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2000 a ANF ALE British Army and tin Make Brilliant Showing at Que- hec’s Celebration. BATTLEGROUNDS GIVEN Plains Where Montcalm and Wolfe Fought to Be Meimorial Reservation, QUEBEC, July 2%-The Prince of ‘Wales reviewed 20,000 soldiers and @ailors on the Pains of Abraham to- day, after wh e forma delivered to the ( 1 tle deeds of the hattl calm and Wolfe as a permanent memorial reser- who as AZMIhE tha the men h rica, The engaged in review while apwar rom the wa In Ine were including Rifles, the Que the service. Own, of w quota of sailors a crowds packed the roads lead- ing to the plains makng them almost impassab grounds were al Cove, where British his landing, and com of gr Wo oc ft M ) were t -day turned over by ce as a last memoria In order al Ronora might be paid bot and British part!- cipants in the Battle on the Plains the Prince lay deposited wrea’ on the monument of Wolfe and on that erected | to “Aux Braves,” the latter typifying the sturdy resistance the Frenoh upation. evlew Wales was'entertained at luncheon by the Mayor of Quebec. To-night ue will attend the state ball given by the Gov- ernment of the Province of (Quebec at| the Parliament buildings At the state dinner elvea nv Ka Grey last night in honor of the «rice Vice- Presiden rbanks occu} 1 the post of | or on the Princes richt, with Admiral Jaureg resentat Ive. a See SEILE TRUNKS OF , the French rep- SET WOM Customs Men Declare Mes. Frederick Pearson Greatly Undervalued: Contents. Uncle sleuths have Sam's customs Started their annual summer setgure of the imports of soclety women dozen biz trunks, each sald to be filled with articles dear to the feminine heart and the property of Mrs. Fred- erick Pearson, of No. 3 West Fifty- seventh street, are In the customs building Christopher street to- ORY undergoing examination. were taken from the plers of the North German Lloyd line in Hoboken yes- terday, having arrived with Mrs, Pear- son aboard the Kalser Wilhelm der Grosse. Although Mrs, Pearson made @ declaration to the effect that the contents of the trunks represented pur- chases estimated at $1.80 abroad, the customs officials declare a rough es- timate of the real value might be placed at 38,000, In the trunks when opened by com- mand of Deputy surveyor John Bishop were found rich Paris made gowns, wraps, fine furs and Ingerle of exquisite design and texture, There was other for woman's adorn= ment valued times above the figure ests y its fair owner, There 1s to be a hearing next week at which Mrs. Pearson will have the priv lege of telling in detail the cost of each | article. her trunks had been seized, Mrs. Pear- son went to Bar Harbor with her chil- dren. Mrs. Pearson is well own In soclety there as well as in Newport and this clty. She Is the widow of Lieu- tenan Commander Frederick F U. 8. N,, and her sons, E. Pennington Pearson and Frederick F. A. Pearson, are in Harvard University. a 57 MEN TAKEN IN RAID TURNED LOOSE IN COURT. Bolicemen ‘Who Arrested Them Saw no Bets Placed in Alleged Poolroom, Fifty-seven prisoners taken in a raid on an alleged pool-room in Henry street last night and three times as many of thelr friends jammed the Essex Market Police Court to overflowing to- di David Well, forty years old, of} No. 510 West One Hundred and Twenty- folirth street, and James Murphy, thir two years old, of No, 510 Pearl stro were charged’ with having conducted | the place. The others were charged with aiding and abetting | Detective Goldhammer, of Deputy Commissioner Hanson's ‘staff, testitod that he cut in on a telephone wire lead~ ing into the an beard a \olce avi, put two dollars each way for me o an." He sald he and the ralding party then entered the louse and found a cr of men !n a :oom where there were racing charts tor beth the brighten and Canadian tracks “Did you see any offersd or Placed?’ ¥ Magistrate Waish, sdhammer. ordered the Magis Ni iischs twate. the Prince of THE ayenine WORLD. FRIDAY, JULY 24, 1906. Is the Waltz Dying in New York? Not on Your “Merry Widow.’ Two-Step Is Crowding It Some, but Not Enough to Worry Anybody but the Dancing Masters. THEY BLAME AMERICA FOR DECLINE IN POPULARITY. And Over in Berlin They're Striving to Revive What the Coroners Would FIVE-CEAT CO ARE It EFFECT TIL AUGUST poe Company Withdraws Order and Will File New Pfea With Utilities Board. HEARNG ON TUESDAY, Commission to Continue sions Until Matter Has Been Seitled. Ses- At the close of the first hearing of the Investigation into the proposed ad- Cali a Mi At Li | C venced fare on the Coney Island and ig: Y ive Y orpse. Brooklyn Ratlroad, Willam,N. Dyck- man announced that the company with- drew {ts proposed change of fares on i Monday next By Nlxola Greeley-Smith, This change raised the Coney Island Shall the waltz die? fare on week ays to ten cents instead see uae ie 4 of five. Mr Dyckman made the an- According to the first Interna- nouncer \fter a consultation with tion: ance Congress now being President Hurt al Dance Congr poy IS “whe lawyer added that the campany held at Berlin, the waltz is dying, ind one of the main purposes of the congress is to take steps—waltz Steps, of course—to prevent its demise. Delegates from twelve nations have already held a consultation wer the desperate condition of the most beautiful’ of dances and have pledged themselves to save it at any They have, moreover, blamed t United States for its threatened dis- appearance. The two-step, which NXOLA. GR! every one knows is nothing but the | sidestep of those too lazy to learn and it, the European delegates claim, is graceful dance denounced to waltz, is of American origin, responsible for the waning popularity of the |by Lord Byron and most Baptist clergymen. One thing {s certain, however. If the oie | Waltz 1s indeed aying New York finds) very lively corpse, Never have) ng and dances been so popular. | er has Father Knickerbocker's | dance card boasted #0 many names. | |Genee, Mademoiselle Dazte, La Sylphe, | [Gertrude Hoffman and all the other | Salomes have all dazsied him with their | grace and startled him with thelr aban- | jdon, He has witnessed more plays in which the waltz figures than in any! previous season. Is the waltz dead? He should ea not! The Merry Widow forbid! The mple dance melody which has achleved the greatest populrrity of any waltz since ne Blue Danube” ts a complete refutation of the charge. the pop- Glarity of "The Waltz Dream" would refute it, if further proof were neces- STOMACH TROUBLE DISAPPEARS IN THO MONTHS, probe Ta How to Get r iid of Opronte’ Case in “ Short, Ohder. jit sar the! ‘dislike which the delegates to the] ‘Idance congress express for the two-| “ | step ts, however, quite expllvable. You | have to learn to waltz if you want to |do It acceptably, but anybody can two- {step after seeing a two-stepping couple | | cross the floor once or twice. thing, however, the waltz has That 1s the savor of the forbid- den, A hundred years ago Lord Byron, the most conscienceless roue of his time rote a poetic denunciation of the waltz sh John Calvin himself could not have surpassed. Nowadays the waltz is so universally the innocent pastime of light-hearted young people that even the majority of the clergy do not eriti- Tae ‘following statement by Albert Kauterman, of No. 197 Brooklyn, Fulton street, {€ In connection with the medicine being iittroduced in New York | by L. T. Cooper: Mr. Kauterman, who a stanch be- Hever Jn the Cooper reparation, said “I havé pad stomecks trouble for five years gna’ have pot a single well day Ags hes ssuaret any | sort looked tg’mé or tasted as it should, i ateerdphy to keep alive and got no enjpytiient from my meals. What I ate tutned to gas and caused me Intense paln at times. I had severs dillous headaches which would make me sick at my stomach and I would retch and vomit until I got rid of the bile. I grew thin, pale and weak and had al- most no anergy. “I have taken all kinds of medicine and been treated constantly, but It might have been so much water I took for all tha good It did me. I had made up my mind that no medicine could help | me and had stopped taking anything for the past six montha, ‘Two months ago I began to hear a| | good deal about this man Cooper and I | dectded to try his madicine. I got a jits languorous measure. treatment of The New Discovery and The two-step is more popular v. 1/ started taking {t. All I can say Is there ‘American young people than the waltz) never was anything Ise ft. I have because they are more impulsive and| gained weight very fast. I eat thres sentimental than Europeans. If| good meals a day and enjoy them all. | One cise it A very clever limerick apropos of this phase ofthe waltz question appeared a few years ago; fald the Reverend Jabez McCotten: “The waltz of the devil's begotten.”” Baid young Mr. Fly As he winked at Miss Bly: “Mo the pure almost everything’a rotten.” But if the waltz has quite properly ceased to appeal to the imagination tt remains the natural expression {n mo- Itlon of the Joy and poetry of life, It cannot, therefore, die so long as there are young hearts to beat more quickly as the violins murmur its plaintive cadence and young feet to keep time to less they fall in love they do It In two steps, |I sleep well, feel as strong as ever in| where the Europeans take three, and| my life and am like another man al- they shorten the path from courtship to | together. I hava no headaches and no the altar by about as much, Half time, | indigestion. I know this to be the best according to the American's idea, 1s | medicine I have ever found and I believe \time enough, since it's all the time hej !t will help any one with stomach has to devote to dancing. trouble," ‘The waltz is much more suitable to the Coopor, with his assistants, !s meeting |dreamy German or to the emotional the public at the Riker store, St ave- | Frenchman than to tho American nue and Twenty-third street, His medl- ‘The two-step 1s simply the daughter | cine !s enjoying a tremendous sale in jot the waltz. Naturally the daughter |New York and he ts meeting an Im- \occasionally shocks the mother, but | mense number of people each day, their family affection should hold them | together. The dancing masters’ convention !s worrying unnecessarily and should ap- | preciote the danger of interfering in a family row. ——-—-—- FOUND SWEETHEART WITH Girl's Father in Frenzy Tries | to Kill the Prisoner, and Is Put Under Arrest. oe DOESN'T WANT TO FIGHT, | BUT PROVES HE CAN. | | RIVAL AND SHOT HER, would fll with t nmission on Mon- ay morning an application to change ite fare at a time Within less than the thirty days required by the Commisaton. He would ask in this petition, he said, that the company be allowed to advance the fare ten days from Monday next, which would be Aug. 6. Commissioner McCarroll agreed and gald that the first hearing on this ap- plication for change of fare would be given next Tuesday morning and that hearings would continue until the mat- ter had been settled First Heearing Tuesday Prior to this decision Commissioner MeCarroll and Eustis had listened to some evidence concerning the new fare schedule. O. C. Semplne, assistant gounsel, rep- resented the commisston. and William | Dyokman. counsel to the railorad, rep- | rasented that comporation wit h members of the operating and finance depart- ment. S. M. Huff, vresidemb of the road, took the stand and declared the mileage of the route over the Williamsburg Bridge to Coney Island js @ trifle over twelve miles. He sald the company is allowed 16 per cent.of the cars across the brie and has ‘Bn operating up to July 1 about 14 cars a dav anprox!mately & per cent. Then, he cits the schedule was increased to 305 cars. He had no figures as to the number iet passengers carried or the receipts, at was pure that under the pres- system the company was running| behind operating expenses | “yes,” he sald, “we found we were losing money. “How long had you been operating | lunder the old system of 6 cents on weak days?” | 'T can't tell how long. I think since 901," you have Just discovered you arc losing money?’ asked Commission- | arroll | Well, {t has been emphasized to us of late that this form of traMe for 5] cents. did not sald President Huff, “Our local traffic paid u well, But now that we have made this lespactal bid for throu traffic and, have got It we find that It does not pay, and so we are obliged to arise our | through rales foUbeensily to 10 cents.” | BART. ADMITS AWAITS THE PROD. Traffic Manager Says Public | Service Board Always “Accelerates.” | | Admitting that the B. R, T. had been “accelerated’’ in the work of Improving | the bridge local service across the WHllamaburg Bridge by the activity Jot the Publi: Service Commission, | jArthur N. Dutton, uperintendent of transportation for the B. R. 7. testt | fed at a hearing before Commisstoner | McCarroll to-day that the B. R. T. had mbant woll, but that !t had ben de- inyed because of the delay !n the com-| pletion of the Manhattan term! “Why ts It," asked Commissioner Mc- Carroll, “that you always walt to Im: | prove your service until our Inspectors have presented a report to us?” “Well,” sald the B. R. T. traffle chief, ‘Mt Is falr to say that our action ts ac- celerated by the report of your inspect- | tographer sells on Patten to-day They| all | brass cylinder from a bench Here’s a Noiseless Mechanical Gun That Fires 50, 000 Shots a Minute ——_+92——___. It Is a Powderless Machine Invent- ed by a Young Englishman, Who Offers It to Uncle Sam, and Who Says a 6-inch Model Cost- ing Only $800 and Weighiag Only 500 Pounds Can Be Oper. ated From an Automobile, PV VLLIAMT PATTEN ANO ALIS EYP "GON. Gen. Sherman said “War ts hell." But motor, but for $7 1 can supply a that was two generations gone by, In- motor to fire tt. The gun would have vention has taken wings with time. a velocity of 1,700,000 feet a minute, William Patten 1s demonstrating a @%4 At 2.000 feet would send a bullet model of a quick firing gun in the b Weoven ‘evoneiinoh plank ; 5 Tt does not require a barrel, but | tiene plumbing shop at 27 We: ‘an be accurately aimed with a rod, One Hundred and y-sixth street and on a universal carriage cat whlah promises to his Satanic sweep any fleld, 1 have demons Majesty's resort a restful retreat by that by hanging newspapers along an comparison if it is ever put in operation, “Iht-foot Ine, By swinging — ths 5 \ medel the bullets c the papel 4 It can shoot 3,000 h h steel bullets puleetay che Me beta a a clean as if It had ben done by shears, @ rmynute, and Kill at 2.000 feet There is no intricate mechan!s THIF marvellous machine is nolseless,;about the gun, so nothing can get out powderless, and as simple as a child'sjof order. ‘Phe bullets also serve as | toy, The little ten-inch mode! in a test) ball-bearings and increase the speed to-day hit a target forty feet a of the discharge.” c every ball striking within a radius of/ [In a word, the bullets are drawn In five-eighths of an inch, Tne 4 buck-/y\ @ vacuum, carried with tremendous ehot looked like a white thread as they | force around the cylinder and then ex- passed through the alr pelled with such force that a halt- A six-foot gun, on the same model, |7unee Wall las & Gb foot p ‘ c “yt "| So far none of the Government « mrolmhing by ra wdsieatid capableccbe jperts have seen the model. Youn) ing transported on an automobile could | F atten says he is an American do more deadly execution in a few min- and that the United States will have utes than the two great armies of Grant the first chance to accept It. and Lee accomplishea at Gettysberg in| Sona camara thre days. There is no limit to Its ca-| BIGAMIST AT SIXTY. pacity, It can discharge bullets faster| than itican’ be fed Peters, Having Burted Three Like poets, inventors are born, To the mind barren of the spark fe Wives, Took Two More. mechanical genius schooling 1s vain, At’ august F. Peters, sixty veurs olf, of the age of ten Williain Patten began (0'No 425 Fast One Husvired and Fifty contrive at his home in England. At ninth street, was soat nerntn Jeleven ihe perfected a motor. Every lintinry to-day for on? ete bv Judue year since In his twenty-seven has been sogter in General Sessions on a tiea of | marked by an {nvention of note, guilty to an indictment for big uny. » Beters told the Court he jad | Bursting Fly Wheel Gave Him Idea. SAAT ee ths on years ed, and when he took ring, deg, the burden ofa fourth ves Patten came to New York four ago with the tdea of the quick- gun in h& mind, Just before his de pee ar so nerediay ani parture ffm England he had witnesge What 4 vouTde Wr a living? Jt | the breaking of a fly wheel, He mage} foster oaigygePetats. study of the wheel and the cayge o} a r was the| iaivadoldentiiandlena lscoyered bas paneer, oy bk ii ay a fourth great ntceriffugal force, which ts the'finities, and we ssvaratyl in ‘ ei K secret of his new eun—if anything about, the women whom, nd vould, Jit aan be called secret, for it ts wo alm OWAse me: BN gLenE e a child could understand it, Tt HAs comely Gorm an [Only ten parts, and all are exposed, aikeat An Evening World reporter and pho-| found a tall, slender, smooth-faced young ne in a dark little plumbing shop owned by his brother, "Oh, you want to see the gun?” he| sald. | “Here it is," and he picked up a little! At first glance It looked something ike a new/ {dea in the way of a meat grinder. \ “Tl show you how {t works,’ sald Patten, and he fastened it to a desk, At the opposite end of the room was a target. Patten took a handful of heavy buckshot, filled the bullet horn and began to turn the crank. In a second « string of bullets flashed across the room and hit the target. 60,000 Bullets a Minute. “This machine does not require po der, dnd It cannot get hot,” sald Pat- ten, “A six-foot gun will weigh only 60 pounds and cost only $800. My gun) can fire more bullets than it can be fed, There has deen lot of taik about getting a gun to fire 1,000,000 balls an hour, but where would they get the 1,000,000. baiis? he Maxim gattling gun, now in use by the United States Army, requires shells and can only be used for fifteen minutes. During that fifteen minutes too, it has to be cooled by water. The Maxim gun weighs more than twice as Greenhut and Company Dry Goods $18 port teil Suits, Jumpers, Waists and Skirts women's $16.50 and $1850 tion trimmed. now, | A Few Money-Saving Suggestions for the Half Holiday jumpers, at $12.50 Misses’ repp tailored suits, at $975 and $12.50 $1.75 Lingerie waists, at $725; lace and inser- “BISHOP” ROBINSON 5 A SCHOOL AM Shepherdess Arrested for “Drawing the Dragon” Teaches in No, 40. | —-—. | | | “Bishop” Elizabeth EB. Robinson, of “the First Assembly of Christ’? of WiUlamsburg, will probably hear from the Board of Education when the case for “outraging public decency’? and | “maintaining a place for lewd, obscene | and indecent purposes" is disposed of in the courts, She !s a teacher and thirty-eight year old. According to the school directory @he teaches In Publlo | School No. 40, on Fifteenth street, near | Wourth avenue, Miss Robinson's mother lives at No j 47 Highun etreet, Brooklyn, but the | “bishop” nrefers to live at No. 179 Pus lashi street with the shepherdess of the flock, Sarah F. Carter, | Summer Tips for Women. Next to the white, pale shades with a very light shrimp pink as one of the leaders ure extensively used In the Eastern resorts, This Is surely the age of the slender | Woman. She predominates at all the resorte 4 season, Over at Atlantle City ik ty sald jail the fat women stayed away, At any | rate, they are few, as ts plain to be seen, What iv the secret? | a Stout ladles of the 400 have found a new way to quickly take off the extra fat and hold It In check without Inconvenlence, They nave thankfully given up dieting, exercising Jand the miscellaneous drugging #0 loag in ogue among the overtat for a simple mix- ture that is sald to give remarkable results, Wing to Its control of the fat-forming ap- rations of the system. ‘The formula ts Marmola, one-aalf ounce; Fluld Extract C: Om “FAGIN” reduce fat at the rate of a pound a day without causing wrinkles, and has the addl- \lonal merit af being perfectly harmless, The Ingredients are Inexpensive and obtain- able at any drug store. In order to get the | em regults, however, the Marmola must be | fresh, and so care should be taken to get It in the original unbroken half-ounce package, Judge erm Adds Eleven ; Months to Term Imposed on Henry Goldber he only Company of Its Kind in the World. YOUR OLD TRUNK or BAGGAGE MADE GOOD AS NEW 1! ! hi) TRUNKS & BAGS, Ete. » Bought, Sold, Exchanged I Le Henry Goldburg, convicted yesterday | PAC Stimereene ag tn the Court of Special Sessions for be- | A Baggage Repair Co. ing a “Fagin,” was to-day an 28, E. 14th St, jextra sleven months in Sing Sing and a #0) fine to work out, by Judge Kosai- | éw Goode, Meummere? Samples, Factory sky, in the Court yeral Sessions. Damages | Godei/ #0) When the Judge read in last night'’s| THOUSANDS OF BARGAINS. Evening World of Goldburg’r terching) TRUNKS | CASES five boys how to steal, he remembered | 94,95 Herc'les 83.05 /49.08 Leather 82.18 Pa suspended sentence on him some | 10.60 Dress 6.85) 1.98 Ext.Style, .00 or. Biway & Eaton Sq. We weeks ago On a charge of grand ere | 10,00 The 0} 6.98 English. 4,35 IK 4/05 Steamer. 2:90/10.50 Boilows. 4.3% irin Goldburg before me," sua |12 50 Gent's pat 7.35) 8.98 Rattan., 1,80, Judge Rosalsky when he reached his| court this morning, After learning: that Goldburg had been given eleven inonths and $300 fine he duplicated the punishment for the of- fense lald before him, which was @ y hestica Te (iepen reeny of property of the Adama Ex- Titled Cases and Chive fress Compan, tr 4 OFF RETAIL PRICES, T Extraordinary Special! One Lot of Brass Bound 50 Grade Cleanit Protecta Health. Keep Your Home Clean With All | Trial | Stores Bagaage Repairs Called for and Delivered. WEST DISINFECTING C0. (lne.) = LOOK FOR THE “QBg |Emergency Co.’s Signs One Door from Union Sq, Weet on 14th @t. SEND FOR BOOKLET, | World Wants Work Wonders. This Store Closes At One o’Clock Tomorrow 00 to $22.50 Im- ed English repp ored suits and Misses’ and Children’s etd in Zz te Barefoot Sandals dilariy$1.28 fomulacs 25 90c Sizes 8% to 11; regularly $1.80, i + $1.10 Sizes 11% to 2 regularly $1.75, at » $1.35 Sizes 2% to 6; regularly $2 00, at $1.50 Second Floor and smal) Imported English cel Bint cantina wand: cosluil twichia $450 Imported English white repp washable He told the Commissioner how, from| much, to say nothing of the cost of skirts, at $2.95; open-down-the-front mode, — the old schedule which provided ona car/the shells. In this we use only bul- with detachable pearl or self buttons. B , T H Knickerbocker i » minutes in the hh ho “ every tie minutia in the tueh hours, A | Second Foor oys lrousers, Mats and bloomer selght cars iy hour, nt how the! “While this gun could shoot 50,00 d thi it: fanc company waa sending even Witty care an|pullets a minute, tt ls doubtful if | A B. S i 3 sizes Busarintendente Baron te ten It Jy not Mkely that an army's facil! | ens $1.50 regularly $1.46, at : 90c at is the best we can do in the Way ities for supplying the ammunition | F Fm ly 00 bachelor undershirts at Washable knickerbocker and bloomer trousers onegate. one a oe aaa, can be equal to more than 10,00) or | urnishings 5Oc; of fine listet no buttons bloomer style; former price 65c, now 45c br! idge out of th f y nh Nor do, 30,0000 25c Imported lisle thread halt hose Knickerbocker style; formerly 95¢, now 65c ve 60) ¢ Ith a t oii y , i. 4 A.a°**\ an Be Hug So As to Sweep Any Lac; in black, navy blue, maroon, gray, tan Blue and gray worsted bathing auity et $1.45 ha guide| Field $004 Bee i Straw hats; the remainder of our stock of boys’ |sooner do loops} “A six-foot gun would require ed aiine a Aare. 65c; white madras, with and youths’ straw hats; former prices $1.50 and ven the crowd piles aboard, and. the| qassmssssssseecsssrn=ennsne-eee s Ly Dw shen 8 one ao wot think 26c Washable four-in- hands at sa nee 98c car {a off again. 1 do not think we can prov as fast a schedule with the [loading and unloading platform on the | | Willlamsburg Bridge terminal.” é ; NORFOLK, Va., July 4.—Finding his ————__~ Deserter From Army Thrashes ,wectheart, Miss Amanda Morse, prome- MRS, MACKAY TO RUN AGAIN Four Detectives Before His nading on the Campostelia Bridge with f iS |, Be in bert opened Recapture. Paap oa SRR RES ate mene aeaet Mra, Clarence H. Mackay has in- Henry F. O'Connell, a deserter trom! 10 o'elack, Two bullote wool effect in) informed a friend that she ia fo be the United Biates Army, was safe in the young woman's back. Willlam| Ce™p ane ior Teton | elk he rd house on Governor's Island, Mitchell, who was with the young sco AHANEdD Nee aad to-day after having fought four private! woman, was unarmed, but kept Qtibert ehavine madera eoce | detectives to a finish when they came. in elght and caused his arr {upon him tn his parents’ home, No, 246 Morse has only a_ sili | biahth avenue, list night recover. | “L would rather die than go back to| The police arrested CW. Morse, thesgiri'es father, w he army" O'Connell said when he wanted to k as conquered. O'Connel! deserted °° 7 Gilbert while he was under ar from Fort Siccuam five months ago, reat Ate. "ei ae eae ver, ler running mate three years ago, wil tlso de in the fleld, and the election on seems certain. They have worked faithfully for the school, ard tency effects, reversible Main Floor -————— Save Money F J | $1.00 sterling silver and ee ; Made of pongee, plain, also ancy Jewelry eaten H Mea he and gain in health, by eati 1g afasols=== iwked: of bck ands white SOc; lerue sizes wall made, checked ta'feta and of plain $3.00 solid gold earrings at $7.00; 10 kt. gold Underpriced taffeta silk and cretonne: p arrings: 3 sizes Regularly $250 and $300 $3.00 mesh bags at $2.00; 4-in. frame German = fe $2.00 silver mesh bags scale mesh Main Floor Main Floor “ , o There's a Roast 6th Ave., 18th to 19th St. Read in pkgs. ‘The Road to Wellvil.e," (Store formerly occupied by B. Altman & Co.) 156; pleia white Second Floor 6th Ave., 18th to 19th St Greenhut & Company. t }