The evening world. Newspaper, February 8, 1906, Page 3

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PID) WORK IN TRIAL OF JERSEY NEGRO MURDERER Jury Chosen and Wit- nesses Called Within an ~ Hour at Mt. Holly. COURT IS _ BESIEGED. Special Force of Deputies to Guard Rufus Johnson from Great Crowd. DOCTORS HEARD FIRST. They Tell How Miss Allinson Was Brutally Murdered and Bound by the Prisoner. j MOUNT HOLLY, N. J., Feb. 8—The swift wheels of Jersey justice were put In motion.to-day when the negro Rufus Johnson was placed on trial in the Burlington County Court before Judge ‘Hendrickson at th!s place for the mur- Ger of Miss Florence Allinson fn @ barn at the rear of her home in Moores- town on Dec. 18 last. Long before the doors of the court- room. were opened a great crowd sur- rounded the Court-House and a large force of deputy sheriffs were on hand | to preserve order. No one was ad-| mitted to the court-room without a pass | from the Sheriff. When the place was | filled the doors were closed and the/ crowd outside numbered several hun- dred. ‘The Sheriff was careful to exclude all women except those who had been summoned as witnesses in the case. At 9.30 o'clock Johnson, surrounded by @ squad of deputy sheriffs, was led into the court-room by a rear entrance and at 945 Judge Hendrickson ascended the bench and ordered the trial to proceed. A special panel of talesmen were on hand and the work of selecting a jury } did not take long. Less than twenty talesmen were called and examined when the twelfth man was secured. The time consumed in selecting the jury was about twenty minutes. County Prosecutor Samvel A. Atkin- son then opened the cuse for the State | and bitterly arraigned Johnson and de- nounced his crime as the blackest and most brutal in the history of the State. ‘While the Prosecutor was talking John- gon, who sat near his counsel, Jacob A. Hendrickson, @ brother of the pre- \ siding Judge. stared abou: the rom tn }@ vacant manner, looking over the \)} The most damaging testimony given {against the accused was that of Dr. Stokes and Dr. Stroud, who performed the autopsy on the body of Miss Allin- fon. They testified to the wounds on the head and the marks about the throat made by @ strap which had been placed about the woman's neck, and also to the fact that the woman had been assaulted. Johnson, who was arrested in Balti- more about five weeks after the cam- mission of the crime, made a confes- sion. His counsel will endeavor to gave him by seeking a conviction of murder in the second degree. YOUTHS IN A BAND “ORGANIZED T0 BEG Leader Keeps a Regular Direc- tory of Kind-Hearted Rich Women. What may prove to be an organized gang of begging boys under the leader- ship of a man who Xceps « directory of kind-hearted persons of wealth has been lscovered by the police who are now nearching for the leader. ‘The first tadication of this condition was in the West Side Court to-day when Charles Slager, nineteen years old, of Boston, and Elmer Ward, eighteen years old, of Philadelphia, were arraigned on a charge of having annoyed Mrs. Edith Colguie, of No. 26 West Seventleth street, and Ars. Gilbert Colgate, of No. $0 West Seventy-sixth street. Both women ure members of the millionaire clgate ‘family and the boys hud been ColeetSang to beg money from. them. Both the ys were fined $10, and in de- i. yinept went to the island. fentbording to the story of Mrs, adith fe, Ward came to her on ‘Tuesday cher his mother in East Aurora, 4 told him if he was ever in {ucke Mire Colgate would help tim: tolgate gave Slager a dollar and an for & room at the West side X. MC. 4. She then wired to Buffalo to. tis story investigated, and re-) St celyed the reply that he was not known in, Raat ‘Aurora, ru came back to) Bla- ed 0} matter y-eighth street station h called at the Col-| the two arrest ney, ig. they, ‘have been liv- Wee tat dt hist tat lars and told Tow too work! Sie’ Colrnten, court Mra, Colgate said she re- moenbere ®@ man named Mason who led*on her & year ago and obtained Boney, from. ber. Since then, she- sald, had Peat scores of youths coming elp. t, want these boys to suffer,” @he said, ‘but I think that man ought to be arrested.” . | “The police has heard rumors of hi _ Work before and are trying to locate a Pitty Killed in Ratlway Strike, ' Mitohell 2) any thee *|yond saying thet he Ww Z RECEPTION COMMITTEE LARRY DELMOUR, Tt was hard to pass through the block dotween Lexington and Third avenues, on Fifty-elghth street, last night at 11 Rhinelander Waldo would lead the march at the ba!l of Tammany Leader Tom Rush's Osceola Club, of the Dia- mond Back district, Rubbernecks from all over town crowds1 into Terrace Garden in the hope of getting a glimpse of “Rhiney Wally,” as the facetious Mr. Devery calls him, Every one of the big hu tlers in Tammany was there in his finest glad robes to get a peep at the First Deputy. Even Larry Delmour, the oldest politician in the world, had his| red-gray whiskers freshly trimmed and MINERS SEEVICTORY IN GENERAL STRIKE Anthracite Committee Com- pleting Demands to Be Made on Operators. (Special to The Evening World.) WILKES-BARRE, Pa., Feb. 8.—Mem- bers of the Scale Committee of the union anthracite miners are in session here to-day to formulate the demands which are to be made upon the mine cperators at the joint conference next Thursday President Mitchell, who was to have presided, has changed his plans and Instead of coming here goes direct to New York, where he expects to arrive on Saturday. The District Presidents and National Board members who came from Indian- apolis, where they had @ long confer- ence with President Mitchell on the situation, will not explain why the plans wera changed, or if the son for Mitohell remaining in Indianapolis is that there {s a prospect of settle- ment with the soft coal operators. While no official announcement of the demands will be made before they are presented to the operators, it ts evident from the talk of the committeemen that they will comprise demands for an elght-hour day. recognition of the union, an equalization of the wages of company hands, and adjustment of the wages of the various classes of work- crs in the mines of different companies who complain that while they do the same kind of work their wages vary; @ revision of the Conciliation Board to secure a formation which will enable the board to settle grievances without the delays now necessary. ‘Also a standard ton applying to all parts of the region and « definite and as nearly as practleable a uniform scale for doing all dead work. Some minor grievances may be added, but they will probaly tbe of such o na- ture that the Conciliation Board can hem. adjust ‘hyident that while the miners 8 t desire to avoid a strike pible, t! they are firm for faetsttng on ' their ands, ore’. believe that a grneenl strike of the soft and hard cpal workers would result In a certain victory, INDIANAPOLIS. Feb, 8.—President refuses emphatically to gay about the anthracite situation ‘his future movements bey rede Hewitt ie pee york next Thut y. He leave for BG ‘Past to-morrow, going directly to Pisladelphia, where. he may meet ong or more from the Wilkes-Barre confer, Shoe. From Philadelphia. he New. York and will be the for the mers’ deli when they meet the operators. Mitchell and the Naitona’ officers here are apparently more annoyed by -the Dolan and Pitts- burg! ineldent than’’ any. anticipated ‘complication in the anthracite territory, $e or to discuss 1B tO esman ’ Loving Cup for Thomas Kenny. A handsome asllver loving coup was predented last night to Thomas Kenny, Superintendent of, the Poor, of Rich- mond Borough, and one of the be: known residents of Staten Island, ‘Tho occasion was. his: retirement treas- urer of the Richmond branch of the Order of Hibernians,. which office. _ VALPARAISO, Chill, Feb, 8,—Rallroad laborers at Oruro, Bolivia, are on strike d to tave been, twenty-five years. pee tation» wad Hage ‘a HERE tanh o'clock, because word had gone out that! | ; ment house at 'S warvo? Wea th pf, Rus KEeT | bis spitlocks briliiantined. Word had gone along the line that Tammany was) expected to show the First Deputy that! even !f he did come from the inner) circle of the "400" it coutén't fease \'em a little bét. He Was Skiddoolng. But Waldo didn't show up. He sent a telegram announcing his Inability to be present. “‘Jimmy," the florist detec- tise, who used to be an Investigator on a newspaper, looked at the date line of the telegram and said: “Waldo has given us the 2 for fair, Thie tel gram was handed in Third avenue, near the Bowery. Waldo must be doin’ the slum act" This wasn't a bad guess of Jimmy's, HARLEM THIEVES LOOT THRE FATS Go Through Top Floor of Apartment-House and Get $500 in Jewelry. ] Some time between 10 o'clock yester- day morning and 8 o'clock yesterday afternoon, burglars went throug the top floor of the Mt Clemens apart- No. 8 Manhattan ave- nue, and looted three flats of all the jewelry they contained. The victims af the robbery were L. M. Smith, M Nelson: ay Mrs, Smith, came in during the after- noon, When she reached the top floor she found that all three of the doors opening on the hallways had been forced, Investigating, she discovered that the apartments of Mrs, Smith, as wall as of Mrs, Smith's two neighbors, had been thorouguly searched for jJew- elry or readily convertible silverware. The Harlem police were netified but no arrests followed. The burglars had evMently been at work on the top floor for gome hours. They must have known that all three of the women tenants went out to business in the mornings and’ did not return until evening. TO RELIEVE BRIDGE TERMINAL CRUS Commissioner Stevenson Has. $50,000 Plan for Temporary Williamsburg Extension. Bridge Commissioner Stevenson an- nounced to-day that he was about to spend $30,000 on plans Intended to re- eve the Jam at the New York terminal of the Willlumsburg bridge, which would inoldentally double the carrying capacity of the trolley cars. At present the trolley Mnes stop at Delancey and Clinton street because there is only a small and unprotected platform. At this: platform there are five points a¢ which cars stop, the only Places where passengers can get on and He proposes to extend that platform a couple of blocks along Delancey Aureet. making ten stopping places. At the present time 150 cars an hour on the average cross the ridge south roadway and he thins this can be increased to 300, There are a number of ner Fook as the Mar-y avenve and Tompkins avenue routes, that are com- pelled at oresent to run to the Broad- way ferries ee want of bridge accom- " cars can cross the of. temporary arran the. present. congested engineers are at the bie tel watch n su) levated roudee, Origieally hie recelved abu a S = propria tion. o1 $800. for the, pul ‘4 id at the last meet of Bo datimate he was 1 on the| his WHO THE CoMMITTEE Comm RE USHING Va for, as it turned out. Waldo and Third Deputy Mack were honking all over the east side in an auto ostensibly inapect- ing tte police stations. This ie « faver. ite stunt of now officials in the Gapar.- ment. While the girls e: ed thelr Ga- appointment at the absence ef Waldo the bali went on with a bing and siza. ‘Tom Rush, with his bald dome freshl ironed, was busy on the handshake sll night ‘long. He was helped by, Park ‘Commissioner Herrman and George Cornish, and between shakes Maurics Quinlan opened bottles with white seaix on them. Of course, the Tammany Old Guard from the district wag there In all ite strength, and it may be remarked that a Tammany man ia the Twenty-ninth rtisart as a Democrat was thie district that i ls as warm @ in Vermont. MINISTER ARRESTED TRIED TO END LIFE Flung Himself in Front of Train and Badly Injured as Crowd Looked On, CHICAGO. Feb. 8—Rev. Justin G Wade, pastor of the tional Church, Waukegan, Ill, yesterday arrested by post-office inspec- tors for sending Illegal letters througi the mails, attempted to cominit suicide to-day by throwing himself in front of a train on the Chicago and Northwest- ern Rallway. The train was a fast pasenger train from Green Bay, which hed elowed down slightly preparatory to stopping at the Waukegan depot. The minister rushed upon the track and when tho engine was about twenty feet distant threw himself flat upon his face. He was struck by the pilot of the engine and hurled many feet to one side of the track. A crowd walting for the train saw the attempt at sulcide. . Wiade was at once conveyed to a hospital, where it was announced that he had a chance for recovery, FLUNG $10,000 INTO BiG CROWD Lavish New Yorker Mobbed at Los Angeles After His Prodigal Start. LOS ANGHLES, Feb. 8 — “Scotty,” the Death Valley mystery, has faded away as champion money burner, A young man describing himself as 5. Oscar Hart, of New York, with pockets ned with hundred-dollar bills, dl tanced “Scotty” by throwing probably $10,000 to a atreet crowd in an hour. Appearing oh the streets of Los An- gelea Tuesday night and yelling like a coyote, Hart attracted a great crowd, He bought the entire stock violets of the biggest store and tributed them to women on the street, embtiog his terrifying yell with every ai From his pockets he scattered silver among the crowd and invited all into the hotel bar to drinie champagne at expense, while he tUppe ie ir ‘a $100 bill after each round. Because a florist could not change it $100 bill He tore it into shreds and throw the pleces at the crowd. The mob be- frenzied and tore his clothing he esoaped on a street car to paige resort, wees cont rofligacy. mitity fPtinknown. Two companions said they were Charles Rudolph, of New Yori, and H. L, Lulbert, of Newark. and for many yeare United State’ Di arict-Attorney, haa been, aeponies a pee. ELS hf scoe Dou AY EVENING, FEBRUARY 8, 1906, SAID ? ¢! WALDO'S GRAND MARCH elects erties by. eonvertin: nonmal Republican piiralicy of 2,000 tt @ Democratic ewe) of mors Uhah 2.000. But Tom Rush iayt saving ‘lovable things about lap tiene Gays, It im 80-0-0 cola. Lhere were olf @eiegations from tue Homemiead Club, the Ovreeives, tne Bug House Burch, the Shazorook- Wienerwurst Pizochle Club end the Bankers. This organization, com- manded by Paddy Cliggett, made a hit, and when Paddy was congratulated he sald: "Wait unt! the Bankers’ ball and we'll show. you how tc do things {n style, We have engaged the services of the celebrated Southern chef, Wilton Wharton—dog-gone him—and ‘he will furnish a feed that will be Temembercd for many ® 4a: "L'il be gay the day atrer the teati,) Saad tobany ‘Romnuy rhe ander. ta OSCEOLAS RUBBERED HARD FOR WALDO, BUT HE CAME NOT. Ketten, the artist of twists and jiggles, was on hand at Tom Rusb's bal! to eatch his friend the new Deputy, but when that functionary failed to appear The Evening World’s famous artist devoted himself to tho other 1otables. ellus J. Pinkney, who was to have the howt of Mr, Waldo, explained he belleved the young’ man kept y becauso the newspapers have been poking fun at him. Then Mr. Pinkney and Miss A. Moore led about five hundred other couples through the mazes of a march fn the magnificently decorated ball-room. Rough on the Chef, Some of the notables who were in the boxes were John Crimmins, Capt. John C, Fleming, of hirciveen, © t Kerry; Edward 8, Murphy, Superine tendent of Bulldings, and Tis brother Frank, with a big delegation from the irish American Athletlo Club, tncluding its President, P. J, Conway, Maurice Blumenthal, Commissioner Lantry, John McLoughlin, the millionaire builder; ol. Berrick, Senator Grady, Commis- gloner Darlington, Alderman McCall, Henry Wassmer and Tim" Deegan. TRIED TO ROB WIFE OF EX-CONGRESSMAN Young Men Just Out of El- nira Fled When Mrs. Shober Appeared. LOBBY HAS FRE AUN IN SENATE Disgraceful, Says Lewis, of Rochester, Who Wants It Shut Out. Two young men, both ex-conyicts, who broke into the apartment of Mrs, Fran- ols E. Shober, wife of ex-Congressman | {Shober, at No, 61 Morningside avenue, yesterday afternoon, wel the Harlem Court to-day $2,500 ball each for trial on a charge of attempted burglary. Mrs. Shober was in the apartment when the two thleves entered. When | they saw her they bowed and hurried out, Two detectives who had been trail- ing them arrested them as they were | leaving the apartment-house. When the youths were taken to Po- lice Headquarters to-day they turned out to be Arthur Kelly and Edward | Baad, elghteen and nineteen years old respectively, both recently paroled from Elmira Reformatory, where they had been sent after a conviction for burglary. THREE THROWN 10 ROAD IN RUNAWAY Society Woman and Actress Injured, but Driver Caught in Smash Escaped. YONKPRS, Feb, 8.—A serious run- away accident in which a prominent New York actress, a Yonkers soolety woman and New York broker figured ocourred in Van Cortlandt Park, near the spot where several automobile ac- cldents have happened. The party were driving through the park ing a surrey yerterday aftefnooon when the horse became frightened by a passing train on the Putnam division and sprang away at top speed, The driver who gave his name as B. K. White, of West Eighteenth street, New York, clung tightly to the reli while the horse dashed over the grade crossing and amashed into a tree near the polo field in Van Cortlandt Park. 1 te The Evening World.) Feb. &—An attack on the as made openly in the Sonate 2 Lew of Rochester, n of lobbyists to the floor for the purpose of doing business was little short of “They opealy practice their profession ef promoting or retarding legislation,” declared the Senator, “The rules of this house bar them absolutely from the floor, and I see no veason why the rules should be extended to promoters and Not to the honest farmor up the State. 6 oly visitors entitled > enter the chamber are State officers and the members of the Senators’ families, The practice of obtaining unanimous’ con- sent to suspend the rule in favor of should be stopped. We r live up to the rules or repeal them. “I have aften had occasion to wit- ness proceedings in Congress and Tani pleased to say that neither im the Stn- ate nor the “House are qmoters: or ° rsons Not wheel to eee entitled to the floor Majority Leader Raines said the Sen- ate ought > be more oaref future aa to who It iets Inne iB the BILL MAKES WIVES LIABLE FOR PAYMENT. (Spectal to The Evening World.) ALBANY, Feb, &—The question of Nabliity of married women for goods bought by them ts to be fought out again this year in the Legisiature, grocers and merohants are diniig no strong in support of the proposition, “? The bil, which makes them Hable for a ol in ® 7 today by Mr. Lansing, a grocer SADDLES POLICE PAY ON NEW YORK CITY. (Special to The Evening World.) ALBANY, Feb. 8—Anather of the series of Ulster County bills which seek to pile expenses of the county on New York City in connection with the building of tie reservoirs in the Cat- skills. was introduced to-day by As- semblyman Fowler. ‘The measure provides that the cost of policing the county on account of the construction of ihe reservolrs shall ‘The horse and carriage, with White sull in the vehicle, were thrown into a marsh. ‘The women had been thrown out just before the ooflision, und one of them, Miss Beatrice Hodges, of Parkhill, Yonkers, well known in society, sus- tained a fractured right elbow and other Injuries, The other woman, who refused to give her name but who w: hurt. Mr, White was not injured. Miss Hodges was attended by Dr. Onell, of South Broadway, and taken to the of BBY Chedsey, Parighill, ino be charged to New York. — 80-CENT GAS BILL IS REPORTED IN. ASSEMBLY ALBANY, Feb. 8,—The Agnew bill, fix- ing 80 cents as the maximum price to be charged consumers of gas in Manhattan and Brooklyn, with a sliding scale in declared to be an actress, was slightly /¢ne outlying boroughs, was reported | favorably, us Was expected, in the A: sembly to-day, ure to the sa) PRODIGAL SON DES N FATHER'S HOME Harry Preston Returns to Parents’ Residence at Mid- night and Expires. | WAS IN NERVOUS STATE. Had a Wild Career as a Young Man and Wandered Over he World Marry Preston, thirty years old, died towtay at the home of hts father, Henry Preston, 0 wealthy physician, of No. 4 Green avenue Brooklyn. The young man had been a profigal aon and re- j turned to his parents” ho at mid- | ntght, dying severai hours later. He had appeared to be In a shattered nervous condition when his father let ifm In the house, The physictan gave iim a small dose of bromide and saw isn to bed. When he went to see how te was getting on early this mor! ind him dying of paralysis of the Dr, Preston admitted to-day that the man hdd been wild from boy- ‘4 and had given his parenta a great lel of trouble. A year ago his father placed him in charge of his farm in ean, N. Y., where he seemed to eedy down, but a month ago he dis- vppeared, Five years ago the young man was arrested in Norwich, Conn., for the theft af a horse and carriage. He nireé the rig in New London and sold it tn Selem. His father managed to ssralghten the matter out. Ten years ago, when the boy was just out of hie teens, he married Miss Bertha Langdon, daughter of an oyster planter. he couple lived for a few months hap- . when suddenly young Preston dis- Ropeared., The next his wife heard from him he was in Japan. She accused ive parenta of alienating her husband's affections and brought suit against Dr. Preston to recover $50,000 damages, he case was settidd out of court. TWO SAILING SHIPS: MAY BE LOST AT SEA. Schooners Pepe Ramirez and Dora Overdue and It Is Feared Have Met with Disaster, Two sailing ships have been posted as being overdue, and there is a grave fear In ehippirg circles that they have both been lost in the storms which have swetit the coast during the last month. ‘The $00-ton sohooner Pepe that day nothing has ‘been vossel, and jt Ix feared that Capt. death at sea. The other missing vessel schooner Dora, Capt, Martine on Oct. 7 near Frying Pan SAoals and men, which left Charleston on Nov, 2 for this port. She has not been heard of since. The Dora first left Charleston on Oct. 3, but met with bad weather and turned to run back fo pert. She went ashore was piilled off In a leaking condition by tho revenite cutter Gresham and two tugs. She arrived back at Charleston the next day. was repaired and again started for this port. ——————EE POSTPONE DIVIDEND ACTION. Action on the Union Pacific sem|- annual dividend has been postponed un- til next Wednesday. Meetings of the Union Pacific and Southern Pacific ex- ecutive commttiees were held to-day, put no announcement of any sort foi. lowed. 1s the New Eton B Ramiren left this port on Dec. 13 for Brunswick, Gn. She toarried a load of cement, Since heard of tho| five times what we do. Jordan and his twelve men have met | d nine New Boulevard Suits. SALE AT BOTH STORES est priced sults—now style skirts draped 4 my by finest skirt tallors in America, Cos- tumes to sult the most fastidious taste f a —a month ahead In style, and offered ey” fas samples at half price, Remember—Alterations FREE ——————— ALDERMEN WANT ~—SILARIES RAED Favor the Story Bill, Which | Would Double the Pay for. | Members Next Year. GET ONLY $1,000 NOW. |This Is Retrenchment Year and Next Doesn’t Count—Say Posi- tion Is Worth More. ‘The bill introduced at Albany by As- |semblyman Story to dncrease the salar |fes of members of the Board of Alder- men from $1,000 to $2,000 {8 indorsed by nearly every member of the Board, theugh unless re-elected none will re- ceive any benefit from it. this ts the year of local economy, Majority Leader Meyers, of the Board, says the lid is on and that if he can prevent {t there will not be any ine crease of salaries for city employees, Stlll, all the Aldermen would like to have the Aldermen's salaries increased in the hope they will come back next year. Davies, eatisa upon the Mayor, ami among | other things made thls statement: “We will show you what a Board of of the Finance Committ Aldermen can do in the way of re- trenchment when we are not hampered by the Board vf Estimate and Appor- tonment. We are not afraid of you people now anil we intend to run our wn Board in our own way. We will not be dictated to nor are we to be ordered what we shall or shall nov report.” “How did the Mayor take this?’ the Alderman was asked. “He sald it was a nice state of af- fairs," was the reply, “Did he say that Ironically?” “No, I think he really meant thet as the Board of Aldermen was a co-ordl- nate body it was right we an independent stand.” The buard of Estimate ts democratic. Leader Meyers asked to be excused from giving iis views on the Story vill in view or ine position which he oc- cupies, but Alderman Davies was out- spoken. “1 tink $2,i¢ for an 2 year ts lttle enough he said. “No man torm the duties without ther business. own case for example I am @ member of the Sinking Fund Commis- sion and Caairman of the Finance Can- mittee. 1 am kept golng all the time | and had to practically give up my bus- | ness, We olect our own Sergeant-at- | Arms, to whom we pay $1,500; two as- Sistants at $1,202, and others at $1,000, 1 ¢hink our salary of $1,000 is wholly in- adequate," | “Little Tim" Sullivan was frank about | his position, “1 think that $5,000 {s sovill enough for the Job," he safd, “Just Imagine. We have to give up all our time to it and get little more than a street-cleaner. ‘The clerk of our Board gets more than I think the 0 take wetion to push a! Board ought | that bill along. The $1,000 which the Aldermen at present receive is provided for in th charter. When Col. Strong was Mayor they got $2.00, Away back in the olden daya the Aldermen ‘recelved $3,000 and 000, That was when there were onl; mty-four members. of the Board, nat $1,00, however, there are many pinints for the position. MANY IN FLOOD PERIL NEAR RIO JANEIRO, RIO JANEIRO, Feb, 8.—The Parahiba = do Sul has broken its banks and inun- dated the lower parts of the city of Campos, 140 miles northeast of Rio Janelro, to the depth of twelve feet In some places. Many houses have col- | iapsed, widespread damage has been ne and communication with Campos impeded. ‘The work of rescuing the imprisoned’ Inhabitants of the city is most difficult. . ring SampleSale Suits “4 5 z $30 to $35 Models, Friday's Big Offerings f sacs dechcheg hairy e Semple ahi =. which our| workrooms copy the full Spring line. Now sold regardless of cost at $15. Smart London Etons, Spring Pony CoatSullst e Our choicest Travelling Suits, All exquisitely tailored as samples, with light gray and self colored sil or satin coat linings. Rich Spring roadcloths, Panamas and Cheviots —Silver Gray Diagonals and Tweeds. din high- New tridiscent colorings It was only yesterday that Chairman ) 3 (

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