The evening world. Newspaper, June 3, 1908, Page 3

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MOGUL, THEBLIND BABY RHINO, SEES AFTER OPERATION -_s Cataract Removed and Sight Restored to Left Eye at Bronx Zoo. Latest Idea of Chicago Clergy- man Is Admitted to Be a Real Necessity. | BETTER THAN THE PARK. | Would Be Boon for Girls Liv- { CHASES HIS KEEPERS.}| ing in Boarding-Houses or Away from Home. Recovers Sooner Than Ex- | ae By Rose C. Tillotson, pected and Resents Visit | 077" 08° ssOts en n Cupid in sombre clerical garb, to His Quarters. with halo and hymn book instead bow and quiver, may look a little odd, tut if he doesn't make good {t will be There was great rejoicing in the Bronx Zoo to-day over the successful termination of the operation upon the the first time. Chubby hittie Dan is ever versatile and obstacles, he should eyes of the blind baby rhincceros, (ane oat es A Ie fac e ser eens a inter viawe would probably s.v of Mogul. A lively chase around the cage| in, Rey, J, E, Synder's plan to bulld a in which Dr. W. Reed Blair and Keep-| eourting room” in connection with the ers Thurman and Layruther barely] Christ Presbyterian Church of Chicag managed to esc: the pursuing beast| ‘Thanks, my dear fellow. I hav t was suifictent proof that Mogul had re-| @one so bad in your churches hereto- @ained his eyesigh fore, but since you want to lend ah CLD: real ing hand, why I shall feel gratified atic ekinned over t encouraged escaping a 8: | Dr. Snyder, as told in erday this | despatches, will have his “courting since last room fitted ith dim lights, cozy Mogul is a) ners and other devices that have lon. India, who figured in the successful courtship of &reatly by blindness. Native rhino} y ik. n the swamps | “Young people should not ne compelled Neepaul : | to go outside the church for any essen into his aide they beat al, and place for courship ts cer clubs until his thick s-| tainly essential, It will supplant th Fembled pulp than anything else. The] Peer Barden, parks, a other such &ttack blinded the animal. places. Cataracts His Trouble. | Plan Approved Here. The rai r old at the| Thus he has blazed the way that others | are likely to follow Warisincedhisiare| for innovations 0 rival a ronx Zoo sad pligat| has been a source of great regret to Supt. Willam T. Hornaday, who has # putt place in his rt for every live | ing thing, plam or animal, To restore| the lost eyes became a decision | | with Supt, Hornaday last week, and vo | | that end Drs. George E. Van Master | | and J. P. Gwathmey were escuried v5 Dr. Blair on Saturday to an iinpro- Vised hospital in the antelop. sous Where the “Bu hau quarters, The operauon fed Was & re- | H moval of calura At took three ang one-hali pouuas eroforin ai nalt a pound ether to put Mo: | Bul to see; needhag was dun vy & smal | ur Weeks ve wn, Mosul was lass, and AT DEVOTIONS ——— = Ff THINE ENEMY iss TAY cHeer | | THOU SHALT TURN THE OTHER) | iss LONGER CHEEK THOU SHALT NOT STEAL. ANOTHER. FELLOWS GIRL Tis BETTER, To GWE A KISS THAN, To RECEWE ISELN'S NIECE US. ENV TOMUNT COLD. MINE W PERL Mrs. Bradford Earl to Join) Husband in Expedition for Savage-Guarded Treasure. LOS ANGELES, June 3.—To find a fabulously rich placer deposit of goid guarded by a tribe of wild men, Brad- ford Eari and his wife, who was Miss deter lation until th | part But tals morning when Dr, Blair and | the tw Ne rrived at the cage B Swany Stren } evesi to perform the ALSO FoR necessary bathing of the Mogul SPCOWERS. when the enter, ~- | to the utt ” . men. the ’ this kind usually prove popular. From oud and strange expressions already heard, many of this kind emit w churches may soon boast of an official approaching He Could See, All Right. room" as permanent and m- anything else about it “I recon he can =." whispered hurman to Bayruthe Le Some of the ministers of Manhattan “T would not be surprised if vour s: have already come out In favor of the Led Bayruther, velty. They fully realize the dimeul- of you BD excla.med yr Bair, an Mogul lifted ihe fore gare ‘les and dangers attending tcve-making of his body began to toss his horn-| on park benches, fire-escapes, two-by-| studded head, “we had better get out of - ae ee e102) eres! The retreat of Bronx Zoo hos-| {tal corps was a memorable flicht,! nd was accomplished to the accom: ent of cheers from a score of the antel house. ne last to get bev Biatr told an ven: r fter the ‘chase that had reamed. the sight of his e, so far. But cannot fo- added the Zoo physician. “Ail | distances are alike to h 1 “be | | some weeks before he aie) whether an object !s 0 or twenty.’ - | A JULIAN EDWARDS SONG. | One of a Number of Song Hits from the House of Witmark. “I Want to Be Your Baby Boy, which the Sunday World 1s enabled | to present to its readers through the | courtesy of M. Witmark & Sons, !s one the many spiendid numbers | from “The Gay Musician,” New York's latest comic opera success. | The music in this prodiction ts de- clared by the critics everywhere to be the best that Jullan Ed four flat rooms, and often under the argus eye of parents, the cold, scornful smile of strangers, or to the accom- paniment of a kid brother's giggles. The Rev. Robert S. MacArthur, rector of Calvary Baptist Church, In Fifty- seventh street, is one of those who in- dorsa the “courting-room" !dea. When I asked him about it to-day, he sald: “It's a very excellent idea, and one| whieh should be coped here. In our hurch we hive provided for every one, xcept the sweethearts, and I must fess they have teen forgotten “We have a room called the ‘baw! yom’ for the childr by mothers who are attend! ce, but as et have no p young eople could cari n their love at- falrs, I think it would be a decided dvantage to many if # library or re- eption room prettily fitted up with soks and pictures and under the wateh- © reliable per- ful care of one or me sons cou ie young oS SE people on certain nigh's cach week bell aro every one, without a singte Sera stole exception, distinct. novelties, Even. ths Utles show this, as scen trom Where: Wt ilsaheeded: the following WBute donibn your taiee.the Amengan We, \Von't, Do a Thing to His Opera,” |boy and girl have plenty of opportuni- “Lovelight Ro: ning from Yi tles of conducting their love affairs witn- “That's How he | ‘ oe Saucy 8} shing out bringing them to church?" I in- Boldier, Boy.) 7 fo eis {quired of Dr. MacArthur, ory at a Dry “No,” he sal dedly “fo 5 Would. Be, Cup. of Te me No," he sa dedly for there Unexpected “Tr Have apepare many young girls who have no op- Doubts,” “Long, Times” and “Not{Portunity at all to entertain their mas- a5 Simple ast eee line admirers, ‘The girl who lives In safe to t n i e, fo of this charming. comic opera. wih Wig) (Re Dearding-house, for instance, has a long after the plece itself has bean| "ard time of it. Many of these places Withdrawn from the boards, although| have no public parlor, and if the girl We may expect to see the latter before| wishes to see friends ts obl’ged to the public for many days to come |; we can judge by the crowded house: | bosib 7 hdl eR ohare see them away from b~§ v@be usually takes wh home, parks and Bessie Goddard, of Providence, R. T., a niece of Mrs. C. Oliver Iselin, of New | York, ha rtered a snip for five years, and as soon as it nas been out- fitted at San Francisco, will sail for| Peru. Mrs, and Mrs. Earl are visiting friends here and to-day he racelved letters! through the Peruvian Consul that will enable him to obtain mining rights and a guard of soldiers from the Peruvian Government. Capt. J. M. Davis, an old friend of Mrs. Earl's family, and former com- mander of the navy of Peru, will guide the expedition. He tried himself to find the treasure sometime ago, but natives drove him back. Earl has also received letters from the Russian Embassy in Washington giving | him permission to visit the shores of Kamschatka and prospect for gold, which Capt. Davis believes is there in great quantities and for which they will search. | Farl was a street car conductor, work- ing his way through Brown Untversity, when he met Miss Goddard, who inher- {ted a fortune from her grandfather. | restaurants, and {t seems to me a room provided for the young people would eliminate a great deal of the danger of these places.” “Then you approve of Dr. Snyder's ‘cozy corner?” I asked. “Yes,” he answered, ‘for in every well-appointed home there is some cozy corner where the younger members of the family oan retire to chat by them- selves. ft we were building an addition to our church I would heartily recommend adding a library and reception room to be used exclusively by young people. Ot course, It would be under the care of a mature person, but tn every way would be made as comfortable as pos- sible for the visitors. | “Another thing, the young girls would meet only nice young men and would jalways be safe. They could choose thelr own friends, and they would in Lo way be 1 cted, so long as they; vonducted themselves properly. Yes. I think It would be a decided advantage to have what Dr. Snyder calls a ‘courting room,’ and I hope New| York will soon follow the Chicago ex- ample ant help the cause of Cupid,” Good, Says Dr.. Slicer. The Rey. Thomas RK. Slicer said the! idea of a ‘courting room a goal | { nyder's church is in a con- t pople whose parents are peos le of said Dr. Sie have thelr bh + purposes of courtship, than which no better places exist, but far people of the poorsr classes a court- ing oom’ ought to fill a big want, + would be rather diMeult, T should think, to DP he door of a room i) ple to ‘go in there 1 assembly rch In prac- rowded what “bette feeult can & clergyman desire than to sea the young 7 congrega- tion marry anc ‘The f H Warren thought likewise “Any nice meeting place where youn, men and wemen can meet and talk is a good place f “he sald, “wheth-r) Dr. Granam produ pur- they mar jporting to show that jociations Anct Who wouldn't allow jand chikiren’s life | s much| his ni jto do with a high de. rate among In TE CouRTING Tew THAN TEN MINUTES KISS OTHERS AS YE WOULD) HAVE THEM LOVE THY NEIGHBOR THYSELF CourTING UNDER OUFFICULTIES OV FIGHTS FORAN AMERICAN IN FRENCH JAIL Police Hold Man Prisoner De- spite Confession of Theft Made by Woman. LILLE, France, June 3—Count von Milevich. whose residence is at No, 127 South Fulton street, Philadelphia, has night on an extradition warrant from ‘Tournal, Belgium, charging him with robbing his father-in-law of $400 while, 20me on a plantation near Randolph, | visiting him at Frasnes, Belgium, early) in May The authorities of Lille have treated von Milevich, who protests his inno- cence, with great harshness. They re- fused to permit him to see his wife, and for a time they would not allow him to communicate with the American Con- sular Agent here, C, J. King Later they ignored a communication from Mr. King transmitting a confes- sion from Von Milevich’s sister-in-law, Mile. Laurence Noules, declaring that she took the money in question to en- able her to accompany Von Milevich to America, Mr. King has asked Ambassador White and Consul General Mason at Paris to intervene In the matter, PARIS, June 3.—Ambassador White made energetic representations to Foreign Minister Pichon, regarding the case of Charles von Milevich, of Phila- delphia, who 1s held a prisoner at Lille oh an extradition warrant. from Belgium. He protests against the ac- tion of the Lille authorities in disre- garding the confession made by Mlle. Noules, Von Milevich’s sister-in-law, in refusing to allow Von Milevich to com- municate with the American Consular representative, and in not permitting the extradition of Von Milevich upon the charge of the Tournai authorities. WANT JAIL TERM FOR WOMEN GUILTY OF RACE SUICIDE American Medical Association Delegates Suggest Law for Their Punishment. CHICAGO, Jute chotee race suicide should be held criminally responsible,”’ This was the declaration made by nu- physicians at the American Medical Association Conven- tion, after Dr. Walter B. Dorsett, of St. Louis, had delivered an address de- nouncing the atttitude of women wno foster merous women oppose the Roosevelt theory. Several speakers who followed Dr, Dorsett de: clared that the laws should be so amended as to permit the punishment of th women Automobiles and Bas well as alcoholic ding to Dr, Edwin C. Te preferred to children. Race su) the result. he said, was T only wish T had the courage to ad-jchildre! seate such @ place as & ‘courting room’| The convention fnally adopted reso a my pulplt. A good. well lighted | luti providing that a propaganda o: ineeting room ts infinitely better than | education wives be launched. A Corey Islan}. dark benches tn parka, | committer will agree upon some method 9 of tha restaurants, or the averago| of reacting tie lay mind either by popu Ughte turned . parlor with the lar lectures or oy @ legitimate public, ten ‘ _THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 3, 1908. “Courting Room ’ tor Church Cupid Endorsed by New York Ministers WARD FORLOVEOR. NEGRO IN CRAZY AIH WHlTE GIRL | Howard, Who Once Threat- | ened to Kill His Employer's | Daughter, Again Arrested, | |HAD HER PHOTOGRAPH. Declared That “Girl’s Eyes Followed Him,”’ His Brother | Says, but Was Harmless. | Parker Howard, the negro, who was |arrested yesterday and then sent to \ |have his sanity examined Into after, tt lis alleged, making threats against the | lite of Miss Louise Corwith, the pretty | nineteen-year-old daughter of Henry Corwith, president of the Manhattan | Knitting Mills, whose home ts at No. 20% Riverside Drive, is being watched close lly by attendants and phystcians to-day. | While Howard dees not appear violent Jor insane, there 1s no question in the minds of those who have him under Jobservation that he 1s unhinged, and that he was probably driven mad by a lcrazy Infatuation. Howard was employed as stable hand by Mr. with, but gan to annoy his employer's daughter Mystery in Case. | wfrorts were made to keep secret the real reason for the arrest of Howard. Frederick H. Brown, of No. 2325 Eighty- | third street, Brooklyn, private secretary | for Mr. Corwith, made complaint in Jefferson Market Court that Howard | had been acting strangely. Howard was arrested a year ago. He | had been writing letters to Miss Cor- j With, and when a policeman took him | in charge he had a revolver. He told the | policeman he intended killing Miss Cor- with and himself. He was released from prison on March 15, It developed to-day that Mr. Brown had been under instructions to see that Howard stayed away from New York when he was released from jail. As soon as he got out Mr. Brown secured him employment in Philadelphia. He stayed there until a few weeks ago, | when he returned to New York and got |work asa stable hand at Pierce's barns, |in Perry street. He went to board at No. 138 Christopher street, on the lower | west side, His brother, Joe Howard, and his cousin, Clark Howard, both stablemen, jadmit that Parker Howard 1s mentally deranged, but insist that his delusions are harmless. The cousin, Clark, who lis an intelligent negro, went to-day to 'Mr. Corwith's offices with a proposition that if the millionaire would advance Cor | been languishing In Jail here for a fort-|the funds and procure Parke Howard's release his relatives would insure that Howard would be sent to his mother's in Charlotte County, Virginia, and kept there What His Landlady Says. Howard's landlady, Annie Carroll, negro woman, hod just returned to her home from the jail after paying a} visit to her locked-up lodger when an Bvening World reporter saw her. | “Howard Parker told me,’ she said, | “that he never wrote but one letter to Mr. Corwith after they let him out of | jail, and that was just before he came | up here from Philadelphia. He said | he didn’t make any threats. But he | did mention the young lady's name in| his letter to her father. He just asked | Mr. Corwith for a job, so he says. | ‘He had a picture of @ little white | girl in his room, and he told me that | {t was a picture of the daughter of | the man he used to work for and that he kept it because she had been kind | to him." | | At Pierce's barns tt was agreed that | something was wrong with Parker men- tally. He was described as an under- | sized, very dark Southern negro, who! did his work well, but was eiven to | |queer behavior. He was not at any time a coachman as some of the papers jeaid, never having risen above the rank of a stable cleaner and groom. Joe Howard, the brother, said that Jabout five vears ago Parker Howard fell off a bicycle and infured his skull. |Since then he had been fiighty. | “He often told me,” said Joe, |people in Mr. Corwith's employ |pergecuting him. He sald that wher- lever he went, and even when he was in fail, him. he turned. | When arraigned yesterday Howard had a picture of Miss Corwith taken when she was ten years old. The picture was | turned over to Mr. Corwith's secretary. | Asked if he had threatened Miss (or- with or written letters to her, the negro | said he had done neither, Then he added: He Denies Charge. | «That's ihe charge they made against | me when they arrested me a year ago. “that were ‘Wives who from| 1 never wroto letters to Miss Corwith. | Todd ¢ | In fact I have never seen her but once | since I left her ther's plo t | was when I was working In Riverside Drive, near Mr. © ith’s home. | have on Mr. Corwith a letter or two asking for enipluyment.” Just how Howard has been threaten Jing Miss Corwith since he was released from prison was not brought out. Mr |Corwith refused to discuss the affair in any wy. | eee BEAUTY IS JAP’S BRIDE. Miss Constance Beer, a pretty girl of | No, 14 Bay Thirteenth str Be on- |hurst, has amazed her friends by con-| tracting a marriage with a Japanese, IoJe Sekine, of Kobe, Japan. Notice of the ceremony, which was performed last Friday, has been published in a morning paper Sekine, acconting to the Be neigh- bors, has been constant visitor at their home for a year. The Jap ts em- ployed at No. 53) Broadway. Mr. Beer, Who has & position with the Brooklyn | | ny. daciined abso- Rapid Transit Com) Hi about his daugh- lutely to-day to tal tere marriage. once! was discharged when he be- | a) | selt | engaged to Alfred Holbrook, Mrs. Yale-Smith, Who Gets — Divorce | trom Her Husband DIVORCE ENDS ~ BRIEF ROMANC OF YALE-SMITHS “Baby Best” Gets Decree from Husband, Now Bankrupt and in Trouble. Announcement was made to-day that Mrs. Annie Livingston Best Yale- Smith, who was known as ‘Baby Best" Smith last November, has secured an right to resume her maiden name. Mr, and Mrs. Yale-Smith separated in April, but few knew of the domes! Cisagreements until Attorney Fancher Nicoll, who represents Yale-Smith in his business affairs, admitted that he had been served in a divorce action by | publication. It was admitted, too, that the young man had about come to the end of his financial rope afier expericncos in th bankruptcy courts. | Mrs. Yale-Smith first bean proceed-| |ings for a separation, but later a di | vorce action was begun in the Sapreme| Court. In the mean Ume Yale-Smith went abroad, and less than two weeks ago was arrested in London for non- payment of a hotel bill at te Carlion, His baggage was seized and his roo! locked against lim, 1t was told in the despatches also how he had laid him-| Habse to prosecution because tie) fad borrowed more than $10) without | making the fact known that he was a} bankrupt. Mise ‘Best and Yale-Smith met last summer and he began paying devoted court to her, and Wielr engagement was announced For two Best had been| who Was | shot himself to st, soon alter Miss Best announced she was to marry Yale- Smith. The marriage of Miss Best and| Yale-Smith followed on Nov. ¢ at Grace Church and was @ social affair of | ears Miss not Wealthy, Holbrook death on Oct. 17 importance. | ale-Smith 18 | @ descendent of Ell Yale, founder of Yale University, and | Js the son of @ paper manufacturer In Lee, Mass. What little money he had Was soon gone, and when his debts| footed up to $4,249 he was forced into pankruptey. The separation followed | Now Yale-Smith fs in Europe in a nch of trouble, and his former wife r moth- | oun has taken up her home with er, Mrs. Clerment D. Best, East Seventy-fourth street. B | Best™ has had a_kood deal of tragedy | and romance crowded Into the short | space of one year. acetone sien | ‘ |CELEBRATE 100TH BIRTHDAY | a Uttle eirl's eyes kent following | He could see them everywhere | a OF JEFFERSON DAVIS, before her marriage to Elizur Yale-| interlocutory decree of divorce and the| {been knocked uncon POLICE HORSE - FRPORTS NEWS Has More Sense Than Many People in the Bronx, Captain Says. | vintage King, the large bay horse rid- {den by Mounted Patrolman Thomas R. MoGuire, after throwing his uniformed day jogged three-quarters of a mile to te High Bridge police station, bringing the first word o! accident “I am proud of the horse," satd Capt. Brennan, He is a credit to the Police Department.’ Here are the facts as related by the | Captain: we King, with McBride astride, |was prancing down Undercliffe avenue fn the Bronx when, nearing Roscovel place, an trolley car and the ,tooting of the stren horn of an auto- Invbile crossing the bridge caused the horse to shy. The policeman was thrown from his seat in the saddle, and be reaching the ground his head struck an electric ht pillar, He did not stir from the ground, laving quite sull and vale on the cobblestones. After observing that his master had fore set off at a terrific pace for the High Bridge police station, which is on Sedg- wick avenue. No sooner had the rider- less horse appeared at the door of the station-house than Capt. Brennan knew of the accident, and he at once sent out the reserv who found Me. de with a fractured gkull and contusions about the head and body He was removed to Fordham Hospital. Capt. Brennan says that Village King has more sense than some people he meets every day in the Bronx, and he s had the station house blotter credit © report of the accident to ‘Village ng, @ most intelligent department ‘Sea and Car Sickness Quickly Cured | By Mothersill’s Seasick Remedy, The Only One For Sale and Recom- mended On Ali Steamships. be i by Ve Luke tear of bea I's Sea- sick Ren 4 all the plegsures. of travel Mothersilis 5 Remedy 1s guaran- cocaine, mSrphino, ous drugs. It ts the IQUISVILLE, Ky. June 3.—Cotncl- dent with the impressive ceremonies marking Confederate decoration da: the one hundredth anniversary of dirth of Jefferson Davis was appro- priately observed to-day. Col. Bennett H. Young, nanding the Kentucky division of the United Confederate V jerans, was master ci spoke brief ns_ took large number Fairview. n was held at Mr. i The do ance Was a feature in most of the Southern cities, PRES | oS UNTING MONDAY. | < IDENT ke (BY HIMSELF | BEGINNING CIN THE EVENING WORLD WITH PICTURES” FREDERICK REMINGTO ickness or carsicknoss tingly recommended amsht unpleasant or est system, ured, +8 up in Te Gelatine capsules in 5 1.00 een otket size boxes, For sale and recom: Mtcinships and’ at drug thciosing pttce “ani dy, all charkes pro- nemation ‘and. test. rominent people,” to uh Pts0 Cheat jonded ind ‘a New York a if Stores, NW Brooklyn, Walter 8. OOSEVELTS STORIES? le Vi x Af, (get JUNE 8 ANACODENT rider under the Washington Bridge to- | COULD HARDLY STOP SCRATCHING Severe Itching Humor on Joints Made Movement Difficult—Suf- fered for a Year and a Half— Many Treatments Failed to Cures —_+—__ USED CUTICURA AND _ ECZEMA DISAPPEARED “J was suffering with eczema for @ year and a half and had tried all kinds of medical treatment but without any results, All the joints my body | were affected in such a way that I had difficulty in walking and moving about. | It itched so at times that I could keep from scratching it all the I had suffered for about a year and four months before trying C ara Soap, Cuticura Ointment, and icura Re- solvent. After using Cuticura for two months regularly, not mi ge day, all signs of eczema disappeared and now you could not tell that I ever had eczema. I cannot find words sufficient to ds the Cuticura Remedies justice, Dantel Fisher, Jr., 1940 Lansdown Ste Baltimore, Md., July 5, 1907." BABIES CURED Torturing, Disfiguring Humors Speedily Yield to Cuticura. The suffering which Cuticura Som and Cuticura Ointment have alleviat among skin-tertvred, dise figured infants and ‘chil- dren, and the comfort they have afforded worn-ous and worried parents, have led to their adoption in countless homes as a, priceless treatment for the skinand blood. Infantile and birth huinors, mille crust, rcalled head, e- gema, rashes, and every form of itcht jecaly, pimply skin and scalp humors, | with loss of hair, of infancy and child= hood, are speedily, permancntly, und economically cured, in the majority of cases, when all other remedies euitable for children fail. Cuticura Remedies @re guaranteed absolutely pure under the U. 8. Food and Drugs Act. Complete External and Interna! Treatment tow Every Humor of Infant, Children, and A\ Gita of Cutioura, Soap (2804) to Cleanse skin, Cutleura Ointment (50e.) to ifeal the Skin, and Cute Fa Resivent (50c.), (or in the form gf Chocolate ted Plils, £60) to Purify the lood, Id throughow Drug & Chem Role Props, Moston, Mass. @y-Malled Frec, Cuticura Book on akin Disease, MILLER:’HYAMS 65-7) SMITH ST, CORWSTATE:ST.) ip THREE BLOCKS. FROM:FULTON STVBROQKL DPEN MON.& SAT EVE: FURNITURE, CARPETS, Etc. AT LOWEST PRICES. ROOMS (3 Fg Cnr 4. EURNI hi ON EXHIBITION=THIRD-FLOOR The Only Company of Its Kind in the Worl. Your Old Trunk or Buggage Made Good ay New ! 1! TRUNKS & BAGS, Ete. Loos Bought, Sold Exehanged. Emergeacy i Fall Baggage Kepzir Co, i? 25 E. 14th St. Samples, I Goods, EU ANDS OF BARG. "ble Top. #80 Matting... 1.80 “pairs Called for and Delivered. LOOK FOR THE |Emergency Co.’s Signs lone Door from Union Sq., West on 14th St. [nurs JBALCH PRICE & CO Furs p——rorrsearerr SEIN 0 COVERS 2% ENTIRE cost STORED Telephone FUUTON & SMITH STS. 5900 Main BROOKLYN W. L. DOUGLAS FOR $3.50 SHOES wren Atrialwillconvince you that W.L.Doug- ae S00 noes oy ey ebestinthe world. joe Wee. a Stores in Greater New York et mr 7) 48 Wroaitws, cor Howard. Pde’ f ohUr BLELD TEMEDLETET Ae UTERO OUND ee eee ‘pee NAO oe et ee N | GS dhe city dail oP. Messenger tra Ch. ree eo W Delete Ottios | Stk Sateen ges:

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