The evening world. Newspaper, October 28, 1911, Page 12

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a eee -- FLKS DEDICATE © Magnificent New FINENEW HOME OF NOTRE Govemor and Mayor Take Part in Exercises in West 43d Street Building. INCLUDES A BIG HOTEL. or er ge Guests From All Parts of the Country Here for the Ceremony. Making a distinct contribution to the architectural magnificence of New | York City, Lodge No, 1 of the B. P./ 0. B,, “the Mother Lod dedicates | its new home on West Forty-third street, near Broadway, to-day, in the presence of one of the most distin- guished gatherings tn the history of the order. Visiting brethren, who have come here from all over the country to be present at the opening of a home in keeping with the dignity of the “Mother Lodge,” are tramping through the fifteen-story building and admiring its many splendid features. Nowhere in the United States is there another clubhouse which in opulence of equipment or in wealth of comfort any- where aproaches the new $1,500,000 Elk: home, standing on the 100-foot plot, Nos. 108, 110, 112 and 116 West Forty-third | street. Qne of the greatest characteristics of building from roof to sub- cated to the use of members of the order, thelr wives and families, Not: @ single detall tending to the greater comfort of the brethren has been for- | gotten. | Of the thirteen stories above ground eight constitute a hotel, as modern in its equipment as the latest hosteiry erected on Broadway or Fifth avenue, but though the wives and daughters of | brethren are welcome in nearly | ry other part of the bullding, the hotel 1s closed to them. Here are 216) rooms in the hotel, including forty %, and every room is an outside! room, t BXERCISES TO-DAY HELD GREAT LODGE ROOM. But, if the hotel is closed to the ladies | of the Elks fraternity they are wel come in the rpactous restaurant on the) ground floor, and the adjacent waiting, resting and writing rooms, where no ttle detail that would captivate a/ woman und make her feel thoroughly | at home ts lacking, Om the floor above is the club proper, with pool and billiard room, conver- CLUB HOUSE. saxiones, lounges, reading and writing| y..,, : | rooms, Here ts cxemptified to the full] Juste Rosales’ Coane: Juatibe | the significance of the slogan “Nothing | jander Poe adorns | is too good for w brother Elk.” A grill| some of the gusate ng and bowling alleys occupy the first cipal address will bo deitvered basement floor. Past | S aived Ruler Arthur | But the crowning feature of the oreland, one of the oldest. mem- | building 1s the wonderful threo-story SS sloauen | Oream and gold lodge room, with ite| peen, Deard in ne 7, Jtae Foor | two tlers of boxes, forty-two In all, d voted to the mysterious ritualistic exe: of the lodge session. Accommo- dating nearly 8,000, it is the scene of to- “Eleven 0! ok,” which In F | language means lodge meeting timo, will | strike at promptly o'clock time, and the mother lodge w | | ya eee day's dedicatory exerciser, at which|€2Velled to order by Exalted Rul Gov. Dix, who ts an onthuslastic Hik,| td J. Shalvey, who gives way to will make a short address, Mayor Gay.| District Deputy Grand Bxalted Ruler New York, Southeast, Philip Parker, nor, Past Grand Exalted Rulers John K. ,Tener, Governor of Pennsylvani Herrmann of Cincinnat!; Harry nm, New York, and’ Jerome Cruelty Charged Against the under whose supervisio exercises will be au the ritualistic ted, Son of Famous Magazine placa BSc e ally B, Fisher, Soporte, N. Y.; Bu. Court just Del ii HARTFORD, Conn, Oct. 2%—In th Superior Court yesterday Judge Gar- BIBLE CLASSMATE diner Greene told Joseph L. Barbour) ‘ that his client, Mrs, Beatrice J. F.) Walker of Washington Heights, New| York City, might have ‘a decree for dl- ie | voree from Wilfred D. Walker, a son of | |Jonn Brisven Walker, former owner | of the Cosmopolitan Magazine, whom| _fo Mrs, Walker sald, after the trial, she is| fa » for $50,000 damages, yoen on the docket for ise of the difficulty of 1 the respondent, of notice the aistry re- | ng to 8 Mrs. Sharlow That |, aa 8 Rich Husband Didn’t Give | 2enine a teres Her Enough to E. Asserts was content with t of Gerald Wal | 1 ye to trial there was ho Mrs, Walker | vge of name | | of desertion, laim rm rec | When the | mo contest, and thot originally 1 for a ¢ and d mn the gro a late maiden the test intolerable has sige Mrs, Laura L. Sharlow brought! sult before Supreme Court Justice Gar.) retson ir Brooklyn for sal separa from rlow, John jr she he not fo member of Thomas Sb Dv, Roc 8, | uelty as w Q Stands for QUANTITY: tigi 4 President of Shariow Brothers Company,| When Mrs. Walker took the witness When your-ad, is printed in the|naraware manutucturers, and a man o¢| Att she sald her name was. Mra Morning or Sunday World it gets | independent means, charging In her com- ; Tulle § a Dilworth bb ree | a circulation in New York City| paint that ho ts a “penurious tyrant” [fy Wotton in Sow Week bite, dale GREATER than if published in| ana that at times while she lived with | 1904 while she was a wer of AnDB the Morning or Sunday Herald,| nim there was almost no food in the|Held's “14 Choru went to Times, Sun, Tribune and Press| bouse. jive at the Hotel Alabama on ast Another reason for her belng legally eventh street and remained there COMBI { So much for QUANTITY Q Stands for QUALITY: “f Sharlow was given seven months until she mother in Prov “He forced me Mrs, Wal in returned to her the insertion of an advertisement pub y to go home,’ testified He began to use vio Manhattan This read shed Sharlow in vapapers 5 4 IGN G| NOTICE ts hereby given that 1 4m not to he ‘on A week or two after our The RESUL T-BRINGIN GG) eeree ie tesomfor ils contracted by my wife | marriage, pulling out handfule of halt QUALITY of World advertise-| When the case came into court yes-|and choking me black {n the face in his ments is best shown by the fact|terday Mrs. Sharlow made a motion rage, In my sleep he often pushed his that ‘i through her attorney for allmony and | thumb down on my windpipe and | counsel fees, She sald that Sharlow, *4 ~ me gisp for breath. On one} EVERY WEEK-— was a man of vast means and theres yaign a” gedanthe aves teeing, ele: EVERY MONTH— fore she should receive a handsome dred and Twenty-Afth street when he um, tried to shoot me. About the first of EVERY YEAR |"sariow now lives at No. 661 Weat|L50 he came invai 1 ocioek one iaoree The World prints more adver-| One tiundred and Fifty-seventh stre | id sald he was thro ith me, tisements than ALL THE five be.| while his young wife Is making her|%) though T'was ill in hed, he forced fore-mentioned newspapers jhome with her father, Abel Crook, an (9 Ket UP and helped me pack to attorney with offices In Manhattan, who oe ty Pra aaa ula have 10 get cut ADDED TOGETHER. You will miss a great opportunity lives at No, lyn. 1S St. James place, Brook- ss T did as he ordered, remaining in Provtdence unt! | Cro: 4 4 * The s are p fi social went to live with my mother x to make business hum it you) ana te of Miss Laura and) i > f : ap eglect to W events 2a i mother ag neglec AC ‘ wiles vents going in New {" Advertise in the Big Mra, Sharlow and her husband are nee pau lcacan i ‘auld to have parted last January, but Gerald Wa of the New ‘ Sunday World To-Morrow intimate friends and even relatives of | and Hudson River Ry tie Crook family were not aware of it | road, does not know here he is.” a LODGE ROOM. the south-bound platform, A local train | Home of Elks’ First Lodge BURGLAR ALARM | ag THREW HERSELF UNDER A SUBWAY TRAN, BUT LVES Two Cars Pass Over Women Attempting Suicide, but She’s Only Bruised. jBUT \Thirtieth street station, was passing THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1911. WURBRA,WUPRRA! PANDOM SHOTS AT BIG GAME AND SMALL FS ROBBERS PACKING FURS Policeman Hears Bell Ringing ! and the Building Is Surrounded. THIEVES |Had Ascended Fire Escape to hedet tht nh Top Floor, Then Down the Stairs to Furrier’s Loft. | | Policeman Fitzgerald of the West) | No. 478 Sixth avenue, near Twenty-ninth street, early to-day when he heard burglar alarm ringing in the building. He rapped for assistance, and Policemen Murphy and Gorman responded and ste- tioned themselves in front of the build- ing while Fitzgerald and Detective} Bauerschmidt, who also came on the| scene, went to the rear. Reserves who! were summoned guarded the bullaing| on all sides. The drop ladder of the rear fir was resting on the ground, and gerald and Bauerschmidt climbed up to the fourth floor, the top of the build- ing. There they found the iron shutter | leading Into the Roth Embroidery Com- | Pany’s establishment had been jimmied | open. The officers climbed through the window. They found that the door leading into the hall had been forced open, and fo! lowed the trail down to the third floor, occupied by the Brillant Sign Company, where another forced door confronted them. The sign company had no bur- slar alarm, so the officers kept on to see where the thieves had been work- ing. A hole in the floor about two feet |square, with a rope dangling down into |the darkness, was the frat thing they saw. Fitzgerald slipped down the rope, followed by Bauerschmidt, and discov- ered that Semmel & Melsler, furri on the second floor, whose establish- Mrs. Sophie Bacon, thirty-five, of No. 613 Clifton avenue, Newark, N. J., is a prisoner in New York Hospital charged She threw her- a with attempted sutcld self under a subway train at Gran Central station early to-day, but et caped almost without injury becau: her body fell in the middle of the track and two cars of the train passed over her without touching her. The woman got off a north-bound local train shortly before 3 o'clock this morning and walked up on the bridge apparently to cross to the south-bound | platform, John Carroll, a ticket chop- | per, noticed tat she scemed nervous | as she paced up and down the brid; several times. Carroll asked her if he could do anything for her and she told him she was waiting for a friend, Carroll called the atention of Special Policeman John Schneider to the wom- | an, and Schneider started to speak to her when she darted down the steps to was just coming in and she threw her- elf from the bottom step directly in the path of the trai Bhe fell on her head and shoulders and her limbs straightened out between the rails, The train was almost upon her and Motorman John Rydel threw on the emergency brakes, but the first car and part of the second had passed over her before the train stopped, Policeman Schneider got down be- tween the cars and crawled back to’ where the woman lay. She was unhurt, but somewhat dazed by the fall. She was lifted to the platform and an am- bulance summoned from New York Hoi pital. Dr. Rochelle found the woman unin- Jured save for a brulsed shoulder and the shock of the fall, She said she was the wife of Irving Bacon, a Newark newspaperman, and was the mother of five children, She would give no reason for her attempt to end her life. ieeeesrecnnatingsmnmnmess LABOR LEADER GUILTY. Ve Murder Muuriece E CHICAGO, Oct, 28 ice Enright, labor unton organizer, was t o-day found wullty of the murder of Vincent Altman| end his punisnment fixed at life Im-| prisonment. Enright shot Altman, also a labor onganizer, In the barroom of a wntown hot In a long confession made shortly after his arrest, Enright admitted that he killed) P Gentle- man, a labor union delegate, but denied tha: he had any part in the killing of Altman, SHIPPING NEWS. ALMANAC FOR TO-DAY, G.24|8up sei4,, 5.08) Moon sete... 9.27 Sun rises, THE TIDES High Water, Lo ai PSE Koy pte. 160 THO BaD PORT OF NEW YORK, ARRIVED. Kaiserin Augusta Victoria Hambui Oot Montgomery Savannah Morro Castle ranted iii NCOMING STEAMSHIP. DUE TO-DAY Aceiduea Stefavo, La i 1 jst 7 imerin, Tampico, Jacksonville, OUTGOING STRAMSHIPS, SAILED TO-DAY puthampton, Vader Pit Antwerp, Havre, iY Orlane ‘Atlant pra ment is protected by a burglar alarm, j haa been the object of the thieves’ visit. | On the floor at the bottom of the jhole lay a saw, @ brace and two bits and a heavy pair of scissors for cut- |ting metal. Near by was a bottle of oromo seltzer, some sandwiches and some grapes, and all over the floor were | bundles of furs that the thieves had | evidently prepared to be taken when | one of them, accident..\y touched the | burglar alarm and they were compelled to flee, leaving their plunde: Only the choicest skins had been taken, Enough skins had been wrapped | up to make a wagon load, and the po- lice believe the thieves planned to carry | the bundles up to the fourth floor and down the fire-escape to the rear, where & wagon would have met them to haul away the plunder, andwiches and grapes indicated that the thieves meant to take plenty of | time to pick over the furs without going | hungry and probably intended to spend most of the night at thelr task and have the wagon meet them at a time when iti in the street set In the neighborhood in the hope that the wagon would come, but evidently the thieves had counter- manded the order, for no wagon made {ts appearance. A search of the neig Dorhood fatled to reveal any more traces of the thieves. Mr. Semel told the detectives that about two weeks ago, on a rainy day, a man wearing @ raincoat and with his hat pulled over his eyes, represented himself as coming from a burglary ine surance company to inspect the wir- ing of the work and storerooms. sem- mel demanded credentials, but all that the man could show was a number of application blanks, He was ozderet out of the place. ‘The burglars believed to he the same gang who several nights ago dug through a cement flooring to get nt hon July 4, 1910, at Reno, N. |WURRA worn BY W. ATTY blames the calamity to the Giants on Thursday by the hoodoo score Other members of the rattled team blame of 13 to it team work. on psychology.” Poor pitching. Looking over all the dope at this calm and peaceful distance f am convinced that the nature of the Jinx that sen: the Ginks from Gotham into The Athletics simply outgamed ESCAPE, | nts In any contest of physical skill, whether on-the diamond, the @tidiron, the cinder path or within the four ropes, gameness counts for a big percentage as a winning factor, The Giants in “blowing up" as they did at a critical point was a lack of gameness. n the critical game of the series showed turned out to be. And It was just that and nothing more or less that causea another tragedy | that may be, a ve UT CHEER UP! body else can win. And I gue: B ND IF THE GIANTS are hopelessly downcast they may take consolation in the fact that Park Commissioner Stover has announced his intention of reviving the ancient and strenuous sport known says it himself! bowling. tive ‘selection, at the first game. GER THAT MARY GARDEN says | she would Itke to be a reporter. I don't think that would do at all. Mary furnishes such good copy now as @ free lance triller that {t would be « shame to cut off her piquant phrasings by obliging her as a reporter to cover Black Hand bomb explosions, feather- bed fires and mad dog scares on Essex treet. Stay with us as an artist, Mary, and keep on telling us how little we know about art. It doesn't hurt you and it makes all of us laugh, and the Lord knows laughs are all too dearce in thie world, Is there any prospect that the Steel Trust prosecution will do away with the Carnegie libraries and put The Hague peace tribunal out of business? ROLLO. No, son; you will continue to pay Bowe PRESIDENT M'ANENY, There wi word was joyfully sent to Mr. McAneny, McAneny. to the bubbles. This second shock has sent several Keeley cure. | Percy Rockfeller, John D. Rockfeller And, oddly enough, the barbers don’ little of the ofl of kindness flows their HE erudite and omniscient Mister | Hoffman comes across with @ ree mark or so touchin’ on this base- hall mess that {s entertaining. He says: DEAR WURRA WURRA: Wud you Mr, Loughlin be of ® chelrful dishposishion {f you hat sen your check for 6 dollers to Mr. ‘J. T. Brush the Petty cash keeper of Gints basse ball clob, to pay for 1 Grand seet tecket for worldt’s ser- fs, and if you diden get It a you feele like a crossy crapped olt cove and let you wife cail you @ Russelamb this is esactly wot hap- pens to me, and I wud like to hav that Brush in a quite corner and proseet to alter the Genneral fee- tures of his lovelie loogin map, and prehaps make his lamps of a dass ing collor, how wil I get my five fron men back? If it wossen becose I hate to see N. Y. loose to Phila- Gelphia Atleths I wud almot be glad that they trimmed Brushes Gints. P.8.—Mr. Louglin wot 1s esactly @ round tecket to Reno for 2; and single comin back???? the metal ceiling of Samuel Saxe's fur hop at No, 24 West Twenty-fourth | treet. They cut through the ceiling , and got away with 1,000 valuable mink | skins, EVERY PO ———»—_——- LICE POST SHIFTS ELECTION DAY. | ‘Scams ts me that when the Sta 9,000 Men Won't Know Where They Are to Go Until Early Morning of Nov. 7. Following the plan he put into effect at the primary election, Commisslonor | Waldo has completed arrangements to transfer 9,000 policemen on Election Day, | Nov Sealed orders will reach cach | statlon-house between 3 o'clock and 4 | o'clock In the morning and every patrol- man and sergeant in the Department on routine police duty will find himself moved to another precinct for twenty- four hours, ‘The election night crowds on Broad- way will be handled by the TraMe Squad with the ald of policemen specially de- tailed, Commissioner Waldo belleves tn the efficiency of mounted men in hand- | | ling congested crow and will have a big showlng of pollee cavalry it to keep the election night throngs moving, | en ee JOHN C, ANGIER DEAD, Brother-in-Law of B, N. Dake Had | Come Here for Operation, John C. Angier, brother-in-law of | Benjamin N. Duke and a lifelong resi- jdent of Durham, Cy died at the |Hotel Manhattan, this city, yesterday afternoon, from sciatica. Mr. Angler, Who was fifty-four years old, and @ man of large means, cam) to New York a Seek agu, believing that & surgical operation would relieve the ailment from which he had been a suf. ferer for more than a month, Vhystoiany were prepa for the operation, which to have taken nlace when’ his ec in permit= ted. His heart action began falling yesterday at noon, Mr. Duke was ‘called and was with bim when be died. ng Mr. Angter | Wit Respect, MISTER HOFFMANN. ‘Tis with salty tears in my eyes I give you my sympathy Mister Hoffmann. All @ise that I know to console you ts the realization of the fact that you're only one of hundreds who were stung by the manipulators of the world’s series in ot | Now York went out of its way to create commissions regulating professional box- ing and racing it should not have over- looked professional baseball and the worse than professtonal football that 1s dished out in these parts once a year amid the glamor of college rah-rah-raha It needs only a few such jolts as t handed to baseball by Mr. John Ticket Brush and his accomplices to Knock it off {ts pedestal as the national game. ‘As to that Reno trip, Don't go double land come back single. It 4 good, | this thing of divorce through the thinly ‘screened Me of legal residence. It en genders contempt for the laws that make civilization endurable. It fosters that disregard for morals and moral obliga- |tions that drives women who should be |good mothers to the streets, and men who should be good husbands to the \rathskellers and later to the peniten- | tiary. Aw, don't |mann, See | leade) | go to Reno, Mister Hoff. @ priest—or your district WURRA WURRA To decide a bet: Did Young Cor- bett win the featherweight title trom Terry McGovern? Was Young Cor- bett ever champion of any class and It so, from whom did he win the champlonehip? Yours truly, HARRY LORTZ, Sparring partner of Tommy Murphy. | _ Flatbush, N.Y. | Hasn't the nows yet reached Flatbush \that Cortett fought McGovern for the title and won {t?. The only title in reach of Corbett now ts the welter—he's that big, so he ts. IT =X RICKARD {s getting him: Into the newspapers with compl cent regularity, Ono day ne 1a hunting for a bunch of fighters to take down to Argentina, another day he trying to get capital interested in a steamsiip line to Buenos Ayres and again he ‘s tryiag to sell real estate nt Others on poor flelding, and still wht have made their defeat less exasperatingly judicrous than It! probapty As Mike says, somebody must lose in order that some- u Battery Park, which Stover 1s about to devastate by the con-| struction of an athletic fleld and running track will have a space reserved for Well, what the —- What do you think of that? | the Giants in his ponderous mind when he determined to revive bowling. And {f the Giants don’t take kindly to bowls they have cricket My friends of the Veteran Association of C1 ‘to welcome them on Abe aerman’s cricket grounds alon, ‘Drewery on Staten Island, where I would like to see Joe McKone act City Hall, came to life all of @ sudden on Wednesday, scored three runs in the third to @ big round goose egg for the Giants. ‘What's the score?’ asked Mr. MeAneny. “Three to nothing in favor of the Athletics,” “Bet you two to one the Giants win the gam wild scramble among the City Hall reporters, dle of the week and funds low. a pool of 42 wi to one, knowing the three-run lead held by the Athletics, The story of the phenomenal luck of the Giants in the ten-inning play and how they nosed out ahead of the Athletics is history. The #2 was sent to Mr. And what was more amazing he promptly invited the boys out and blew them N THE CUP RACK of a big uptown hotel barber shop I noticed these names inscribed on mugs: William Rockfeller, H. H. Rogers jr., James G. Cannon, "tow — contract that if he develops It success. fully will make the world sit up and take notice. It is a conglomeration em- bracing real. estate, steamships and fight Dope it out as you like, I'm pledged not to give It away. IM SHEA of No, @ Putnam ave~ af nue, Brooklyn, gomes across with that old weevil about “a hen and a half laying an ege and a half in @ {day and a half how many would eix |lay in six days.” Have they half hens in, Brooklyn, I |dunno? They have lots of ba Hod A s th hatr-growini P.MELOUCHLIN: Pinar ene ear For instance, at a political meeting In the Browpsville, or Jewish, seotion last night I noticed that John McCooey pre+ sided, Aaron I. represented Agsem- blyman Louls Goldstein in the absence of Rose Goldstein, the sister who 18 campaigning for Loole, who 1s sick abed. James M. Sullivan paid a tripute to ‘Alderman Aleck Drescher, the live wire who has helped overy public enterprise tie benefit of his con- others on poor ve discard the so-called launched for ot le ooh stituents. There were a Soc! plainiy that as a team they lacked the | Situerim Tit ijendence Leaguer— the oniy one left In the dis Democraiic Leaguer, whatever ia trained spelldind |from Fourteenth street, ex-Assembly- |man Richard J. Molloy. All the speak- ‘ers of a‘l nationalities referred to “the |issue of the hour,” and one can hardlly | trict a He. Gest tORIR Won, Gt 'tHAL. imagine what variegated a1 were taken. But they. all lined up Drescher, who is going ‘back to. th Board of Aldermen for another term, OWN IN STATEN ISLAND at the D Liberal A. C. show the other night the two chaps carded for the ain bout deliberately attempted to oure’ the management for a better \sstake than had been agreed upon. ‘he management very properly refused Icketers will be glad 4, be held up. The matter naw goes side of Eckstein's|pefore the Boxing Commission. s umpire the precious pair will be put out of business so far as this State ts con- cerned. The boxing manager {s not ways villain he ts painted. Som boxers aro as crooked as a corkscrew and it 1s about time to straighten "em out. HUNT BORGLARS WO WERE ROUTED BY RS, LOOMS SPRINGFIELD, 0., Oct. %—Two |burglars yesterday entered the home | of Francis B, Loomis, former Assistant United States Secretary of State and late Commissioner to the Turin (Italy) Exposition. When the two men got into the bed- room of Mrs. Loomis she offered reaiet- nce, Two shots were fired at fro she was not hit. She returned the but the burglars escaped from ¢he house. Some time afterward two man a a train when it was west of 8. E, Hounshell, the conductor, eag C. L. Brown, @ brakeman, ordered the strangers off. ‘ Brown was fatally shot. Hounshell was seriously wounded. The two robe bere, then leaped off the train and vaa- ished. Bloodhounds were put on the aly ‘The dogs, after a run across twenl miles of country, rounded up @ man who turned and showed fight, Many shots was exchanged between the fugitive and the posse. Me was shot twice before he was captured, in the heart of that hustling city. As|The prisoner described himself as a@_matter of fact Tex _has on hand a Charles stoop of Dayton, 0. | he | ‘bow! Yep, Yut maybe he had your share of the taxes made nece! sary by the Carnegie lbrary gifts. | Uncle Andy didn’t take any of the stock, He took his in bonds, and there is real value behind all of the bonds— every cent. So you'll have to keep on reading whether you want to or not, and there will still be a good home for Laura Jean Libby, George Ade and Prof. Harry Peck to utilise for the children of their brains. As for The Hague, I notice that when Austria wanted a strip of the Balkans, when Germany wanted a bit of Morocco and when Italy wanted a Uttle Tripoll for polish, none of them paid much attention to the peace ment. It’s only good when there's no war to invite the public attention. All the Powers will run to the ringside and forget the gentlemen with whis- at the conference any time the "e not looking. ‘the cake of ic as he is known in the The Athletics had id Teddy Piper. aid Mr. MoAneny. It being the mid- all that could be gathered an@ who made good his offer to go the two of the reporters on their way to the jr. and E. L. Marston. r diamonds and they look as if way. JAMES McGREERY & CO, 23rd Street 34th Street On Monday and Tuesday, October the 3oth and 31st. SILK DEPARTMENTS. 1m Both Stores. “McCreery Silks” Famous over half a Century. Sale of Fifty Thousand Yards of Plain and Novelty Silks and Satins, suitable for Evening and Street wear. A large variety of weaves in White or Black. 65c to 95c per yard Imported Black Dress Velvet. 4oinches wide. 3.50 pos yard value 5.50 % DRESS GOODS. Im Both Stores, 5,000 yards of Colored Broadcloth in the newest shades of Tan, Brown, Navy Blue and Black. Bright satin finish, sponged and spot proof. 55 inches wide. 1.45 per yard value 2.25 3,000 yards of Black Broadcloth, suit- able for Tailored Suits. Brilliant satin finish, sponged and spot proof. 54 inches wide, 1.75 per yard ake 2 10,000 yards of English Cotton Voile in a complete assortment of Evening shades, also White or Black. 45 inches wide. 5oc per yard JAMES McGREFRY & CO. «, 23rd =treef 84th Street

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