The evening world. Newspaper, October 25, 1911, Page 18

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

4 _- HE BVENINGY WUbBuD, MASCOTS TABOO ON BATTLESHIPS FBI FLE Uncle Sam’s Sea Warriors No : Longer Floating Zoos of Mascotitis Days. REASONS FOR CHANGE. Heavy Gun Firing Fatal to Pets and There Are Only Few Left Now. . Phe United States Navy is recovering from a severe case of mascotitis. M cotitis te an cverabundance of dom eats, roosters, kangaroos, goats, parrots or other be: nd birds of terra firma which have been taken from thetr na- tive henths and haunts to serve am talise mans for sailors aboard ships of war. The startling discovery was made by an Evening World reporter that mas- cota are on the decline in Uncle Sam's Noating forts, Of all the battleships that swing at thetr maorings in the Nerth Hiver not half of them possess mancots, Th was a time, not so long at either, when many United Staten battl ships resembled Noah's Ark. ‘There was Not one mascot to a ship, but seemingly & mascot to every member of the crew. was like the Mascots Which the Taboo Hasn't Reached ONE OF THE VERMONTS MASCOTS. tht bed chamber to the greatest ruler on arth. He admits that in the close quarters of the bos locker the goat doen become powerfully Sodorous at times, but he argues that @ man can get ured to almost anything in this world, HAVE BOSTON TERRIER AND FLATBUSH CAT LEFT. Off the foot of Ninety-sixth street lies the Vermont and aboard her are monagerio tent of a ‘Trained pigs, Koate, dogs of various breeds, cats of various color, bears, roostef™ and other apecimona of the animal kingdom Aelighted the homesick hearts of our Jolly tare, But, alne and alack! there has come achange, Mascots are becom- ing as rare as red rhinocert where for- merly the: as plentiful as plums in @ prunery. scot of olen days fe taking his place with the dodo and the aperys. HEAVY GUN PRACTICE ENDS MANY MASCOTS. two mascots to bring good luck to her crew. Chief Bor'n's Mate Garrison Payne proudly produces the sacred mascots for Inspection. One 1s a Lor- ton terrier and the other @ cat of the ordinary Flatbush vartety. There 1s nothing extraordinary about either of these quadrupeds beyond the fact that they are sincerely revered by all the enlisted men aboard the hui warship. But Chief Bos'n's Mate Payne will tell you that they are the most wonderful animals in all the world and he will tay great stress on the fact that they sleep together and never scratch, bite, aplt or growl at each other. board the Oho ts the biggest mas- The jolly tare who man the battleships 4 i Aue Aee The, bende ot mood tm the Hudson are not at all pleased by Pat aoe omen 1s none other than, a huge the turn of events, but aboard MARY | dear, with nhagwy cont ‘and cold-tipped ships the edict has gone forth that MSs | nose, who likes nothing better than to cots are taboo, and taboo they are! piaytully pa ‘sallorman or give a In some cases the commanders of the hander that sends nis hum ad- chips are opposed to mascots on the} mirer scrambling in the scuppers. The ground that they are a nuisance, On| bear has a half dosen names. Some other ships the surgeon objects, clatm-| call him Teddy, others call him Sam. ing that doge and cate and such like| Ths does not worry the bear in the crittera are breeders and carriers of die-|Mlihtest. He is mo obliging that he il) anewer to any name. The men of ase, But the chief reason for the pass- | 1 this thee and tap of the eatiors’ pete 10 thet the tere | che Oule, are proud of thet rifle concussion aboard the big boate| ren of the anti-mascot ships and those during target practice is fatal to mas-| who ri over the merits of a mere cots, They will tell you of instances | pup or cat of unsettled apecte: where at the firing of a thirteen-inch MUST TURN TO AUTOM @un the pet dog has turned over on his FOR @AIRING MABCO back and shut his eyes forever. But there are mascots still, Often| But the men of the other ships, tired down between deoks, in a quiet corner | of the supercilious alr of the Ohle seidom victed by oftera. the mon have | Meter 82 10 elt wae kane, secreted a cat or a dog on which to] Sh AUTO Oo they say ts the grates fon, On ships where. mas-| Kaseot that the American navy. | or where the mascot has | ever possessed, It will don boxing glo Tecently died the men find aplace in the | and make the ship's champion slug Aidoes of the ship's jester, who corre-| look like @ babe ™ arme in the pres eponds to the village cutup of terra| ence of Jack Johnson. firma. Mascots give a human touch to the ‘The Connecticut, flagship of Rear-ad- | @reat inhuman leviathans, but they are miral Osterhaus, which Iles off Beventy- | TAPidly going, and the only hope ts me- second street, 18 one of the mammoths | chanics. Some mechanical gentus tn the Of destruction that is minus a mascot. | SAYY may Jnvent & mechanical laniox, phtha dachshund or @ steam kan- ONLY THE MERRY “WoO woo" roo, and then the ship's commanders ON THE FLAGSHIP. May cease to protest, the ship's si e ih to preach of animal-carried dis- When The !vening World reporter and| E62"".04 he big auns may roar thelr artist clambered aboant the Connecticut | foudest and the steam kangaroo and Qnd asked for the mascot a brawny naphtha daschund wil) but whistle like reve in biue said the only mascot they | peanut stands in self-complacency and had was a Woo Woo bint. The Woo | Joy. \TON Woo bird was drought forth and proved Sr Epes to be Sea ¥. C, MoComb, the merry Heter and aweet aera the sin. CHARGED WITH FORGERY. jeComb takes @reat pride in being _— Boown as the ship's mascot. Ho wht elapse apn ase: look condescendingly upon their breth- |* The Two CAT MASCOTS On THE VERMONT. REEPE Ro OF THECAT MARCOTS (Continued from First Page.) Distriot-Attorney ordered the Medical Examiner to make the examination dur- ing the night. Here is Richeson' told it several tim friends and counse! “It is true that at one tine Avis Linnell and I were engaged to be mar- ried. “There was a time when I thought no girl in the world could compare with her. And I eagerly looke@ forward to ime I could make her my wi But trouble I had not dreamed of arose. It was nothing 1 could have prevented. Avin's mind concerning her ambitions for the future underwent a el She wanted to become an ory, as he has te his intimate op time tn. minister of # small church, tho cause of our broken ei “Avis had @ voice that was naturally sweet and rich, Friends frequently ad- mired {t, Many times they urged her to come to Boston and have her voice cultivated at the Conservatory of Mualc, AVI8 PREFERRED A CAREER IN OPERA TO MARRIAGE. “At last sho acted on their advice, I had absolutely nothing to do with her taking up her residence in Boston, Our engagement was ‘broken some months before, when she informed me that to take up life as the wife of a country minister Would mean an end to her Prospects as « singer, She felt that the future had much in store for her, and that vocal cultare was all she needed to realize her hopes. When she remained determined, tn spite of my endeavors to have her abandon such @ plan and become my & parsonage as the wife of a And that is ement. THe “Lousiana HAS THE REAL TING im MASCOTS, POISON IN CAPSULE TD LEA —_NOTRNE Ww, HAGMAYER> CHAMPION: Buck-AND- WING DANCER* or THE A Ay e that show that she regarded our cement as at an end. “They are couched in terms that are those of an ordinary acquaintance. They are the kind of letters that one would expect a pastor to receive from the average attendant at his church. “At the proper time I will produce these letters and let the outside world know their contents.” ‘This statment of Richeson’s is im- Portant as explaining the unfaltering faith that Violet Edmands and her father have placed in him. It tells why they sheltered him under their roof the night of his arrest and it explains the etartlingly unexpected visit late yea- terday afternoon to the Charles street Jail of Violet Edmands herself. Miss Edmands came under @ pass ed by Sheriff Seav manal: and a wide felt hat that successfully concealed her features from the few curious hangers-on outside the jail. FIANCEE VISITS ACCUSED PAS. TOR IN JAIL, She chose an hour when the vigilant ewspaper guard that had watched the Jail all day had relaxed in quest of an evening meal and nothing was known of her visit until after she had spent half an hour talking with the prisoner and had driven away in the closed car- riage that brought her. According to the jail oMctals, Mios Famands appeared tn @ highly nervous and excited state, but smiled bravely in the presence of the prisoner and hatted with him volubly, The conver- tion was held in the presence of a guard and is believed to have been confined to a reiteration of her intention and by him to the end and his fidence in his ultimate acquittal, Her visit 1s said to have cheered the wife, I could only acquiesce, “I did not call off our engagement. Aleo Accu of Petty Larceny. @ing on the lightest provocation, and Ale barver shop minor would sweeten the heart of w dill plokle. Seaman Lip- stein, known as “Lippy,” is MoComb's yoalthy real estate dealer of able Heutenant in fun making, but de- | rest one Iundred and Tenth eee Pe og lien gee capable palr the | ang a nephow of Sanuel Krulewitz, pehytieny ip Samoan the taboo] ine Republican leader of the Twenty oN eagle ee eighth Assembly District, was are so Boned (mm ar Repent raigned before Magistrate Butts in tho Soaton bull and an English bull, ‘The | ee ee ay jo tecoygger aplebed 4 a , : le was — etn eo seimt gay {helt without bail for forty-eight hours might term pretty or even fair looking, | ON, the former charge and unter Anti-pretty that a savage look, from nee ae his ecrambled face would make a steam | YOURE Man said there was a string of Emanuel Krulewltz, — twenty-four years old, a 6on of Isaac Krulowitz, a roller start back tn terror. forgery charges against him. ‘The spe- the two dogs and Seaman J. elfle complaint offered was made by haber, the end man of the ship sdward Davis, a printer, of No. IMT B@trel troupe, the men of the M: \-ratet avenue, He charget that Krule- are amply suplied with mascots. wits gave him a check for $10 on the man W. J. & pion | State Bank, bearing the spurious sig- Duck and wing dancer of the Atlantic | nature of is uncle, Samuel Krulewttr. feet, is also one of the cherished treas- |The petty larceny complaint was made ures of this big ship. by Edward Lyon 1 avenue | seaman, who ne had been LOST THEIR MASCOT AND ARE | sainiied oui of & by Mean of a YET MOURNING. | worthless check, None of the young man's relatives appeared tn court at Aboard the N: o - forth Dakota the men-| VO" of tiie arraignment ton of the word mascot brings pain to| path Ble se naan the hearts of a few hundred (Bins sea | Warriors, for Zip, the white dog mascot! BAYONNE BOY VANISHES. of the ship is no more. He was lost —_—— at Norfolk a short time ago and the| mothe: men have not had the heart to replace 14-Vear-Old Lad | ‘ommitted Sule him with another, Even the efforts of “Doole” Lazarus, the 5: cut-up,| ‘The police of Rayonne, N and eennot make them forget poor Z!p. the offictala of Hudson County are Where's the mascot? was the in- quiry made aboard Louisiana, and teen two able-bodied seamen led the ques hunting t y for John Whelan, four years old, who dsapp weeks ago, after being released from toners down between \decks and to jaurel Hill, the County Hospital at the bos'n’s locker. The bos'n's locker gnake Hill, N. J. The boy's mot h ts @ workroom about four feet by four hontes Yeet in sise, and in this packing-box | \ compartment was an able-bodied goat ; Bweet scented breezes from Arabia's) SAYS" shores were mot in it with the at. eure! MM) ff mosphere in that selfsame dos'n's ay boa ge locker, The goat did not sem to mind | OrMerly Deon & the cramped conitition of the locker in Bolltan ant the least. If he had been a car he York t would have purred in comfort. | He wae released fr “Billy Butts” is the goat's name and, Oct & taken to “Billy Butts" be it sald, {s the fetisn, | station near macred cow, the god of good luck House in Jersey the pet of every man-Jack aboard staire to take a Jackson ave nS te | Joseph Roach of No. 111 Ninth s has ce lived at Me had Mil for tted sutetd: No. 6 deen Seaton H Suge seal That action was taken by Avis herself, “And when it becomes necessary 1 shall produce three witnesses who can |bear me out in this, ‘They knew all ®) avout our match falling through, and they will tell the reason, Just as T have |wiven tt, “Miss Edmands ta fully acquainted with the part that Miss Linnell played in my life. I told her how wo had kept company and how the engagement was finally terminated by Avis. At no time did I endeavor to conceal from her the existence of Avis. TOLD MISS EDMANDS ABOUT AVIS, HE SAYS. “And I feel that the complete con- fidence that Miss Edmands and ber father place in me is, in large measure, due to the fact that | was frank with her from the first. That is, 1 told her how I had begn engaged to Avis and how the latter had broken the engage- ment, “From the first Miss Edmands be- Ueved and trusted tn me. She knew that I was telling the truth. For months I had hardly a passing acquaintance with Avia Linnell. There- fore I could not have played the int! mate part in her affairs that I hi been pletured as doing, Since Avis can- celled 0} ene nt fast winter I save seen her but seldom, Tt is true I called at the Linnell house ast summer while spending my vaca Uon at Hyannts, but I called merely as a former pastor would drop in on me of his old-time partshtoners. 1 ed on many Opher famiiies tn Mya I showed them as much, and In some instar Te, attention than 1 gay » Linnells. 3t would be just to say L was keeping ALL ay tha ‘ I paid se- Avis d uring my sum Visit GAVE BACK HIS RING AND ENDED E®GAGEMENT. { ring thar T had aiven engagement 1 did not toe meeting when cent off Avis re om her flager and ins 8 that I should take tt. ‘1 have letters written to me by pflsoner greatly and to have strength- ened the young .woman's bellef and trust. When ghe Yeft the prison she ts reported to have said to the warden yank you for your courtesy, Mr, Richeson is an innocent man, in @ ter- rible position, and ts taking It very bravely. We know he is Innocent and you won't have him in there very much longer.” i Richeaon yesterday sent the following letter to the Immanuel Baptist Church at Cambridge, of which he is pastor: Dear Hrethren—I appreciate the posttion in which the church ts now placed, but { would ask its consid- eration until after the preliminary hearing, or, if the Grand Jury pre- viously meets, then until that time, Most fraternally, CHARLE V. T. RICHBSON, ‘This letter, sent to Charles F. Cum- mings, No. 15 Marlboro street, Belmont, is the first utterance of the clergyman to other than his counsel since his ar- rest. FIRST OPEN MQVE. Richeson wrote the tetter and handed it to his counsel, Philip R. Dunbar, who spent several hours witn the clergyman at the jal. At the close of the interview Mr. Dunbar seemed unusually well pleased Then came a surprise when he, In coms pany with Assistact District-Attorney Mod. Dweer, ap Judgy Murray in the Muncipal at 4 o'clock tn the afternoon and asked per- mi on to have @ witness present at the opening of the coffin of Avis Li nell, which had nh taken from grave at ilyannis and was then on way to Boston Judge Murray Was rather nonplusacd by the re and withheld dectsion unttl 9 o'clock this morning The gefonso argued that as the ca has practically been opened and the p Hee had had every opportunity to ex- amine the body prior to the arrest of Richeson, it would not be fair to p any furthe examinations of the ithout @ witness for the de- t being present This move is the first real sign of life |the defense has shown in public. But the defense has not been idle, Robert Burns and his detectives have been dusy on the caso ever since last Satur. day, and it is sald they have unearthed @ great many things that may prove of inte when the case comes up in court, READY, THEY DECLARE, TO MEET EVERY LEGAL POINT, Both Mr, Richeson his counsel are eontident that they de adle to meet WHEUNHOUAL, A‘ RIDDER.*= TRYING The A Jone ON THE MICHIGAN HAS AN ENGLISH = DOG. Ly Bult 00G MASCOT OF GIRL’S MURDER vues ABER! OF THE MICHIGAN = MASCOY, MS@nB |. 15 irnown| ANDY ANDERSON AS THE| KNOWN AS “SAILS” | Woo. 1 QN Me | BRD Connecticut, the police evidence, which looks #0 black and damaging, at every point, at least all that can be legally introduced as evidence, Jnderstand,” sald Robert Burns to- day, “we are rning outselves | with hearsay jcerning ourselves only police claim to be facts, intreduce @s evidence at a trial conver- gations held by Avis Linnell with any- | body, untess the defendant was present |when those conversations took place." | That legal rule eliminate much |that has been given out as seemingly \important fn this case, much that has gone to strengthen the impressions of guilt in the publ mind, especially as the defendant chose to keep silence. It can be stated the defense confident- ly expects to prove an alibi, if they choose to make an alibi their line of defense, They ara said to be able to account for every moment of Richeson's time from before the day on which William Hatin alleges he sold the pas- tor cyanide of potassium until his ar- rest. They can prove, it ts claimed, the minister did not see Avis Linnell in that tim ‘They are not going to deny, however, thdt he did not speak to her over the telephone in that time, nor that he had not seen and talked with her some gwo weeks before her death, ‘They wilt”ac- count only: for the pastor's time during the days that are important In this case, Embarrassed by the notoriety hi visit to Boston to be close to her ac- cused brother has occasioned, Miss | Russell Richeson, who arrived from Saranac Lake, N. Y., With her com- panion, Miss Andrews, last Saturday, has sought absolute seclusion at the Parker House. Yesterday she was joined by her ven- erable father, T. V. Richeson, who ar- rived from the Richeson homestead tn Amherst, Va, He, too, secluded himself from visitors. Sonal aun FALLS DOWN CHIMNEY PLAYING SANTA CLAUS. Boy Spent Twelve Hours at Bot- tom Before Bricks Were Torn Away. NEW BRITAIN, Conn., Oct. 25.—White | playing Santa Claus with several other ren, five-year-old Erland Nilson elimbed to the roof of his home and | stepped into the chimney, | ‘The other children watted a while for | him co appear at the fireplace and then turned to some,other game and forgot about him, Erland, who had fallen to the cellar, remained tn | nearly twelve hours before forty feet the chimne; Vveun eet 4) AT LANE TEN Dd, 1¥4 WOWAR HD. SIAN FOR REVENGE POE THERY Detectives Delve Into Social Life of Helen Knabe and Question Her Friends. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Oct. %.—Detec- tives to-day took to police headquarters for examination Augusta Knabe, cousin, and Katherine MoPherson, assistant, to Dr. Helene Knabe, former State bacteri- ologist, who was found dead with her throat slashed in her apartment early yesterday. Completely baffled in their efforts to secure a clue in the death mystery of Dr. Helene Knabe, and one of the best known women physicians of the Middle West, the Indianapolis police to-day worked on the theory of revenge as the only possible solution of the mystery. Coroner Durnham to-day announced, after a complete examination that tho body of the dead physictan showed no evidence of criminal assault. He scouts & suicide theory, and considers that the evidence that Dr, Knabe was murdered conclusive. None of the woman's Jewels or valuables are missing, according to the police. With these theories made untenable the police to-day are seeking out the life history of the dead woman In an effort to ascertain any enemies that she may have had. No hint of any love affair has yet been secured by the police and, so far as they have been able to find, that any man Practically all of her male acquaintances were among the physicians of the city. That the death wound was inflicted on called upon her. |the woman tn her @leeping apartments by a man is, however, the bellef of the police. The cartilage of the spinal c¢l- umn was found to be marked to-day, indicating that a powerful arm wielded the knife to her throat or tt would n have penetrated so deeply. Investigation of the private Iife of Dr. Knabe, occupied assigned to the ‘They purported woman's friends in the medical pro- fession first, for it 1s said her acquain- tanceship was almost entitely confined to persons Interested in scientific sub- jects, in physical culture or in social hygiene. That it should be discovered that any scandal attached to the death of Dr. Knabe would be inconsistent with her life, it was pointed out to-day. She lived alone in the comfortably fur- nished apartment in which she was Killed because she devoted all her spare time to study and experimentation, @ was a member of the Young Women's Christian Association and fre- quently lectured to the members and to the students of the high schools on social hygiene, attempting to tmpress mysterious jupon them the necessity of purity in| ali social relations. MAN WITH THROAT CUT Laborers Discover an Unidentified Body and Police and Coroner lavestigate, The body of an unknown man about twenty-two years old, with his throat WATCH ONE SPOT ON THE SKIN See, Overnight, the Fine Work of Poslam, the Healing Remedy © heard, * found necessary to send for a mason and remove a number of | bricks from the base of the chimney. | He was uninjured, | —_—- —_>——— | TIED UP THE U. S. MAIL | BY ATTACHING HORSES. | Creditors of Com actor Paralyze Postal Service at Bridgeport by Legal Writ. | BRIDGEPORT, Conn, Oct. 3. | and horses engaged in the transporta tion of Uncle Sam's mail, the firm ot Fiss, Doerr & Carroll, horse dealers of New York City, Was the cause of | paralyzing the mail service here last | night, ‘The attachment was served after | 6.90 o'clock, as fast as the mall wagons | dro outlying sections and railroad station, . F, Malley, the contractor, was un. able to raise #002, the amount of the claim, Later in the evening a tempor. ary arrangemeAt was made and the sit- vation relieved somewhat.. The tem- porary Wagons failed to meet the post- office, however a | ‘Have You Trizd This? Simple P Wond rription Sald to Work for Rheumatism, Deen well Known to the best y and Is now iven to the Get one ounce of >and and one hat yrup Sarsa. | parila pound. e Toris com food pint of at bedtime, ve using.’ Good ef: | firat day, Many of the have been cured by thin | Any druggist has these ingredients on hand lor will quickly get them fr, his whote Any one can mi Ih'will save many @ doctor Dill and ‘houia de Kept on hand at oi) timen—Adve, | with the surrounding skin not <mians| ORR COUNSEL FOR DEFENSE MAKES ing an attachment on the mail wagons first ap up to the post office from the| You have heard of the effectiveness of Peslam, the newest, modern skin remedy, Test it for the rapidity of its action by selecting a small part of a surface (about fa silver dollar) where the skin isextensively broken out. Apply Poslam on this place at night and note the dif- ference in the morning by comparison reated. its are seen, for Poslam's a nin eczema, acne,psoria- bers’ itch, piles, etc., begins with plication, when ail itching is sto) and continues unremittingly until vork is done, It “takes hold” at once and you can observe progress day by day. ‘The eradication of pimples rashes and minor troubles are but mat- x of the briefest treatment with ‘oslam. Poslam is sold for 50 cents by all ruggists. For free sample write to the Emergency Laboratories, 32 West 25th St. ] ‘oslam Soap, medicated with Poslam, is best for your skin. Antiseptic, pre- vents disease. Large cake, 25 cen! AUBRY )SISTERS’ me OF Ask for the Orig- See inal and Genuine THE BEAUTIFIER FOR ALL Takes the Place of Face Powder Apply, with moist 4 pat face ur with soft cloths ‘of hand and, fu) youre amazed. 25e Tie AUBRY SISTERS’ BEAUTIFIER TINT Used with Beantifier gives the ekin a soft, and white texture. ‘of tat one te t. iiss all coi eg on AUBRY SISTERS D3C,"%. Yo Ha. i the detectives | case. | to question the dead| cut, was found to-day in the meadows between Flushing and College Point, L. L, by two Italian laborers who were cutting hay. Coroner Ambler expressed the opinion that the man had been | Killed within the last twenty-four hours Practical Home Helps For Insormni ase of milk to oiling pola and the body dragged back from the} Heat 1 t College Point Causeway, wh hidden | add enougl Ms rae suit the taste, by the long meadow pockets 12 tablespoonfuls of Eufty's pure malt j Were rifled. A bunch of % cents, | whiskey; stir well and drink slowly. If a clipping from a Jewish newspaper and fragments of a sheet of writing paper were found nearby. The id man is & feet 6 inches tall, wore dark clothing, and his dark fea- tures are covered by several days’ growth of beard. Detectives Kennedy, |Graham and Caputo have been assigned to the cas taken before retiring this will quiet the nerves and produce restful sleep. It is a simple remedy ek Nope! be by any one very quickly. rl. S. Townsend of Detroit, who is an authority, says will cure insomnia and build aj wenk, nervous and debilitated.” Advts JAMES McGREERY & GO. 23rd Street 4th Street On Thursday, October the 26th. WOMEN'S HOUSE GOWNS. In Both Stores, Negligees of Crepe de Chine,—Empire model, sun plaited skirt, net trimmed. _ Lined to waist. 5 18.50 Kimonos of Crepe de Chine, ribbon trim- med. Unlined and lined with albatross. 11.50 and 14.00 French Flannel Wrappers. 6.25 and 9.50 __ Negligees of Albatross, satin ribbon trim- ming. 3-75 and 7.50 Wrappers of Cashmere,— tucked and trimmed with velvet or satin ribbon, lined throughout. High neck and long sleeves. Blue, Gray, Lavender and Black, suitable for ~ elderly women. 8.50 and 10.75 WOMEN'S HOSIERY. im Both Stores, Pure Thread Silk with double tops and unusually heavy spliced heels, soles and toes. goc per pair 6 pairs for $.00 Fine ‘‘Cobweb” Lisle Thread with double tops and spliced heels, soles and toes. lack or tan. 30c pes pair 6 palrs*.or 1.60 . Gauze weight with double tops; extra splicing. Imported Black Cotton heels, soles and toes of 25c per pair 6 pairs for 1.35 SOROSIS SHOES. 1m Both Stores, New models showing the latest shapes in a large variety of materials. JAMES McCREERY & C0. FOUND HIDDEN IN FIELD.! 23rd Street 34th Street! JAMES McGREERY & GO. 23rd Street 34th Street Interior Decoration, Rich Fifniture, Decorative Fabrics and Lace Hangings are exhibited in an unusual variety. Orders taken, at moderate cost, for entire or partial Furnishing of Residences, Apartments and Club Houses in City or Country. UPHOLSTERY DEP’TS. On Thurdsay, October the 26th. Rich Reversible Portieres, of desirable materials and color combinations. . Shee 9.75, 15.00 and 19.50 per pair former price 17.50 to 40.00 Fine Satin, Moire Damask and Double Weave Brocade. .2.co, 3.75 and 5.50 per yard | former price 3.00 to 10.50 LACE CURTAINS. 1800 pairs of Imported Lace Curtains. , 7 3-75, 6.50 and «,.75 per pair former price 5.50 to 15,00 Fancy Chintz and Cretonne Bed Sets... . 5.00, 6.00 and 4.50 per set former price 7.50 to 13.73 Imported Casement and Sash Curtain Detting icc se ees 3oc, 4oc and 65¢ per yard: \*! * former price 48¢ to 1.00 500 Pieces of White or Cream Madras Tissue...........++++...28¢ and 4o¢ per yard’ former price 48¢ to $$¢ JAMES McCREERY & CO, 23rd Street In Both Stores, In Both Stores,

Other pages from this issue: