The evening world. Newspaper, March 27, 1911, Page 2

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ing the day in his office. He was not a bit slow at king’ the public into his confidence, and he said: “| have been over the ground carefully and can tell you in advance what these witnesses will develop, because I have talked with every one of them in detail. I have examined the situation at the building, and my purpose now is to get in the sworn record the th to me on the ground, and the gs | have seen for myself. “The fire started, without any question, from a cigar- ette or a match thrown into a pile of lawn clippings—light cotton stuff—on the Greene street side of the building. There was no gasolene about the place, so far as | can learn. The power for the machinery was furnished by electric motors, “The tire started at 4.40 o'clock, Samuel Bernstein and a boy got the hose and tried to fight it for a minute and a half. “The alarm was not turned in for five minutes, the register showing that it came at 4.45 “While Bernstein was fighting the fire, Brown was trying to get the girls in line to march to the fire escape and to the elevator doors, But the poor things, in most cases, understood only Yiddish and did not know what Brown meant when he was talking to them. The confusion arising from difference in language was something tense and terrible, GIRLS WORKED BACK .TO BACK. “The girls were at sowing machines wo close together that their backs were almost touching. The stools uvon which they sat had to be mi in orfer to get them into line. the girls were seized with panic they fell in h stools, and the whole screaming, struggling mass remained for minute im that tangled condition. ‘At | “There was 15,000 square feet of space on the floor where these 700 | girls worked. “Ef they had been marched to the flimsy fire-escape it would have taken three hours for them to have come to et. Imagine « theatre i this town that seats 700 that 1 would take three hours to empty. ag same condition that was found in this factory will be found fin all of the other loft buildings in this city that are rented for fac- tories. The renting of such buildings for factory purposes should be made « criminal offense. A loft is built, it complies with the law, and then it is rented for factory purposes, and « herd of workers ts sent to work in it, just as was the oase in the Washington Square fire. “Under the charter as it stood the department could have formed al bureau for the prevention of loss of Iife. Steps were taken several years ago to do this, and owners of buildings were ordered to put on iron shutters for the protection of the workers. The owners took the case to the courts, and the Court of Appeals knocked out all of that part of the charter under which the department sought to compel the badly needed protection of buildings and employees.” ‘The official investigation attracted a Iarge crowd to Fire Headquarters, | and the witnesses were given plenty of room to put in the record the things apon which the Marshal based his official conclusion, ELEVATOR BOYS SPECIALLY CALLED. Isaac Stern of No. 49 East Eighty-elghth street was the first witness. He said the building in which the fire took its death toll was owned from the time of its construction, in 1900, by Joseph Asch of South Norwalk, Cogn., and that he was the resident superintendent of the building. “I do not know that any ‘violations’—a term used to Include all complaints of failure to obey bullding and fire laws—had ever been filed against the building. I was up in Broadway when the fire started. When I got home some one telephoned to me that the building was on fire. I have never seen the lease of the Triangle Waist Company and do not know of whom the company consists.” Stern had promised to have the four elevator boys at the building on hand for the investigation. They did not appear and the Marshal was bent upon getting them. “John Casey, the engineer,” boys.” The Marshal called Casey, who sald that he was in the basement washing up to go home when the fire started, He gave the names of the elevator met said Stern, “knows the names of the elevator ‘ At a quarter to 5 the bell rang for | York University t ty as Michael C! ‘0, 28 Leroy street; John Gasper, No, 35 Bedford street; | power off. Almost ins:antly there as} “What Ase acuipeaat ine you have?" Joseph Zitto, No, 120 Macdouvgal street, and Frank Formentk, No, 447 8! y of fire, 1 Was washing my hand%| “We had palis, the Holmes alarm, Ann's avenue, Bronx 1 t i, around, I saw the girl ba Jautomatio ata and bucket, “You go right away and have those boys sent here," commanded thc yl i Abeer ai ph eerigi eng Eps roo Fae automatic sprinklers?" je was ablaze 0; I did not know. about them Marshal. : i ¥ b ae throwing eta a would have put In. any apparatus Casey said that he went up two floors and then ran back to the street over to help. Ps ait t would have prevented fire if we by which time the firemen were there and the glils were jumping from the Hocan't put out. had known of it.” windows. | : “Did you have a fire drill? > “ LpRED \ ; Be Noj It was never proposed to ua, and GIRL REPORTED A “LITTLE FIRE ‘ i et this out Answay, What good would a fire drill be Casey gave way w Sa Bernstela of No, 103 West Fortyseventh| wissw tong were they fighting the! Palle? What ought to be done street, who said r of the eigith and ninth floors and had to have’ a freman posted tn every | charge of al! the ew . Tria ‘pany orcuy eemed t who knew all Spares 4 : : | “whate vandling fires, and let the mer upper floors of the building | I ee dd mae pay for h They would be “The eighth floor,” he said, “is used as the cutting room and they also : Rid ae #0, Now nobody knows what to do. make lace goods there. There were between 210 and 220 persons employed 1 found thath blocking thelawaye “tke © Stampede: to. get on the floor.” “Did any of those on the clghth floor lose thelr Ive: he was asked “Only one girl from the eighth floor lost her ife,” he sald. “1 identified a the “took 15 toward me) war ause of the fi h t " rf yee it woul ws be an exceller 4 he no gt on the west sid e eighth o e an excellent thing, oor when the fire started taliing to Miss Dinah Lipschutz, an employee, re. head of these stairs T t th 4 old on Stan 7? ; lated to one of the proprietors. Fva Harris camo over to us and sald: ‘There | reason #0 many elcls dled] pa you 8 ane as ° th, |GREAT FUNERAL 4 you have any relatives among! py ; TURES 1s @ little fire over there among the cuttings and the boys are trying to unable € be- | thors Danae y mong) KOR UNIDENTIFIED put ft out. ow stairs | "My w broth his ute; al BY THEIR UNION. “This was on the Greene street side, where the cutting tables were.” | ray Jeousin of » was Killed; @ cousin “Had ng for the dismigsal of the employees?” he was stamsent eee ech | ter was killed, and a} ‘Phere will be a great combined funeral asked ‘ Katie ee jer's wife was take: sday for the unidentified dead of be 1 bad been r nie f the ont were putting on my fel a nae eed per disaster be under the man- their o A j gaged Vi that thie ta if matey “What did you do then? ‘ On the sixth | oe Dany 1 unte +] yan to the p' nd np box ofl fo pti} : ek Ww th insurance « 4, No, 1 cuttings, and some of the pleces ting tables were also on fire We k do e te iia eee Rar Mase “How often that box cleaned dut?” foo Wa clagct Sind Isaac Har . side parks fo: “About a wee The ¢ man, Frank, and a boy each brought rb saw sige door open at al. Ti a me e bucket of wa 1 J threw them on the fire amare \ fa tons (one porta! & to-mor i Wa t t nh wery ' y : be bap Hol a ae As “T think th i, tried to get the he lo bia F dawn i garding tte funeral requests all not think that they 9 ! | " : ' . A operators in all the ga work rs i! | at vera ade » their machines for five JAMMED AGAINST THE DOORS t ° minutes at roof the funera “Were there any iron d the stalrways at the eight and ninth} sax ‘ A esa rack ‘ The union has also issued an id f only for funds to bury the dead and floors : : hrough the fire, ho made t med cods of es whose “There were none. There is an Iron era jn front of the freight |e!" Ue Hare ' | tempt, followed by a 'e aunpert , t The : elevator on the tenth J ‘ tanh Sonn He said he did 4 at money! be ad sed to the iellet; This statement was a direct contradiction ofall the previously pubs! na ee rvineas nine: years, |Teached the roof, Continuing, he teat: | Pung Committee @ union at No, lil ) ) ‘ oe Clinton Kish c formar the fi nstein sald Mr Bia told a dramatic story of] When T got to the roota s rdder 11 zen Hoveft o: “Realizing that I could 1 I cailed to the & 0 gO 10: AED Was found and we e caped to an ad union mate publi olay affidavits at by the stairways. They were in a pa Rr trying to make .... 4. ; ga ial n showing that one man, Herman Berliit, t 1 r F bes Meda a d that 75 ¢ cent. of the { No, 326 op a , ” get in line and go o' owded against the stairway jjttie girls were y me, and we were! employe: fs mi cea Lede syrtorined prota and it took a minute for r ) ae to take ces ; re smun bro ° n a | aye He He ped Girls, 2 Monroe street probably saved the Bernstein doscrib he arrang the eighth floor room. He eald ag for the ! SHK of No. SW nd aver | lives of a hundred girl | tained eight lines of machines, with eighteen machines in each line dg who is not employed in the Tri-| He dropped fom fire-escape to fires | Rink ella 6 » floc 6 added, tianazed to aét but: exce *§ sample room to # ngle was w Mr, Harris escape from tae ninth floor to the| u he girls on the fl he added, managed to get out, except Pauline Aispute over a pece of Ince, a HU Ai Herida ancane: Anh tae, SIN Anan te the ho was kille who wa fied by the witness on the! r od to the shipping room, where Jing Hke an ex- Same sort of a pan'c that caused those e hospital. Bernstein ran to the ninth floor through the smoke 1 heard of the fire |p r opening the win. hove them to, Jump. ed in| 7 Just then the ator man opened the window which .sey too | 1 more than forty girls to the roof, he asserted sua te Avan Sbt88) t to th r ne Raviken eh 'eaek Beawae aw Mr. Blanck and his two childre e sald, “and helped them up.! tine 4 the car, 7 { [heh '@ the roof, through smoke and through the smoke, he drove nearly a ing the gitle to the roof. To \ girls H a |flame, On the roof he met Harris again hundred girls out to the fire-escape, ‘. u aD be TF « ler We passed Up grabbed then ted them ‘and both went toan adjoining room and aided by young Gelbrock and guided re tha persons. 1 went to the roof and a ladder was passed over! telling them Duld wait for tho! helped operators to safety them into a loft on @ lower Ber- me from the roof ue New York University Build T escaped by that other car 4 As sure T could’) When questioned by the Marshal re-|lin's hands and arma were {rightfully der. . » them - nto the) garding an explo: » he said iadder tt D were” panies | Carciog $n explonion, he aaia it waa Apt hax decided to empioy coun “How many were killed on the tenth floor?” ‘ be eee : J “I do not think anybody except the 1 do not know.” assistant bookkeep “Is there avy rule agalnst smoking in your establishment?” oo cap greet 1 caters eee peti pete ere renerert cre gg ape \ sank BVENANG WUKLD, MUNDAY, MAKUH 321%, UNIDENTIFIED BODIES VIEWED BY 100,000 ee 1911, OSi’S TUESDAY DRESS SALE seventh atreet, Brooklyn, dookkeeper for the company, was in the office on the tenth Moor of the duliding, talking to his etenographer, Miss Alter. He heard the alarm and telephoned to Fire Head- quarters. Whoever answered the phone, he said, told him it was already being Fi ire Marshal at Public Inquiry Into Blaze That Cost 144 Lives gs that have been told! (Specially Phtographed for The Evening World.) “You have had other fires, have you not?” “Yes, one of the men and myself put out a little fire a short time ago.” “Did not these fires occur in the part of the fioor where the men were | at work?” : one of them was In the motor box, about three week: How long did you fight the fire before the efforts were topped?” | “About two minutes. |MEN SMOKED ALWAYS, SAYS MARSHAL, | Marshal Beers interjected “I can prove to you that !n almost every one of these loft shops the men continually smoke cigarettes as the stains will show in places | where they have left the cigarettes whilo working. Louis Tudor of No 14 Clinton street, sald that he was on the eighth floor and saw Bernstein throw two buckets of water on the fire and saw | Brown trying to get the girls 1p line. He went down the fire escape himself, Edward Markowitz, of No. 29 West One Hundred and Seventeenth | Street, shipping clerk, sald he was on the tenth floor when the fire started. Some one whispered to him that there was a fire on the eighth floor and he went to the ninth and found everybody in a panic, He had done his best to get the girlx to go to the fire escapes. Marshal Beers gald that the stairway mentioned in the testimony was only three feet wide and it was encased in three-Inch hollow tiling and had wooden doors, making it neither a fit method of egress nor a fireproof con- struction. | “Yes;I never saw anybody smoking in there.” Louls Brown of No. 88 Dawson street, Bronx, was the machinist In charge of the eighth floor, He was asked: “How AY people were on elghth floor ‘I don't know, but thore were 176 ma- chines on the etghth floor. On the ninth with smoke that we went through the smoke to the Washington place side. Eighty Saved by Roof Ladders. | “We made our way to the roof by the | stalrway on that side and found forty persons, mainly glris, on the roof ahead of us. Some one had placed a ladder the floor thes ere 286 machines,” bata ing acjoining from the Greene street htt side and we went up this ladder, with about thirty others, I should say that forty more went up a ladder that had been lowered from the roof of the Tell us about the fire.” “Can't Put tt Out,” Said Boss. door was saut th T pushed | “Did you have any ‘ans in Yiddish girls. {to say where the fire-e pes and exits | Max A. Levin of No, 163 Bast Sixty- + awh r the car to} : It did " ¢ HO CURE A COLD AN ONE DAY eh faite LANMLIVE “tnioap re out ae eso choked ¥ ooo _ {to ¢ _—— | car, and then he tet it down to the base- {solves itself in attended to, Smoke waa pouring into his office. After putting the books into the safe, he fan to a window, grabbing @ girl the was about to Jump. With the girl and his atenographer, he made for. the | root. Only one of the girls followed him. There he met two men, they got a ladder and mounted the adjointing root. Gays He Gaved Eighty. Joseph Zitto of No. 12 Macdougal street testified that he had been em- ployed at the factory @ix months and yperated the car on the Washington place aide. and that his car would holt ten sons at one time. The car next to hi he added, made trips until it lost its power, Casper Lontelia, who ran the other car, told why the power his car. It failed because men and women piled on {ts roof and jumped from the upper floors after he taken all the car would hold, added: "One man came down the rope, aiding from. the ninth floor, He dropped nto the cellar and stayed there four hours in er up to his neck be- fore he was rescued. A girl wrapped her iegs around the steel wire and alld | bottom. 8) nded on Zitto's ide) | ment and allowed her to crawl off, un- hurt, at the ground Moor. The freight elevator boys also told of | their trips, Then Joseph Aach of Saugatauk, Conn., testified that he owned the building; that it was constructed in 19M, cost $200,000, was ingured for the amount, and was built from the plans of Julius Frank, architect, of No, 26 Madison Square. Not Bullt for Factory. “T built the house for « loft building,” he said, “and I never know that it was being used as @ factory. It was not in- tended for that purpose. I considered the building fireproof.” “In the light of what happened Satur- @ay, do you now consider it @ fireproof butlding?” he was asked. “I cannot tell as to that.” “Do you think, in view of the dts- aster, that If fire-escapes had been pro- viled ¢he loss of life would tave been least" : “T cannot tei. I do not know whet a pante will do in a factory.” “Would you not put in such fire-es- capes as Chief Croker told you would be essential?” “I certainly would, and would have done it long ago if anybody had told me that the Chief wanted any addl- tional fire escapes. I have always been willing to accept any statement from Mr. Croker an to what was needed.” Following Mr. Asch's testimony the hearing adjourned, subject to call at any time. It 4# possible that a further hearing may be had late to- day. * When the witnesses left the room the Fire Marshal said to the newspaper re- portera present: “T.can show you 150 loft bulkiings far worse than this one. The question re- ite last anaiyais into this: @ must have a Bureau of Fire Prevention, from which we could send out the necessary legal notices to ha’ these things done forthwith—not in twenty-four hour, but at once, Chief Croker and I and Commissioner Waldo talked this thing over a year ago, Such u can be established only by act of the Vegisiature.” Fire Marshal Be | he would continue tis inqu: could have subpoe cutters who w in the building at tne time and for six or ven firemen who were on duty there The Frie Marshal ta seeking the man who smoked the clg- arette that started the blaze. He said this afternoon that he was salisted the testimony of to-day only ontirmed his original theory as to the 5 announced that y we-mor- as served at work of the fire yw if he for fifteen He said he made eight trips, | ve out on) | years, operator. single, of CTIMS OF FIRE HORROR WHO ARE IDENTIFIED TO-DAY lee of the “Unkn “Unknown” Les-| | sened as Reiatives Find Dead and Injured. Identifications of the dead and injured in the Aach Butiding fire additional to those listed elsewhere were made to- day as follows: BASSINO, ROSIE, thirty-c.. years old, of No, 97 West Houston street. Identified by her husband. RELLOTA, VINCENZA, aixteen . 25 Wash- ington street, 10v0ken, N. J., identified by her uncle, Ignaaio Ratzo of No, 6% Washington street, Hoboken; asphyxia. BRODSKY, IDA, fifteen years old, of No, 98 Kast One Hundred and Twenty- fecond street. Identified by. her sister Minnie. BROOKS, ADA, eighteen, examiner, No. 126 Graham avenue, Brooklyn; by | Isanc Muller of No. 378 Bast Fortieth street, brother-in-law. identified by cork goles in shoes. Incineration. LOEB, ROSEN, thirty-. _ .t years old, of No. %1 East Fifty-slxth street, iden- titled by his cousin, Mark Smallsky of No. 174 Attormy street. BRODSKY, SARAH, _ twenty-one years oid, of No, 205 East Ninety-ninth street. Identified by her fiance, Isidore Brolosky, of the same address, who was to have made her his bride to-day. Asphyxta and burns. FRIEDMAN, ROSE, eighteen yeart old, ot No 97 East Fourth Iden- titted by her pay envelope, containing w2. GRAMEATTASIO, IRENE, twenty- four, married, operator, No. 6 Bedford t; identified by husband, Attore: sister of Rose Bassino, also killed; in- cineration. HERMAN, MARY, forty, single, fin- isher, No. 611 Fifth street; identified by brother, Dr. M. Herman of No. 42 East Sixth street; incineration. MAILOIL, FRANCES, twenty-one years old, of No, 185 Sulilvan atreet. Identified by an envelope containing $92, with her name on It, MIDOLO, GATEAN, sixteen years 01d, of No. 8 Commerce street, identified by her brather, James Midolo. RAYNES, REBECCA, nineteen, No. 216 Madison st This identification, made by her younger sister Nettle, is not yet complete, as Nettie Raynes col- lapsed on seeing the body and was taken to @ hospital in a hystorical con- dition. ROSENTHAL, NETTIE, twenty-one years old, of No. 10+ Monroe street. Identified by her sister Saran. SABAFFOWITZ, SARAH, _ sixteen years old, of No, M2 Avenue B. tiled by ner father. SPUNT, GUSSLE, nineteen years old, of 323 East Wighth street, iden fled by her flan Joseph Beter of N 319 Kast Bighth street. STARR, AND » thirty-two, married, examiner, Ne. ‘East Ida Dubow, cousin, of No, 7: inth street. Incineration. STELLINO, JENNIE, sixteen, oper - tor, of No. 315 Bowery; by brother, Joseph Steliino, Multiple injuries, INJURED. GROSSMAN, PAL J operator, No. 9% Seventh skull and Ketlevue Hospital, LOPEZ, DAISY, twenty-four, operator, No. 11 Chariton stree'! body injured; serious. pital. ROSPN, ANNIE, twenty-three. oper- ator, No, 9 East Broadway; hysteria Bellevue Hospital. Iden- fifteen years, Street; internal injuries New York Hos- FREEDA, operator, Ni st Twelfth stre fractured leg and arm, general con- | tuslons; serious, New York Hospital. Others Reported Missing. Max Herse >, ported to ng of the blam on the proper persons and tn the prose- cutton, AML survivors are asked to re- tin per at t nion eudquar- 'y be taken| three years old, of No. 171 Broome who had bee ployed tn the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory only hal a day Saturdey, is missing, Mr, He schensohn stated that 1 learned t n volunteered to get the e Blan ¥ 1 trs a tain his pay envelope for th jay's Work. He las not been se among the bodies at th ld wore a gold ring with a large blue stone and moth eved one loring th ng ones Heady aid t “ee Police polico to Who work tory, nded South Pote RIS CHURCH Hunters, yasded Stew 1 ex ty of New turning from ti British Antaretic e R. F. Scott was lane Household Remedy Taken In the arene tor Years, Ralph Rust, Wills, Mich, writes: "Hood's Sarsaparilla has becu @ household remedy in our wome ws long as I can remember. 1 have taken it in the epring fur several years, It bias no | ani | Hood's Sarsaparilla is Peculiar to ts m0 “just as good," Get it towday 9 usual liguid cosa or tau There fractured lex, | ll “An ill wind that bloweth 2° MONTH Y FIRE DRI man good." AND HEY MA rg LAR These Smart New Dresses y * we de in the POST Whole- IN PROPOSED LAW. | sale Departirent for a large |house in California, but owing ALBAN March 27.—The Assembly Committee on Labor and industry, at a) t the Express Strike we could special meeting this afternoon, reported | not deliver them in time, and the Assemblyman Brooks's bill, requiring | order was cancelled. every factory or mercantile estavilsh- So the "ill wind’? compels an ment conducted In a bullding two and in order to make the sale A SENSATION- |AL SUCCESS every dress wil! be sold at the REGULAR WHOLESALE PRICE—$6.98. or] more stories i.tsh, In whieh tty or more | eMmediate «sale, persona are employed, to be equipped | with @ fire alarm system, It also pro.) | vides for a montily fir drill, The State Commissioner of Labor 1s given power to enforce the act, and a ie lo punishable by fine en day the factory ts not) | equipped with the fire apparatus and | | $800 for each week the fire drill is not | i‘ The bil! was introduced on February but no action was taken’ until to- When it Was unanimously reported @ result of Saturday's fire in New York City, —— HORROR STIRS OTHER CITIES TO ACTION CHICAGO, M. —Renewad ac- tivity of the Chicago Building Depart. ment follows to-day the fire horror in ew York Satu Building Commis- sioner Muntock Campbell put thirty ad- ditional Inspectors at work to-day with onde: ound up those whd disobeyed the orders of several months ago re- dating to fire escapes. “Chicago has put up more fire escapes since last Nov. 15 than New York has had in its history,” sald the Building Sommissioner to-day, “but there still jare bout 3,600 bulking owners who have failed to obey orders relating to | fire escapes, My men have been or- dered to serve final notice on these people, and they either will have es- capes ip in thirty days or their bulld+ ings will be closed. Reports from various cities in the West and South show action of a #im- far character for the safety of work —— WIFE SUES DR. J. L. HAWES. Namen 12, Co-respon: Moyer, Sued by Hi Years Ago, Mrs. Addie W. Hawes applied to Jus- tice Crane tn the Brooklyn Supreme Court to-day for $200 a month alimony and a counsel fee of $500 pending trial of her sult for absolute divorce trom | Dr. John Langdon Hawes, a dentist in a fashionable section of Madison ave- nue. Mrs, Hawes names a Mra, A. H Moyer, who lives at One Hundred and Thirty-third street and Broadway, co-respondent. The Hawes were married In 1901, but have been living apart for two years. Mrs. Hawes claims her husband's in- come reaches $5,000 a year. The Mrs. Moyer mentioned by Mrs. in all the fashion- able colors of the sei Heidelberg Waist, exquisitely trimmed with band embroidery—broad collar effect—stvlish short sleeves and wide cuffs, very daintily finished. Smart tailored styles that have not rey been copied by other tailors, be! marter, better and exhibits more Pe sre style points than any, $15.06 vane shown anywhere else in New fork: | peautiful Dress, which you can wear all Summer long, is available to- morrow at the lowest WHOLESALE Hawe id to be Mrs. Flora H Moyer, whose husband, Alfred Moyer, | PRICE.+++++++++.+++- 0-055 98 brought suit against her two years| Will you save ‘the difference between ago, naming as co-respondents a phy- siclan and an artist. Pll SO ROBIN AGAIN TESTIFIES, Grand Jary Also Hears L. L. Lewis, Cammina's Legal Ad The Grand Jury continued to-day Its investigation of the affairs of the Car- negie Trust Company. Joseph G. Robin was ago He was followed b Iviser to William J dicted promoter of the company himself_a_director. “FASHION vicTATES: i the 13 ar $6.98 and $15.00 ¢ JL. POST W. Cor. 14th Street a and Union Square a Stree * Fashion Dictates ” he use of London Plumes the most exclusive ctyles ui the ceason, See the models enexhibition in our new idea department. y Consisting of ited, Spring and Mot! Vatnr 820, | GRAND Ri IDSs FURNITURE Everything for nekeepl oo CREDIT TERMS $90 Werth $3 Down $100 Werth a Dogro $188 Weekly i 2 6§2) CM $223 bid $30“ ($275 1417-1423 THIRD AVE pdt SAV Eat 80"ST Onarc Furniture plGl East 125"s¢ ““EDDYS” JELLIES By them! ew ll Bet. 38&Lexington ies At Gracers’ and Delicatessen Stores e Bedding Carpets Rugs Furnishings Open Satard Ralston BREAKFAST FOOD Nutritious—easily digested N- TAR COLDS, youn GNIPPE | Removal Sale UND AND ) REWARDS. vy ddareh 2T," about °. hs iat Ade! John ty every prominent American 5 REWARD, | maker, which come to us in ex- MAS Np "a Gir | change, at exceedingly low prices, No a ROOM ott. $45, $65, $140, $175, $190 o=vae_|Wissner Warerooms 538-540 FULTON ST., BROOKLYN, New York, 96 5th Ave., cor. ISth Se,

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