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. vA OM SHEKEL WON F . Mystery Shrouds Case of » Young Parsee, Stricken After a Feast. ‘SUICIDE IS SUGGESTED. Some Loss of Caste May Have » Driven Him to the Use of Quick Poison. Noniaynum PhirowshautJavert, drink ‘gome poison so doadiy that {t slew }him as he knelt before ‘Mrs, Carrie J jBhawe in the parlor of her boarding ebase at No, # Irving place, or wae Mt heart failure which killed him so beuddenly, is the question toe police are " \anying to solve to-day. Tt may require an autopsy to clear eway the mystery of this young Bast 2 Indian's death, It is known he be- ed to an influential Parsee family Bombay, and there is a theory that {having lost caste, by some act, ho { took his life in despair, * Javeri was twenty-three years old, He came to this country a few monthe aso fresh trom an English school and ‘pot lodgings at the vheatrical boarding+ the Cosme ), WS West Thir- -ningh street, He worked at some Bouse handling Ortental goods. 4 At the Cosmos he was visited In nis j@iny hall bedroom by many bearded {men in turtans, These were his only @smoclates except that ocrasionally he ‘Wed at Mrs, Shawo's, in Irving place. Ate Like One Famished, \ Yosierday Mrs, Shawe invited him to dinner, He came, polished and courtly, and bowing right und left like a di cing master, but once at the table he ate like & starving man, The others watching him in astonishment felt sure he had not hed a real meal in days, Satter dinner Javer! came into ti parlor, The only persons there were Mr .sShaw and Miss Emma Osgood, one of her guests, Without a word of pre- lude the dark-skinned little man pud- denly dropped on his knees before Mrs. Bhawe and began, in a bubbling, exvited stream of mingled English and Hindoo- etanese, to beg her pardon for some- thing, Before she cowld fathom his meaning he faltered, turned pale, and clasping his hands to hia eyes rolled \over on his side, allent and still. Miss Osgood ran across tho street end brought Dr. C. A, Randolf from hia home, at No. # Irving place. He found Bhawe laving the Indian's fore- thought he had fainted, ' SaldyPhysician. “This {e no faint,’ seld Dr, Randolf, @s he felt for the pulse; the mantis dead, But I don't know what killed him,” The body was taken to an under taker's on Second avenue, ‘Phere was mot a cent in the poakets' when tho @lothing was examined. Javer!'s hall bedroom at they Cosmos was 5 dd to-day, It was/ bare of everything {In the way of passessions excepting a muth worn dress quit, ‘The bureau was littered with lettens fand notes and cards of Indiana fortune tellers, including one who advertised bimeelf as “the Great Yog!.” There was a letter signed “Bertha Keeley, No. a7 Central Park West," in which the writer advised the Indian that she did not care to seo him again. Another fetter showed that he belonged to the Kings County Oricket Club. On a table jay an unfinished note which may help to solve the mystery of Javeri’s death. Scrawled on a single shoot were these lines; “My Dear Mrs, Shawe: “L was very sorry to hear you com- plaining about me last night) I am sorry I did not get a chance to explain. As you know, nobody, as a gentleman, can explain some things in the pres- ence of another" — When shown this letter by an Even- ing World reporter Mrs, Stowe almost fainted. Recovering shot sald: “What he wrote referred 1o a purely personal matter of several weeks ago. I don't think it could have any bearing ‘on his death. I have been told his peo- ple are very wealthy Hindoos and his poverty must have galled him consider- ‘ ably.” Dr, Randolf, who saw the body Just afier death, said to-day that apoplexy, resulting from eating a hearty meal after days of fasting, might have killed the young Parsee, ‘The funeral arrangements are being Jooked after by Jal N. Bhumgnra, an importer of Indian goods at No, 45 Bast Twenty-fourth street, — An Old Fir: Generosity to Ite Employees, The old-established firm of Cowper- dhwalt & Sons, One Hundred and TWwen: erm street and Third avenue, and ‘hatham Square, have presented to eveny employee, from manager and heads of departments to the newest office 4 @ substantial Christmas “Mt in the shape of cash according 0 the years of service. This ts an old and jong-stinding custom of this firm which is thoroughly appreciated by their many employees. % Ask Y our Wife! ~ She Knows! NE. of the safest and Peed a you can possibly lay away for a rainy day is the deed toa ::1: eee} “Of” IS THE NEW SURE THING. FIT) FOUGHT — | | | —_——-—— \ This Number Creates a Craze! in Paris Owing to Its Luck in Big Lottery, Everybody Knows what. the. number | twenty-three means—to evaporate, skid. doo, of otherwise become missing, Paris has given us another number with the oppowite interpretation rapidly becoming a synonym for all that is lucky In that dear, dissolute Paris the | tery {9 a legitimate institution, fost by the state. Kvervbody buys lottery tickets, In the drawing of Dec. 1 an humble painter of houses drew down the capital prize of $200.00), and hig! number was 230,585, This created as much of a sensation| in Paris ag we would expertenca here In| New York if a millfonaire automobi! ne ee DIED AT PRAYER Ih ANCESTOR'S HOME Mary Weeks, Granddaughter of Charlotte Bradley, Passed Away in Poverty, Miss Mary Weeks, great-graniviaugh- ter of a revolutionary tero, Capt. Abel Bradiey, and granddaughter of Char- lotte Bradley, died while praying in the very basement room, No. 1 Barrow street, where her antestor lived and died, Her body ds in the Morgue to-day wuiting for her relatives to claim It if they will, ‘The neighbors who Mve tn the house Say sho died of starvation, but the cer- tifteate gtven by Dr. Conkling, of St Vincem’s Hospital, says (ubercul@ is When the black wagon came to take all that was left of her to the Morgue, she was found where she died, kneeling by a bare mattress, just under the picturs of her uncle, Judge William Dwight Waterman, which hangs on the wall be- wide an old-time walnutaframed motto worked {in gephyr, “God Bless Our Home." In the hands of the dead woman—she was only twenty-elght-.vere some wooden prayer-beads, part of a taken rosary, and a letter written many years ago depicting @ scene in the same room when It was the tmppy home of Char- lotte Bradley, where she did tier deeds of mercy aml was the salnted ‘ Bountiful” of Greenwich Village ne house had long since passed out of the family, but Mrs. Waterman, widow of the Judge, retained the right to ocoupy the basement in her husband's ancestral home, and Miss Mary came there a few weeks ago to nurse the old lady in ber last Ulness, Happy In the Basement. ‘The letter found in the dead woman's hand is only a fragment of faded blue Paper of half a century ago. The first Words are: “Spring had ripened into summer and the day was far spent when I again entered the happy base- ment, I found Mrs. H. sitting behind her screen reading her Bible. She arose and warmed my heart by her truly be- nignant smile, that threw a radiance searcely of earth upon her time-worn features.’ Miss Weeks must thave been (hinktog of the time when that basement could have been called happy. She must have been praying for death. Nye fireplace of nearly @ century ago was littered with papers, scraps of old letters and books that had lost their backs, A well- thumbed Shakespeare, open at a “Mid- Summer Night's Dream,’ was on top the litter, The fine oil painting of the Judgo, her uncle, who was almost like @ father to her—in fact, all the father sho ‘hadi ever known—looking over the wreck of chairs and tables, two ol! ‘trunks, a broken jewel casket and all the litter of what was once a home full of comfort, elegance and love, looked down upon her last moment when, pray ing, she Mell’ Victim of Diseases, Mary Weeks was a consumptive, She | trial to cure herself by the outdoor life, her neighbors say, but she could not. Her aunt in Philadelph Mrs. Jane | Slane, could not had to work, She managed for a while, vunt, Mew Willlam Dwight Waterman, had just lost ‘her my support, @ ew, Was taken dll herself, ry caine to New York to nurse her id they Hved together In the of the old Waterman home, naw the property of theta. Poverty pinched them, but they bore tt together and were happy as two lonely, alek women could be, with nothing bet n them hut tielr devotion to each . Miss Mary became weaker and weaker, and kk was only a question with the be eae whieh woubt go first. Then the yoye woman was too weak to help herself and the elder too old to + ald they took the ty PAINTER WHO WON Paris ts crazy} over the number twenty-one, which {| wpport her, and whe | J {ind nad a little money saved when her | J ah ys MILLION FRANCS. owner should die A natural death, Paris at had won the vaplial + t © Wie some tall of setting It to m ‘Those Parisians wre § udvoll omebody with & mathematical turn Momtad discovered that the varius teket, added Wollowing this | ket No, 13,198 had drawing held ance of which agere: together, have inh $10,000 en 04 won $5,000, On first prize of He put th centime into at lucky ti was i and his broth lived with him, was out of a job. Now he has everything he wants, ‘There is na moral attached to this story Mary left th hospital to take up the K She folded last I*riday n st down dazed = an woo ioken to speak me Mra. Della Ludlow, a sister of Mrs. Waterman, came a found her so, M L w and er two daughters at 431 East Thirty-«eventh street. They are not rich, tut they took what things wer ment room a nid base- lized enough to pay rying the old lady. Forshay, the janitress the first floor, went down to the nt Saturday to see what tie girl wis doing there all alone. She found h pitting m the side of the old mat- the expense Mrs on: Il and Hungry, ‘There were no sheets or pillows, no blankets nor quilts, Only a little pile of Jet spangles lying there. and Mary sitting in the old rooking chair, trying to string the rosary of wooden heads, which had broken. Tho beads were ji @ leather purse, and she was a stringing: them one by one, and erying There was nothing In the purse and nothig ¢o eat. Jolly, the little white rough-coated (orrier, was sitting on the dusty Moor and watehing his mistress ‘T was that shocket I did not know what to do for a minute,” savl Mre. Forwha: ‘and then 1 hurried upstairs and got something for them to eat. Her and the dog—they were starving. T took the goose and the bread and coffee down and gave {t to her, and. she thanked me, and then T left her there stringing the rosary “phat was Suurday night, and Sun- day morning we found her dead when the Jiwlge’s friend sent for the oll paint- {ne ‘Then T saw that the girl had fed the meat and bread to the little dog, must have starved to death, be did not hive anything else to eat, and the doe was starving again yh vi nd them, whan we found wirrelatives.”” aad Mrs Forahay, wien questioned. "She has relatives, but she les at the Morgue wilting for them to claim her if they wantito."’ GUGGENHEIMER PLAYS SANTA FOR “NEWSIES.” Gives 500 Youngsters a Christmas Dinner at Newsboys’ Ath- letic Club, | Rendolph Guggenheimer was the new day boys’ Santa Claus ¢ He descend the ohimney of the veboys’ Ath! Club at No, 74 East Fourth street with 4 cartload of steaming turkeys and "fil lin's” and bade the {0 ravenous young: | sters d The newsboys, big and Httle, of every shade and nativity, turned out at dawn to work up appetites with which to do the banquet justice, They lett the qual tty to Santa, knowing his epicurean tuste was equal to that of old Lucullus, What they wanted was room, So they out out breakfast, took a apin around the Bowery and lined up at the News: | boys’ Club with mouths watering for the feast Jack Sullivan, who founded the elub, was the master of caremonies, He also | refereed the feed | "Go at it, boys,” Ne sald in the tne | etructions before time was — called. “There ts no limit. No one will. be counted out.” here was turkey with real brown | Y, Mashed potatoes, stewed toma-! toes, celery, mince pie, ice cream and! entree, | Mr. Guggenheimer made a speceh.! ‘The boys cheered hin lustily before the set to and afier. When they finished the once heavily laden tables looked! like wind-swept tracts of desert i he reat | jer aunt's | morning, | n @ pathetlo at times, | He Wak Ot sivcess(ul, and lust sume: VOI: TO Wi BICK Wie When He Lost She Sent Telegram Saying It Was All Off. When Bob Fitzsimmons fought Joc O'Brien at San Franciseo last Thure day night he knew, a¢ he was be: Juwn, that he wes losing not only fight but his wife, oll war horse of the Ang went into the b with | O'Brien solely for the purpose of wine | ning additional fame, and through that] we love-or ton=thit his wife] had held for him when she first met} him, and the glamour of victory that} vmpanted him wherever he went } Fitzaimmons knew when he entered the ring that {f he lo» his wife would From the fuer t wit one telegram he inte iim to win and as deaer hin had sent him his weeks of training she w anxious for Nevertheless, he took he dropped in agony in his corner from O18 of the punishmeny inflicted | O'Brien he saw in his mind’a ey a chance [Joa Gifford Falzsimmons packing up} and leaving the Portland Hotel, where | they had heen living, in this etty Genuine Battle for Love “It {9 an actual tact.” sald Fitz's closest friends to-day, “that t old aan sought a battle with O'Brien | f e purpote of rehebilitnting him self in the affections of his young wife It is hard to associate anything Ime | |sentiment with Bob Fitzsimmons, but | he. went Into jat ring as true a knight) us any helmeted and armored advan: | turer of old to Mattie for his lady fair. | “Phe marriage was a mistake, any: how. Fitz's wife, Rose Julian, had died about three months before Bob met this little Giffont woman. He was lone | some and he was attracted by her pretty fi At that time he was in the height of his fame, money was coming to him | {in streams, adulation followed him from | town to town. The girl became infatu ated with him and after a wild court | ship in Chicago they were married. | “Fitz knew at that time that for five | | Years the girl had known Major Miller. of Franklin, Pa, the man de now ac jcuses of taking her away from him He had been told that she left her firs [husband on has death-bed in Altoona, |Pa., to accept the attentions of Major | | Midler, the millionaire. But he married | Julia Gifford, and he entertained then | And deca now @ sliwere affection for | hor, Under all his rough exterior Fitz simmons has a childlike simplicity that Didn't Like Bensonhurst, “Fite took his chorus gil bride down to Bensonhurst and placed ‘her in the home with his children by his second wife, Rose Julian, He had divorced his firai!, The lady of the footllghts did Not take kindly to life in Bensonhurst aud caring for (he boisterous Pilesin- mons cadidren, Fitz sent the Hite ones Gway to school, but he soun sw What (he fascination he had aroused in the Deginning Was d.raypearaing, | “He wok to giving his wie pieces of Jewelry that fue veen lett oy Hose Jullan, Piece by piece he hantell over M0 Worth, hoping Uus Ww lan Lie whe Waning afe.con of tie wont she fan away dian nim and went ty 8. “It ( wasn't for the tragedy of v0 thing it would be extremely lunay, You | Femember that about that Lime Bicasiin | mons bougnt a toupee to cover the bald syut on jas head. Honesdy he imag ined that the toupee would win back the love te had lost, Ho set oft the wik with an array of ciuthes of the latest hurried over to Paris, and dia] ot in persuading his wile to cowie back to New York, “That was the beginning of the end ‘They were wnaappy on the road wi thelr show and when F\ta closed and came back here It was with the Inten- tion of re-entering the ring and again | making himself a hero in the eyes ot | his wife, "If Loan lek O'Brien,’ he argued, | ‘they ll call me a wonder, it will sicw Uhat I] am not as old us | seem and Jus | will stand for me again,’ | “Well, you know how it ca AS soon as Fitz recovered Knockout he sent telegrams to friends here asking that we look out for his wife, She ad skipped before we Hd get to her, but I don’t think she went away with Major Miller or any ocher 1 man, J huye information that she took | WATCHES, with her as a travelling companion a | JEWELRY, well-known young Woman of this city.” “Daylight” for Fitz, Major Miller, not seriously perturbed, gave out & statemem, In whieh he made tun of the idea Liat he Was an intimate friend of the runaway chorus girl and sald that he had not seen her since jast June, when he put her aboard a seamer for Europe “If Fitg comes sround here with his tale about my eloping win his wie ti put daylight through him,” sald the 4 oF. "Ve Marquis was present during the interview of the Major with reporters, and he nis ite at the end 1 “TL was with Major Miller during the tine he was in New York on his last visit and I came with him ‘o Frank iin," he said. “Ef am certain that we did not meet Mrs. Fitasimmons. ‘This ts Major Miller's formal state- ment: “T have known Mrs. Fitzsimmons for about eight years, | knew her before Mtzsineons did. T knew her to be all = & that {s nice and T knew her to be a _per- rir fect lady, The last time | saw Fitzsimmons was in June of this when she was going to to yooul music. I accompanied her to the | ae mer in New York City and saw her off, h OND Aw paw : i LL i Dont Delay ihc"! DIAMONDS) PAsy Ger, Exenank out-of-tow WATCHES Handle That Brought Oat Volice “Pynamite, dark bundle, quick! The words cane over the teleph: Prnhavivay the Tremont Pullee thon t night tir New York T Threv poticemen jumped to the home of} f Joba Holland, rich contractor, at Bord. | T Da found peeullar and a bunch of blocks Fr i presents to the “kids Ba cas cnn sla STV RTD of Tank TANOS AND,ORGANS, PIANO3 AND ORGANS. 4 5960'S : the greatest plano value in you to come to the rerooms and select a Bloomingdale Pia Walters Piano at one Special Announcement! Owing to so many of our customers not being able to take advantage of our Holiday Piano Sale in time to have a piano delivered for Christmas, we have prevailed on the Walters Piano Company to supply us with one hundred and filly more Walters Pianos before New Year's. Tke World-Renowned, Celebrated, Tone-Lasting ‘350 WaltersDianos SDowns* 1a Week. Liberal Terms of Six Reasons Why This Is the Greatest Piano Offer Ever Made: First—Because the Walters is the best piano you can buy at any price. Second—Because at $195 you secure the Walters at half actual value Third—Because |t is offered on the most liberal terms ever known, Fourlli—Because we charge io interest for time taken In making pay- ments, no insurance or “extras” whatever, $195—that's all, Fifth—Because on payment of $5 piano is at once delivered to your home. Sixth-+Becavse you save from $150 to $200. The Walters Piano is offered in this great sale At About Half Its Value Pianos which do not begin to equal it in artistic construction, quality of tone and excellence of workmanship are being offered daily at from $350 to $400. In our thirty-three ye rs of retailing experience we' anything which las given our plano customers more satisfaction or which ted more cr upon establishment than the Walters Piano. ianos are in the homes of thousands of Greater New York families, as well agin the homes and studios of some of the professional and musical people in the United States, Walters Pianos are Built to Last a Lifetime by the Walters Piano Co,, of N. Y,, by skilled, experienced piano builders, e never handled a covering every part of the Walters Pi inside of the top lid of every piano. your old piano for a beautiful new Walters and pa bal- Exchange yi (ue it st a week may thea Upon request a representative will call, pia All Cars Transfer to », is inserted in gilt letters on the Bloomingdales’ Lex, lo 3d Ave, 59th to 60th Si, FOR SALE, y PAYMENTS. lowest fees Call, write 0 nw AMES BRKGMAN 7 MAI LANE (upstairs) RAILROADS, 9 BL weekly; gentle Pay, Ping. made t0. OF F AALiwAD, pom | 4 ALLUNS fous of WEST TWN TY « 3,| " DwSUROSSES AND contepce | aM'The ie FUMNGL ae men's cloth ae ining CO., Bh) Bway Small onters address Hit VORTLANDT sit J) Desbrosses 8 Tit thir West nl Diamonds-cHasy payments, re | st suo sentative. calle Hest tech Hable kode: Mesane.Anverioan Watch & Diamond Co., 10 Maiden lane *7.58 A.M~CHit 910.55 AM. 8 8 18 hours to Chicago, ma LEMP ite ‘ NR KAN DIAMOND CO, Maiden lane, easy payUnens; rep hone, BAGLE DIA 14 Malden lane | MONDS. Jewelty delivered . Uh Wid Bt, Louie yt nis Ace ie vpn 10, 8 AMT NSYLVAN telephone, Syudiea s ay Air wascie, Joweuy; Weemiy bay. ST LOUIS eat prices! contd nteal, MAN- —PENNSYLVA NDS, watehe ative calls D_ WATCH CO, Commenciig The World will give & weekly prises of $10.00 Nov, 26 cach for the 5 best positions ob- tained cach eek by advertisers IM : through the Situation Wanted Me idilG nla columns of the Sunday World's COART LINBS-99.95 4, 4 Want Directory ~2) words, 15 gy LINR=1835 Pag cents, Advertisers who secure posi yaw STERN RalLway tions will please communicate with The World's tussified Advertising Munayer, Room G1, Pulitzer Build ing. (Oo ya) ASBURY PARK Asbury Park Surty 6, 10 nicht. wee Mand 4.55 P, SANTA NO DYNAMITER, ke dave, M 4a way ith a Proved te rit Fifth avenue Contain a Doll, id | yy ‘ ebout avenue d family g the »D 4a plot to blow Poe the Crighte looking be Holland sald he seent M up. Bundle, carefully opened, a doll led gu Carigt= from nelgh- rant PATENTS, The police returned ty the twa Sse | ANBHboK. baat Parks pal ve mt blottel Las; no {izrainner” ete | Be Bee A Ten Years’ Guarantee, |... | NSYLVANIA by, ad than tha ton, BCIAL, LIMITED — For and} ny Re 8, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26 and JO West Fourteenth Street, 24, 25, 27 and 29 West Thirteenth Street, ), AM, 13, TO-MORROW, TUESDAY and following days preceding December 3ist 45, 17, Ciearance Sales In Preparation for Our January Sale! | These “clear-uos" extznd to almost every department, for after our great holiday trade there ate multitudes of articles that have become tumbled or soiled through handling, or of which | (assortments ate rather depleted—they must be closed out at once— QUICK CLEARANCE PRICES WILL RULE! | Great Lot of Heavy Curtains Women's Suits Site ee aa At Clearance Prices rrerciyn eroerived yeades, o Wrbada ‘ Fronsh and American ‘Tapestry--Preneh it jand Verona Valoure and b \ short and muves and) Reps—Soll) colors, two ated, Cireular and 8, com ination tinte-with and | Semi jackets trimmed lar - : with silk br vet and fancy i thou? applied herder buttons—were S and $19.98,,11.98 Talired fults—long coat or plain and Ragdad and blouse Bions. wedeto! cheviots wnd oosey and mixtures—elnborately trimmed with brald and velvet—silk or satin liniigs—were $22.98 and $24.98,..15.08 Stylish Sults of Fancy Mixtures—also Styles (no der | jvis and cravenettes ‘ineat French Velours 0.08 otha, chevio's and c fn — \! French Velou 25.00) ion and long coate—satin lined— Verona Velour ld and velvet trimmed—collartess, Dupes designs, ..sisres 38 16.98 vith intald velvet and brald trim oF litiah atasie avd ve sich collar—value $99.00..19.98 spolitan Curtains U8 9.08 Velvet Eton and Blouse Sultse—sile mak f ie aid Persian veate of contrasting ' ” colors—elbow or full length sleever= X USIA Be ssscsssaees 1.9 B98} colors—Albew pated. conte—deep nT y ail girdle—were $%.00,.... 498 Oriental designs ‘ 09% 508 Rep—tich bonte 46 408 Fine Furs Hagdads—Emb'd 3.93 i Armures—best colors 2.98 | At Clearance Prices Derby Tapest 8 198) satural Mink Throws—two stripe Hargninst | vith taile—bromde tinine—alnas 69 | Muffs to mateh value of set $&, raat yrice advances in all mani-| Prloe now. each a jf tuned fabsios make the above an OP | ronetia and Sable Fox Pearts— anity that should he at once taken |eytra lone-fur or satin ined fill Fox Talls—vatue § 16.98 Shaw! Hffects in Sable Rageoon~ with Pox talls-also Japandse Mink Ndvantage of—manufacturers would not fill orde: the pr we qil rane Net a Sets poliay heade ae occas R08 hree special c'ear-up lo!s— ree Pillow Muffs—Isabella and PR Se Akai re banat awi (ot | nese 4,98,,,.6.98,...9.98 Mars and Throws of Ja were Mink—sable, Russ'an Squitrer rte | Ad eRe nd Sable Raccoon—value $14... 9.08 of at attractt Fleetric Seal Coats-large storm wh rablan, wit ollar sand cuffs of beaver La F ahams. trimmed t0 |Cage SU TORR cen. 18.08 paral fhehtly solled=no othe Finer Coats to $29.98 Lace Nets—to Clear ; Sart, Allover Lace Nets—polnt Venite Remember, | Toe eet ermemiue tae 1 PTO§ — Clear-up Prices througtout the stores | As a Betwixt Old and New Year Offering We Will Sell ($1.50 Black Broadtatl Zibelines at 59 cents | Imported for finest Tailor-Made Gowns and Evening Cloaks~56 inches wide— | soft, silky fibre--exquisile lusttebeauti{ul goods at atout ONE THIRD VALUZ ALSO CLEARANCES AS FOLLOWS; cy Sul. ings- ids and strip Ine h—ehecks, All Woo! Black Panamas—one of the value 59e, stanchest fabrics for constant wear—4t Inch—worth .%8 +0 19 | tmported Kollennes—40 inch—the- Imported Black Voiles—5 Inch— mixture of silk gives a fine lustrous | "close. flem weave. ctlep finish finish—white, black and all the pretty $1.20 quality, merrerran:-| ee ae % fe sa sell ¥ Navy, * | Black Broadelothe, 54 nah | ? bid soft kid finish—worth $1.% 1.49 | A) Woot Crope syptiane=4# Inches MM inch full crepe Onish—all street | were .59 89 | and evening colors—worth .99...,.. 68 | —_————_——_—_——_———-@ Veilings Fiannels At Clearance Prices | At Clearance Prices Crepe Chiffon Vells yds. jong | Double face Riderdown—reversible, & tucks-some with Newport checks, figures, polka dota ring for auto—all colors | value $1.8 1.69 “lannele—vand wide—all woot Special lot Crepe Chiffon \ W Ken—white and colors— Ps vs long—allk. emb'd—velvet dotting mit vialue $1.69 to $1.98 98 ne's—ela orate All Sik Tuxedo Veliing—plain o — and Scallop chenille dots—regularly 29. . 19 % a e White Saxony Baby Flannels— Remember, finayy Daas ee 1 iar clear-uo prices throughout the store, Heached and unbleachede= . value 11% see OM Novelty Ribbons Bleached and Unbleached Canton ; lannels--worth §% ...,, , | At Clearance Prices | L Neckwear and Ruchings Beautiful styles in Dresdens, Persians At @ | aad Shadea Novelties—best colors t Clearance Prices 4 to 12 inches wide. | Nock Yokes—were $1.69 and $1.98.. 98 129 cent Ribbons. har 2g Ciiffon Jabots—were $1.49.. 98 sf cent Rishons 39, liberty Silk Capes—wide stole ends— 65 cent Ribbons. 49 tt irimmed—value 95.08 498 acl Liberty Sik Net Ruff, extra full ‘ 77 oent Ribbons: BO) “ruche—value $4.98 v.coscccccceceeses 98 89 cent Ribbons 89 Crepe Lisse, Chiffon and Net $149 Fubbons 98 hings—verlety of designs— ' Odd lots-but perfectly clean! | and colors—value 2 yard 19 | § . { Picante Liinimeeniciermerensenesly | | MORNING SALES ‘To-morrow, Tuesday, Until 1 P. M, To prevent dealers buying, we reserve privilege of restricting quantities, Wool Cheviots 4 Camel's hair flnish—Black y serviceable dress fabrics the 29 were made to sell at 6) conts Royal, Brown and Wino —thogy MAIN FLOOR—NEW BUILDING Steel Laid Shears Fine Mercerized Sateens iret q full nicket h—Black, white ana all fin 8% inch—usually 25 j epee 1 49 and Morning Sale... Don't Judge morning specials quality. by priee, uvhlon backs, be 1 re extraordinary and Bureau searfs—value BASEMENT—WHe? ou MAIN FLOOR-CENTRE BUILDING, Women's W. Liberty Satin Ribbons te Pooily andf Siy-ineh—extra quality—@urah Ny Hecke da Ri aA f finish—black, white and all good mas shades for millinery, girdles, new tucked . sashes, ete, 15 slacs to 4 splendid value at 4, nee || SHOOND FLOOR—CENTRE BUTI MAIN FLOOR—ARCAD Fine Rookfold Percales The fold speaks for quality pin dots, polka and faney figures, Gobelin, Cardinal, 7 Nivy, White, Brown, Gray 5% and Blaok BroUnds..\..ssseveee . Women's Dressing Sacques Flannelotte, German Flannel and Riderdown--fitted or loose Persian, Japanese and flowered , best colors—value 08 and $1.25. SECOND FLOOR-NEW BULLDING, UNAS S90 £