The evening world. Newspaper, June 7, 1912, Page 3

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SPRY FAMILY SAVEDBY FRENEN, VLA DESTROYED Trading Stamp Man, Wife and Four Children Carried Down Ladders at Cranford. LOSS ABOUT $150,000. Rare Paintings Bought From Ex-Ice King’s Estate Go Up in Smoke. ‘Wiien an early morning fire raged through the beautiful Italian villa at Cranford, N. J., where Thomas A, Sperry, president of the Sperry & Hut- chingon Corporation, of New York and his family were making thelr summer home Mr. Sperry, his wife and four children had to be carried down lad- ders from the second story. Not only did they narrowly escape with their lives, but they lost the inagnificent furnishings of the house, including rare paintings which had been bought from the estate of Charles | W. Morse, all valued at $150,000, Mr. and Mrs, Sperry, their daughter! therine, two small sons and an in- fant three and a halt years old, Jost every article of clothing they pos- sesued when they were roused from their beds near dawn by the volume of acrid smoke rising from the floor below, ‘They stood on the green lawn ig their night clothes watcling the Mstruction of ti bors brought th them to their hom exposure. THE FIRE PROBABLY DUE TO FAULTY INSULATION. ‘The fire is belleved to have started in the cellar under the dining-room the electrical pump and (ie Kas-making vir home until neigh- clothing and took to save them from where machines were located, So far as can) be guessed faulty insulation in some of the electric w ve the necessary | spark tat spread into flames, Imme diately the house filled with the fumes of buriing rubber insulation, Neilie Brock, the m tor the smaller ehil- dren of the family, whose room was on first floor of the extensive vill one to discover the presence of She rushed upstairs, shutting behind her as she ry and pounded on| the door of the bedroom ocoupied by Mr. | and Mrs, Sperry. After warning them ot the fire the nurse hurried to the bedrooms of the children and roused them, half awake, from their beds. As soon as Mr, Sperry jumped from! Nis bed he staried downstairs to Inves- | tigate tho extent of the fire, but the great billows of smoke that puffed up into face were shot through with stabs of flame and he was forced back, | Hoth the front and back stairways were ny of the family te | did the fire spread that they were ouf onto a higit balcony, upon which some of the bed room windows opened, A chauffeur, whose pleeping quarters were over the garage In the che Videk-squave yard which the villa oc-| cupled, saw the tl ud hurried to send | in@n alarm, but the alarm system was | famity, so it was discovered later, and aflame defore descend and so | | rear 0 | the ¢ yfeur had to rus to aon yi the hats are—well, frlaly was so filmy [t could be drawn through telephone and call up “ie poilee to 4 Tae detinquent # nom I meet @ wedding ring, But the bride of 1912 he alarm. ‘foun ne ran bavk to the! and the factory gitls are not to blame! could put her whole troussoau to the | taming house, fron thi windows for adopting those outlandish styles.| same teat. To pay the most possible of which ilames were Z ching, Th y them from the high sehool| Mm cy for the least possible garments smd began to search for a ladder wh girls, whom they beileve to be educated | seems to be to-day's standard of dri with to vescue the liuddled people in! enough to know waat fs right, Girls | Fitters in departinent stores and talloi night garments on the balcony. lich school are just at the self-cone|!'s establishments have had to ask thelr CLIMBS TO A BELL TOWER TO)! scious age. firms for rulings as to How few clothes SOUND THE ALARM. “Their clothes are growing worse ang . women ae q . er ane By Forenty minutes were lox: because of NO CAS: war | hey bee ne Kile pore fasnion books and thp delay In getting out the larm i re weurur's. all figure. low ers Unlexs: thelr dolls are sade to look Bigs, Ad Imb to the borough bell |’ ie a simple girlish frock would] !<® "Fea! ladies,” |. e.. dressed in {mts tower sound the al m by hand be- | tation of « suggestive style worn in ause of the faulty apparatus, A tele- | Parle by some person whose business phone had meanw de sent to} "UE Grosses ime] 1: to suggest. Undoubtedly if a Meoittcht and the nex automobiie fire Properly ii ls her mother’s fault, Tie} Lenius with a tuning fork were to hang | cngine, tei Js the pride of that ham- old-fashioned mothe, io was content | ver the cradie of the modern girl baby let was sent teaving over the country | with shnple gowns and frocks, would! ho might Le able to establish that h toads toward the red gloW in tle eys not tolerate such attire on her dauwh- | apparently meaningless clamor {s really of the dawn, ter @ vid-fastoned mother $s sadly | a frantic howl ¥ Wien the firemen of Cranford did. jceded now tw effect a radical dress re-) What, after z arrive the Sperry s auteur had found form.” way in which the very young gir tadders and as ting Mr. Sperry, ‘ne who has noted the complete | dresses? Why does her mother permit ale wife and tue ¢ nto make th sine schoolgirl! | her to imitate the caricatured fashions way to the grout.’ The fumes were and atreets of | of Broadway? close behind them in the s they » dispute taese |MOTHERS OF GIRLS HAVE MUCH tad go recently deserted, ‘The firemen | conc *hicago’s Rew probation TO ANSWER FOR. yan up their ladders and soon 1 | office But here at joast the old-fash-] irs Annie Nathan Meyer, founde: of everybody down n the lawn, ‘The, ioned mo.her is as vbsolete as the dodo! Barnard College, once explained to me streams were turned tuto the blaze, | bind or the liver issue, this extraordinary maternal negligence. but, such headway had the fire made We haven't even an old-fas “@nere's uo donds that many 6f chat the water seemed to have no| foned grandmother, Mother Xnick- our Uttle girls of sizteen and avail. Within two hours the inverior| erbooMer herself is as tightly seventeen go abont with painted Of the beautiful house was destroyed | skirted, os thinly attired, as high and powdered faces, false hair and and only the shell of whi had been heeled aud beplumed, suggest clothes,” Mrs. Meyer t snitivent home in Crantord'y| @8¢ powdered, as her /siztes: aid, ‘and the mothers of such girls she moss, magpiicant vom | old grandchild. In fact, a traveller coldgy, xempined a in Now| ?¥0m Mars beholding three genera- ein al taay Mr Sperry, whose company In New| [1000 Of Mew York femininity at Sse 28 er Srey Sate, be. ete York operates the green (ruling SP) eg game time would be tempted to | the powder puff and the rouge pot Dusipess, had spared no expense in| eee warhich te grandma?” Bor | for fear the poor little wonae Det ttt othe. interior of his how today grandma, in her short pak he Bee pease Sa) farts decorator ot w York M4 gghoolgirl skirts, her kittenish, | we ‘ae ae ‘Wee martig mir con te charge of the interior fu “outey-cutey” ways, looks hardly | smothers will win possible hus- inga-and Mr. Sperry himself had olde: and certainly no more sophis- heads oven tiem su" sndtfixed his hobby for collecting rare! thoated than her powdered, painted | iF thig be true, the high cost of hus- paintings, Last month he spent $00) and bedecked grandobild. |) | bands iy a much more important prod- or new additions to his collection, One Now, 1's really allt t about # 44° | Jem than that of the hikh cost of IIVing. of the collection, “A Court Favorite,” | ma, Age has all privileges, Including | Bie yt: true? A great many mothers was-one of the most veluable in the | that of making an idiot of itself 1.) go not train thelr daughters to the hus coligetion of Charles W grandina's daugater, a matron of thivtys | bandehunt. or. marriage is not the wagrsold’when the New five or forty years od, Wants to Wear! good, solld investment that It used to @ silt skirt and spider we», le#h-colored | be. Divorce has become too easy to} wag indicted { | stuchings, no one les right to ob- | made @ wedding seem like a paying life NS diipiees BE Wie ange 8s sil mares be the pal Art! investment. And marriage, moreover, STB rogsures wery. payed wes len ceihe ty tee toard, | {about the only profession # irl can ollfportralts of Mrs, Sperry and of the Conmisston or the Pupste Sty J adopt 1 which age and experteroe will t ove, Tt Was Mr. Spervy's hope TIME TO CALL A HALT ON GILD- diminish her efficiency instead of Ine AY "sy A yato Re ewe i ‘ a? ING THE LILY. CWT ‘rea! explanation of the dis- diaBbVer tha sone of Cir paintings |e) pat wien the Liy of giriiiood 1 glided appearance of the young Kini ainong us Joved might not be drrevorauly VM Vang piiited amd dyed it is time for ia the snowdishness of our dominant ened, | some of the old-fashioned virtue of com- ideals, After the fire was ptngytshe, the | non sense to be a 4 to the Witua Te inexyensiy fom me stm. areye, Wearing clothon. furilihy }tion, ‘Save the trees,” somebody saya! ple arrangemel ° Ree neghhoras wont to thelr to » | overy atue ville: on elae exe some old, mecmspicuous Jewels, all the vis- house at No, 1% Central Park Wes Pigs iy dble symbole v7 girlhood which house 4 . Von ire Des |famehackie butiding in which George! gee gougus afver ond emphasized, aarti van-the only one tnjuned in | Wasiinwton wrote one of ih + {Seem ta, the attire of royal _pxin- the fre, ile broke hia, wrist letters, 1 HAV Ce (se BD ets wwe GRANDMA , MOTHER AND DAUGHTER COULO BE EASILY DISTINGUISHED IN THE OLD DAavs —— Miss Mary Bartelme of | Chicago Adds the} Charge That Mothers Are to Blame for the Vulgar, Suggestive At- tire of Their Young Daughters. New York Has No Old Fashioned Mothers or Grandmas, for All Women Wear Stunning | Clothes, and Even the| Babies Cry for Fashion- ably Garbed Doll By Nixola Greeley-Smith. “Girls of six teen and eighteen to-day dress shamelessly to! display their physical charms rather than their innocent | girlish attractions.” This is the declaration of Miss Mary Bartelme, the newly appointed probation officer of Chicago's Juvenile Court. “I pelleve the girls who belong to the| high school sororidies are the worst. No style seems too daring for them, There are the panniers, the hobbles, and how many other kinds of absurd ekirta T do know. The high-heeled shoes for the ballroom and not for Wear—are common and uncom-| ble, The girls migut as well wear! The stoc ure too thin, and not meal stree 5 Maw and Gran’maw, as Well as Big Sis, All Look Alike in Reigning Gowns' Copyright, 1913, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York World). THE MANY PASHION MAGAZINES OF TODAY EDUCATE TNE” CHILDREN WW ULTRA STYLES ne prairie dog. The threatened extinc- tion of the buffalo and the American Indian have been topics for national discussion and reform for twenty years. And meantime the freshest and most charming product of American life, the clear-eyed, simple little girl, with her hair in @ Ddraid, !s becoming much scarcer than the buffalo, numerically loss than the dwindling red man. If something is not done pretty goon by fathers and mothers the Government will have to establish ® national preserve for girlhood— @ roservation to which no cosmetics OF false hair or feathers or fashion books will be admitted under pen- alty of death to the introducer, Miss Bartelme of Chicago {s entirely right In saying that tho girls of to-day are not to blame for the silly and vul- gar manner in which they are dressed. The mothers only are to blame for per- mitting such a sacrilegious distortion of youth and for setting the younger gen- eration an example o: ontery and folly. It used to be the boast of the old- ‘Aloned bride that her marriage gown Jested In th THE EVENING WORLD, OWEN IN BATTLE WITH POLICEMEN TO DESTROY MEAT Kerosene Squads of Amazons Declare Butchers Must Close Until Prices Come Down, “We Are Battling for Our Lives,” Brooklyn Housewives Cry as They Fight. The kerosene ol protest against the high cost of kosher meats and poultry was renewed in Brooklyn to@ay, when & dozen different committees of tndig- nant housewives went from butcher shop to butcher shop, endeavoring by argument and force to compel shop- keepers to close their doors until the wholesalers reduce prices. Gallons of kerosene oll was consumed in making unfit for consumption meat and poultry found tn the hands of women shoppers who dared to make purchases. The protesting housawives were up and doing at 9 o'clook and a score of fights quickly followed, while frantic policemen scurried from place to place, separating hair-pulling women and lending ald to luckless shopkeepers in the hands of the Amagons. There ts no question of the serious neas of the kerosene-armed housewives. \‘They say meat shall not be sold until the prices are within reason, and they state emphatically that they will con- tinue their crusade until their ends have been Accomplished. The polloe been ordered not to make arres the law is grossly violated. this, the women are waging war relent- lesaly. Not only are the women Waging War on the sellers of ineat, but upon the 00d exough, not costly enough for Our overburdemed “little women.” ‘They prefer and their mothers en- courage them to prefer, the expensive to the appropriate, the striking to the becoming. What we need in New York more than anything else—and apparently Chicago has the same necd—is a renaissance of ‘unless the young girl—the slim, bright-eyed| gealers in poultry also. They @rg¥e) nigchief, she was arraign | creature with flowing hair and simple) that i¢ is unfair to stop the selling Of) Magistrate N umer in Tnveoatee Ave, girlish dresses—“the rose with all it] 10) ana permit poultry dealers 0) nue Polic art and held in $600 ball sweetest leaves yet folded; “not the harvest, so meat and poultry! for trial on Monday: flower compelled to exaggerated bloom | ‘tap & d | —— ~~ for the marriage market, as azaleas | allke Is being kerosened. | ‘and roses are forced for Easter, and| HOSTILITIES OPENED WITH AT-| FLAT WHEEL CAR PROTEST. | after @ brief season, worthless for any | TACK ON A WOMAN. death purpose on FSReS*, Sone MANY RIOTS FOLLOW. | Wave Knowing Hostilities opened this morning with | PT ae lonter the shop of Herman Epstein, No, ‘1058 Myrtle avenue he slammed the joor in thelr faces and barricaded tt with rrels. 1e women harangued from the outside and then wended their way to the shop of Jacob Rudin, 60 Sumner avenue, but here they found the polles awaiting their arrival and they were unable to do anything. The protesting housewives have dl- le themselves up into committees of from six to eight and ten womer cach and have scattered throughout the neighborhood, making it dimMeult for the police to tell where they will strike next and giving shopkeeper palpitation of the heart by unexpect: edly walking into thelr stores with their kerosene cans, A. policeman has front of every butcher vicinity of Myrtle avenue, Tompkins avenue, Throop avenue, Sumner avenue and Lewis avenue, the district where the war against high priced meats {* iB most hotly waged. The trate | women, however, are undaunted by the binecoats. Their numbers are growing hourly it Ie expected that serious emonstrations will ovcur, The women 1 themseives strikers. ‘The butchers call them “terrors.” The housewives plan to | demonstration to-morrow night in a hall jat Slegel street and Bushwick avenue, |They have sent out invitations to « | number of settlement workers and stu dents of the high cost of living, Mra, Rose Pastor Stokes has been asked to {address the gathering, at which ft 1 expected that a permanent organization Wil be effected and plans for @ cam- pain drawn. At present there ie no general organization. A few leaders have arisen and. have gathered about them loyal followers and each leader fe waging the war against the shops as she thinks best, KOSHER BUTCHER SHOPS ARE CLOSING DOORS. As & result of the demonstration on the part of the indignant housewives, praotically all of the kosher meat shops in the disturbed district have closed thelr doors, A few on Gates avenue have continued to dure kerosene, but | the majority have decided not to pur- | chase new meat or poultry and are simply selling the stock on hand, This | closing of the stores and fallure to pur- chase new stock {9 the result of @ meet- Ing of the butchers held last night in the hall at Bartlett street and Broad- way, when tt was dgtermined to boy- cott all chickens and meats. Mrs, Fannie Rothman, | years old, of No. 9. is the first martyr to the housewlver cause, Sho participated yesterday in the assault on Benjamin Diamond's shop at No. 924 De Kalb avenue, when meat was strewn about the floor ant an iron pall hi 1 through the front window, At daylight this morning De- tective Patton arrested Mra, Rothman in her home, charged with malicious heen stationed in shop in the twenty-six De Kalb avenu Pa iat Fathers ¢ eee an attack on Mre, Etta Rosenberg of} Nimth Street ¢ No, S81 Stockton strest. Mrs. Rowen. 1; was, learned to-day the Paulis: beng, who was carrying ket snore com. | Pathers ‘of thin city, of which Rev her arm, was haled by @ kerosene com-| Fh 9 tideltes, recently named by mittee on Myrtle avenue, near Tomp- king street. The committee demanded to know the contents of the bundle, Mre. Rosenberg hugged it closer, There was @ rush of amagons and the bundle HEAD-M SHE COULD HAVE BEN SAVED Architect of Liner Says Glanc- | ing Blow Was Fatal—Escape chicken was exposed. oan of kerosene was being pouted on the fowl. Mrs, Rosenberg did not relish the idea of her dinner being flavored with kero- sene end, voicing her disapproval, selzed some of the Keroseners, In an inetant a crowd of women had knotted about her and began to scratch and pull her hair. Some one sent In a riot call to the of Kitchen Men Barred. utes later Capt, Reinels arrived on tho scene with reserves. It took them fully ten minutes to disentangle fingers from flowing locks and quell the riot. LONDON, June 7.—Edward Wilding, }one of the archi } The next apearance of what is known ing the Titan! Jas the “boyeot committce’ swas at the | Poinde at hat 12) butcher slop of Louls Hosen, No, 1. day's Inguiry disaster that {| Myrtle avenue, ‘The committee had the 1 had struck the teeberg atem | forced thelr way through the duor which of striking a glance! lave been brougit safely to ig blow | Rosen frantically held against him and AK Wau were preparing to make him appreciate ae a the seriousness of thelr views when an- Tharbor, Jord Mersey was much Inter | other squad of policemen arrived on the point and asked double trot and shoved them {nto the fi ins | “Do you mean to say that If the ship | street. had been driven on f the iceberg at a| The “boycott committees," which ts Longe ipl composed of Mra. Ethel Weinman, Mrs. speed of 21 knots she would have been Bertha Shafter, Mrs. Rebecca Fi faved?" Mrs. Rose Rubin, Mrs. Rose Wagner Tam quite sure that she would have] and Mrs. Yette Archand, was loud in t poen.” the witness answered its protests at being ejected uncere- j_ “Hut Tam equally certain that she maanlously from’ the shop. Mrs. Shafte 5 “Sieh Payee i } was loud in her denunciation of tu Jwould have Killed every man in the} noice, saying that they were using * If the helm had ded the ship would firemen’s quart ‘not been starbo | have been saved. | One of the chefs of the Titanic named Mauge testified that sixty mem- bers of the restaurant staff died on {the third class passenger deck. rough tactles towards women who were fighting for their homes and life. POLICE KEPT ON RUN TOAVERT THE RIOT. A committee appeared at the shop of Morris Rothstein, No. 1% Myrtle ay and found him He , ay fl | ngaged in selling meat | The employees were drowned like rats! and chickens to a Kroup df women in a trap when the Iner went down, be-| Customers. ‘The customers were put to cause stewards blocked their way when] aight and the trate keroaeners W end to the boat deck, according to Mauge, Mauge sald that the kitchen workers were as- | sembled on the third-class deck immedt- ately after the Titante struck the tee, nd might have hance for thet Hives bad they b owed to go to the jupper decks, Ho explained his escape they attempted to 4 opening the lee bi ing out Rothstein’ battled against them the m the situation, the police arrived again the he vives Were jostled into the etreet while Rothstein slammed his door shut and held his shoulder against preparatory t suppiles Ww Just as the committee was atout to AITKEN, (FOUND! | IMPORTERS, M. |by saying he wore no uniform, but was|s Ker: j dressed like any passe ——-— Deer Trapped by Wire Fenee. MOUNT KISCO, N, Y., June 7,—One jof the many wild deer that are roaming about this section of the county wan- dered onto the estate of D. N, Good- rich on the Millwood road three 1 west of this place last nixht, diy was caught in a barb, wire fenee and in struggling to get loose broke one of hi hind legs. Game Warden George 1 Sutton shot him, ‘The carcass was sent to the White Plaing Hospital, as. th law requires it be given to some charity hats of our own design, ' Here’s the Economy over teas at the | Its double strength me price. half. WhiteRose CEYLON TEA | Uniformly Excellent. their cost, some of them at the materials in them, disre cost in their production, BROADWAY White Rese Coffee, Rich and Pure was torn from her grasp and opened. A In an instent & Vernon avenue station and a few min- | | A Special Clearance Sale of Spring Models in French Millinery, including some midsummer These hats will be sold at but a smali traction of | Home Commissioners, 1s Superior Gen- through James P, McGovern, of 27 William street, thelr counsel, Public No, have filed a protest with the Service Commission and the New York y Health Department, against the type and operation of the surface cars on the Fifty-ninth street crosstown line. They state that the cars used there now are elther flat-wheeled or of such antl- quated and faulty construction that the noise caused by the operation thereof, especially when starting andy stopping, creates & nufsance and @ violation of law, Fifty-ninth street between Colum- bus and Amsterdam avenues, is oo- upled by more hospitals and medical organizations than any other section of the city, and Inclide Roosevelt Hompital, | std ne Maternity Hospital, Syma Oper- ating Theatre, Vanderbilt Clinic, and the College of Physicians and Surgeons, wud it ls expected that these Instituto will auliny Path Indiana ¥ WASHTNGTOD 7—The Yndiana Pu “oot law was upheld to- day as constitutional by the Supreme Court of the United States. ‘The prine!- ple Was that States may enact sue vithout interfering with the F od and Drugs ret of 1906, SON &Co ED 1635) ANUFACTURERS all of the best qualities of materials, is now in progress. prices less than the value of garding altogether the labor he prices are $5, $6, $8 and $10 each, forrrer prices $18 to $25. A few ready-to-wear hats at $2, $3 and $4. & 18> STREET kosher | hold a dig! Mayor Gaynor as one of the Inebriate | SHOOTS AT LEADER THE HUNGARIAN HOSE OF DEPUTIES Deputy Kovacs’ Bullets Miss Count Tisza, So He Kills | Himself to Avoid Arrest. | BUDAPHST, Hungary, Jime 7.—Count Tiexa, the Government leader In Parilas ment, to-day was shot at but escaped injury in the Chamber of Deputies by M. Kovacs, an Opposition Deputy, who then turned his revolver upon himself and fired two bullets into his head, dy- ing Inatantly. Kovace was one of the Opposition Deputies excluded fram, the Chamber on | May &1, following # near riot, in which the Emperor and: the Government of- ficiais. were bitterly assalled by the Opposition. | The disgruntied Kov who, it was | said, brooded over what he considered {humiliation until his mind became af- fected, entered the Chamber unobserved ‘to-day, and walked into the box pro- vided for newspaper correspondents, be- fore his presence was known. Standing at the rall, he drew a revolver from his pocket and fired threo shots & Count ‘Tisza in rapid euceession, but his aim iat | exclusive wrap. | reproduction will be specially | Don’t fail to get orie. There i new beauty. hagen, lavender, leather used alternately for street Also, stylish model | | rr fee for be. e upholstered with Imperial leathe indestructible springs; value $15.00. ABSUST AN WY Reversible Linon Coats Season's Smartest Model To-morrow, Saturday, Only Every fashionable woman eagerly aw the Dis AER Tah season's most 912 will be the Reversible Linon Coat. The Bedell i priced to- morrow at the introductory figure of $2.98. MODEL LIKE PICTURE an appealing fascination about their natural color pend prevented 2 with self material in cnet eg rose, Copen- | evening wear. f in tailored linens for motoring and ¢ aveling are included. SALE AT ALL THREE STORES 14 aad 16 West I4th Street—New York. 460 and 462 Fulton Sireet—Brooklya | 645-651 Broad Street—Nev, ark, N. J. Buffet in Quar- tered Oak, Colon- ial style, in Early English or Gold- finish, with large bevel plate mirror, drawe full swell linen drawer and2 cup- boards, like cut, value $30.00. $19.75 Turkish Couch, with heavy carved frames, Golden Oak, 2 was bad, and the three bullets. wild. 2 InsTtantly there was wild as Deputies, Parliament oMcers newspaper men rushed toward Kovacs, thinking he might fire again, but the would-be assassin forestalied thom by killing himself. ; eed PUBLISHERS IN ALLIANCE. John Lane Company and@ Moffat, Yard & Co. Effect Partial Merger, The publishing houses of the John Lane Company and Moffat, Yard & Ca, have been partially met The fin cial and business interests of the la company hereafter will be looked after by Walter A. Johnson, managing direo- tor and vice-president of the John Lai Company, who has become treasurer and a director of Moffat, Yard & Co. ‘The letter has moved from No. 31 Ea Seventeenth street to Nos. 116-199 W. Thirty-second street, where the other company has offices. ‘The editorial line of work will be car- ried on IndeBendently by each company ‘The business wil be separate, but th* companies will he closely allted, enti CAMOYS HAS APPENDICITIS. NEWPORT, R. 1, June 7. — Lord Camoys, who married Mies Mildred Sherman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Watts Sherman, is Ml from ep- pendicitis at his home in Engtamd, ac- conting to report received here to-day. The attack ts sald to be @ light one and it has not been decided whether or not it will be necessary to undergo an oper- ation. Lord and Lady Camoys are expect here to spend part of the summer wi Mrs, Sherman, but Lord Camoye’e it ness may delay their arrival. : - le mw? ney Down small deposits wi 2 small 's, | large, TURKISH KOCKER, a farge. upholstered nerial, leathers 1 uited: ih 820000 ...0.. S13. deeply tufted and $9.98: eee

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