The evening world. Newspaper, December 27, 1910, Page 11

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rc ‘ FRAUDS REVEALED BY PROBING INTO STATE'S ASYLUMS, Report to Be Sent to Legis- lature Shows Public i Officials Involved. Was recelved in a wireless messago t Wun Sauited iesanttied: t0' Oa eros from the steamer Tees off Cape Scott. % has Gratted 6 petition to be oF Wreckage began coming ashore two} Pullmans Now and Want | sented to Manager Dean of the con # ago, pany. | ‘The St. Dents ts long overdue in Los 5 “That we may not have to be | Angeles from Victoria, and the sight- $45 a Month. Pendent wholly upot the the jing of a large mass of wreckage far Ite for a living ft out at sea Sy the steamer Aymerle last families,” the pet INSANE ARE CHEATED, Evidence Obtained to Be Sub- mitted to Grand Juries J for Action. A special report will be submitted to the Legislature next week by the State Commission in Lun: as a result of the investigation during the last two months into the financial and industrial man-, agement of the thirteen State institu tions for the insane, ‘The report will embody certain recom: mendations calling for a change in the Methods employed in handling the ac« counts of the various institutions, mission by New York, wlio hay countants working on ¢ Anstitutions throughout the closes amazing fraud and of funds, of It 1s sald th: oMcials are involved, dealers who have contracts to 8 the State institutions wi ith supplies, « To Go to the wand Jury, ‘Where the report warrants it the evie dence will be turned over to the grand Juries of » counties in which the ale ities have occurred, It is rtain instances the results to the attene | nd action usly with the elved by e Audit Comes 1 ased at prices which should have afforded the unto e inmates the best the 9,00 pationts pockets w of the 4 "t Discuss Report. ‘will be thetts of revealed at lon Ward's nued tem of accounting will be which, it is claimed, will make frauds impossible. Meanwhile the 5,00 attend- ants and officials await the report of the Commission in Lamacy with much | anxiety, pote DECIDE AGAINST STRIKE. Longshoremen Change Minds After Plea by Leader Butler, More than 1,000 lon ployed on the river fro Barrow and Washingt night, eager to vote ing he said, “take my your unable But was ¢ , all ctl ales We pay freight and RR, fare. ALL GOODS MARKED PIVIS IN PLAIN FIGURES. a ~Malled Free, A. GRAND RAPIDS q % FURNITURE A HOME COMPLETELY $123 FURNISHED AT Our Liberal CreditTerms $50 worth, $i. OO weekly $ $1.50 $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 ** $3.50 * Js in Pronort i its In Pronors +} Rite . telandte “ 7 West coast of Vancouver Island. News of the finding of the wreckage week led to the belief that the coaster . fad gone down officers and men were lost. por aS | who inaugurated the movement a féw| THE EVENING WORLD, eeaee ey, DECEMBER 27, | STEAMER ST. DENIS LOST a preh OFF VANCOUVER ISLAND. ALL OFF sity, actor Twenty-five Persons Were Aboard ’ hg! a t anined rarer sa and It Is Feared That They Weed IAD cae ach re’ evo ivonee Have Perished. [aa Wan Aalbay Hie @inine, What: VICTORIA, B, C., Dec. 27.—Feara that Ja Mihai AR FEAF da ek the 40-ton steamer St. Denis was lost “aa (PR ak Mt nlad AE Sad an | were confirmed to-day by the news of More than half the women never ti the finding of wreckage marked "8. S. Dee one oo wean wut riee ler St. Dents” in Cape Scott on the north: three thousand miles give a dir ain't wh. or pe t ody ‘nial |Get Only 83 Cents a Day on} | CHICAGO, Doc, 27.—Some 3,000 Pull man porters assert that tips are be- coming #0 scarce that their incomes have suffered, and therefore they de-| mand an ine! of $10 a month from | the Pullman . They want $45 'to $50 a month, Instead of 83 cents a day, which the « y has paid the for forty yea that the salary of e talsed to $45 per mont It is feared all of the twenty-five porters of five years or more se Baum, a well known cotton broker, ago for a monunent to the committed suicide at terday, porters should wages are | senge: rs, and that Store Opens at 8:30 A. M. and Closes at,6 P. M. Very Special and Seasonable Sale of Fine Furs Collected Mainly Within the Last Four Weeks In Expectation of An After-Christmas Sale Upwards of $130,000 Worth of Furs Made Especially for Private Furriers’ Shops The changes in the management of our sales floors. and fur making shops have given us a very active season and made an outlet for large quantities of Furs— in addition to our own large importations, selected personally by a long experienced expert. © During the past month we have kept our hand on a number of small lots of handsome Furs of excellent quality which we were ready to take in at a reduced price. © All who have bought Furs from us this season know how fine the ane are that we sold them; and how low they were in price by comparison with the usual market quotations. They know, tdo, that we do not deal in fakes or in any of c the cheaply made substitutes of the genuine article. All the furs we sell are sold upon their proper names, and the prices are fixed not so much by their real value which may be considered high, but are based on a moderate profit on the price we pay. { Here, for example, are fifty fine quality and finely lined Pony Coats of equal quality to such as were sold fairly at $100 a few weeks ago. © We could easily sell every one of them in a single day for $80, But We Prefer to Let Them Be Taken at $50 and this in spite of the now apparent fact that skins will be higher next year. ™ Many Furs that we have sold this season we cannot duplicate next sea- son except at advanced prices. " We have a few seal skin coats that are very desirable at prices marked $400 instead of $800. " Details are given in tonight’s Evening Mail, Telegram, Evening Post and Brooklyn Standard Union. Second floor, Old Building. Wee Folks’ Hats and Coats Carried Out on End-of-Season Price-Winds Hats Now 50c to $9, instead of $1 to $18; Coats, $3.75 to $45, instead of $5 to $90, in This Semi-Annual Clearance In pursuit of our regular custom of lessening prices just after Christmas, we offer tomorrow, children’s hats and coats, both imported and domestic, mostly at one-half their former selling price. This means that a LITTLE FELT HAT for boy or girl that was previously $1 will now be 50c. Or that a lovely French hat of white silk, hand embroidered, and with a white plume, which was formerly $18 is now $9. Size 6 years old. Also that a number of school hats for the elder sister will now be $1.50 instead of $5. COATS offer a wide range of similar opportunities. Starting at $3.75 for chin- illas and broadcloths, they go to $45 for in imported white silk coat in two-year size, which is exactly half its former price. In both hats and bonnets there will be found MANY ONE-OF-A-KIND STYLES. And, though all sizes, from babyhood to 6 years, are represented in the group, there are nocomplete lines in any one kind. Third floor, Old Building. JOHN WANAMAKER Formerly A. T. Stewart & Co., Broadway, Fourth avenue, Eighth to Tenth street. the | ’ullman pas: | 1} 1] | m. i: nember, urged by a amem-|tandant upon advanced age, SR) Walt tlon caused by j eighty-five years old, * hich W ey panying them ove her; |} i 18 glances of we're b " he oviseds walt for a cold to wear off, Tb w wale away the lings instead. Father | an r 1 ready to vo that if t ad known Medicine cures, or the money is That Im aind I'm aroused fr fee (ee sent Shey tro ed. Free from opium or nerve. dreams ing drugs upon whieh many. | turkeys ixin’s,"" plum The Christmas festivities o members of the Alimony ¢ en the body and all | good things get aqleeper hold. ; > twenty | clears to ' now in| Prestded an f all d ow her John's Medl- seclusion in Ludlow Street Jatl, took | wy! » others. Cures place yesterday as arranged, It was a| yy colds, brone asthma and all throat great success, with only one susplclon| en rnd lang troubles, A food medicine of a jarring note. This was when a! ente t-| and body bullder. | preceding. There are no shirts, no collars TOO GOOD for this Sale—providing the quanti’ | woven madras- aaeheape And Closes at6P.M. | Store Opens at 8.30 iY we We Can Afford to Be Merry For Tomorrow Is the Annual Sale of Men’s Wear ae a Men’s Shirts, Pajamas, Collars and Nightshirts In Our Once-a-Year Offering | f We have served New York men too long not to know well their keen judgment This year we have held to a standard of quality a step higher than that of the =h is large and price is low enough. The qualities this year are the highest in the history of this event—the pric have not gone upward. The items: values and styles in personal furnishings. 9,000 Men’s Shirts at $1.35 That Would Grace Our $1.75, $2 and $2.50 Shirt Cases and some of which are of even higher grade, valued up to $4 each. Pleated and neglige shirts of fine imported and of highest character in pattern, in making and in every way. Some of the material ws imported for our own custom shirt bureau. Coat style, cuffs attached. Sizes 14 to 17, in the various length. $1.35. 1,200 Suits of Men’s Pajamas at $1.65, Made of Ends of Materials of $2 ‘and $2.50 Quality High-class imported madras and mercerized cotton, made up over our own roomy but shapely patterns. Patterns excellent-—both light and dark. Silk loops, buttons and general finish are of high order. In small, medium and large sizes. $1.65 a suit. Main floor, New Building. Only 1,200 Men’s Nightshirts at 50c— All We Could Get of this Quality Of white muslin that is Very much better than is usual in 50c nightshirts— muslin that will’ wash and wear very well, Cut on wide, roomy patterns and full length; with surplice neck or with collar-—600 of each kind. Both styles with neat fast-colored trimming. Sizes,15 to 19. 50c each. Main floor, New Building. { Fine White Dress Shirts at, $1.25—Fiftee: Hundred of these Made on a $2 Model Made months ago when our best white shirt maker was hungry orders at almost any price. Bodies are of medium-weight, high- -count Ii Bosoms and cuffs (attached) are of pure linen. Laundry work is perfect.+ Bosoms are graduated in width according to neck size—for fit is all impor-! tant in the dress shirt. All coat style, with buttonholes. Sizes 14 to 1714.1 $1.25. Main floor, New Building.. 1,350 Suits of Men’s Pajamas at $1, that Equal the Usual $1.50 Pajamas Self-figured madras in white, blue, tan, lavender and gray—the popular, Surplice neck, fnished with loops and buttons, Small, medium! H Basement, Old Buitding. $1. Main floor, New Building, 3,400 Dozen Men’s One-side Linen Collars, $1.15 Dozen That Are Better Than Any Widely Advertised $1.50 Collars That We Have Seen This is a windfall. Here is a man making splendid colls who thinks this is a good known and at the same time giving 1 a practical dem tion of the qualit new. Every one has a linen outer-surface. (Most $1.50 collars are ail cotton Every one is made of fully shrunken materi insuring perfect fit and appearance; and turned by hand in the laundry, giving a round, smooth edge that will not chafe the n or cut the sce ? These styles: five lock front; two wing; two standing; and several turn-down styles, We selected the styles—if they are npt right, it’s our fault. Quarter sizes, 14 to 18 inclusive. These collars will be sold only in lots of a dozen each, shades. and large sizes. y of making his trade-mark bet y for which it stands, Every one of these collars all of one size and style~ at $1.15 the dozen, Basement, Old Building! ’ . a . 9 3,600 Men’s Shirts at 70c—Without the Maker’s Label If we had insisted upon his label, you would have paid $1 and $1.50 for these shirts —and gone away satisfied. Hand-i (meaning better fit) shirts of percale and printed madras, in neat stripes (some plain white and self-figured); coat style, with cul attached and pleated and plain bosoms. Sizes 14 to 17!) Various sleeve lengths. 70c. Basement, Old Buildings Men’s Pajamas at 85c---100 Dozen Everything new, fresh, clean and perfect. Selling ‘ ba starts tomorrow morning and. continues as long as an Each of Domet Flannel and Percale of the merchandise is here. First day choosing wil Alle Dollar quality, cesily over Wanamaker erns, meaning naturally be best. Selection wiil be made as easy as comfort. The flannel is especiall © ice. The percale is white, seth ia shetn ip pa with neat stripes and figures in fast color 1, medium and large sizes, possible by division by sizes and by ample force of B5c Basement, Old Building. salespeople. JOHN WON A MA Ea Formerly A, T. Etewert § & Co., , Broadway, Fourth avenue, Eighth to Tenth street. = z= i cee)

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