model of the ties and aristocratic tailor touches, Meltons—black and colors ch of these garments, at the ridiculousl ulness and quality of materials and the New Empire Models, plain and for the sensational offering of the season, 77 meet with an enthusiastic recep- i very best. We must make way ® be => al ty one of the't ample, well materials—some with fur collars, ethers —many of them ‘nter!'nad. [twill be t character are rsduged anywhere else. this figure $17.77,

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