The evening world. Newspaper, July 27, 1908, Page 3

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—_ | alihnlenaiinenaicdnantimr nn sennecmemtrn sani erent cht eAthena MAF A INES ate CONVICT THREATENS UDGE ON BENCH WITH VENGE OF MAFIA $e ““e Gave Me Ten Years; Take Care ot Him,” Riccobono Crie; to Countrymen in Presence of Rosalsky. In anger and resentment at being sentenced to the limit of the term Provided for his offense, although he had entered a plea of guilty, Cosimo Riccobono threatened Judge Rosalsky with the revenge of the Mafia in the Court of General Sessions to-day and shouted to a group of his countrymen instructions to “take of the Court. This was one of many threats that have been directed at Judge Rosalsky since he went on the bench. Riceobono w SHRED MES, PASTORS SL one of the three men | mho, on May 25, held up Samuel Edel- man, a messenger for the Jefferson Bank, at First avenue and \First street and attempted to steal from him a @atchel containing $13,000 By arrange-| ment vetween Riccovono's attorney and the District-Attorney’s office a plen of gullty to attempted robbery in the first decreo was tendered on Friday and ac-| cepted by Judge Rosalsky, | Not Disposed to Mercy, | ‘The limit of the term of tmprisonment Provided for attempted robb in tho first degree is ten years in prison. Ric+ cobono and his counsel figured) that In consideration of a plea of guiity the sentence would be softened, althouga mo agreement to that effect had ben Herron, on Trial for Shooting made—nor could one have been made, as Rev. Mr. Prickitt, Declares ter of fact { He ir Bidding. OEE ca apaaisal He Had to Do Their Bidding. merciful to hold- men would commit murder if the occasion arose, When Rivcobono was arraigned for son- tence to-day the Judge said: “The good of the ommunlty demands that this man be kept in prison as Jong as possible, not only for the pur- pose of keeping him behind steel bars his life. Herron claims he was mes- an@ stone walls, but because his sent- merized and Is therafore not responsible ence may prove a lesson to others. for the crime, His counsel will try to Portun: the Indeterminate sentence @ him by entering a plea of in- few gives me the opportunity to se- ity, questrate him in Sing Sing for almost erron claims that all the people of the full term provided by law, Metuchen, where the crime was com- who (Special to The Evening World.) NEW BRUNSWICK, July %1.—Archi- bald Herron, who shot and killed Rey. 8. B, D. Prickitt at Metuchen two weeks ago, was placed on trial to-day before Judges Bergen and Booraem for “If 1 should sentence him to ten years! mitted, had been against him for some! “the Mmit—he would receive an allow-! time; that there has been a secret s0- @nce of good behavior and would be Cloty working against him and that his released in something more than six! enemies mesmerized him and compelled years, dim to do their bidding, Makes It the Limit, Just Defore Judge Bergen the bench Mrs "Therefore, I shall impose an indeter- accused man, who has refused to see minate senten providing that he her husband since the shooting, entered shall serve at hard labor in Sing Sing court with a young woman companion! prison a term of not less than nine and took seats with the other specta- years and three months and not more tors three or four rows from the front. than ten years at the discretion of the She seemed quite nervous during the Proper authorities,” went on} Herron, the wife of the: | | subsequent proceedings, but when her) gallon of boilng milk. Judge Who Was Threatened in Court With the Vengeance of the Mafia f EEN hOB \ O7T7O FrOSAL Siy BY SCALOD ¥ UL Playmate Overturns on Head of Two-Year- Old Girl. ATALLY GIRL FALLS 1ATO TH YAULT: RESCUED LK BUT ISL Caldron Brave Policeman Dives in Af- ter Her, and Is Saved by Other Bluecoats, Two little girls were pleying In the Angelina Evangelist, ALICE Td tene- oid, who lives with her parents at ment, No. 241 Eldridge str to-da e while the mot! ne of them, Mrs, Coney Island avenue, near Avenue U, Rebecca Betterman, was preparing | Sheepshead Bay, was hanging clothes wos kneading dough at luncheon. Sh a table and on the gas range was large caldron containing more than a| in the yard in the rear of her home to- when the earth suddenly gave Way eath her feet, Evangelist, who witnessed Rlecobono's swarthy akin turned yel- husband was Mrought into court he sagie Betterman is two years old and NHL feached cbie’ yard (Ete low as he realized htat his plea of! passed within a tow feet of her, but ner playmate was Gusel MaNCUrSd OREL CHAE NGG guilty had been in vain in the way of sho made no effort to speak with him orl wno is eight. Gussi Paiva het weKtath earning mercy. As he was leaving the ‘greet him in any manner. Apparently) nave @ flat on the same floor of the iNvisy yator that almost covered her courtroom in charge of tw officers he he didnot know that he was in court! tenement, Mrs. Betterman had warned UTA water tat almost covered hit tumed and shouted in Italian, “The |and took the stand without looking her! ine children not to go too near tho , pa, THe mother Be eta Mfafla will get you for this.” Turning way. | stove and had turned her back upon! way lwme from. tl ad Bay to a gathering of his friends near the| It took just twenty-five minutes to nd he hurried door he cried: “He gave me ten years, ;choose the fury and the trial immedi- Take care of him.” ately began. By the time the remarks of Ricco-} Prosecutor Bordine, bono had been translated to the Court | °@se, referred to the the group of Itallans at the door had Mr. Prickett on July isappeared. Judge Rosaisky does not; Borough of Metuchen. He said fear that Riccobono's friends will make | Y@Ts ago the victim committed the ‘ny attempt to carry out his instruc. |“efendant to the county jail on a minor tions. charge. The State would show that in opening the ooting of Re in the nearby __ POLICEMEN SAVE THEE WN FIRETRAP —o—. Aged Woman, Unconscious Girl and Man Rescued j by Heroes, kill Prickett and Marshall Fourall, arrested him, The trip of Herron to Prickett's home on the day of the mur. | der was briefly alluded to, and the mere fact stated that Mr. Prickett was shot upon the two men meeting, The first witness called was County Engineer Larson. of the house and the vicinity of the spot where the shooting occurred, Photographer Vanderveer, County Phy- sician J, L. Suydam and other wit- nesses, who gave details of the shoot- ing, followed, Khe State has a complete case, 80 the fat will be on the question of sanity, Judge Cowenhoven, the prisoner's law- yer, means to offer as the defense that Herron if of unsound mind, and there- fore not Fesponsible for his act. Dr. Cotton, of the State Hospital for the A very smoky fire In the collar of the | sane, and De; tenses: of Feo An Wouble three-story tenement at No, 49/ the jall. De Kalb avenue, Williamsburg, to-day| To these Herron told the story of placed all the tenants in danger and haying bern Wesmerhen iy atenists to gave a couple of policemen some earnest | combat any testimony that the de- work in the rescue line, The building | fense wili produce. According to report fs occupled by stores on the ground Dr. Britton ton | Ds Rvans, of tho Plains Hospital, who was one floor and shelters six families above. Fata : All the tenants were asleep when the fire started but John Hughes who lived with his wife and three children on the second floor. He smelled smoke @nd heard the crackling of tlames. He found the alrshaft acting as a flue and drawing smoke and fire from the cellar, Shouting an alarm to the other tenants, Hughes set about getting his family out, He carried two of his children downstairs, supposing that his ! Wife and his ten-year-old daughter, lennie, would follow. Mrs. Hughes did follow, but Jennie, overcome by sinoke, remained b hind. In the exc tement It was several min- utes before Hughes discovered that his @aughter was missing, By that time Morris called by the State. with Dr. Frank M. Donohue. of this atv. ee TOO OLD TO WORK, A SUICIDE Nobody Would Hire William Pat- tem Because He was Sixty-seven, People thought William Patten was too old to make a good coachman which was his regular trade. was sixty-seven years old, and for moro than two months he had been without a job. His wife, Mary, only a year or two ‘his funllor, paid the rent of the tiny’ Polloemen Mnglish and Steers had ar-/flat at No. 162 Amsterdam avenue, by rived. They rushed up to the Hughes | doing odd bits of housework, Tha) flat and groped about until they came | eoupple had no children. is morning the old man kissed her, good-by saying he was going out to make one more effort to get a place, Instead he went to the cellar, slung a rope end over @ water pie runnine along the ceiling, stood on a box. noos@ the free end of the none about His throat and. stenped off into space, Iiis body was found an hour later, —=—— OPERA STAR DIES IN POVERTY SAN PRANCI8CO, July 21.—In’ ex. treme poverty Helene Dingeon, a for- mer comic opera star, dled here yes- terday. Twenty years ago she was a {ayorite at the old Tivoli Opera House upon the unconscious girl. She w: Fevived with dimeuity, ©" S™® Was Patrick Martin was carrying his aged mother from their flat on the third floor when both were overcome on the first floor landing. English and Steers stumbled over the pair and carried them Into the alr, where they were attended by a neighboring physician, The firemen kept the blaze confined to the cellar and the property damage was small. mnt 1 _—>—.—__. INJURED BY FALL FROM CAR. While alighting from a Thirty-fourth Lipo hae bat) avenue to-day Sarah iil, forty-five years old, of No, sh operas a8 "The Masked Bali’ Wo West One Hundred and’ Twenty:| Sd the Little Duke Afterward she fourth street, slipped and fell to the| went Bast and made a suce She Hereort utp hatog om sone hd as ures ae tad a x | when she aman euzston of the brain. Sede MNtx ani Tellved from the stage. jof the experts in the Thaw trial. will be) Patten! two since then Herron had made threats to! Up her little daughte Who! ‘was so frantic w them while kneading the dough, Sud- denly she was horrifid at hearing both ggling girl Miceman rea of them ‘eam, und without Gussie had taken hold of the an plunged in, He handle of the caldron con fect of water and was boiling milk 1 unconscious form of the Nearly all of th over his head ee emptied over the head of the tw > girl his feet began old girl and some of it na, Both, would elder child's arms and b pave bene pana inet Aron Thee neh sree’ th aes the use of ropes ‘and a ladder . rushed out 1 eat Ay noand the girl were perilous situation as carried {nto Sof the King ny the hall aie she didn't know but other tenant Daniela, was ca om Gouverneur tt Hospital. he a e The child was taken there immeai- fet; iO, Vae, | ately, but the physician said it was pible, awful exp doubtful if she will live until night. several physicins called they failed to Beckerman is not seriously revive her and she died within halt He identified a plan! Gussie | i DELIRIOUS, SHE alded. uniform was no Ill effects experience, amination of the premises ed that the girl had fallen into an vault. that h been covered and unusued for many years. ——__ ~~ WALKED STREET “I’m Tired, Hold Me,” Said Mrs, Beeson to Policeman Who Halted Her. GIRL OF TWELVE HER OWN SLEUTH pa SS a Owner of $500 Necklace Traces Missing Servant ta Church When Police Fail, Mrs, Gladys Beeson, of No, 1042 Madl+/ son avenue, {3 under close guard in| Presbyterian Hosp‘tal to-day, having | been found at Madison avenue and Sev. | enty-fourth street at 1 o'clock this morning, attired in a long black coat over her nightdress and apparently | delirious, Policeman Daniels's attention was at- Yo,, 1288 1, to the woman as she glided) Dr, Hirech at No. 123 inion avenue worked as a domestic in the family of tracted swiftly through the streets and he fol- (he Mronx. Last Thursday she disap- lowed her, peared, Simultaneously a pearl necklace ar are you going?” t toe= man aie you Boing?" the polices |v orth $00, belonging to Resina, the “I'm tired; please hold me,” replied|twelve-vear-oldl daughter of the house- the woman. ad Daniels took the woman to the hosp i tal. He thought at first she was a} isfled with the per. sleep-walker, but the dootors found she) fnctory way police had of not had a high fover and was semi-delirious, | finding Katle She turned Hag ee pen Ae Gite NAM9| toctive on her own unt. Last nighi and address, and when Mr, mM ar- KC WePe "at k rived he was greatly astonished, as his|S"° SW Katle enter the Polish Catholle wife had retired last night in apparently | Church at One Hundred and Fifty-sixth ' street and Courtland avenue, The Mt- tle girl slipped in behind her and lo- good health, cated the pew where the servant knelt BABY ARCHITECT | FALLS TO DEATH, | "then ‘sho went out, called up Police | Headquarters and asked for ald In make In trying to catch a block with which | Ing the arrest. Headquarters passed the he was building a toy house on the | message to the Morrisania station, and fire-escape at the fourth story of his| Detective Phelan found little Regina home this afternoon, Jacob Gunther, | waiting for him at the church door, three and a half years old, plunged four | Phelan stood watch until Katie Suka stories to the pavement below and was came forth, and then he halted her, She killed instantly. | was wearing the, pe arl necklace. ra. the Mrs. James Duffy, who lives on the | To-day, in the Morrisanta Court, Mag- second, floor, saw the aluld's body shoot | istrate Butts held Katle in bonds of pest ie window. | a0 tor General Sessions. nineteen years! he resigned from the force re-| Katie Suka was a wide-eyed girl who! de-| dle, _THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, JULY 27, 1908, ABIES VICTIM DES OAV AFTER HEARING Fa ‘Too Late,’ Said Pasteur Doc-, tors When ex-Police Lieut. | Phillips Called. | |BITTEN BY PET DOG. Goes From Institute to Pres- | byterian Hospital, Knowing | He Was Doomed to Die. —_—_— | A cnae, parallet In hopelessness rv horrible detail to that of William| | Marsh, who was sent to his home by the doctors at the Pasteur Institute to \ale of rabies, is that of James F | phillips, a former police |who dled in agony at 8.40 o'clock to-| \aay in the Presbyterian Hospital, Phillips's elder son {8 John Elwood Phillips, @ patrolman attached to the | West One Hundred and Twonty-fitth street station. Told Him He Was Too Late. “pay told my fether at the Pasteur Institute that he was in the second stage of hydrophobla,” he sald to an Bvening World reporter to-day, “and when he asked what that was they answered that {t meant he wes too for gone for the Pastteur treatment to do| him any good, and that he must go to a general hospital. “Of course he knew that there was small chance of relief at a general hos- pital, if the Pasteur people couldn't help him, and I am ceratin that he realized he had only a short time to live, although he didn't say much, and | was breve unt!l the disease gained | mastery over him, Thev told me pri | vately that father couldn't live many hours.” Although the rables symptoms began to show on Phillips a few days ago, neither he nor any member of his fam- y Suspected that he was afflicted with the disease until yasterday, About three days ago he noticed that jhe had difficulty in swallowing water, | which is said by physicians to be an in-| | fallible sign of the approach of hydro- phobla. Phillips didn’t think it was! serious, however, until yesterday morn: | ling, Bitten Nine Months Ago, The son remembered that nine months ago the elder man had been bitten by a brindte bull puppy which a neighbor jhad given him, The dog was not vicious Jor mad, but fumped into Phillips's face lin play and his sharp teeth broke the skin of the man's cheek. Phillips cau-! jterized the wound himself and thought no more about it, although he sinva gave the dog back to the man who gave {t to him, | After leaving the Pasteur Institute, ,John E. Phillips hurried his father in| |the automobile to the Presbyterian! Hospital, | Everything was done for his comfort, | |but In a few hours ha was selzed with! convulsions and became violent and delirious, so that it was necessary for attendants to hold him in the bed. His son remained w il the end Phillips Ilved at No. 182 East One| Hundred and Twenty-first street, and after he was reduced a few months ago! for an infraction of rules during a rald he Heutenant, had been interested in a nrivate de! tive agency at No. 18 West One Hun-, dred and Twenty-fifth street. Wiest es BUGHER IN AUTO SMASH. The nice red car in which Deputy Police Commissioner Bugher and his gilded badge take in fires and other events had Sts right hind wheel sider wiped from the axle this morning at Seventh avenue and Forty-ninth street by a south-bound car, According to Policeman s, who made a report of the smash-up, it the fault of William Clare, the B chauffeur. He was bowling ‘own on the wrong side of the avenue when he attempted to get over on the right aide, As he crossed the tracks the car {n charge of Motorman Patrick Me- Kenna hit the wheel. Clare was ordered to report at Head- uarters at once to explain how a po- Hoe automobile happened to be on the, wrong side of the street. A FOOD DRIN Which Brings Datly Enjoyment, a A lady dootor writes: “Though busy hourly with my own affairs, I will not deny myself the | pleasure of taking a few minutes to | tell of the enjoyment daily obtained from my morning cup of Postum, It is a food beverage, not a stimulant | like coffee. “I began to use Postum § years, | ago, not because I wanted to, but be- | cause coffee, which I dearly loved, made my nights long,’ weary perlods to be dreaded and unfitting me for businees during the day. | “On advice of a friend I first tried Postum, making It carefully, as sug- gested on the package. Aa I had al- ways used ‘cream and no sugar,’ | mixed my Postum 80, It looked good, was clear and fragrant, and it was a pleasure to see the cream color it as my Kentucky friend always wanted her coffee to look—'like a new sad- “phen I tasted it critically, and I was pleased, yes, satisfled with my Postum in taste and effect, and am yet, being & constant user of It all these years. “tT continually assure my friends and acquaintances that they will like | postum in place of coffee and receive benefit from {ts use, I have gained weight, can sleep and am not ner-! yous.” “There's a Reason.” Name) given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich, Read “The Road to Mee in pkgs. Ever read the above letter? 4/ new one appears from time to} time, ‘They are genuine, true, and) fall of human interest. BalDE WAS KISSED [00 OFTEN FOR PAUL ——— Objected With a Beer Glass and Started His Honey- moon in Jail, Paul Baroukus's honeymoon has been a hurdle event thus far, It began yes- terday evening, and since that time the happy bridegroom has experienced a riot, an arrest, 4 night in a police sta- tion, a discharge in a police court, the loss @f all his wedding presents and the temporary loss of his bride. Paul was inarried at 7 o'clock yester- day evening to Bertha Sarkowltz in a flat he had furnished at No. 98 North Seventh street, Williamsburg. Paul has many friends, who attended the wed- ding, bringing gifts, most of them of china and glass. Following the wedding there was a feast. Two kegs of beer surmounted by cakes of ice were on tap in the! kitchen, All the male guests Kissed the bride at frequent intervals, This feature of the celebration tinaliy became irk- some to Paul. He ventured to suggest (hat inasmuch as his friends had kissed the bride about seventeen times around, it was time to call a halt, The protest of the guests was unanimous. Paul passed a beer glass across the room and one of the guests caught it} n the forehead, In @ minute the flat) was full of flying wedding presents | and the crash of breaking china aud glass and the shouts of the wedding F e neigiboriood, — Po- rushed {nto the ix of the guests dow and were they Were ar sted. After an anxious night In a cell Ra-/ roukus and his friends were discharged to-day, The bridegroom hurried to his te flat to find it deserted and the floor n, deep with shattered wedding pres-| enté’ Half and hour of searching the) nelghborhood brought to light his wife, who had fled to the home of friends, ‘| i | GAS EXPLOSION BURNS TWO, | Members of Tilden Club Look for Leak with Lighted Match, Thomas Kahill, of No, % Division avenue, and William Davins, of No. 562 Wythe avenue, Williamsburg, were bad- ly burned in a gas explosion In the Til- den club-house, at No, 672 Wythe ave- nue, at1 A, M. to-day. The two men and a number of other! members were down stairs when Kahill and Devins went to a small room on the second floor, They lighted a match, | and instantly there was an exploston that shook the building, caused by a ak in a gas pipe. | ROME RAIDER ‘WORRIED BY REMOML STOR County Detective Reardon | Hurries Back From His ‘Va- | cation at’ Seashore, ———= County Detective Edward J. Reardon, as chief sleuth for Distriot-At- made himself famous in the days of Jerome's oficial activity, reached the Criminal Courts Bullding this afternoon in a highly excited state. He was at Long Branch spending his vacation when he read In a morning paper that Mr, Jerome had used these words: “Tell Reardon to gend in his tion by Aug. 1. I'm through with him." Reardon caught the first train for the city, He went direct to the District- Attorney's office. He was told that Mr. who, torney Jerome, Jerome had not reached town, and he d sat down in an ante-room to walt for him, The spectacular and dashing ralder of former days looked troubled. "T didn't even have a suspicion that the chief was dissatisfied with me un- tll I saw the piece in to-day’s World,” he eaid. “And now I'm here to see if it's true, I've got nothing In my record to be ashamed of. In fact, I'm proud of Mt. If It is true that they've got my scalp I can only say that the Head- quarters bunch have put through a conspiracy against me. T never had any intimation that Mr, Jerome want- ed me to get out.” ae WOMAN “DENTIST” HELD. Mrs. James Markowitz, who Is said to be the first woman to be arrested In New York an a charge of practicing dontistry without a Mcense, was a pris- oner in the Harlem Poltce Court to- day. Bell Conro, an Inspector of the State Medical Society, sald his attention had eon directed to the case by Henriette Friedman, of No. 174 Bast One Hundred and FMfth street, who told him that on July 16 last she had called to se a doctor Levy, with offices In the same apartment as 'Mre. Markowitz, at No, 18) Lexington avenue. Mrs.” Marko: wita, Mise Friedman told the inspector, operated on her teeth and asked hep to call agaln, Magistrate House held the woman, Who carried a five-months- old child In her arms, in bonds of gino for a hearing Friday. : NURSE TELLS OF BAR'S SUFFERING Raw with Eczema from Birth—Fear= ful Itching Lasted for Months— Treatment Futile—Walked the Floor with Him Night and Day— Wasted Away and Got Little Rest, PERMANENTLY CURED BY CUTICURA REMEDIES a “Tho first time I went out as a nurse was when a baby boy was born, He was perfectly raw all over with humor, Tho doctor gaye us some ointment to use, but he got no better, The baby seemed to be suffering terribly, and at times I had to walk the floor with him night and day, sending for my husband to carry him when I could note His poor little head became covered h crusts and the doctor decided it waa eczema, The fearful itching went on for months, and the little fellow was wasted to a skeleton and could get al- most no reat, At last I decided to try the Cuticura Remedies, bathing him with Cutieura Soap, using just as little water as paral ey then I applied the Cuticura Ointment, and gave him small loses of Cuticura Resolvent, This re- lieved him almost at once and in @ comparatively short time the baby was quite well, Now, thiween years after, ho is a fine boy, in the High School, and ho has never had any return of the disease, I have since known, of a num- ber of cases of eczema which have been cured by Cuticura, but none, perhaps, as severe as this one. I have always recommended Cuticura most highly for skin troubles, and shall continue to do so. Mrs. Elizabeth Howie, Nurse, 70 Grove St., Chelsea, Mass., Now, 15, '07.”. ——+ DISFIGURING Humors, Eczemas, any! Itchings Cured by Cuticura, The agonizing it hing, and parang of the skin, as in eczemay, the frightful scaling, as in psoriasis; tie loss of hair and crusting of scalp, as‘in scalled head, all demand a remedy i extraordinary virtues to successfully cope with them, That Cuticura Soap, Cirticura Ointment, and Cuticura Pills are such stands proven by testimonials of remarkable cures when all else tas failed, Cutteura Soap (25e.) to Cleanse the Skin, Cutle enra Ointment (S0e.) to Teal the Skin, and Cite cura Resol de.) (or Ma the form ot Chocolate ie. per vial’ gt 60) to Purity the Nioods nut the wormL Potter Drug & Chem, i rope, Bost ne Mass ‘@F- Mailed Free, Cuticura Book on Skin Diseases % Sunday World Wants °* 3?) Work Nonday Wonders, Greenhut an Company Dry Goods at, each eer Sale of Notions dye; 400-yd_ spool, at English twill white co’ all widths up to 1 inch; at Dress shields; pure nainsook, at. Spring hooks and eyes, black a lastic shirtwaist belts, at ‘ ; Gray and white, at Main Floor Wo smartest styles of this season Regularly $5.00, at Second Floor $12.0, $18.50 and $22.50 Imported Imported Linen Suits and Jumpers, at $30.00 Mahogany breakfast tables, at $70.00 Hall chairs, high back, at. $40.00 Mahogany Sheraton card tables, at . $32.50 $16 50 Carved India tea tables, at . Third Floor John J. Clark’s spool cotton; per doz, 22¢, Belding Bros’ spool silk; warranted pure rubber, double-covering of Oc ross, per card at. i ; 6 ; oy Spools of darning silk; black and colors, at, Puritan pins; all sizes; per sheet, at, All-over hair nets, blond and brown, at Sor ae copa eth) Hair rolls—net covered, to fit “all round head,” at , 25¢ Pumps, ties and Oxfords—our regylar five-dollar stock, Iced Tea Is Served Without Charge in our cool, quiet Reception and Lounging Room, Fourth Floor. Visitors to New York are invited to take advantage of this modern dry-goods store. showing views of the store, newest feature of a Souvenir postals, free of cost. The August Sale of Home Furnishings now in progress at this store promises to set a new standard for the top-notch quality and character of the goods involved, as well as for the uncommonly low prices with which they are tagged. This sale had its first announcement in yesterday's newspapers, and this added word is simply intended to act as a reminder of the extraordinary values we are presenting in odd, artistic furniture, brass beds, mattresses, springs, housekeeping linens and kindred merchandise that go to make up the furnishing of the home. cH : An Unusual Opportunity in ARTISTIC FURNITURE Beautiful, odd pieces from our regular stock—all this season's goods—at radical underpriced figures. Many home-furnishers will avail themselves of the opportunities presented in this sale and will buy now rather than wait until the regular season and pay the regular prices. A fewinstances at random: + $25.00 lee 00 Colonial sofa, carved mahogany frame, extra ~ large, at + ‘ t S j * $95.00 $65.00 Gold cabinet, mirror back, at. Coan $52.50 Mahogany writing desks, at, . $40.00 + $14.00 $32.00 Mahogany sewing tables, at. . S95'Q9 $48.50 Inlaid mahogany bookcases, at, $38, 50 2c 4 + . 25¢ tton tape; 10 roll; And Nightg ind white; 15c¢ per 3c « Ze « 4c » » 4c ee 12¢ models; trimme: Second Floor men’s $5.00 Summer Footwear at $3.45 All leathers; and all the The price saving is $1.55, . For dress or street wear. . . . . . . . Suits, Dresses, Coats, Skirts and Waists—Reduced $6 50, $7.50 and $1000 one or two-piece Summer English Repp. or ry Dresses at $6.50 Linon Motor Coatsat ss $4.75, $7.75, $9.75 and $12.50 ¢25 Imported English Washable Repp. Skirts (the $30 00 Taffeta Silk and Pongee Dresses at . $13.75 new button-down-the-front model) at. $2.95 Second Floor $3.00 Lingerie Waists (lace trimmed) at. $1.50 Besides the Furniture touched on above there are involved in the | Anant Home Furnishings Sale: Rugs, Mattings, Linoleums, Upholsteries, Brass Beas, Bedding, Blankets, Comtertables, Bed Spreads, Linens, Sheets and Pillow Cases, Lamps, Fancy China, Bric-a-Brac, Cut Glass & Silverware, 6th Ave., 18th to19th St. Greenhut & Company. 6th Ave. 18th to 19th St. (Store formerly occupied by B, Altman & Co.) White Petticoats Underpriced $2.25 to $4.50 White Petticoats at $1.50 and $2.95; tops of cambric or nainsook—lace and embroidery-trimmed $6.50 and $7.50 owns== White Petticoats at $5.00; lawn tops, finished with lace and embroidery. $3.00 to $6.50 Nightgowns at $1.95 and $3.75; ot sheer nainsook; lace and embroidery trimming $3.00 Nightgowns at $1,50; dainty nainsook ‘d with medallions, lace and ribbons, $3.45 + $3.75, $4.75 and $5.75 ' Sabie

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