The evening world. Newspaper, April 17, 1912, Page 22

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7 STS: atiege . Servant in a state of collapse and all ~ {INTE GIRL LED POLICE 10 CAPTURE GANG OF BURGLARS Marie Rohan Chased Leader and Detectives Soon Got Wagonload of Loot. BRONX _ TERRORIZED. Victims Crowd Station andj Court and Pick Out Stolen Property. Fourteen-year-old Marie Rohen, a@| echooigirl, chased George Burke four | ‘Viocks and finally led to the capture of | the whole gang which has been oper- ating for a year past to the terror of | the people tn the Bronx, It looked as if there were a «rent| fuction sale in progress at the Morris fnta police etation to-day. The foot taken from the “fence” at No. 24 East) Sixteenth street wae dispinyed in one of | the roome of tho station. ‘The wails | ‘were trang with coats, overcoats, Easter | gowns and latest fashions in millinery, Mngerte, eilk stockings and other mys- teres of women's apparel, while tables ‘were filled with some of the same ma- terial and jewelry of all descriptions. ‘The people of the Bronx who had been robbed during the past year hastened to the tate epring “opening.” Many identifications of stolen goods ‘were made, the names of the owners taken down and the goods held as evi- dence. Similar acenes wer enacted in Morrisana Police Court, where more of the stolen goods were on display at the arraignment. GIRL MAKES COMPLAINT AGAINST PRISONER. Burke was arraigned on a charge of burglary on a complaint by Marlo Ro- ton, A necond charge of burglary was made against him by Rudolph Moore of No. 3 East One Hundred Fifty-frat street, whose house had been eobbed on a A ee ee a en ites . THE EVENING WORLD, Man Triumphs Over Sea By Heroic Sacrifice for Women and Children Those Who Voluntarily Went Down to Death Wi the Titanic Gave the Most Splendid tenes tion That in Supreme Moments of Life the Race Lives Up to Its Highest Ideals. BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITRH. Arctic'a tou.” Men's bodies strew the battlegro And the hushed world echoce children first!” gave their lives loved and died, ‘ thetr worst frati" Be brave as they were brave and have met. More April 13, Moore saw a lot of his miss- ing jewelry on the person of Burke. He immediately swore to a complaint eharging him with burglary. On the advice of his counsel Burke Dleaded guilty and was held for the Court of General Sessions, with ball fixed at $3,000, Burke ts twenty-three yeare of age and evidently the leader of ra Tony Blano, twenty-four y of No, 2% Sulivan street Mauro, twenty-elght years, ‘sof age, Dominico of No, 26 Filzabeth street; Michael Caporelll, twenty-nine years, of No, 140 Hudson Street; Samuel Aquiviva, twenty-alx years, of Nineteenth street and Third avenue, and Charles Silverstein of No. M4 East Gixteenth street, were ar- Taigned on the charge of receiving stolen goods. On Burke was found a journal with the names of all his victima and others whom he had hoped to make victims. Minute particulars were noted opposite the names, giving the habits of the peo- » ple, when they were Itkely to be out, when the Hghts went out, etc. The po- lice have dubbed him the “systematic ‘burglar. Mr. Moore, who had preferred the second charge of burglary was accom: panied In court by his wife, Mrs, Moore Kept nudging her husband until finatty Magistrate Kernochan asked what the trouble was, Mr. Moore informed him that all hts wife's clothing except what she was wearing at the time had been etolen. They had an engagement to- morraw night and wouldn't his honor please let the lady have her princess Bown as otherwise she could not at- tend the function. YUDGE SORRY HE COULDN'T GIVE UP THE GOWN. The judge said he was sorry, and he really looked it, but was obliged to re- fuse in the interests of justice. Tho woods had to be kept as evidence Inst the criminals. Little Marie Rohen who was the cause of al this commotion in the Bronx was the concerned person in the police sta- tion or police court. Marie Rohen was returning home from School on Monday afternoon, As whe Went up the steps of her home she was nearly knocked down by a man who was coming down, ‘The girl found the whe could get out of her was the Whte- per: ‘“Burglars.”” ‘The little girl ran into the street. She @aw Burke a block away and gave chase, She ran after him for four looks. ‘Then she met Lieut. Reney and he grabbed the burglar, ‘That night Burke sent @ note to # friend at No. 26 Fast Sixteenth street. Lieut, Reney {ntercepted the note and taking a num. her of men went to the house and cap- tured the rest of the gang, numbering five. About $4,000 worth of loot was found in the house, all of which was taken to the police stati Investment Opportunities Safety and Profit Consti- tute a Wise Investment. 389 “Real Estate,” “Business Oppor- tunity” and “Financial” adver- tisements were printed in The World yesterday— 73 More Than DOUBLE the 158 Published in the Herald. Put Your Idle Dollars Where They Will Work to the Best Advantage. World Ads. To-Day that have reached and tragic victory belongs. To me one line stands forth from about the disaster: “TER CARPATHIA IS BAING- ING OVER 000 SAVIW, MAINLY ‘WOMEN AND CHILDREN.” And im this line is the whole history of civilisation, That hundreds upon hundreds of men of all degrees of Gevelopment and grades of society should accept in the hour of certain Geath that first law of heroism. * WOMEN AND CHILDREN FIRST ia the greatest triumph of the soul of man, the most splendid demon- stration that in the supreme mo- mente of life the race lives up to ite ideals. We are all heroes in theory and In dreams, There no more frequea diversions of a vainglorious imagination than to ‘magine one's self plunging through fire and water for the sake of lover or friend, FEW HAVE A CHANCE TO SHOW THEIR COLORS, But it 1s given to few of us to put our ideals to the test that came to the men who were passengers on the Ti- tanic, And no one of we could pray the high gods for more than this, that {f such a test comes to us we may met it as bravely and triumphantly as these men who died. ‘They died not for 800 women and children saved from the Ti- tanto, but for all women and chil- G@ren—for the racial ideal that man owes protection even to his life to the mother and to the child. It is a very noble ideal, It fs an ideal contrary to all the warm surging in- atinots of life, to all the cold dictates of reason, A man’s life is worth more to the world than @ Woman's as things are to-day, We are trying to change this condition, of course, and we will change it eventually, but the fact remains that nearly every man who went down on the Titanic gave up hin chance of lift for some woman of lees value to the world, of less value to the individual, of less value to the child than he, All men, however narrow and tradl- tlon bound, honor women as the givers! of life, and in tragedies Ike that of/ Sunday they make the most magnificent return for the unequal burden of c: rying on the race, which Nature has put upon woman, by laying down their own lives that she and her children may be preserved, “GAVE THE WOMEN AND OXIL- parm” There cannot be anything radically ‘wrong with a masculinity thet invents jand enforces such @ heroic tradition, SWEET MITIGATION IN TIME OF GRIEF. Every woman who lost father or brother or husband in the Titanto dias aster mus feel even in the wildness of grief & sweet mitigation in the knowl- edge that the men she loved died tn vindicating the highest ideals of the race, Every orphaned child mus: feel that it inherits @ priceless legacy of heroism, Other women for whom the aun stands and for whom the freshly garlanded spring is dancing down the April sky hope and Show How and Where. Delleve that Khe mon they love are heroes, But these women know it, And remembering the joy and, saver of like ‘Women and Children First’ The Titan of the Sea has met the Titan of the North— The Dreadnought of the Arctic that the aulien gods sent forth— Saying to Man the Secker, “You have flung your flags to the Pole, You have trampled my enow-white altar, now I claim the The Monster of the North has alain the Mammoth of the Sca— und, but Man's the victory, For they died aa only men can die in the teeth of a doom accursed, the valiant cry “Women and “Women and children fret!" they said and died. All men are braver that they died, all women for whose sake they May yet be nobler mothers, gentler wives, Because they lived and loved, because they loved and dicd, “Women and children first!" Oh, you for whom they aepecially You desolate orphan, sister, watling bride, Weep not for them whose souls subdue the Titans of the Tide. « Weep not for them, who, smiling, died when the high gods wrought And halted the pirate skipper, Death, with “Women and children Oh, you for whom they spectally loved and died, We share your mourning, you must share our pride That such men lived, that auch men loved and died. Oh you for whom the great ecaa sigh, the winds are desolate. fling the challenge back to fate, For you are the child of a Titan, you were a Titan's mate, The Titan of the Sea and the Titan of the North than 1,400 human beings have per- ished as the result of the collision between a giant foeberg, @ veritable Titan of the Arctic, and the mammoth eteamship, on her maiden voyage, which had been christened the Titanic. And yét trom the meagre stories of the catastrophe New York, it fs clear that in this struggle of leviathans there was a third combatant, a greater Titan than the Arctic Dreadnought or the sea mammoth, and that {t is to this Titan, the greatest of them ali—the Titan of the Soul of Man—that a great the columns that have been printed aa they lived it together they must realize the full measure of the sacrifice which they did not want, but which had to be made for them and for all women. Bvery man must feel himself more of @ hero, must experience an expansion of soul, a thrill of cour- Every woman wonders and te awed by it, and while her first selfish thought i one of joy that those dearest to her are within range of eye and speech and touch, she knows that those otner stricken women have a privilege and a slory all their own that the sea whicn claimed a husband has left a hero; that a body has perished that the soul of the race might live and defy Titans of the Arctic and of the aea. PENNILESS GIRLS ARE DRIVEN OUT OF HOME AT NIGHT Late Arrivals From Ireland Found by a Policeman and Receive Offers of Aid. Policeman Shumway of the Tremont @treet station was at Tremont and Third Venue, the Bronx, early to-day when two young women carrying sult cases him and between soba bemeet him to show them same place where they could sleep. They were good ame up to looking girls, th rich Irish brogues. They told Shumway they had been in this country three months and until last by a Ths week were employed as maids family in West Ninty-sixth street. famtly went away and the giris moved into the home of a friend, Mre, Martin, at No, 4068 Thin avenue, to etay until they had found @ new place of employ- ment. Late leat night, they sald, came home, drove them from bed, made them dress and pack their arips and chased them out into the etreet The girls Were sent to the Morrisania Martin * LOOKS LIKE PEACE -—INGOAL FIELDS; IN G00 FEET PLUNGE CONFERENCE IS ON | It Is Now Believed the Opera- | tors Will Grant 10 Per Cent. | Increase in Wages, When the sub-committee of anthracite coal miners and operators, which te try- ing to settle the differences raised over the demands of the men and the refusal of the employers, went into session at expected the work of the small commit- tee would soon be over and that @ ten- tative agreement would be reached by |the larger committee by the end of the! | week, Representatives of bo:h sides have re- | fused to discuss openly what progre | the sub-committee has made, but it 1s evident concessions will be made on both sides. In the four previous sessions of the committee the demands of men have been threashed over. The indicaxions are that a settlement will be reached on this basis: Am increase of 10 per cent. in wages. & partial recognition of the miners’ union by the establishing of grievances, or pit, committess at the collieries. | ‘The right of the committee rep- resenting the three districts in the anthracite region to enter into a | wage contract. agreement for one year. ther wage demand the miners had ked for an increase of 20 per cent. ‘The counter proposition, 1t was believed, would be 5 per cent. with the com- promise on 10 per cent. ‘The establishing of the grievance com- | mittees 1» as far as the operators will go toward the recognition of the unton, in trallty it will accord to the many of the things along this line that they have asked for. | Ort WEDNESDAY, the Union League Club to-day tt was|M&ht at the aerodrome. | olde. sone AVIATORASUICIDE FRM THE CLOUDS? Friends Say sey Vee Who Quarreled With Fiance, Let Aeroplane Fall to Earth. VERSAILLES, France, April 17.— John Verrept, the well-known Belgian airman, who had participated in many of the leading sporting events in Eu- rope, was killed to-day while making @ For som known cause his monoplane collapsed while he was flying at a height of six hundred feet and he fell to the ground and was killed instantly. Friends of Verrept now express the opinion that the aviator committed sul- He had yesterday, they say, a | dispute with his flance, to whom hes swore that he would kill himself. Ob- servers of his fight say they saw Ver- rept throw his arms up and the aero- plane then left to itself crashed to the ground. Th machine was found in perfect working order. Verrept was twenty-three y old. LETS HUSBAND GO OUT OF PITY FOR RIVAL’S CHILDREN Brother and Sister of “the Other Woman” Appear as they had asked for the “check off system by whioh the operators would collect the union dues from the miners. This would have the effect of keeping all the miners as union men in good standing. The griev tees will have the same effect. miner is not a union man It is not likely he will have much of a standing before these committees. The work of these committees will aleo leave the Conciliation Board, ‘against which the miners fought, only @ nominal body to be appealed to as a court of last resort. ‘The agreement for one, year will also ‘be a compromise, The operators had asked for the continuante of a three- Year agreement and the miners wa! @ one-year contract. Before going into the meeting this morning, John P. White, the miners’ Dresident, saki that negotiations were ee ee along smooth lines, FORTY SPEEDERS TAXED HIGH FOR DASHES IN AUTOS Waldo Ordered General Raid as Result of Accidents Due to Carelessness. Forty automobiliste with @ mania for fast driving came to grief in the Harlem Police Court to-day beforé Magistrate O'Connor, They were caught yesterday by the entire force of motor cycle po- lice drawn from the five boroughs by ‘ommissioner Waldo, following the re- cent increase in the number of accidents due to carelessn In ail the cases except one brought before the Magistrate to-day fines were imposed in a manner that won the ap- proval of the prisoners. Grades of dis- tinction were made between driving up hill, downhill, on the level and in crowded parts. The fines ranged from $5, $7 and $10, up to $20 or twenty days in Jail. Policeman Hellens had nine captives picked up at intervals on Broadw north of One Hunderé and Twenty-ninth street. Policeman Moore had thirteen taken in the same district, Policeman Haggerty captured eleven on Riverside Drive, north of Beventy-second street, Policeman John Donovan was there with eight taken from the same p and Policeman Zeh fini the score with seven picked up at random. Mra, Venna M. Btarr of No, 634 West One Hundred and Thirty-Afth street was charged with doing a trifle better than thirty miles along Riverside Drive near the Viaduct, She was fined $10, Mise Etta Morris, who lives at the Hotei Bonta, Ninety-fourth sireet and Broadway, wae asked if she had been travelling at thirty-five miles an hour, T guess I en I tine you $10, ‘dig price for four blocks of epee: answered the prisoner as @ very excited young man rushed forward said the Magi- station, where Mrs, Sullivan, the ma-|to pase her the $10 required by the tron, took them {n charge, ‘To-day they | Court were taken before 3 rate Kerno-| A man with @ ninety-horsepower car chan in Morrisania court, They|was doing a tri etter than forty sald thay O'Brien, eighteen, | miles an hour along Riverside Drive and Motite nty Yeara old. | when Pollcoman Haggerty bewan to give | offered to ald them|ohuse, In court he sald he was Lowell | the girls refused all] H, Brown of East Orange, Just as| proffera of pocuntary aawiatanes Magistrate O'Connor was discussing the | Wore Allowed to go to the home advisability of fining him &0 tt wap die. | other friend, On the way out Joovered he was making the Journey up man Shumway au 1 in makin /@ sligat incline, ‘The tneling reduced | one of t the loan of w/the Sine to $20 and a warning, half dolla: ‘The Good Citizens’ Committee was eral Their story aroused the sympatiies of overy one tn the courtroom, and the ria carried with them tho add ofa pre. Osten Beats Diaces whee they Ruabt ex reematdabtinagt fender in (he person of Joseph E, Weat, dts head, who declared the law could ‘not be complied with, and entered a plea Bese Save nb (9 ale 08 Ope as” Jour teats feel young,” strone and "vig Db |. -saanarbaeneebhemnmnety ZH Witnesses Against Her. The sacrifice of her husband te “the other woman" for the sake of the two Uttle children of that “other womai and not @ mere attempt to rid herself of an unfaithful husband was the inter- eoting feature of the undefended divorce euit of Mrs. Isabella Young against ‘Warner 8. Young, a travelling ealesman, dried to-day before Supreme Court Jus- tice Greenbaum. Mrs. Young ‘s a tall brun Atter @he had told of her marriage and an- ewered other formal quegtions, Miss Jo- sephine Cook wae called ‘to the witness etand. Miss Cook told of a domestic establihment maintained by Young at ‘Roxeburgsh, , Ma where “the oth qroman" wes in charge of the hou: ‘hold and the two Iittle children lived, +“ Mved with them for two years,” eaid Miss Cook. “You lived there, knowing the man and woman were not married?’ asked Justice Greenbaum. “How did that happen?” Mise Cook, a handsome young woman, modishly dressed, replied in a low voice: “The woman with whom he !s living 1s my sister Charles H. Cook, a brother of “the other woman,” gave testimony similar to that of his sister. . Justice Greenbaum took the case under consideration. After the trial the attorney for Mrs. Young ex- he said, “did not learn aantil recently that her husband had this other establishment. At first she thought @he would not apply for a divorce, but decided she should do all she could for those innocent little children. Then she led her sult. The brother and sister of Miss Cook—the mother of the children— appeared in court to testify against their sister because they hope a divorce tn this case will result in their sister be- coming the lawful wife of the man with whom she has lived for years and to whom she has borne children, APRIL 17, 1912. ROOSEVELT IN CAMPAIGN HERE With Munsey He Gave $10,- 000 Toward $59,000 Fund, Then Each Added $5,000. ALBANY, April 17.—The expenses of Colonel Roosevelt's campaign in New York City for delegates to the ‘ational Republican Convention was $59,126.75, according to the report of the Roosevelt League which its treas- urer, Elon Huntington Hooker, filed with the Seoretary of State to-day. @ month. George W. Perkins, Frank A. Munsey and Alexander 8. Cochran each con- tributed $15,000. Other cemtributors in- cluded George Baxter, $5,000; 1. L. Stod- dard, $2,500; Charles H. Duel 000; E. H. Hooker, A. Foster Higgins and R. P. Perkins, each $1,00 and Byron L. 6mith and Oscar Straus, each $00; H. L. Sat- terlee, $100. The league also received several hundred dollars in small con- tributions. ‘Messrs. Perkins and Munsey contrib- uted $10,000 each prior to the primaries and evidently there was a deficiency on April 9 when the league raised $12,500 more. This money was contributed by Munsey and Perkins, who each gave an additional $5,000, and by H. L. Stoddard, who gave $2,500. The expenses were in- curred by office help and in small amounts for campaign purposes Ogden L. Mills, treasurer of t! York County Republican committe: certified that the received and spent $5,585.44, which was contributed by the| Taft National Leagu POLICE ASKED TO CLEAR MYSTERY OF MISSING MAN. No Word Received From Forrest C. Patterson of Bristol Since Last November. ‘The police were asked to-day to ald {n locating Forrest C. Patterson of Bristol, who disappeared under myster- fous circumstances on Nov. 13 of last The missing man was at that time supposed to have committed sul- cide and has been mourned as dead by his wife and relatives. He was the manager and a large stockholder in the Wakefield Woollen Company at Wake- field, « short distance from his home in Bristol. Tt was the custom of the missing man to make trips to New York three times He left by rail on one of these journeys on Nov. 12, 1911, and that was the last seen of him by On the following day Mrs. Pi colved a let from him the substance of which was that he would leave for home on the Joy line steamer, but that when the steamer arrived at Providence he would not be aboard. The wife hurried by train to Provi- dence. In the stateroom engaged by the missing man were found his over- coat, umbrella and travelling bag. In the umbrella handle was his passage ticket, A singular coincidence was that this was the first time that he had ever travelled by the “Joy” line, having al- ways taken the Fall River line, on which he was well known. After these months of waiting Mrs. Patterson believes there is something stranger about the disappearance of her husband than even at first was manifested. C. W. Heritage, brother-in-law of the missing man, went to Police Headquar- ters to-day and told the story. A general alarm Was sent out by the police with the following description off Patterson: Age, forty-two years; height, five feet ten inches; welght, 170 pounds; ‘brown hatr, blue eyes and brown Van Dyke beard, The first two toes on each foot were webbed, Mr. Heritage said that no posethe rea- eon could be assigned for eulcide. “Usin’ TIZGramma?” “Yes, Harold, It Makes Grandma's Feet Feel Just Like Yours, Free from Tiredness, Aches and Corns!” Send for FREE Trial Package of TIZ Today. “Yes, TIZ Keeps Old Feet Always Young!” “Tour papa and mamma, your grandpa and your grandma all ‘T1Z, And you'll use it, to Moet of 9 got old, feet firet le, more weart be when old most, they can use them less—uniess they use: TZ, . If you have never used TI% before, your first uso of it will bring back so chafe or ache, never get @wollen, and your corns, bunions and Tousee will be no more, Nothing will ¢ it or can do tt Ike Tim, De Ment with other thin) have done that for you now using T1Z, Don't wtitutes, TIZ acta on a new out all the polronous ake foot trou 4, accept any sub- princtple—drawe exudations that Bou, Wenesn ae si ghetto m free trial package of and entoy the real toot relied Soc noes Galt before, PERKINS BACKED — GREATEST ISSUE ‘OF ONY BONDS 1S OFFERED FOR SALE —— Bids Asked for $65,000,000 Securities Bearing 41% Per Cent. Interest. r Comptrolter Prendergast is going to ‘sell $5,000,000 4% per cent. fifty-year cor Porate stock of New York City on May 7. The sale will be the largest in the history of the city, It will take place in the Comptrotier's office at 2 o'clock. The sale was approved at a special meeting of the Sinking Fund Commis- sion held to-day in the office of the Mayor, Tt 4 year and a quarter since the last sale of public bonds. The Comp- troller believes the financial markets are now comparatively barren of New York securities, and he expects a good price will be offered for the bonds now to be sold. There was some demand for 4 bond sale in January, but the city was not then In need of the money. The Comptroller calls attention to the fact that city 4's are selling from par to par and an eighth, and ¢’ new 44's assumed the the market they would be worth ulti- mately more than 105, ‘The bonds to be sold will be divided in three classes—$25,000,000 for varie ous municipal purposes, $20,000,000 for water and $20,000,000 for rapid transit. Bond sale ts made necessary because of the subway work now going on and to be undertaken before the end of the year. The Comptroller feels confident that it will not be necessary to hold further sale of bonds for at least one year. He will redeem corporate stock notes issued in anticipation of the com- ing sale, at par, with accrued interest. ———_— OUTGOING STBA rae 1IPS, SAILED TO- dirervool, Berm Bermuda, Lady Carrington, Montevideo, ENGINEERS READY TO QUT WORK AT | MOMENT'SNOT Railroad Managers, Apprel sive of Strike, Postpone Meét: ing to Make Decision. Delegates to the meeting of Brotherhood of Locomotive which has been considering « strike and has heard from 93.3 per of ite membership that @ strilee ts de-| sired, let it be known early to-day that if the demands were refused by the railroad managers the engineers were! ready to quit immediately. The dele- at the Broadway Central Hotel on ten minutes’ notice. The railway managers were to have met in their headquarters in the Ter- minal Building at 10.9 o'clock to-day, When they heard of the aggressive at- titude of the engineers the meeting was postponed until 2 o'clock this afternoon, The managers would give no intimation of the nature of their probable answer to the letter of Chief Stone, foeepeues the Brotherhood's demands, J. C. Stuart of the managers mala tha that he did not himself know what would be the sense of the managere’ meeting, Most housekeepers would prefer to keep the kitchen floor unpainted and “in the white,” were it not for the labor of keeping such a floor in satis- factory condition. However, the work of scrubbing will be lightened and milk white floors can be easily at- tained, by dissolving in each patiful of warm water a tablespoon of Gol Dust washing powder. If set this way each week old stains t! seem to be ground into the wood will Soon disappear altogether, \ This ia ” iso excellent for scrubbing stone steps and woodwork, James McCreery & Co. 23rd Street 34th Street On Thursday, April the 18th. “McCREERY SILKS. In Both Stores, ; Famous over half a Century. Sale of Ten Thousand Yards of Printed Foulard Silks in choice styles and colors. Imported Black pure dye. value 1.00, 55c a yd. Chiffon Dress Taffeta, valuc 1.50, 75cayd. - DRESS GOODS. $,000 yards of Dress Serge in the newest 1 In Both Stores, ~ shades of Tan, Brown, Navy Blue, also Cream or Black. 50 inches wide. value 1.50, Q95c¢ a yd. 1,500 yards of Black Whipcord Suiting, value 2.09, 1.25 a yd. ey CORSETS. In Both Stores, Mme. Irene Corsets. Models for every type of figure. Made of various Imported materials, including silk and elastic Tricot. 5.00, 7.00 to 25.00 B. and J., “Mme. Poix” and De Bevoise Brassieres and Bust every type of figure.’ Confiners. Styles for 50c, 1.00 to 15,00 RIBBONS. 1m Both Stores, ve Fancy Ribbon,—a variety of self-colored designs in pink, blue and white. 634 inches wide. 634 and 330 a yd. 6 inch double faced Satin Ribbon infa complete line of millinery shades, ae 2O0cayd} iby Figured Satin Lingerie Ribbon in pink, blue, violet and white, James 23rd Street McCreery & Co, Nos. 1 to 5, 25 to 75c a pieco—: 34th Street '

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