The evening world. Newspaper, February 23, 1906, Page 4

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gD at i i te ' } iS : ig eK LOOK OUT FOR _ SURPRISES IN PATALCK CS Both Sides Have “Cards Up Their Sleeves” Says Rumor. SEEKING VALET JONES. Jerome Encourages Report that He Has Him in City, but Defense Doesn’t Credit It. HEARING TO BE LONG. Medical Evidence to Follow that of the Texans Likely to Stretch Out for Weeks. When the hearing of testimony in the motion for a new trial for Albert T- Patrick, convicted of the murder of Millionaire Rice, is resumed before Re- corer Goff on next Monday there may ‘be some surprises forthcoming from Doth sides. The greatest possible coup District-Attorney Jerome could spring ‘would be the production in court of the missing valet, Charles F. Jones, upceo whose alleged confession of perjury in ‘Texas the defense hopes another chance for the convicted lawyer now in the Geath cells at Sing Sing. It has been persistently rumored dur- ing the past few days that Mr. Jerome thad Jones where he could put his hands on him whenever be might be needed to men who are here from saloon in Houston to @wear they heard Jones say he lied on Patrick in order to save himself from ‘the chair. The lawyers for the defense Insist mobody knows Jones's present where- bouts. According to one story he Is in Samoa living under an assumed name. ‘For this reason Patrick's lawyers have Uttle fear of Jones being produced to confront those who have been brought here to testify. Ask Mayor Rice Here. With the possibility of the appearance of Jones disposed of, the District-Attor- ney will bend his efforts to impeaching the testimony of most of the “Big Annie” group of witnesses by intro- ducing members of the police force of Houston to testify that they are men of bad reputation. He is also sald to be making efforts to induce H. Baldwin Rice, Mayor of Houston, to hasten to New York and under oath deny the story told on the stand on Wednesday (afternoon by Miss Minnie Gaillard, The Texas schoolmarm sald she over- heard a sensational conversation on a Street car between Mayor Rice and Jones the valet. Mr. Rice, who is a nephew of the murdered millionaire, Wiliam March Rice, has wired a denial to The Evening World, but Mr. Jerome 1s urging him to come here in person in order that he may get the refutal of the alleged conversation into the record. To-morrow, it 1s expected, former District-Attorney Olcott will go to Sing Sing to ask Patrick if he walves nis right to object to the evidence which Mr. Jerome wants to draw from Pred- érick House, who was formerly of coun- | sel for the prisoner. There is no prob- ability that Patrick will consent to a waiver. If he shouid. it Ix stil! well-| night certain that Mr. House, sland- | ing on professional privilege, would | Tefuse to disclose what a client told | him under the seal of secrecy, espe-| cially as he was attorney for Jones as well as Patrick, However, {t may be necessary to produce Patrick in court] during these proceedings. in this event the Warden will bring iim down onj| ‘Tuesday, Patrick May Come. This may be the last trip Patrick will ever take beyond the walls of the gray prison until his body 4s carried from the death-house.. Even though he! takes !t with handcuffs on his wrist| and an armed guard by his side, the| little bald-headed lawyer with the fron nerves will be apt fo enjoy his fleeting | Glimpse at the wintry fields and the elty streets, The hearing may be prolonged for weeks. The Texas witnesses, most of them, are Ret to be heard. ‘Then will follow @ mass of expert testimony deal- ing with the effect of embalming fluid upon the bodies of those newly dead, & being one of the contentions of the defense tnat the pecullar conditions found in Rice's body were the results of chemicals used by the undertaker, and not of the chloroform which Pat rick {8 alleged to haye administered to his aged victim, ‘The District-Attorney will cross-ex amine each of these witnesses at Jength. He has a considerable number of witnesses of his own also That “Bad Cousin. He has steadfastly declined y whether he ‘will. cause the arrest o Joseph Jordan, allas “Skinny Martin, the conversational Texas boatman, on 4@ charge of false swearing. Jordan's evidence was the feature of this week's os slons, enh when confronted with & prison register and with a policeman ah swore he had seen him in the “Stare prison, Jordan still persist ry Joe Jordan, ‘the convict, was Ns agit Bake and cousin. born in the same town on the saine day; also lame us he Is. giao tattooed as he is, also of the same height. weight and general description as he ts, and also having the allug of 1 i COLLIER COMES 10 PRESS WAR ON MANN Says He Is Not Through with; the Proceedings Against | Town Topics. With the expressed intention of pro- | ceeding further against Town Topics | ami Col. W. D. Mann, Peter Fenelon | Collier to-day landed from the White| Star liner Cedric. Mr. Coiller was one of the 230 first and second cabin pas- sengers who had enjoyed the qufet run of seven days and twenty-two hours from LAverpool in the Cedric, which had been put into service owing to an accident to the Oceanic. Mr, Collier has been enjoying himself on his English and Irish estates while his son and afdes were conducting the Town Topica fight. | “I am back," sald Mr. Collier. “to| attend (o émportant business, the most important of which is to continue the fight agatost Col. Mann and the black- matiing evils that he and his associates | ihave stood for all these years. | “I believe that this infamous tramfc has received a deathbluw, but we shall not cease our fight untilgwe know for certain the class of ation which has thrived on infamous insinuatfon against young giris and which bas also preyed on the frailties of others is buried beyond resurrectson. Two Giris Driven from Home. “1 persooally know of two young and beautiful girls who were high fn) the most exclusive social circles of New York whose lives have been irrevocably ruined by insinuation made agas.st them In Town Topics. 1 know these even ithe conhdence of the parent broken and eney” were driven trea, ne. ‘Te names were not me-v | in the puvlication, yet society read tee dreadful news betweea the lines and | the fuoral characters of | Tho names of twy so: ‘ C ciety scamps | were used In connection with tae arte Against tne girls, ho were ative , «never fy minutes alone with taose men 1 cane not tell the names of these victims of Col. Mann and Town Topics. Tne gitls are now back with thelr tamilies again work. As for Just! bound to see that he Special Sessions bench. “Of course, I'me pleased at the Deuel, resigns from the enjoyed the foke and to-day s m just plain Jim H. Hamilton. of erford, N. Y,. and my only Aibany con- from Lage Champlain,” COLER STILL TRYING 10 | MAKE SHEPARD LET GO. | Another Letter as to the Etiquette of Holding Two Positions i at Once. | sion and the Pennsylvania Raliroad at he same time. In a plethora of words Mr. Coler charges the former candidate for Mayor with acting In a false ca; @\ty as coun- sel for the city, while he was fighting for the Pennsylvania Railroad in an ef- | fort to rob the people. Commenting on | | Mr. Shepard's defense of his position in| that Presiden; Orr and the other mem- | bers of the Rapid Transit Commission | concurred with him in his counsel as | ests of the clty, Mr. Coler wrote: “This fs Just what I think ts unfor-| tunate for the city. Their views always concur with yours and wou concur with your views no 1 | widely at variance might be the Inter “Skinny | Murtin,”” Tt is predicted that “Joe Jordan's bad cousin’ is going to take the place of the well-worked litte black ‘man. in pewepaper comparisons before very of the community and those which y might for the filme represent as a’ pald |attorney. What 1 am trying to drive in) the mind of Mr, Orr and the pul \is that Mr, Shep can be no | expected to give elty the ben his legal training and professional when the case of his client is even directly involved, and that ther representatives of the city treating as I am eure that he will treat them with the utmost courtesy and the ; utmost fairness must regard him not as thelr guide, but as the paid champion of the other aide." | DRT G = SyRGTENE | Leaves Boston Symphony. BOSTON, FEB. 2.—Wilhelm Gericke has resigned as conductor of the Bos- ton Symphony orchestra, bis resigna- tion to take effect at the end of the present season, un April 28. Bir. Gericke] He sald he discovered hi was conductor of the orch: 185} to 1889.and fram 1898 until [ent time. He will return to ‘a from pres- pope. to what would best preserve the inter- | while | j he fought with desperation, two of them | got | making a dive into his pockets for his | Toll of $27 when Policeman Kearns | came \thought It was merely a street fight and |not in accordance with the facts’ as/ made no effort to conceal his move-|she knew them, ments, running at top speed and mak-| Incidentally, the verdict will prob- ably make Katherine Ballou, 0 ts girls are innocent, yet so ounmingly and | Ing noise. damnably were the lies worded that) ” from | and they darted into the girls wera | and, seeing that the scuttle leading to | Ballon." | the roof had been opened, he started up| son of Watrous. have personal knows eir | Looking up ithe stree Has Spe! br Weat Sixty-seventh street, When mutried Frederick Floeckher after St Aer @ Spent $75,000. ike three men saw me coming they Went away. A divorce ine e | ‘We have spent $75,000 already to! aurted through the haliway of Kio: ;, Then came the Warrous ending crush this evil and are ready to spend C twice the amount to acc.mplish our|, “I ran up the stairway after the fel- 2: | end. We woild taken’o dillght in send. lows. I chased them up five fights of Her testimony. taken In Cricezo and] ing Col. Mann to” prison, but if we do. stairs and uirough an opening in the , tead to the jury, was the backbone of that it will only be an incident in our Foof. One of the men, Ge.rge Held, | Mme. Oatman’s case. we are! Who ls now under arrest, atiempted to flication of “maltor Hapgood and ¢ escape. | Held was the only one | in *n Topics contnues to be! sigfii. He ran from one rof to the Published after we have disp sed of{ other. until we had reached the cor-! | Col, Mann {t will not be with th se, five roofs from No, 27. It! DISTRESS AT SEA. | of respectable citizens. Such pu rribly dark up there. It ts a ———_ H is cannot thrive whthout to me that one of us d not < "4 vertisements, |tatl over,” Wa kept running from one | NORFOLK, Va. Feb. 23—A special | Hon the Cedric, was a mysterious “Mr. | Root fo the other. | Held is a Uttle fel- | mesage over the United States Weather | Hamtiton' whom _ the sengers | low. but ‘ant to fell you he is ay, rg) sence fe 7 spotted ar “Judge. J durng | fighter. Finally 1 caught up to him just; Bureau's seacoast telegraph wires to | the first days dog-v Mirks | aS we had reached the edge of the/ the Commandant of the Norfolk Navy- | about “dogs wer rife Hamilton | root {Yard to-day said: "The torpedo boat nection Is I'm building a conduit there | weight was a little too much for Gim. He i | with the tenacity of a dog and it seemed | Virginia capes and was carried in the) ja few feet. jeu "| Senate without amendment and transfer ter how | | SAYS SHE TOOK HIS WALLET | Man Gets It Back and Has Two THE WORLD: HOW HORSE WAS SUSPENDED AT SIDE OF BRIDGE. TRIES TO THROW COP OFF A ROOF Policeman Kearns Has Fierce Battle with Alleged Foot- pad on High Ledge. WATROUS'S ESTATE MUST PAY BILL: Jury Practically Decides Kath-, erine Ballou Was Clubman’s | Battling with a highwayman on the roof of a five-story buitding at No. 227 West Sixty-seventh street, Policeman Joseph Kearns, of the West Sixty-elghth street station, nearly lost his life early to-day, P. J. Collins, a wealthy grocer of No. 1958 Third avenue, was held up by three men in front of No. 27 West Sixty- Seventh street. When he left the car one of the men struck him on the side of the head, felling him. Collins manage¢. to scram- ble to his feet, and in @ second the other two were upon him, beating him. Collins is a powerful man, and although Common Law Wife. i Mme. Rachel Oatman, a milliner, to- day won her suit against the estate of Walter Wells Watrous for a $5,825 dress- maker's bill incurred by Katherine Bal- lou, and the jury by its verdict before Justice Joseph Newburger, in the Su- preme Court, practically declares that} Katherine Ballou was the wife of the elubman by a common-law marriage as she claimed. Mme. Oatman will receive interest, also, bringing the amount of the judg- ment up, to $6,629.90. The verdict 1s a vindication of Robert} Livingsyon Cutting, Mme, Oatman's at- torney, who was charged by Margaret C. Carroll, a professional collector of alms for the Cha Organization So- and bosom friend Katherine Ballou and Mr, Watrous, with offering her a $10 bribe “to sign an aftidavit| him, while rough his clothes, his scart pin, monds, the thira went The highwayman tudded with dia- valued at $150, and was jus: up. At first the policeman now Mrs, William Brown, of O14 ‘wish she had not settled her contest of the Watrous will. In the will Walter | Watrous left %,000 to atherine | Floeckher, sometimes called Katherine ‘The rest went in trust for a/ Saw Policeman Coming. Collins's assailants heard him coming, No, 27 West Sixty- seventh street and ran to the roof. Kearns followed them :o0 the top floor, oe jadder. i | Katherine Ballou was a famous | ere is Foliceman Keurne’s story of beauty, livin in Lexington avenue. his hatile with the alleged thieves: | fr ane tore affair was with Alfred | I was standing at’ Amsterdam ave- nue and West Sixty-seventh street when I heard a man cry for help. Sully, wealthy man, now Europe, who sends ther $3,000 a year for a very in | seath in 190 She is now the Wan talaie: eaiemeeratier wife of Brown, a Cunago oroket The jury was out only forty minutes. EE | TORPEDO-BOAT IN | push me down the stairs, but I was too for him. By the ‘Ume I reached of two ot the men had made their FORD AND NKS | provis FRIDAY EVENENG, FEBRUARY 23, 1906. HORSE HANGS OVER SIDE OF THE BROOKLYN BRIDGE Pinned in the Steel Framework by a Huge Auto Truck Animal Struggles Until Shot by a Policeman. i with @ crash, The truck driver put on the brakes, but the huge machine had swung around almost squarely across the path and had jammed the horse against the steel framework at the side of the bridge. The animal struggled to free itself, and in a moment had worked its way halfway through the orles-cross of steel and was hanging headlong above the vold below. ; His head hed been crushed, both jaws broken and both legs snapped as though they had been cheese straws by the terrible force of the Impact. The truck had jammed and it held the animal ie pple to the roofs below. The ver of the wagon, Michael Flyn was hurled against tne slde ot the ve: hicle, but aside from several bruises was unhurt. The driver af the Truck, Joseph’ Cavanaugh, was thrown to the ground, but was unhurt. Pollceman Brunette was at the end of the bridge and hurried to the scene. ‘The horse’ was still endeavoring franti- cully to free itself and the policeman drew his revolver and with a single woll-directed shot put the naimal out of its misery. A force of laborers on Jammed and crushed by a heavy auto- mobile truck, a horse hung struggling for twenty minutes over the alde of the Brooklyn Bridge to-day before he was finally put out of his agony by & policeman, A panic was caused In the tenements beneath by the sight of the terror- stricken animal dangling directly above. Blood spurted in streams from the ant- mal fo the lines of white linen that had deen stretched upon the roofs far be- low. There was a block on both sides of the bridge which lasted nearly half an hour. A delivery wagon belonging, to the Best Toy Co., of No. 60 West Twenty- third street, was passing along the south driveway just beyond the Brook- lyn tower. Behind {t approached one of the huge automobile trucks used by the Pittsburg Plate Glass Company, of Vandam and Hudson streets. The bic truck was heavily loaded and this to- gethor with its own weight made {t ‘as heavy asa small locomotive. 1s was running at top speed. ‘As it approached the delivery wagon in front it swerved to one side. The driver of the wagon for some reason drew out into the roadway. Just at this moment some workmen yelled to the truck driver to stay inside the tracks. The reason was evident from the repairs they were making to the rails. The the bridge were then called and they pulled the horse up through the inter- stices of the Lridge. The drivers and thelr wagons were to the police station. The de- y wagon was badly smashed and the front of the heavy truck was dented and cracked. together | Adams Street Police Court, Brooklyn. two vehicles swerved ANH BOR HK OK SG MERGER COUNSEL Defeated Candidates Who Talk Against Monopoly Said toBe in Employ. John Ford, a Hearst party candidate, and Willlam M. Ivins, Republican can- didate for Mayor, whose anti-trust and anti-monopoly ‘utterances have made local history, are declared to be lawyers In the employ of the Belmont-Ryan mer- Fs We extend a helping hand to ‘They have been retained to “wateh out’ in the interests of the merger and i will make their first professional ap-) purchas- pearance in that respect to-day ae os ers oF City Club. The City Club has taken 4 decided Interest in the merger and wants! Diamonds to know all about It. a Seeanicres xa WihGMdo named recently to draft a bill to \ d to Albany. The bill went to Albany ana not wish to tax their was treated with consideration by the} legislators. pocketbooks too severely. ) ‘This bil Diamonds bought of dismay be returned lesa per cont. when =) stipulated tn bill. Diamond Solitaire ting, blue white, clear as crystal, 11-16 karat, Write for New Illust ated Catalogue, fathered by the City Club, | ared to @ been drawn by | © Melien, one of the counsel for the Metropolitan Railwa corporation, with | such finesse as to favor the corporation, | in that !t is discovered to contain a! joker, The bill was offered as a substl- | tute. j ‘The bill provides for the expiration of | the leases of the proposed new subways | the same year that the Bel- Ryan subway lease expires. Ths yn, it is belleved, was Inserted 50 us to make the contracts for the new subways exactly dovetail into thelr pres- ent arrangements. Before I realized what he was up to he Caught me around the waist and ied to «rip me. But I guess my Winslow is broken down southeast of Cape Henry and wants immediate as- sistanc Rear Admiral Harrington at once patched the naval tug Mohawk to the | | agaistance’ of the Winslow. The Winslow as bound from the | New York Navy-Yard to Norfolk. She | | in all probability became disabled dur- | ing last night while Making for the, fought hard, Looking over my shoulder, I_saw that we were right on the edge of the roof. Policeman Was Dizzy. “I tell you I was scared for a minute. It made me dizzy, Held clung to me tide southeast of Cape Henry, considerably out of her couse. ——————_— ACTRESS SHOT FOR GUYING. that we were getting nearer to the ede which Is | all the the, All of a sudden I gota good hold on him and hurled him back But he came at me again and this time he struck me several times tn the fter_a time I managed tto draw my Mr. Mellen is head'of a City Club com- mittee named for the purpose of dealing with the Belmont-Ryan merger as well action on the Elsberg bill. as to (lieprise was expressed to-day when it became known that Mr. Mellen js one of the leaders of the City Club movement to defeat the chief reforms In the Elsberg bill. ASPERFEL LEVELAN a4 BOWERY, Bowery Savings Bank Block, north of Grant GETS $5,000 FOR FINGERS. f Lost ‘Them in a Young Peddler Surface Car Accident, COFFEE SALE Saturday, Monday and Tuesday. y Haas, of No, 137 Goerck street, Sacer years old and a peddler of shoestrings when he was crippled fer life by the sudden jerk forward of the car which he was boarding at Goerck and Houston streets. , ‘This was on Oct. 21, 1902, ‘The boy fad his peddler's pack on ‘bis shoulder. He LINTON, Ind., Feb. 23—While guy- | and after giving the man a few ing the audience at the local theatre! taps on the head with the butt of it Borough President Bird: 3. Coler ‘© was not much fight left in him.” | just night Miss Peari Elvyn, the leuing continued his epistblary debate with e prisoner was held in $1,000 bail, lady, was shot in the leg by a. man in| Edward M. Shepard to-day over the |for trinl. Collins, the complainant, wae|the ‘rear of the audience, She had etlauette of Mr. Shepard acting as /Badly cut up. He could not positively | made | several disparaging remark | ounsel for the Rapid Transit Commis- | ‘entity, Held as one of the men who| about LEMON Toy pemoved to _her| ‘tas Too scared to take much no-| dressing-nam. ‘The bullet penetrated Mca of the men," sal? Collins, ‘The the calf of her les. first thing J kn J was struck a leary} of hi ‘ vl th heels took A finely flavored fell unter the car, and the whesis took | Maracaibo éxist), saree" 18C and Charles Steckler took up his case and sued the Metroploitan Street Rall- way Company. 2 A jury before Justice O'Gorman, in the Supreme Court, to-day awarded $5,000 damages to the boy. Ceylon Tea *"% 50c OUR TWO GREAT LEADERS. Broken Java, very fine, 20c. Broken Mocha and Java, 23c, 5 ibs, delivered Manhattan and Brooklyn: blow on. the head. | DEMOCRATS IN SENATE FOR HEPBURN RATE BILL | WASHINGTON, Feb. 2%.—The Demo- embers of the Senate Commit- | Interstate Commerce held a to-day, and decided to yote to report the Hepburn rate bill to the 800 YOUNG MEN Former price up to $12, { no This special lot embraces the remainder of young Men's Sults (about 359), sii he contest from tho committee to the | on the question of court review, ———— and $12, Also 360 last spring Young Men's Suits An exceptional opportunity to procure bargain... Women Arrested, Detectives under Inspector McLaugh-| Former price } Mn last night arrested twenty- § men and women, all alleged’ te bo up to $3.98, | NOW 1.65 alae Annie Wakene™ Wes Annie Neil,|I This tot is composed of winter and spring weight double May Roberts. Both are alleged to be known to the polige, ‘The women Were arrested on com- plaint of Elisworth D. Hayes, of No, ih fast Forty-ninth street, who says# that gn Monday night he’ met them on Broadway, at Thirty-atxth str that the Nell woman Third Av. and 1441 the Roberts woman, Established 1875. Pocketbook had beeh passed, Important Sale! mainly of all wool cassimere and worsted; regularly $10 closing out price and 91 all wool blue serge sau $5 600 BOYS’ SUITS baeasted and bloomer pants, Norfolk sults; sizes 6 to 16 years; some blue and black cheviot suits are included; regular prices were $2.98 to $3.98, now. ..0 Westchester Clothing Co., 10 lbs, 25 miles: 25 Ybe. 100 miles. NEW/ACCOUNTS INVITED. Orders by Postal Promptly Filled. Gillies ohn Company 233, 235, 237 and 239 Washington St. Bot. Park Pl, and Barclay Bt, 9 Established 1940, ‘S SUITS w $5.00 of our winter stock ize; up to 36 chest; at the same an unusual Great Danger in Neglect. Constipation if neglected leads to appendicitis. A. D. 8. Fruit Lax, a palatable tablet made from ripe fruit and curative plant juices, cures it. One thousand Jruggists back this compounded prescription. 25 cents, all druggists, or by mall prepaid for price. American Drug y a cate, 2 Madison avenue, New Yors, © Santos z 1$1.65 St., Bronx Evenings. Cavanaugh was later arraigned tn the | BURNED HOUSE AFTER LOOTING Burglar’s Torch Destroyed Fine Country Home of Richard Hayes. The country home of Richard Hayes, @ contractor, one of the finest yiild- ings in Gifford Park, Tuckahoe, was destroyed by fire varly yesterday morn- ing. There ts little doubt that thieves, working in the security cf the country section, looted the house and then set fire to it to cover up their crime. The house was worth $15,000, and the fur- anishings cost at least that much more. The Hayes family have been stopping at thelr New York home since the holl- days, their servants accompanying them, and there was no one of the fam- lly In the house at'the time of the fire. The house was fitted with expensive woods, and the furnishings consisted vf palntings, bric-a-brac, china, other art objects. In the ashes of the ruins no trace of these can be found, which makes it practically certain that burglars were the incendiaries. Prob- ably they carted the furnishings away in wagons. Thieves have looted several houses in hat section recently though this 1s the rst Instance In which they may have added incendfarism to robbery. When the volunteer frenen of Tuck- hoe arrived the entire house was en- oped in flames and the barn. fifty fost to the rear, had caught fire. The barn was saved, with only slight loss, | Insurance will cover no more than halt the total loss. Large assortments of Real Irish Combination Embroidered and Baby Irish Lace Wash Stocks, for ‘Venise Lace Collars, suitable { Misses’ and Children’s Coats, Crepe de Chine Auto Scarfs a variety of styles, novelties in fancy effects, plaited Cloths, noich collars, nicely tailored, 4 to Value Girls’ Guimpes, of White Lawn, At Unusually Fancy Cheviot Tourist Overcoats with extra knickerbocker trousers, Blue Serges, 33 to 38 chest, 16 to 22 yrs., Boys’ Madras Pajamas, Women’s Irish Linen Eypbroidered Initial Hdkfs, Women’s Sheer Shamrock Linen, in tape and plaid effects, Women’s Hemstitched Hdkfs, Men’s All Linen, Hemstitched, in 3 and }4 in, hems, Men’s All Linen, in tape and plaid effects, soene of the atest burglary and, after removing tis shoes, had him place his fect in the Impression on the chalr. was identically the same. was also found on Maguire which the Stocks, Chemisettes, Dutch and Circular lars and Cuffs, Chemisette Sets and Yoke with Cu Also To-morrow z in white, light blue, violet and pink, Batiste and Baby Irish. also Valenciennes Lace and Embroidery Chemisettes, 3500 Yds. Pleated Neck Ruchings, Men’s Soft Bosom Shirts Special Offer of Spring Lines. High ia e Madras Fabrics, white, solid colors and regular and coat models, perfect fitting ond best finish, Misses’ and Girls’ Apparel Excellent Values To-morrow. Misses’ Suits, Eton Model, of Panama Cloth, Rose, Alice Grey, Navy & Black, trimmed with braid, Girls’ Three Quarter Coats, of Cheviot and Covert Girls’ Regulation Dresses, of Cheviot Serges. skirts, trimmed with braid, emblem on sleeve & collar, 4 to 14 yrs, Girls’ Wash Dresses, of Fancy Ginghanis, Plain Cham- brays, Russian High Neck or Guimpe effects, 4 to 14 yrs., cluster tucking and insertions, 4 to 14 years, Boys’ « Young Men’s Clothing Boys’ Raincoats, of Waterprosf Fabrics, also Yoke Norfolk Suits, of Fancy English Cheviot, Young Men’s Spring Suits, Fancy Cheviots, Ho: Boys’ Madras Blouses, with and without collars Special Values in Linen Handkerchiefs embroidered, scalloped and lace edge, “ SH Hl FOOTPRINT SA PERFECT ET Brooklyn Sleuths Try Dust- Covered Impression on Pris- oner’s Bare Tootsy-Wootsy. Detectives of the Adams street police station, Brooklyn. are intent on out- doing Sherlock Holmes. For the past few weeks complaints have been pouring in from residents of the Columbia Heights section of nu- merous robberies being committed. At an early hour to-day the police came acres a young man who described him- self ns William Maguire, eighteen years of age. A few ourglary was nights ago a committed at the residence of Charles Bull, jevidence left by the intruder that the |r and ‘on a dust-covered plush char and some matches. ( No, 209 Henry street. The only slice had to work on was @ footprint The police took Maguire over to the ‘According to the pollce, his footprint A matchbox police say ccritained matohes with the ends broken off so as to fit the box such as were left at the Bull residence. ‘The police will hold Magutre to look up his record. Stern Brothers Women’s Neckwear Crochet Neckpiecss, including Collars, Turnover Col- 15°, 25° 69°, 87° $1.25 45¢ ,. $1.25 yard 15° po. 1.70 and plan bosoms, $1.45 $19.75" 6.95 6.95 Value $27.50, 14 yrs., . full plaited $8.59, $1.98, 2.95 soo | Low Prices. 94.00 Unaly $6.95, 94,00 Usually $9.75 to $14.75, Usually $10.00, 6.40 21500, 7.50 15.00, b 69¢ ‘Usually $1; Usually 95 to $1.45, rach 9° Do: $1.00 « 13¢ 1.50 24° « 2,75. ber, 1.00: nach’ 23° ‘Des. 2.50

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