The evening world. Newspaper, December 16, 1910, Page 3

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AP CHURCH TRL TO SHAKE ’EM UP Ordered to Appear To-Night}| * gnd Answer Charge of Gamb- fing in Pinochle Game. ¥S TOLD TO LEAVE TOWN {What He Calls a Committee of | foreheads Suggests It, but He Won't Go. Beacon J. Vroom Roscoe of the North Mackensack Reformed Church, the vic- | tortous plaintiff in the famous double | deacon slander sult of Roscoe vs. Dem- erest, will be tried to-night by sixty clergymen and elders of the Reformed Ohurches tn Bergen County on the charge of playing pinochle at five cents @ point. an Last night a representative of the Rev. Abram Duryea, pastor of the North Hackensack Reformed Church, served Mr. Roscoe with a formal request for | his resi aation as deacon and ordered him to appear for trial to-night. Defense Will Cause Quivers. “Mr. Roscoe will be ready to defend imself,” said Mr. Roscoe to-day, ‘Mr, Roscoe has a defense that will cause @ome quivers in church ranks, Mr, Ros-| 0e cannot be bluffed. Last night, after Mr. Roscoe had been ordered to apps for trial, a committee of North Hacken- @ack soreheads called upon him and advised him to leave town. Mr. Roscoe ndlady called and said she had heard | he going to leave, Mr. Roscoe| 4an't going. Concerning the church trial to-night, Mr. Roscoe say: “After considering the Old Testament and the addition made under the new dispensations Mr. Roscoe finds that there is no denial in Holy Writ of the| right to play a game for small stakes. Nor is there any inhibition of gambling in the church constitution, Deacon | Demarest, who was convicted of slander. | ing Deacon Roscoe, however, has not to stand’on. File defense is as As to Styles In Wigs. ‘Mr. Roscoe is also bald, but if he orders a wig tt will not be marcelled Uke Mr. Demarest’ Nor will it be, Mr. Roscoe may get a Wieck wig, pompadour style. As Mr./ Roscoe's father and grandfather are} gleo bald it may serve as a family wig. | “Mr. Roscoe says this for the benefit of the committee of soreheads who threaten him and want him to leave town, He knows who inspired the com- mittee and that an auburn brown wig is at the bottom of it. That ts all Mr. Roscoe will say till after the church tril to-night.” Foch cncerreetipiiaeeeire BLIND MINISTER BEGS FOR DEATH IN CHAIR. Appeals to Governors to Let Elec: | tricity End Life He Declares Is Useless. CRE BATTLE Dec. 16.— . Mich. Death in the electric chalr is being sought by the Rey. Thomas McKinsey of this city, who {s hopelessly blind, | fs about to lose his voi is useless to soctety, He does not believe in sclf-destruction, and says he! and has sent appeals to the Governors | of New York, Onlo, New Jersey and other States where electrocution f& In u to grant him a legal execution by electricity and save him from life in| an_ almshouse. ana He hus been singing In the streets selling small articles, but says the| people no longer buy, He says he can not be profitably employed and there fore cannot consistently have a home| and family, and that under the ctreum-/ stances it is the duty of the State to take his iife in the possible, _—_—To | EQUITABLE CLERK ARRESTED. | Georwe A, most painless way | jette Held in $2,000 fi jer's Charge. George A, La Foliette, for ten years a clerk in the e of the table Life Assurance 8 » Was.arrested to- day by Detectives Moley and Carmody as he worked at his desk in the premium collections department the second floor of the Equitable Building, No, 120 Broadway. A warrant enarging him wih grand larceny had bee minutes earlier by Clarence the cashier of the company, La Follette was taken to the n secured a few Websté: Centre Street Court and held on a short aff« davit, which gave no details of the al- leged crime beyond saying thar the prisoner had failed to account $125 which was paid in ten days » by a policy holder, It was admitted by a representative of the faw depariment of the Equitable that an examination of La Pollette’s books was still The accused man was bh $2,000 for examination ne n progre t Tuesday. ie thirty-four years old, married, and Hives with his wife at No. 67 West One Hunared and Thirty-stxth street | —_—_—— MeFarland Sent to Instand, Pohn McFarland, accused of using the mali in an attempt to get $50 from Theo- dore N. Vail, president of the Western Union Telegraph Company, was sent- | enced to two months In the penitentiary iby Judge Hough in the Criminal Branch of the United States Circuit Court we dey. McFarland asked Mr, Vail to sub- wortbe for a banquet to James EB. Sulli- van, Secretary of the American Amateur Athletic League, which he sald was | being arranged, He pleaded “non vult,"" | but the Justice would not accept the plea, an? McFarland then pleaded @uilty. i \ THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1910. American Men Are Ready " DEACINROSIOE 4 to Give Women the Vote, Mrs. Snowden Declares Apathy of Wives Mostly | to Blame, Says British’ Suffragist, for Failure | to Accomplish the Ob-| ject of Securing the} Ballot Here. By Nixola Greeley-Smith. “The suffrage movement in England he abolished the olg = =maia among edu- cated and set for- applied oppro- briously among the lower classes.” It has seemed of late that there 1s not a new suffrage argument under the sun, but there at least is one from under the sunny coronet of Mrs. Philip Snowden, the English suf- fragist, who is sailing back to her | own country to-morrow. Mrs. Snowden’s reference to old maids w incidental to some re- marks on “the atmosphere of the old Colonial scarcity of women” in which | she declared at a public meeting the other night American women are 6till | living. “Women are still relatively scarce in America, and, like any other rare product, are correspondingly valued,” the blond Mrs. Snowden observed yesterday afternoon. “No one who has not lived in both England and America can appreciate the difference in the masculine attitude toward women in the two countries. Foreign View of Woman. “The Buglishm even the of cated Englishman, still regards the ‘women of his family as his belong- ings. If an Englishman's wife or Gaughter expresses an opinion on any subject under discussion he may take it tolerantly, but not serfously. Men and women are not comrades in England as they are here, in every way except politi- cally. Your men are proud of your ‘women, your women are proud of your men. And American men are s0 chivalrous in their attitude to- ward their wives and toward our sex in general that I believe the apathy of the women is largely re- SHEATHED IN ICE FIGHT FIRE WHICH ~ MENAGES SCORE Hydrants Frozen at Three- Alarm Williamsburg Blaze— Many Driven to Streets. Fire which started to-day in the big hay and grain market of Gastelger & Schafer, at No. 2 to 31 Johnson ave- sponsible for the fact that they are nue, Williamsburg, spread with such not allowed to vote. rapidity that three alarms had to be “It is true that if a majority of your|sent In, bringing more than half the women, or even @ considerable number | fire fighting apparatus of Brooklyn. of them, were to demand the vote as! qh» building, a long brick structure feverishiy as the women in England five stories high, was packed to the roof with inflammable provender. The | blaze started in the cellar and ate its | way up so rapidly that the stable have demanded it, the men would give ft to them, In fact, so much fervor would not be necessary. Women are cheap in Engiand—very cheap—because they have outnumbered the men for so hands had to run for their lives. long and the struggle to get a husband| Battalion Chief Langan saw that the which, till recently, seemed a necessary | burning market stood in a nest of fac- commodity, has been very stiff. To get} tories with tall tenements on two sides, husbands women have felt 1t necessary, He sounded two more alarms and on top though in my opinion it never has| or those Deputy Chief Lally sent a been go-to stoop to certain things which have given the men a contempt | #Pécial call to Manhattan Headquarters, for them. It is the Nemesis of the| Fifteen minutes late Chief Croker was women of England that this should] on the spot, after a record run across be so, the bridge. Once “Old Maid” at Twenty-one. Even before the “To Ket marvied seemed the only hon- orable thing for a woman until very) the flat-houses on Montrose avenue at recently," Mrs, Snowden continued. “I| the back, &nd on Union avenue, at the was brought up in an Knglish watering! eastern side of Gusteiger & Schafer's place and i can remember that When || The dispossessed families congested in waa barely twenty-one and it had not! the street, wailing about thelr house- he arriyed police been rumored that I was engaged to | hold plunder and refusing to leave the any one, people spoke of me as ‘on the | jittle heaps of belongings even for the sheif. | shelter of nearby houses. 1 was interested to observe that It) The intense cold hampered the fire- to amuse this young mation of! men mightily. The water froze as it twenty-eight that at twerty-one she! yolj, forming great cascades of ice on had been called an “old maid." the walls, and hydrant after ‘hydrant | “The suffrage movement has glo- went out of commission and the fire- rified spimsterhood,” Mrs. Snow- | men themselves were siieated In Ice. den added. “Educated men no long- Capt, John F. Conway of Engine Com. ex dare to use the phrase ‘old {pany 137, was leading iis men up a« maid’ as a term of opprobrium, and | jadder wien a gush of smoke belcied even among the ignorant it 48 wot | Gut of a tiird floor window into his face appled until an unmarried woman | overcoming him almost instantly. He crosses the Rubicon of thirty. dropped to earth, Ambulance Surgeon “Here in America where the old | (jojdstein of Williamsburg Hospita chivalrous spirit survives I have | sewod up a long gash in his scalp and never heard it used. But thenasZ joint him home. said a while ago, there is an eco- After an hour's work the firemen nomic reason back of the Amert- | seemed to have the upper hand of the caa's high estimate of women— |) ji 70, they are scarce hore, RRR SSE TE Poey are scarcer In the West than in Salesman Dead in Stairway, the } and I think 1 have observ William Abrams, a false hair sales- ac vdngly KY man, of No, 12 West Ninety-thire upon t in the West | treet, was found dead to-day a ne frase 5 ave Western and (iere 4 tccrns to Ke a greater deference toward |foot of the basoment stairway of Max the women in the Western than in| Kirsch’s shoe store, No, 184 Sixth ave. Eastern man, nue, There was a deep cut over als American Women Selfish. eda Ataet# Police, Sought ¢ he American man's whole view jto a fall. His watch and other Jewe ankind is so different from | 2nd the ney in his pockets had no: n the Highly educated Buro- |b turbed, His wife told the po- an English he had ben out late with Some of your, customer last night. seemed to me just. the| Sanne sh toward thelr men, They Received by the Czar, med to appreciate thei, ad- PET Y I 16.—Emperc vantages os (aey might, and they hay ¢ ; a te f. Ee, ntca thd IMP T ROWER Re ONELIN olas to-day gave a farewell audi- HO Sens ent to Capt. 8, I. H. Slocum, the n military attache, who is re- “I have met your finest women. not only your suffragists, but your college aad literary women. Most of them want the vote, but they want a great mauy other thini home Bven the suffraifts often belong ine to four or five clive and ar terested in half 2 dozen refor: or charities. In England we have learned to oncentrate all our thoughts and euergies upon the one thing--the vote, “If your women were to exe the influence which has been exe ted in England they would get the ballot before we do. For you are still pres- clous possessions to your men. There are not too many of you, That {s the tremendous advantage you have, whi i don’t believe half of you apprectate.”’ oo FAREGORIC or laudanum to n’ and a FE are prohibit New Swiss BERNE, Switzerland, Federal Assembly has elected Marc- Emile Ruchet President, to succeed Rob- ert Comtesse of the Swiss Confedera tion for 1911, and Louis Forrer Vice. President, in euccession to Ruchet, of what it is comnpceed, CONTAIN NARCOTICS, tf of Chas, H, Fletcher. were driving out scores of tenants of | Don’t Poison Baby. ORTY YEARS AGO almost every mother thought her child must have sleep, W DROPS TOO MAN | FROM WHICH THERE IS NO WAKING, Many are the children who cise half) have been killed or whose health has been ruined for life by paregoric, iauda- num and morphine, each of which is a narcotic product of opium, Druggists from selling either of tl.e narcotics named to children at all, or to anybody without labelling them ‘ poison.” is: A medicine which relieves pain and produces sleep, but whtch in poison. hn @us doses produces stupor, coma, convulsions ana death,” smell of medicines containing opium are disguised, of ** Drops,” ** Cordials,” ‘‘ Soothing Syrups,” ete, | medicine to be given to your children withouy CASTORIA DOES NO! it bears the signature Genuine Castoria always hears the signature of WOMAN STREXEN UST AS PALMS | ~SEESGOODLUCK | |Mrs. Guinan Falls Dying When | Told Wealth and Happi- ness Would Be Hers. HAD BEEN DOWNCAST. Recent Operation Given in Hospital as Cause of Her Death. | Mme. Stanley, or, as the big varl- colored sign on her palm-reading estab- lishment at No, 1013 Gates avenue, Brooklyn, calls her, “Queen Vanchi, the Gypsy Wonder," declared to-day that just before Mrs. Clara Guinam of No. 6% Union place, Union Course, L. 1, was mortally atricken last night she (the palmist) had been telling her that she would recover her health, enjoy a Merry Christmas and be relieved of her financial troubles. Mrs. Guinan died in the Bushwick Hos- pital a few hours after she was stricken, At first it was thought she had been poisoned, but when her husband, John Guinan, explained to the doctors to-day that she had been operated on for | blood clot on the brain her death was | set down to that cause. “I had never seen the woman befor said Mme. Stanley to-day. “She asked for a reading and told me her husband Was out of work and that she was in bad health. I undertook to cheer her up by telling her that her illness would disappear and that she would enjoy @ merry Christmas and be relieved finan- jally, when suddenly she toppled over. She had given me her address, and af- ter I got an ambulance I telephoned t her husband. He was with her when she died | Coroner's Physician Wuest will per- | form the an autopsy to-day to deter- mine the cause of death. Mrs. Guinan was forty-four years old. fetches Renal NEWARK FACTORY BURNS. Bat stroyed—Los Four-Story ng Swiftly De- In 840,000, (Special to The Evening World.) NEWARK, N. J., Dec. 16.—Fanned by {a forty mile an hour gale, flages swept | a big four-story brick factory building at No. 22 Prospect street early to-day | causing a loss of about $40,000, ‘The blaze started about 1.45 A. M. on {the second floor and in twenty minutes the entire building was doomed. | Wrecked Three | alarme were sent in and even with the| | exation that the Academy of Mustc had SLAVE TO DRUGS BES CURT FOR LONG PSO TERM by Drink and Mor- phine, “Clark” Appeals for Last Chance of Cure. A ragged, trembling wretch w are raigned in the Court of Special Ses sions to-day as George F. Clark, no ad- dréss, on a charge of petty larceny, He admitted he was guilty passing a forged check for $11.50 ¢ aries K. | Jenks, a Ninth avenue grocer, and then turning (o the three justices, he said in the language of an educated man our Honors, T ask to be punished to the full extent of the law. Please | give me at least a year I no longer | deserve to five among decent n and perhaps the confinement may cure me of the habits that have put me where T am. “My name {« not Clark, My father | WAS a respected merchant of this city. | I went to coll and [ inherited some property, Six years ago [ was married happily married, [th ait Whiskey ruined me, Three years ago my wife had to leave me, takgge our child, and I have never f them since, rying to rt alcohol, Now I am a slave to b J have been living on the Bowery, a} homeless, rum-soaked tramp, I want to | &o to Jail-it's my last h earth, residing Justice Ryan committ to the Tombs until after Christmas, saying he would try to find a State in- stitution where "Clark might be| treated. | asics BROOKLYN ACADEMY WANTS | SUBWAY TO MOVE AGAIN. | Delegation Asks Service Board to} Please Let Them Keep | Their Boilers. | A delegation hy by ex-Mayor| Charles A. Schieren of Brooklyn call upon the Pub rvice Commission to- day to protest against the building of the Fourth avenue portion of the Tri-| borough subway tn the centre of Ash- land place, Brooklyn, The callers resented the Academy of Music, whi they said would be “ruined” if the un.) derground tube was not shifted twenty | feet further to the west under private) property which the elty would have to/| purchase for that purpose. | They explaine to the commission | that the Academy of Music is now oc-| cupying some of the sp: under Ash- land place with its botler plant, and| that they desired that the commission | change the route of the subway #0 that | they would not have to move the boii ers. Commissioner MeCarroll told the del- force that these cails summoned, tis firemen had diMfculty in fighting the | flames. Defective electric wiring is said | to have started the fire ‘The two upper floors of the building were occupled by I, Meisselback, novelty manufacturer; the third floor by Lebkuecher & Co, silversmiths, and | the ground floor by J. 8. Mundy, | owner of the building, who ran 4 ma- | chine shop. , The butlding had a f-ontage of 7% tect | on Prospect street-and extended back 200 feet. | ees | BIG ELK STATUE MUTILATED. Vand Again ry ie Figure in On Part of Bro: Paterson Cemetery, | time In eighteen have damaged the solid bronze four-ton elk figure whica surmounts the granite shaft marking the plot of the Elks in Laurel Grove Cemetery, Paterson, J. J. ‘The tigure was pulled down and much of it carried away the first time. On | thelr latest visit the vandais contentea themselves with taking the antlers and the ears. It ts belleved that Paterson junk dealers are behind the mutilation, Cecelia For the second months vandals | Brockway's Son His Heir, Ry the will of Horace M. Hrockw | fled with the Surrogate to-day, hi | jorace M. Brockway jr., will receive | \t » bulk of his estate, There 1s only | | one other benefictary—Julla M, Bri widow of Charles Brockway, an-| Jocher son—who will receive $20,000 in | ish, ‘The testator, who died at the Park Avenue Hotel Dec. 5, was one of | the best known hotel men In this ctty | The Income of the estate will go t ung Brockway until he is thirty-nine years old, when he will have the prin clpal. duro: Dagober andle ¢ as a juro: the trial of } Way arraigne: fore Ju in the Crim-| nal Branch of th Court to-| day and released custody une us was ever ar would get to witch he plea jake it sleep, These drugs will produco will produce the SLEEP The definition of ‘* narcotic” The taste and and sold under the names You should not permit any 750 or your physician know | Jury Finds He D no legal rights in the street at all, and suggested thal the bollers be moved. The commission has already changed the subway route once, giving the Academy of Music ten feet leeway, Its! members are adverse route again pS BANG A MODEL DOG. to moving the Not Bite Little Sophie Kahn, | Bang has been vindicated. A Jury efore Justice O'Dwyer in the City ‘ourt to-day ound that he had not bitten Sophie Kahn, twelve, of No. 456 Kast One Hundred and Thirty-fifth et, on the cheek. Sophie's father | anted Bang's owner, Hir, L. Phelps, 4 wealthy real estate owner of tne! Bronx, to pay him $240. Mr. Phetys | thought the charge a deliberate slande against Bang, and so he court to ref brought Bany | the accusation Talk No 3. Prices tell their | own story wher backed by such a guarar tee as this: | If you can duplicato th eles for th retail price qu ly refund on R Retail price 830. : $1 SABLE OF BLACK FRENCH CONES AEs, th 4 POINTED FOX sir, ft and Nevky price && IMITAT! C0, Fox, 50 inc Retail price BENIOF! Manufacturing burrtere, 42 West 15th St., vow York Betwe Avenui $85. 4 band Oy The Busy Canily Corner, ChniSiMaS SPECIALS. Mixed Candies, ie per Ib. 1,00, jorted Chocolates, i9c per Ib te, of man Nove que and new designe. 210 Sixth Ave., Cor. 14th St. 366 Sixth Ave., Near 23d St. Open Evenings, ten at newapap é = . Winter coats with a gifty air — sure to delight any woman of any age, and the biggest bargains it has ever been our pleasure to offer you. Imitation Persian Lamb “i ” | of tvcoums and wrote ratirioal pollipoal EL! PERKINS” DEAD. | Sfivicn'or trany'neneparers: espeelein arg er aad Tegardin the tariff, in which h pe nd Comes for N Hamortet at! fieved. ite Was a graduate of Union Age ot seventy. Co He published several dooky nd Ma }am 1em “Fil Perkins at Large” and “EM Perkina’ te dend at his home at| “Wit and Humor of the Age.” No. 544 Palisade avenue, Yonkers, The ie know three «¢ test lars tn humorist, whose fight name was Mel. | the world,” jarnin Butler afte ville Delancey Landon—his nom de listening to a quid plume was picked for him by Artemus ike re xwain is one and wy Ward—had been ill for six years with | He Ober two locomotor ataxia. He had” not been | WOMAN A SUICIDE BY GAS conscious for a week. Hits wife and U GA bg daughter were with him. Ile wil be Wife of Real Estate Man Ends Hee buried on Monday at Woodlawn Ceme- tery, | Life tn His Absence, Mr. Landon was seventy years old He Was an obscure paragrapher in| The sulcide by gas of Mra. Jacob 1877, when Josh Billings, as a reward | Deerwakl of 9M Weat Ninety-ninth for havin alled disastrously in a lect. *tt was Giscovered when her colored uring tour in the Berkshires under | mai! arrived for work early to-day Landon'’s management, gave Landon an M Deorwald's husband is a retired nterview, which, published in a New| real estate dealer; he ts in Philadelphia York newspaper, br ‘ht fame and po on pusiness tri Mrs. wall had Hlarity, THe went around the world | connected a tube with the gas fixture sending bur ea to the and after putting It In her mouth had a drawn the bi thing over her head, Xmas Coat Bargains Regularly $15 & $18 Values Now 7? Tomorrow, Saturday, Dec. 17th ° Collars and Cuffs Many luxuriously warm models to defy biting gales—"' styles that arc different’ and qualities that are su- perb, With a real Xmas leade among them—an elegant black ker- sey, beautifully li ed throughout, and fashioned with big shawl co la; and turn back cuffs of imitation Per- sian lamb—further ornamented with silk frog fasterings—-Aso man Swagger mixtures and attractive cheviots for your delectation. Alterations FREE SALE AT ALL THRE: STORES 4-16 West 4th Street—New York 400 & 462 Fulton Street —Brooklyn 645-651 Broad Strect—-Newark, N. J. What Nicer Gift than This? —to Always Have Money Handy! Bills Slip In or Easily —Without Fumbling! Give him a Handy Bill Fold for Christmas—and get one for yourself. The nicest thing you ever saw —and the HANDIEST So Thin, So Light, SoHANDY POSSIBLE way to carry your bills, BILL FOLD Mei, who used to carry their bills in a clumsy wallet—others who” tucked their bills in a small cardease and men who simply cartied a loose "roll"——are now using the Flandy Bill Fold They all say there is nothing so simple, so HANDY! Bills go in or out in a second~no trouble, no fussing, no fumbling. are ver 1 ca sel Ha il Folds—-ALL the big Kept. Stores aod tie Leading Stationers and Leather Goods Dealers jencrivtive Leaflet to cr Union GIFT OUTFITS 00000 Passe Partout Outrits TO AID IN PHOTO MOUNTING Seatine Wax Outrits For ) WELL PURNISHED DEST FvLower OutrFits r 1K MAKING OF DECORATIONS Wiacwam Outrits FOK BOYS ENTERTAINMENT Dott House Outrits FOR GIKLS' ENTERTAINMENT Derwioow Mla Caching Sa NEW YORK 15 JOHN ST. 15 W. 27TH ST Out — Quickly — | ‘Best Values at the Lowest Prices 3d Ave. and 12Ist St. Special Saturday Women’s Pony Coats $12.98 An extra special holiday offer of women's regular $19.98 Pony Caracul Coats, like picture; mag nificently marked. ‘anteed Ve netian lining; regularself facing; newest shawl collar; double cuffs; sizes 14 to 4 omen’s weaters, of zephyr wool in white, oxford or red; double breasted, shawl ollar, double cuffs pockets; sizes 36 to 44; @ ipl $3.58. $1.98 fomen’s Skirts of embroidered broadeloth or panama, in black, na xt brown: plain tailored; embroid- ored or teffeta silk trimming; extra, egular and misses’ sizes; g. $3.98, 1.90 Women’s Shoes, dull calf ‘and iit. leather, cloth or kid eps; sizes 2! to 8: special $1.48 Men's Bath Robes, heavy im- tted blanket robes, silk $2.98 irdieg, all sizes; special... Jersey Coats, black, Men’s all wool; all sizes; ecial ‘ 2.98 Women’s Umbrellas, pice ed taffeta, variety of fancy ‘ondles: special fs 89e Marabou Boas, 4x5 ancy Pin ushions, hand embroidered centre and 4 tufted baby ribbon corners; value ARe ie Postal Card Albums, nicely ornamented cover; will hold 400 ostals; val. 49c 29e Zable Sets, fine quality German linen, pure white; hemstitched; size 64x84 ins march: wal. $6.08. $548 Boys’ Shoes 98c Satin calf and vici kid; blucher or bal.; sizes & to 214, No C. O. L mail orders. OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL XMAS VIsIT JHE FAMous QRIENTAL BAZAAR For Unusual Holiday Gitts A thousand things that you will like at prices that you can afford, each one an appropriate Holiday Gift. Come and see the: wonderfui and Japanese things whether you purchase or not. We have made selec- tion a pleasure. Send for list of Gift Suge gestions. Open Bvening® Until Christmas, SING FAT Co. | 4425-1127 ROADWAY 25TH STKEET Our Only Slore in New York OTHER STORES; |] San Francisco and Los Angeles, Cal, 7 7) Hw (Special features Next Sunday’s Worle ist’ No extraordinary dieplay of “Wiatep 2d «. emeots, wily wil sip) much valuable” Iaformadion out trite by boat into lands where summer sephyry blow and roses bloom end about hotels Uhat cater (0 the wants of Winter Tourtats,

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