The evening world. Newspaper, February 23, 1906, Page 6

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| paecen | never si | brightly varnished and polished has the | wife kept them, * ghe leading the boy, now five years old, * Famous Referee THE WCRLD: FRIDAY EYONIN N “AIRY KILLED BY | Here’s the Odd Fancy CAR: REASON OF MOTHERS GONE | Little One “Ground to Death Beneath a Sec- ond Avenue Trolley. | a yi A dead a wite her husban: mangled baby, son gone from 1 and father too dazed to realize | extent of his misfortunes {s the | ‘olloy accident, all because anted to make wp time | as no fender on the car. In the family of Bernard and Rosle esterday was to have bee: Bernard came to t Hungary eighteen moi azo, leaving his wife and baby boy to be sent for. In less than a year he had saved enough money to furnish a little fint at No, 156 Lewis street, and to bring the wife and baby over, together With a Uttle girl, Gussie, whom he had n, The flat has three windows into which the sun streams all the morning, and there the new sideboard and the new ining table reflect Uke mirrors, 30 d ofa Word of Work. But @ few weeks ago Bernard got out of work. He Js a tailor by trade, and work 1s sometimes siack after the holl- @ayn, Yesterday morning, however, he received s postal card frum Hirshgo- ‘wits, @ ladies’ tailor at No. 13 Avenue B, only three doors from Second street, egking him to come and see about a job. It beng a fine day, Bernard thought the alr and walk would be good for his wife, so they started out, very happy, £ Our friend. Mr. Bateman, of the with another obsession. Readers of Bnd he carrying the baby, aged: two some of the former drawings of this g years. When he entered the shop she cook the baby in her arms and remained outside. For some reason, she decided to cross the street. A car was coming, but she was used to seeing it stop before reach- ing the corner, carrying all the good And sion of waiters, marches by just out of reach! of a Star London Artist London Sketch, is on the job again The Evening World who have seen entleman will probably agree that it is the most horrible that he ever perpetrated. Think of being chained to an iron champagne bottle and a couple of huge globes—possibly meant to represent plum puddings—while a proces- things in the gamut of the appetite, even if the agonized prisoner could reach the eatables so maddeningly displayed, he isn’t dressed for dinner. Onlookers say that not only was the ear going faster than usual, and not only did it not stop at the usual point before it reached the corner, but that aa motorman did not even ring, his BURGLAR BUS AS POLICE HUNT «| Reserves Surround — Block While Thief Enters Second House for Robbery. d | white the police reserves from the} | West Forty-seventh street station were] d| tre, early J to be was at the home of Mrs. | with her aunt, 1 to te police so refused to give maid, Edith. The reported that the aunt discovered the IS GOING BLIND and satu! Man Suffers from Bell’s Paraly nd the maid arrived they @ burglar leap to the areaway y telephe to Police the man was still in eserves were Sent 10 NEW OR @aryon) Day Blind while The va: able on of a ca sporting me came wit ats by forcing open the * PRINCE A SUICIDE AS BRIDE WAITED. | Pignatelli Strongoli Kills Himself on Eve of Wedding to Duke’s Daughter. -Prince Pignateli! old, son of a His own story 1s as follows “I was sitting ov augater of the Duke father, 5 Renew Your Vitality REPLENISH THE DEPICIENT — | NBRYE FORCE Sic -Dlcssness 1 A degre City Takes. the § Stoc k. harm- the atural successful spec ronle Dis * jetor of this Nerve and Blood prepara- a be consulted in persdg.or by letter, without cost, 401 Fifth’ New York, Yashyti BON.000 of T venue, | ~ sensation, both families being among the most aristocratic in Naples. —_—_————_. National Ownership Party. FRPSNO, CAL.,FEB. 22—The National Pubhe Ownership party was formed ut a convention called here yesterday for that purpose. A party Executive Com- mittes of seventeen Rabensek yas en, with ?. NOW MADE Every bale opened, graded and who is himself in this country made “NES (Nestor Gianaclis, CIGAR famous as the leader of Egyptian Cigarettes, not only in Cairo, but the world over. You can now “NESTOR” OIGA- RETTES exactly as they formerly came to you from Cairo, except the price. Also in tins of 50 buy in America the genuine and 100. GOLINS WIFE SUES FOR $1246 1Col. Bob Ammon’s Alleged Treachery Part of Basis tor Legal Action. In the sult of Mrs, Una R. Goslin, | wife of the stock manipulator who was once the friend of Lemuel Bly Quine and who caused the B. R. T. stockhold~ ‘ers and a Grand Jury to take notice of him, the disclosure 1s made of a hither- |to unrevealed transaction of the oon- victed felon, Col. Bob Ammon, who was a Geks tor * ca Per Cent." Miller, Goslin’s suit is against Mra. AMoo | schmitt tor 812400, which, ane Daya, ehe lost through one of Ammon's deals. ‘Soon after the B. R. T. raid Gosiin end his wife were living in a sumptu- ously furnished house in West ind Avenue. As there were too many credi- tors ig Goslin, everything was in bis wife's name, and n he needed $18,000 tn 1 fo went to his friend Ammon to ntigouate the the loan. uld get the money Mrs, Schmitt, and got | tor her Mrs. Goslin to Neeail 000 notes and another fur ), for interest | and incidental expenses. The notes Were secured by tre $60,000 worth of furniture in the West End avenue house, and Mrs. Goglin further had the indorsed by Mrs, Clara B. Kel- 08 Mrs. Goslin never got the $18,000. Ammon had her notes. A year later | Mrs, Schmitt and Ammon obtained an Attachment and tried to seize the furni- ture. They were sto yan injune- tion, and in a year or two of fight Mrs. Goslin won out in the courts, ‘Mrs, Goslin wants $12,450 in expenses | she says she incurred in fighting the | attempt ‘of Anson and Mrs. Schmitt to |gelze her furniture. While Ammon is in |the penitentiary, she holds that Mrs. Schmitt ts la NEW SUFFRAGE BILLS FOR THE AUSTRIANS. Disorder in Parliament as Five Re- form Measures Are Presented by Premier, VIPNNA, Feb. 3.—Five bilis embody- ing a statement for universal suffrage and other electoral reforms were in- troduced in the lower house of the Aus- trian Parliament towlay by the Pre- mer, Baron Gavton yon Frankenthurn. ‘The Premier was to nolsy In- terruptions on the pert of Pan. mans while erp ening: the details of the lan, eer aed of the de utes Beary y append hls speech. 455 deputies to the lower every Rustrian, twenty-four years. old and domiciled {n a constituency for at least @ year will be entitled to vote and every one possessed of Austrian citizen- | ship’ for at least three eligible to election to the } Plural voting ts prohibited and a division of the electoral districts is designed & as to give th representatives. | the Sia Tealiane 16 and the Rouman! mending the stan vides for the susp members for a period lower house. IN AMERICA! of the same tubacco, shipped direct here instead o* to Cairs blended by Mr. Nestor Gianaclis, and whose skill and knowledge TOR’ Cairo and Boston.) ETTES Per Package of Ten 20° Sold by all Clubs, Hotels and Prominent Dealers. NESTOR GIANACLIS CO., BOSTON, MASS, oot Constable ce SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 24TH. Women lined white, braid trimmed, GLORIA DUST COATS, TRAVELLING COATS, Scotch Mixtures Cc ’s Coats. NEW SPRING MODELS. BROADCLOTH COATS, three-quarter length, black, 28.00 27.00 19.50, 30,00 Handkerchiefs. MEN'S Irish Linen Hdki’s, hematitched, WOMEN’S fine Sheer Hdkf's, hemsti | — CHEVIOT COATS, New Models, bli WASH POPLIN DRESSES, Dutch sizes 4 to 14 years, Value $6. Sdroadway L i916 Street. 2.00 aozen. 2.00 dozen. Value $3.00, itched. Value $2.75. Childrea’s Wear, | ue and red, 7.50, 12.00 neck, also Russian style, 00. 4.50 lis provide for the Siection ot | | years will be || y YT INT a at VUVENVVP ERED Y YS SANUUL ECT ASAT cA Noteworthy- Sale «Men's Ready~-to-Wear Clothes. ¢«7Make and Style as Good as the Tailorman’s Best $16.75 which formerly were $25 ° This lot comprises many de- sirable suits — fashionable long cut coats with long sweeping lapels ; some with straight fronts, | others have slightly rounded corners—many are body-fitting, others moderately loose; all have deep centre vents. Colors are light, medium and dark Cathedral grays and neat refined effects in worsteds. @e hand - tailoring which | characterizes these garments gives them the distinction ¢f { being the only- ready--to-wear clothes obtainable that vie with the highest achievements of the best custom tailors, _“cAsk the -Man Who Wears Them” | | _ Salesrooms Between 39-41 Cortlandt 6th & Oth Ave. “LY” | Street Stations \ Friday and Saturday Spanking Styles in Men’sFine Business Suits Regularly up to $35, $19,° .W men exercise judgment in buy- ing clothes. It will never grow unless you use it. Judgment, like taste, is a product of development, and no man is born with it. Begin, then, on the Suits To-day. They afford a lesson in judgment building by which all subsequent tests may be made. The values are unusual. Also, About 500 Men’s $15 and $18 Sack Suits .in either single or double breasted styles, While they last, $10 Miscellaneously considered, the $19.50 Suits embrace: Blae or Black Chebiois, Real English Tweeds and Worsted- Chebdtots, Smart Platds and Checks attaned to 1906. Single or double breasted styles. All sizes, from ‘‘shorts’” to extra size Smith, Gray & Co. THREE STORES: BROADWAY AT 31ST ST., NEW YORK. FULTON ST. AT FLATBUSH AV., BROADWAY AT BEDFORD AV., B'KLYN, W.L, Dousiat makrned sells more men’s $5.50 shoesthananyothermans ufacturer in the world. $330 ALL LEATHERS, ALL STYLES, ONE PRICE $3.39 If I could take you into my three large factories at Brockton, Mass., and show you the infinite care with which every pair of shoes is made, you would realize why W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes cost more to make, why they hold their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are of greater intrin- sic value than any other $3.50 shoe on the market to-day. W. L. DOUGLAS $3. LY SUORS CIVE COMFORT AND EASE. LLY 2 fave worn W, Lat He iar sare volar and cea that fie fe in iterator Police Captain, 72d Precinct, ut the ne ota $209 $0 she, jathers, onuine without W. L, Douglas namo and price stamped titute. Sold in » Douglas exclusive shoe stores in Cah and by the best shoo dealors everywhero. uf PS DOUGLAS GREATER NEW Y YORK STORES: Howard 81 Fast Color By: exclusively. Gutaiogue mailed free, W.L Doug- its, Brockton, Mass, 100 Women’s New Eton Suzts reseda, coral and Queen’s gray mixtures; an exceptionally smart model copied from an imported suit. 50 Girls’ Winter Coats: 65 Girls’ Wool Dresses -yrs.; formerly $10.00, 55Girls' Light Weight Spring Coats cpa Ty THE, PINK EDITION OF THE,EVENING, Distinctive y Black Suits for Men $15.00 to $38.00 u Spring M ced Until the weavers present their new fakrics we } are held in leash. Black is counted a staple. y S els, Ready-for: That leaves us to design the new models initially in black. They are ready for your service, in single and double breasted suits, half or full lined. So much for the mere declaration. Our strength lies beyond that—lies in the expressive tailoring of which the garments have had the benefit. Ex- pressive, since it defines the character and dig- nity that should be the inherent attributes of a garment in black. The New Spring Overcoats Not in its full strength, but wholly representative of the ten= dency, will you find our new series of Spring models, fash- $15.00 to $40.00 ioned of conservative and daring fabrics. A Sale of Trousers for Men At $2.50 At $3.50 Trousers of serviceable worsteds and tailored a little better For the big men, with a girth all the way are in the collection. | Formerly $3.50 and $4.00, Formerly $4.50 to $5.50. than the average. up to 54, exceptionally “good things” SPECIAL FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY. Wash Dresses for Girls at $2.45 Regularly $3.50, $4.00 and $4.50 Some four hundred dresses of white lawns 11 two high-neck, surplice models, elaborated witn laces or embroidery, together with dresses of fancy ginghams in divers BIOS, in high neck and guimpe models, elaborated with embroidery, $7.50 Top Coats for Girls at $5.00, Double-breasted coats, lined throughout, with em- broidered patch emblem on sleeve: three styles, one of tan covert, one of navy serge and one of gray homespun. Saks & Company Broadway, 334 to 24th Street, Lord & Taylor Will Otfer Friday and Saturday The Following Exceptional Values :— of Chiffon Panama; colors:—black, navy, l 29. ‘50 value * $50.00 A Combination Sale of Girls’ Coats &§ Dresses. sizes 6 to 14 yrs.; formerly $10 to $20. To os in Serges and Mixtures; sizes 4 to 14 5: on cach, in fancy mixtures; formerly $10 to $15. Broadway and Twentieth St. Fifth Ave., Nineteenth St Broadway, at Thirteenth Street Nine Hundred and Twenty-five Waists—Divided Into Two Groups, at Very Low Prices for a Decisive Clean-Up. Taffeta Silk Waists in white and light 95 *1, colors only, value $5 and $7.50, at......+ $ 1 25 Fy @ Roman Striped Waists of Bottany Flannel. and Granite Cloth; value $3.75, at....... White Nun’s Veiling W. S350 ators eeicea es Of ee eee White silk figured Madras Waists in light and heavy weights; value $2 and $2.50, at. ONTAING ALL on

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