The evening world. Newspaper, July 17, 1911, Page 2

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t ee NE / otty from June 20 and memoranda of the evidence secured vy them. POLICE COMMISSIONER MAKES REPORT TO MAYOR, Commissioner Waldo's report to the Mayor follows Hon, William J, Gaynor, Mayor, City of New York, In compliance with your letter of July 12.1 caused a thorougn teees- tigatign to be made of conditions affecting the delivery of ice in this elty This department has interviewed 420 independent Ice dealers, of which 22 complained against general ditions, and thirty-eight have agreed to submit sworn aMdavits, which will be forwarded to the Distriet- Attorney and to the Attorney-General of the State as soon as prepared. President Oler of the Knickerbocker n- Jee Company was interviewed per- f@onally. In response to a question as to what would be done in case of further hot weather he said: “Noth- ing we can do can improve the situa- tion,” and then remarked, “God help the publi Oler alleges that they have not taken advantage of ‘the present sit: uation to raise thelr price, Investi- gators from this Department state, how ver, that about July 1 t price of ice Was raised by the Knicker- bocker Ice Company from $2.2 to $2 & ton, and that at Ninety-firet street and the Ba iver the price was raised to $ a ton, A copy of the letter from President Oler te attached hereto ICE IN PLENTY STORED DEPOTS UP HUDSON. From investigation by this de. Partment the amount of ice stored in the ice houses along the upper Hudson appears to be plentiful, Re= ports from investigators of this de« partment ftom the ice district state tht ‘the Knickerbocker Ice © pany has .vioe than 200,000 tons in storage on. the Hudson River, The Teasop that this ice is not brought te Sew. York ts att the company is unable to obtain the necessary men to handle it, This Feason js not believed to have any arent Weight, as there are to-day a large numberof man in thie city out of Kerk who might be employed by the fee company on this work. IN et tae he thet | “TO NEARBY ROOF BY BOLDBURGLAR Stephen J. Regan Called From Vacation Investigate Burglary in His Home. | to APARTMENT A WRECK | Thieves Got $3,000 in Loot, but He Had Taken $4,000 Worth From Safe, Stephen J. Regan, retired hotel man | of No. 46 st | hurriedly home to-day from Liberty, N. Y., to find his handsome apartment a wreck. Burglars had looted the pla from end to end, thrown things ab the floors, stolen an iron sa regaled themasel Silver, valu nat , and even os with the Regan wine. cut glass and clothing to the of $3,000 were taken The burglars overlooked $4,000 worth wiver and cut glass in their eagern nS to get away with the tron safe, from which they got nothing and which led to the discovery of the crime, Saturday morning the Janitress of the building at No. M5 West One rth street went Hundred and » the r The raat ad Nicholas nue D THE IRON SAFE ON THE ROOF. She was surprised to find a larg weighing #ome 30 pounds, middle of the roof. Then the neighbors hirty> nf to hang St a ‘The ne’ of very skilled labor is not béHeved to be necessary to load and untond ice. Mr. John Cairns, proprietor of the East River lee Company, one of the Independent rs, alleges that the Knickerbocker Ice Com- pany had sixty barges less in op- eration this year than last, though the supply of-ice In storage 1s greater now than then, From these facts it would ap- Wat the present situation fo lereely-diepge the greed of teiee companies in refusing to take micasures necessary to supply the city's wants. Bvery effort should be made to insure against & te- currence of the suffering entailed upon the people in the congested districts whére the price of ice be came prohibitive. TURNED HOSE ON DEALER WHO WANTED TO BUY ICE. T attach hereto statement by the Knickerbocker Ice Company of num- ) ber of tons of tce brought into this July M4, 1910 and Wil, by that company. Also state ment of num of wagons, tugs and dargea employed during same period, showing the comparivon be- tween this and last year J also attach the thirty-elght at- fidavite from retail dealers stating thatethey were refused delivery of fee by the Knickerbocker Ice Com- pany, or that an increased price w demanded, although quantities of ice were available on the barges tied up alongalde the ice pier, One retail dealer makes affidavit that when he asked for ice a hose was turned upon him by the employees of the Knick- erbocker Ice Company, and he was driven from the dock. Very respect fully, R. WALDO, Poltce Commissio: Accompanying the report was a mass of documentary evidence obtained by Commissioner Waklo's — detectives. ‘Tuese documents, with the report, will be sént to District-Attorney Whitman in time for use at the pubilo hearings inaugurated by the District-Attorney before Magistrate Appleton. District-Attorney Whitman said that Magistrate Appleton would open the public hearings in the toe inquiry to- morrow at two o'clock, in the library of the DistriotsAttorney’s office, cc in # court reom If one could be obtained The formal complaint of the People va. the Knickerbocker Ice Company will be presented and summonses will imeved for the secretaries of various ice companies, ordering them to pro- duce the books of thelr respective com- panies before the Magistrate. WILL NOT CALL PRESIDENTS TO GIVE TESTIMONY, The presidents of the companies witi not be subpoenaed to testify under oath, the District-Attorney proposea to no chances of giving immunif\ to responsible com: pany in the evidence at the hear- ings shall justify Grand Jury proceed- ings. Mr. Whitinan said that a ta take Before Selecting Your Apartment CONSULT THE “Apartments to Let” Advertisements in the Daily and Sunday World. IT WILL SAVE YOU Time, Energy and Money The World's “Apartments to Let” all remembered that on Friday night they heard men pounding vigorously upon some metal object with hammers. ‘Tho police were called and \t was found that the safe belonged to Regan It was found that the burglars had carried the safe from a dining room el of the Regan home, up two flights of stairs to the roof, and then over to the adjoining roof, where they pounded !t open with hammers. They are getting somewhat accustomed to nolses on the upper weet aide since the warbage men have started their protest against having to work while the ‘tips’? sleep, and everybody who heard the anvil chorus on the roof cursed the city officials, turned over and went to sleep again—If they cou when the din set Itself up as a count attraction to the rattling of the cans, and the more or lass cholce greetings bestowed by the city’s workers, the one upon the other. A report of the robbery was made to Mins Ellen Regan of No. 120 East One Hundred and Seventeenth atreet. She in the alstet to the owner of the stolen Property, and she telegraphed him to come home at once and see the wreck, “They must have taken at least one big van load," be told the neighbors, after his arri HAD REMOVED ALL THE VALU. ABLES FROM THE SAFE, Tt had been Regan’s custom to keep hin Jewelry and money in the safe, which was an old fashioned affair that boasted no modern combination. But when he went away he took his valu. ables from the safe and left in it nothing except receipts and euch docu- ments. The burglars had no thought that the chief part of the valuables had been removed and they seemed to contre their attentions upon the safe. In making their selections trom the other goods the intruders took plenty of time. Cigarette stumps gave evidence of u long #tay in the apartment, and the inroads upon the Regan wine stock indi. gated that the cracksmen were endowed With thirsts of marvellous capacity. ‘Phe invaders left a lot of evidence for the police, If they are known crooks, because the various articles In the plac ave Mberally marked with Anger prints, They indicate that a man did the fob with the ald of elther @ woman or o small boy. One of the sets of prints ts very delicate and fine, The police, be- luted on the Job, are trying to clear up the mystery of the robbery number of witnesses would be in readl- nean to testify. Commissioner Waldo regards the work of the police on the case as an extra ordinary achievement. “In two days," said the Comiiasion- Advertisements Offer You the Greatest Variety of Selection, All prices, sizes and locations Hell Nicholas avenue, came ne tha uy In the} THE EVENING; pe Shan. MONDAY, an fone fot. observation: staat ® ‘Cares, CHOLERA DANGER DEMAND REPORT (Co tinued from First Page.) wh? shoved symptoms of cholera were yesterday removed to Swinburne Island. All were among the Moltke's passen- gers. ‘Three cholera @uspects taken off the | Anchor liner Perugia, from Naples Sat- urday, were eald to-day at Swinburne Island to be convalescent. The Peru- gla's other passengers are on Hoffman Island, The crew are aboard the vesvel, anchored off Quarant! Dr. Doty, Health Officer of the Port, called his entire staff for a consultation at his home in Rosebank, 8. 1, yester- day, on learning of the death of the woman. Patrick Cushing, a Hoffman Island watchman, dled from cholera at Swinburne Island on Saturday, after |apending part of @ day in a ward at | St. Vincent's Hospital, West New Brighton, reignite DRINKING WATER ON ISLAND CAUSE, DUSHKIND SAYS. Charles Dushkind, the lawyer who ts pushing the investigation of conditions at the Quarantine Station ordered by Gov. Dix, declared to-day that prac- tically all of the cases of cholera which developed on Hoffman's Island the arrival of the Moltke on July racted by the victims on ¢ Jaland itself as the direct result o: @rinking water from a cistern which had been contaminated “ insist that nearly all the cases of cholera now existent upon Hoffman's Isiand,” said Mr. Dushkind, tracted there. I consider that T have proof for this assertion and I propose to offer it be ent investigation, “Testimony has already been offered to show that a cistern {nto which drink. ing Water is pumped from the artesian well on Hoffman Island was found last week to be contaminated from a Precautions are said to have been taken after this condition. was discovered, but that such a condition 1d exist upon the place of all othors where the strict- est rules of hygiene should be enforced iy almost beyond belief. “Sclentifly authority and the Govern- ment regulations fix five days as the period of incubation tn cases ot chol era, ‘That i» to say, If & person does t develop choleva within five days after having been exposed to th Ser of infection he or sho le assumed to be frec from the possibility of con- tracting It “Phe Moltke avrived on July & The first 414 not develop until days afterward, and other cases de- veloped seven, eight and nine days after her arrival. This, I contend, is proof positive that they were not in- fected while on board ship, but rather after they landed on Hoffman's Island. GERMS CAN BE INTRODUCED ONLY THROUGH MOUTH. “It tw an established medical fact that ra germs can only be introduced into the body by means of the mouth It We established that a contaminated water cistern was discovered on the island after known cases of cholera had developed there. My contention is that at Quarantine case of cholera July 1M, or tx a aiken aha Atal ently lod Difenfecting ‘pla CAUSES GOV. DIX 10 were con- | ore the close of the pres- | er. | tw 4 Advance, ~ ait, pasnenc ~~ SERVIAN MOTHER RUSSIAN TYPE keeping the entire company exposed to the danger of the disease. 1 will also bring out some evidence on this point before I have finished.” —~@—L. BOSTON tO INSPECT ALL NEW YORK TRAINS IN FEAR OF CHOLERA. ROSTON, Mass. wel H. Dungin, Roard of F day lo p announcement July 17.—Dr. Sam- irman of the Roston took drastic steps to- vent the Invasion of cholera that all New York trains would be Inspected by health tn- spectors and that y ship entering the port would be given rigid examina- tlons at qarantine, All persons enter- ing Boston who have been in contact with cholera victima will be held at quarantine for ten days. > CHOLERA QUARANTINE LIFTED IN AUBURN. Y., duly 17.—The cholera qua hioh has been in force here since the death of Tomaso Birardi, an imintgrant from the steamer Duca degli AUBUT Abruzzi, on July 1, was offic clared off to-day and no secondary cases are now anticipated Peels sLteect AUSTRIA GUARD | AGAINST CHOLERA. VIENNA, July 17.—Alarmed by the in- crease of cholera in Italy, the Austr! | Government to-day gave supplementary | quarantine instructions of the most rig- rous character along the frontier to prevent the epidemic from spreading to Austria or Hungary. ——— HOORAY! THREE PRAISE NIGHT-BLOOMING CARBAGE. We are having letters commending us, as well ay some lotters complaining | In ignoranc CRE Lay 4h Citak ao ore ‘Quarantine Station Now Under Probz; WON SAFE TARE Types of Immigrants Detained There Quarters; where cabit TS ate under GERD ane ie fé ioept FROM SLolhy IGHTED AMATCH TO FIND GAS LEAK; SIXTEEN INJURED (Continued from First Page.) vice of Mr. Webster and filed out, but the danger the fire. the fire after the second explosion. cvULY 17, 191t." ; ATHLETIC GIRLOF | TUXEDO TO WED | Engagement of Miss Kane and George F. Baker Jr. Is Announced. | George F. Raker fr, banker, yacht liman, all-around athlete and heir to $19 009,000 or more, dith Rrevoo and Mrs. Grenville Kane of Tuxedo Park, who is the premier girl athlete of the Tuxedo colony and one of the most skilful whips in America. ‘The young couple have announced thelr detrothal in letters to friends sent off rom Mr. Baker's yacht Viking, on which /they have been cruising for several daya jwith @ party of friends and Mrs, H. HH. |Rogers jr. as chaperon. The Bakers and Kanes have been near |netghbors ir Tuxedo Park many year! \'rhe marriage will unite two of the fore- most banking families in the country. Grenville Kane is an immensely weal! iy anker, with offices at No. % Pine street, and George Baker sr., former head of |the Firat National Bank, in one of the four richest men on this side of the At- lantic. J. Plerpont Morgan, who revises ad- + |Jectives downward and conserves su- | perlatives as precious gems to be kept lin the dark, said not long ago that George F. Baker jr. was one of the few clever young business men to whom the coming generation could look for a leader. He has already risen from a clerkahip in the First National i Kane, | i} | | i | leney ember, ree F. Baker | jr. risked his iife in the surf off Sea- bright to keep a luncheon engagement with his sister, Mrs, William Qoadby leew. He ran down in his t, Is- saquena, and found a still breeze smothering the beach with a thunder- ing surf, It was impossible for the yacht to approach the shore nearer than 300 yards, skipper advised putting back to town. Mr. Baker would not hear of this and ordered one of the small boats out. He got Into this with two of the crew, and plunge after him ia ease he was beaten down. But he forged his way through | the surf and kept his engagement, eet me PICTURE SHOW FIGHT GIVES BOY A DREAM THAT ENDS IN DEATH James Kehoe of No, 237 Bast Twenty- eighth street believes that a dream, tn- lapired by a moving picture of @ pur- suit of British troops over a cliff by a detachment of Continentals, impelled bis six-year-old gon Joseph to leap from a window in their apartment on the third story to-day and fall to his death, forty feet below. Kehoe took his boy to the show last night. The film depicting the skirmis: interested the little fellow intensely and he followed the clash, the superior sol- diership of the Americans defeatin, their foes, the retreat of the British and their final rush in contusion over the top of a hill, with the victorious Continentals in pursuit, with all the enthustasm of childhood. “He came into my bed in the middle of the night." said his father, sald he wanted to sleep with m chfldren in the butlding about the mov- {ng pictures, and in his sleep he ri peated the story of the fight between troops Mayor Gaynor to-day received the| many of the men hastened down to the rly thia morning I was awakened following letter from Street-Cleaning |cellar to help fight a ure that hud] by a scream. TI felt for my boy in bed Commissioner Edwards, in which the| started from the explosion, and le wasn't ther, 1 called to my Commissioner wrote: In the mean time w fire alarm had| wife, who was in another room, but he I desire to sive you another report| been turned in from @ private box in| wasn't with her, Then T looked out of regarding the night work, and to say|the building. Taree eusines and two window and saw him down on the that itis progressing most sattsface| hook and ladder companies responded, | bricks in the courtyard,” torily Deputy Chiet Lally and Battalion! ‘The boy's skull was fractured and he “Yome of the newspapers are taking| Chief Dooley also went to the tire, | was injured internally. He was taken up the question of night removal in| Dooley, Firemen Harrigan and| to Bellevue Hospital, but he lved only # regard to the noise that ds made. 1] Klein and elght flremen, ran a line of| few minutes have spent several nigiity working on] hose Into the ecilar, | wefore entering this one particular thing, and have} Harrigan, smelling gas, asked Lr the Histened very carefully, and have noted | wervice pipe had been cut off. He was| NEW ASSISTANTS BUSY ho unusual amount of nolse made by| told that nO Kas Was entering the the Department of Street Cleaning tenet ea Snatter ot tact tne sa’| DRAWING THEIR SALARIES. y driver wilfully makes} ply plpe from the street had been any unnecessary noise, T shall certainly | broken by the explosion and # three- Pils ; 7 hanatah dismiss him immediately * lihoh n of BAS Was pourlug. Into} Mayor and Comptroller Indirectly Score Legislation When Mat- or's scoretary, Mr, Sheehan, to-day, “the | the bulk of those now suffering from | against tho noise I ine me three letters i ed _streains g (Water on the ter Hits Board. olice covered all New’ York City, the | this dread disease contracted it by | commending the work of the depart-| beams of the jar and the floor! an 4 te ie 4 ft th rer Hudson, inters | 4@rinking water from that polluted ela. | m , and as Buch letters never get into | the first floor, which were ablaze. Dep- The lid is off now,” sald Comptroller fee depots of the upper son, inte’ Ne n sud 4 “hlet Lally and his driver, Gi Prendergast to-day at a meeting of the hundred individ. |tern. It was the only source of water | the pa , 1 am glad to have you see] uty Cale y , Gasper Mewed more than Ave hundred Individs | ooo on the island, them." Wiseman, did not arrive until the cam-| ioard of Estimate, “The Legislature uais and obtained @ great number of fT WRT RAney “tb Masa Panone eee paign against the fire tn the cellar was] ias made it mandatory upon us now to aMdavits bearing upon the methods Of | awveion cholera on shipboard, but to} WALL STREET QUOTATIONS, under way, They went Into the court-| furnish salaries for additional assistant the Jeo Trust, The Commissioner be- | have them actually contract it at « yard ; distriet-attorney# in Kings, #0 nothing Neves the report will show that the po- | quarantine station is a shocking com Bhs dclavinn wie the tibet The break in the supply pipe was dal- Hee work Was ‘thorough and well done,’ | mentary on the methods prevailing at | wives of socks Tor to-tay Ny rectly under tho ceiling of tho cellar as he asked that it be.” station AS compared with Saturday and near where the meter had been be- 4 Dr, Doty himself says that Cushing, fore it was blown from | fastenings PLOT TO FREEZE OUT THE 24001 11, discharged Inborer who dled from | Amal by the shock caused by Lexsett's match | CEE AMERICAIL SMALL DEALERS. cholera on Staten Island on Saturday, | \™ SORIA Ih SARIN WOH, BACB EIA Fvidence ta accu to-day in| did not come tnto direct tact with | At ‘or nearly ten minute ° | the rict-Attorney’s office that rep- | @”Y ra patients or Kuspects, Grant | 4m pumped into the se Mar hetore spark G From picturesque Colorado fi Mf the Ice 1 tog ing this tobe true, Cushing must have rom the Glasing. bes bla |Fesentatives of the Ico Trust were In a) 106 Oot i vileouge, ive Oy agin The second explosion was terrific in and wonderful Yellowstone | plot to “freese out” many of the 2400] U72 Dohiuted water force, All the firemen in the cellar were 1 mn | small dealers, and elected the recent ove to vo into this Cushing knocked down and blown about, as were Park comes the call. hot wave as @ propitious time to carry arefully at the Investigation, I the Webster employees who were aiding Jout thelr plans and ut the me| will call every doctor who had anything in tne work. ee ieeay aes oe Gg The personally - conducte salr’ pockgnl » of|to do with tt as a witness, and I will reman O'Conno: id Murphy, who Hi ery whip fe Aud at the expen airy AERURH LAT MRRGGAS haw lk aka GnKS were working in the rear of the cellar tour of the Pennsylvania Y erin, 0 : in) Z Rac wen contitiaa ers chopping at a 8 dering beam, and ‘ . | Assistant District-Attorney De Fora | tt* aha, ths ned uuconsoioua for & inomant Wi Railroad affords an oppor- has promised the dealers that | 1 > germs xplosive foree that slammed them temity to visit Colorado clent proof 's given we Y st a stone wall. Foreman Harri- spins Rockar Gomaanit & | Fat ny thie nae gan, although badly hurt, called for vol- Springs, Denver, and the partnership with other com | Vth Mol rand other ships unteora anh mare 1 eR ae bad Yellowstone Park under'the een comm! ¥ an offense, the guilty been enforced by Dr, Doty eae i he MR SAO i tee ja ai ba niaea ek seit bare AL he deliberately vio- floor 17 Be approached t om they | most favorable conditions. ” bs ment qua stagger o eir feet and started for | tences will be asked, The District-At- a stairway by whieh they made their aus leaves ba ial Pull torney 18 going ahead on the theory vig. snag 1 the courtyard | our leaves by special Pull- that the American lee Company, which |) as a suspected © of the injured, except O'Connor | ; iak a | was convicted in 1009 of restraint of aha re A into aint irphy, was rendered, man train on August 26. lerade and fined $5,000, has reproduced up to t lated wee soon out of the cellar k . nethods tn the Knickerbocker, its . asons for t ira eputy Chie ally, with & new foree Round-trip fare coveriny nt fT fire-fighters, wuned work a the . cea epe ees ; 8 axe, while a couple of firemen turned necessary expenses $225. " DAY. he ed for longer than off the pipe supp gas, aw , | éua rises, Moon 11208,.10.00 | i the mem) 1 . Dra, 5 and Robertson responded | from New York, | exposed to contast uy it t from Brooklyn Hospital to an ambu- s } | Doty ‘has 0p t the par ay call, The i rm hoa: | Full particulars of C. the | Studds, D. P. A., 263 Fifth Avenue, New York. | BANKER-ATHLETE, andthe young man’s | when they had tolled to the dan, ine of the breakers the heir to ti Baker millions leaped qverboard in his) yachting togs and swam @shore. A great crowd watched him. from the, |beach and lfe-savers stood ready to 1s engaged to marry Miss | daughter of Mr. | ‘and | . The) bed Was against the open window, but) I slept on that side. Little Joe woke| me two or three times talitng in his| sleep. He had been telling the other Eddys TELE ’ PHONE GIRL WHO GAVE ‘WARNING OF BROOKLYN FIRE} Aiatinetively helpful moral for cording to Chief of Poltce Cowld this city. In reply to a demand | church organizations that he sup the Sunday games at, Lighthouse in the suburbs Chief Cowles says ‘Sunday baseball by: professional continue at LightHouse Point 60 lo the game ts conducted in an ord manner because it Araws young from the streets ana lessens the ni | ber of arrests for drunkenness and order, Many young men are | to the shore by the Sunday | would otherwise loiter on street | | 1s left for the money. The matter under discussion was the appropriation of $5,0% for two additional assistant District-Attorneys in Kings County, “Why! exclaimed the Mayor, “there are so many istant district-attorneys now that they are in each other's way. They are falling over each other, Halt of them have nothing to do,’ “Oh, yes, Mr. Mayor, they have some- | thing to do. They draw their salaries,” interjected Comptroller Prendergast. s to do than to appropri Yes, that is true, They draw their salaries,” the Mayor sald, nodding his head. =| a GATES fent MAKES HEALTH GAIN. Has a Good Night and Slowly Improves, PARTS, July 17.—John W. ys, the American finaneler, who ts ill in this clty, passed a comfortable night. He] continues to gain slow! After his second visit to-day, Dr. Gros sald that Mr. Gates continued improv- ing and that while {t probably would be some days before the physicians could say that he was out of danger, the! condition of the patient Justified con- fident hopes of recovery. Dr. Pterre| ‘Tissier, a heat specialist, examined the financier to-day and sald that he had a good heart, which he believed was sufficientiy strong to stand the heavy sivain placed upon it. (oe ees SUNDAY BASEBALL TO STAY. A Moral Force, In Reply of New Haven’s Police Chief to Churches, NEW HAVEN, Conn., July 17.—Sun-| day baseball by professional teams is a) ‘ The Powerful +, Non-Poisonous Disinfectant pHs, ners, and from my own personal servation I know it lowers the ni of cases in the courts Monday,” out disease da Pde yo mouth with Vern Lotion. A solution of one part Vernas Lotion and two hundred parts water pre- vents development of diphtheria baci jahtly stronger solution destroys typhoid bacillus. Con- ceded to be the most Scientific and efficient of all mouth wash Invaluable for throats and irritations of mouth, At your Druggists 15¢ 50c $1.09 Vernas Lotio AS CHEMICAL COMPANY, 249 W, S8th St., FENNELL: Furniture Stores 4 Summer Price Reductic Reduced Prices in Every Dept. Keep dea nam Outht Double heavy FINE “DESIG Extra well mad various wood $15 Dining Roor Chairs Cane - $1.0 Leather $2.0 AurGoods Reed in Plain igus ou! We Furnish Homes Comple —Cash or Credit At All Druggists Wc 25c 50c $1 * = WEST DISINF:ECTING CO, Id end Sauce" always helps to make a good meal better. It givesan appetizing flavor to meats, fish and salads. 10c A BOTTLE Made by B. Pritchard, $31 Spring St. N. ¥, Mis be WE TRUST YOU FURNITURE Mugs, Carpets, Beddiy; $3.00 Down on $50 §.00 Down on 75 7. 50 Down on 100 La its ie Broportion, ‘reight and Raflroad fare 23d St. pnelsery Z| 128 Gramercy POVERS (0 bound me HEUPHO! Hal), #9 ed up. | Nv. prdenin GEO. FENNELL & CO. | 2209 3d Ave., bet. 120th & 121st | Bronx Store, 3d Ave. & 140th ‘Furniture Re-Uphoister LOWEST PRICES IN NEW YORK. SS it tas German a Il with samples, 14TH ST. UPHULSTERING $3 W. 14TH ST. muita opp. Rothenbei $3.50 SHOES <3 Atrialwilleonvince ou that W.L.Doug- las $3.50 shoes are fi thebestinthe world, Storen in Greater New York : I “ adage BL, Cor. oe Fy mw, oe, oe vies ee Saath, HE (Jersey) KC OUTINGS NEXT WEONESDAY $250 ave W. 23rd St. 7. sy ie Liberty dt. 4 = ) ya “ast (an AA Phone ‘2:

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