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AS WELL AS CONSPICUOUS LEADER IN CONVENTION 2 een Does More Actual Labor Than Any Two Other Men in Baltimore--- Works Along Many Linesand | Always at High Pressure. a. Pf BRYAN’S DAILY STUNTS. \. + Bryan's feet hit the floor and his bogins. 7.06 A. 2—Bath. na 7.98 A. M.—Strops his razor and begins dictation of mewspaper article, 7.84 A. M.—Pinishes urst three paragraphs and the rasor. 7.88 A. M—Dictates two more paragraphs and lathers his face. i 7.98 A. M.—Threo paragraphs and his chin's shave: 7.90 A. M.—Another paragraph and the right cheek. 7.88 A. M.—Two paragraphs and « half and the left cheek. 7.38 A. M.—The article and the shave are finished. 7.40 A, M—Dreased. Starts another article, 7.48 A. M.—Breakfests in his room a dictates. The menu: srepefruits and three paragrapls and a half; | Srephe; fried potatoes, four fried eggs with bacon, two sentences and a half to & bite; large pot of coffee and peroration. | 7.58 A. M—Reade his mall—and it’s some man. | 8.15 a. ae Fences with political leaders, interviews with newspaper 9 A. M.—Ten-second to ten-minute intervie: rf 5 9.30 A. M.—More dictation. Sad pte 10 A. M.—More conferences. 10,30 A. M.—Reste in his bedroom. 11 A. M.—Back on the job again, 1 Moon.—¥e adjour: the menu: Three chops,e | two or three glasses of iced tea, ice cream, rent. ‘out with politicians, his seat hugging Nebr: ? P.M, oF may be A. M.—-Returns to Hotel convention topsy-turvy—or turvy-topsy, i the case may be, | ?P, M.—Din: 4 whenever he can spare a few moments from guiding the jestinis 10 P.M. (unless there is @ night session).—Starts to dictate article for | 10.18 P. M.—Article half finished, he begins to undres | . 8. 10.17 P. M.—Coat and vest off aud another paragraph done. 10.19 P, M.—Collar and tle and paragraph and a half, | 10.82 P. M.—Shirt and trousers and two more elvedere after turning the | | paper, WORLD, clean habits. Bryan has for years prac- Used the thing on himself which the faddists call “scientific management.” He has learned so to order his work and his pleasures thet he is always in the fittest condition to do the next thing. A study of his day ts @ lesson fo ting the biggest job out of the human machine Mr. Bryan lives here at the Belvedere Hotel. He has a suite of three rooms and a bath on the third floor, With rooms at the present Baltimore prices this might seem to some admirers of the | simple life as @ rather extravagant lay-| out for a true leader of the common People. But Mr. Bryan thinks his labors worthy of his hire, and from all the re- ports of the profits of his present liter- ary enterprise, to say nothing of the rewards which his prominence in public life have brought to his weekly news- the Commoner, he can afford to buy any comfort which he and his fam- ily crave. ‘The portion of his hours which he de- Votes to his newspaper work here pays very much more than a handsome profit | over his largest ponsible expenditure: even though they do amount to about $300 a week. Nobody except Mr. Bry: and his extremely youthful literary manager, Mr. MeNitt, knows just how many times this expense investment Mr Bryan ts gathering out of his newspaper enterprise in cities from the Atlantic and Pacific. THE EVENING The Tireless Bryan, Who Works Harder Than Any Other Delegate jkotched in Baltimore by MAURICE KETTEN, Evening World Caricaturist). MONDAY, JU Mr. Doyle, who is himself the gentl ef guilders of men, are working to Ket the crowd out as rapidly as possible. Mr. Bryan 1s @ good listener, but he 1s not one of the unfortunate men who fre doomed by thelr dispositions to let visitors talk to them long after the vis- itor has finished what he really has to Ys *eThere are no secret signals of dis: tress, ‘There 1s no code, But in- stinctively, as quickly as Mr, Bryan has learned from a caller all that 1s to | be had out of him, or when the caller has got out of Mr. Bryan all that Mr. Bryan means to give, the conference between caller and commoner a inte rupted, the caller finds himnelf talk- ing to Mra, Bryan or Mr, Doyle, and in a moment more 1s rushed back at Mr, Bryan (who has now been con- ferting with somebody else, ts shaken by the hand and finds himself out in the hall and pressing the elevator but- ton before he knows it Incidentally the handshaking has interrupted the second caller, who is just as gently sidetracked to make room for the next. And there you are. Some of the talks are ten minutes. | Others last hardly ten seconds. They | average about a minute each, Thus the room can nearly always be cleared of the assembled group and others | who are added to it while the recep- | tion ie going on In about half an hour, Mr. Bryan drops back into his room | again for more dictation and more #e- | CHINATOWN SHAKEN BY ANOTHER BOMB AS FEUD REOPEN Second Blast in Week Rocks Headquarters of the On Leongs. ATTACK ON “BIG LOU.” Police Fear More Trouble, Since Dynamite Has Re- placed Guns and Hatchets. Not since the murder of the slave sit] Row Kum, and the resultant bitter warfare, punctuated by killings, be- tween the rival tongs of Chinatown, haw @ situation existed there such as that caused this morning by the attempted assassination by dynamite of “Ble Lou,” otherwise Lou Ling Hoa, pres- ident of the On Leong Tong. For the second time within @ week the dyna- mite bomb figured as the new and u to-date weapon of the Chinese tong men The police are prone to see something sinister In this adoption of the favorite weapon of the Black Hand, In all th dark record of reprisals between the Hip Sings and their allies, the Four Rrothers of Pell street and the On eongs of Mott street, the forty-fou calibre revolver, the knife and tho hatchet have always been the instru- ment of murder. Though bad Chinese marksmanship made the revolver dangerous enough for innocent bystanders, the dynamite bomb will make a private grudge a wholesale Public danger. The Chinese fighters have learned a dangerous lesson from the activitles of blackmatlers of another race, At 4 o'clock this morning a bomb ex- ploded in the ground floor hallway at No. 11 Mott street, just three minutes LY 1, ; 1912 CHAMP CLARK (Sketched tu Baltimore by MAURICE KETTEN, Evening World Caricaturist). ‘ By Heck! a Gotta QUIT CRIN MY Dy Arouns | AWG TUL SHow See WuHo'S ! HERE ! BITS OF GOSSIP | BETWEEN BALLOTS DOWN IN BALTIMORE Luke Lea Would Be Suitable as a Dark Horse, but He Isn’t Old Enough. BALTIMORE, July 1.—Another story explaining the length of the deadlock went the rounds of the convention to- day. It ts this: } ‘The convention indulged in « ttle! playful sport Thursday and unexpectedly failed to have a nomination before mid- night. IN BALTIMORE | |“BITIER” BURGLAR IDENTIFIED AS ONE WHO GOT GEMS HERE Madison Avenue Residents Rec« ognized Trusted Upper Ser- vant in Police Photograph, Second Deputy Commissioner Douwthe erty announced to-day that he had suce cooded tn fixing responsibility for the $3,500 robbery in the home of Dr. Jonn F. L, Davis of No. 743 Madiaon avenue, upon Edgar R. Reach, alias F Gunning, the “butler burglar," who wa arrested fn Philadelphia on Saturday Just as he Was about to embark for Liverpool on the American Line Stearn ship Dominion. Gunning, who is known both In England and this country, had $100,000 worth of jewelry 1 his trunk when arrested, a part of it the rich loot valued at $15,000 which he stole from the summer home of Mrs. Georme. M. Studebaker at Rye Beach, N. H., when he was serving there on June 17 in his usual “blind” as a butler. It happened to-day that Dr. and Mra Davis went down to see Dougherty to learn what progress, ff any, bad bees made In finding trace of the thief whe cleaned out thetr aafe on January 18. On row,” said Lea, “Ul be glad t your most flattering indorsemen: consider A genius for sintistios to-day figured that since the Democratic conven- avsembied, delegates have spent this amount of time in cheering: For Wilson, 2 hours 3% minutes; for Clark, 1 hour # minutes; for Underwood, 48| that day a butler whom they had had minutes; for Marshall, 9 minutes; for! put a short time tn their household éis- Baldwin, 10 minutes; for Harmon, 2] aypeared with all of thelr Jewelry, One minutes; plain noise, 2 hours minutes of the pleces was a pendant represent- ing St. George’s battle with the dragon —an unusual Jewel which was set with diamonds, rubies and omerakis. On a chance Dougherty ordered We ‘There was a sign pinned on the door of William J. Bryan's room at the Bel- videre Hotel to-day, It read “po not knock, I am asleep, W. J. BY secretary to bring down from the But the knocking went on just the} rogues’ gallery picture No. 01,78, which same. was of the “butler burglar.” The ized it instantly ae TT. Rustone of Chicago {9 a vtetim | DAvises recosn! ty as being nat of thelr butler. ‘They went to of the wiles of a dig city, Me came| ¢ from the rural precints of Chtcago,| Philadelphia to-day to complete the went to sleap in Convention Hall and | identification and see if they could find any of thalr Jewels in the rich contents book and ratl- of Beach's trunk | Mr. Bryan rises early—for a politician |—which is to say about 7 o'clock. As ragraphs, 1 euother paragraph, eret conferences unt!l the parlor fills ‘The next day was Friday, a very un- again, | RAI AcS CA 10.20 P, M.—Three more paragraphs aadero after Lou Ling Hoa, President of the} fm M.— Pi climax and—— 11 P. M.—Dack im the hay again. Good night! SA ae ; | BY LINDSAY DENISON. | (Staff Correspondent of The By ‘ening World.) BALTIMORE, July 1.—What is Bryan doling? It is the first question asked by every Democratic delegate as he walks out of the elevator ifto the lobby of the hotel and meets a friend. | © ng at the moment is something that may be it Commoner himseli, or to Mrs, Bryan, or his enographer, Poh Rose, or it may be known to 12,000 shirt-walsied, perspiring dele tity all ct almost to the p *s and spectators excited hing Mr. Bryan’s figure as he sits or star vith impassioned voice walks the aisle in front of the Nebraska delegation in convention hall, In sixteen years the intense personality of the man, always the most conspicuous, if not command- ing in every national Democratic gathering, has never been more impres- sive than it is here in this most tumultuous of Democratic conventions, ho are w In ali the storm of tense feelings amldt him tn yay suas ; ; ‘King the convention do his men and women y . and st Bryay, tial 1 : of fun as oes vn atiick on his out above the crow t omen? for a the field marshals o * 2 hi a weak spot in even than the sis Haure of the ove. Hes a ai Lule aI ts turning baid Ollfe James of Kentucky beating < Ive volee against the ranks he the Chairman's table at the pinnacle of ait or the other oratere ue thy convent the three-tiered conv n platform | tion together, He ts writing two ate and begging, threatening all the time, | ¢ 2 day for the newspapers, slsing to keep the muititude tn some appears) up the events and ance of oF ae | Ure morign ¢ “What is Brya He is doing | Hrotest more in actual apart from the YET E&RYAN APPEARS TO BE political trouble suirring—than any two] UNTROUBLED. men tn Balt'more, Yet no man in the convention city to £ ere aNparently ubled than Mr, AND ALL THERE ARE WORKING | dee! ubied than Me HARD, TOO. im action, cn the floor his face seems| The politicians hurrying up and down wie in his effort to keep up the giant! town from the Belvedere Hotel to the) struggle; it Is often as strongly marked | Emerson Hotel in taxicabs for their) with the passion of his battle as conferences are having the busiest time/ though it were tinted by the green of their lives, The leaders of delega-| Spotlight of melodrama at the critical tlons on the floor are strained to the| moment of the third act, tearing point of nerves in keeping their) One ts never certain of this Bryan men tn line and in trying to caten every! Pérfon; one never knows, certainly, breath of the eddies of feeling which Why he does things or how. People in the alr and on which their future have been eat him @ great emotional | Jers may ¢ reading Sector for years, It may that clerks and the 6 us who found the secret of giving his face| try to velleve the ¢ nd hisas- tt drown, heroic, devoted-to-t re | sistants of ax muc lavor as is Geath look, without the aid of artificial! possibie, even to t of making Huminatton from @ spotlight. But al angry and somet ot unmoving Hpeag later he can warm his face Speeches for them, are more tired im ate & smile of the utmost tolerance and body at the end of each session than i nature, His hand clasp ta sure ‘The newspaper reporters, and no cons Nr in, me a # Slenaly areehing, vention ever saw a larger army of them, ind ears more | soon as he ts out of his bath and {s sufficiently dressed to admit a walter to his room, he orders breakfast. All of his meals are served tn his rooms while he Is going at the swift pace which he must keep while the convention {8 in esston. STARTS DAY WITH A HEAVY BREAKFAST, ‘che ordering of the meal does not take long, but it is @ matter to which the ‘ommoner pays the strictest attention. He is not regular in his meal hours; no one in a convention can keep regular meal hours. But he feeds ike a Hol stein cow. He eats all that he can con- ime in the time which his work allows him for eat! With his eye on his watch he orders not half a grapefruit, but two grapefruits, the both eggs and |chops and fried potatoes and a large pot of coffee, Long befove the breakfast appears he has begun dictating such additions to hi article for the evening newspapers as may be necessary after the rough draft he has prepared in the carly hours of the morning before he went ‘o bod. He dictates while he shaves. He shaves himselt very slowly, with tender and ex- act care, walking about the room and now and then passing before the mirror on his dresser to make sure how he looks. All of Mr. ns important dicta- tlon is tak ry Rose, a big fellow tha shock of black lait and a brain like Mghta'ng—a man not untike Mr. Bryan himself in his general appearance and his habits of mind. Rose has been vorking with Mr. Bryan for years. He knows every turn of the leader's mind. He could write the pleces lim- self, almost, after Mr. Bryan had once given him the subjects of the para- grapha and the run of the argument— and Mr, Bryan could not « month later whether the actual forming of the sentences and the use of particular words were his own or thore of lose But cating or shaving or there are always interrupt ing when Bryan ts resting or visiting with Mrs, Bryan, his daughter or his intimate frie Ituhte of polities. He owes his phy system and his fam- fly @ certain proportion of his hours out of each day, he holds, and these hours are sacred. They are not hours fixed by a hard and fast rule. ‘They may oe short one day and long the next; they come in the early morning or ing, or be scattered between, the finishing of his dictation reception of his mail there are People to see, These may be important men who are in Mr. Bryan's confidence. They ma be men whose messages may prove to have great im- Portanca when developed hy a moment of preliminary discussion, There are conferences by appointment with poll- ticlans and newspaper men, and there are telephone call Between the two bedrooms of the Bryan suite Is a pari The peop! who have no appointments or who ¢om > merely out of good-will or whoxe are not known to be of tmports shown into this room as fast a rive, Mr. Bryan, with hi sits in the room at the far end of tha Bryan's mail is very envy, and last night there were in his room three waste baskets filled with unopened tele- grams. | One of the most urgent duttes of Mra. | Bryan and Mr. Doyle is to stand off) the messengers who come wth urgent | demands for immediate answers, and | incidentally those who come from young | Mr. MeNitt demanding copy. HEARTY LUNCH PRECEDES WORK IN CONVENTION, ! Mr. Bryan's lunch 16 as generous as {his breakfast. He cats like a farm hand n haying time, Chops, a small steak, vegetables, two or three long glasses of jogt tea, ice cream varied with ple or shbrtcake go the same way the mignty breakfast, and then, after a jemall loaf-about, for the sake of diges- tion, he is ready for the session of the convention, All sorts of people, delogates, acquaint. | ‘ances, party lead ‘orrespondents | run crouching along to the alsle to them | and whisper in his ear, He nods or shakes his head, and sometimes says a few words, but always his Keen eye; is elther on the man tn the chair up loft, or roaming across the hall looking | for trouble, or a chance to manufacture trouble. | | If particula interested in what @ man has to ir. Bryan pulls him down into the seat which {s usually left vac on his right. At the very firat {ndication that time for him to get into the 4 igs he rises, watehng | the whole ha sa war-hawk, If the | alarm for the call t battle seems real he puts his foot firmly on the sea takes a twisted grip on the stanchion | with one arm and reaches out his arm | ‘to the rostrum with the other. | “Mr. Chairman!” his big volee booms | out. Other delegates may have to call | to the Chaleman for three, four or ten | ltimes; they ma; have to wave their | arms tn the air and dance on thetr | | seats; they have to call on their whole de to p point them out | to Mr. Jan Mr. dimham Lewis, or | Sulzer, or Whoever may te the par- nentary ruler of the moment. But jam Jennings Bryan. Not oniy the Chalrman, but the whole | convention takes notice at once. With | | @ roar the galleries lean forward, Ex- correspondents climb on’ thelr | irs and their writing tables, The stenogcaphers rush pellmell for or to Ket near him. Police block the aisles to make sure he does not rush to the platform before he ts invited. Mr. Bryan returns to his rooms at the Telvedere the moment the session ‘s | over, He wastes no time in pulling and | hauling #trugeles at conversations on the floor, Those who feel {t necessary | » see him must go to the hotel. And those who Ko must walt untll he has had at least fift minutes of rest. If there {s not a session of the con- | vention late at night, he ts in bed dy 31 | and refuses to answer calls either tn person or by telephone. At any rate he gets to bed as soon as he n grind out is art) for the morning newspapers, with the help of the faithful Bob Rose | bentna Seashore On Leong Tong, left with a police escort for his home, No, 22 Mott street. FIRST BOMB WRECKED ALTAR IN THE JO8S HOUSE. Lou Ling Is the biggest Chinaman in the colony. He stands more than s#!x feet and 1s known everywhere as “Big Lou.” He has been in constant terror since the war broke out between the two tongs because, as he expressed It to a policeman, he would be hard for even a Chinaman to miss if he got @ good shot at him, No, 11 Mott etreet ts a storm centre in the tong tro dle. On the north alde of the hallway is a cigar store kept by Lee Pong, a member of the On Leonga In the rear of the store high oMcials of the On Leongs are wont to assemble an ice box door and discuss weighty matters of state, such as the best way to dodge the Hip Sings. It tn whispered they also have a little fan tan | occasionally. Sunday night @ week ago a dynamite bomb was expioded under the altar of the Joss house at No. 18 Mott street. On the altar was the On Leong god "Quong K Whose dignity got the worst jolt of his career. The explosion ripped out pretty much of the Intertor of the js ho but no one was hurt because Ao one happened to be near, The police say this was the first time on record that the wily Chinese has re- sorted to dynamite, Since the On Leon's god Was mussed up the police had mn expecting troubie, and have kept a close watch, Barly to-day one of "Big Lou's" body guards was fol- lowed into a hallway at No. 4 Mott street by Policeman Nelson, of the Bll abeth street station. “BIG LOU" ESCAPES BOMB BY ONLY A FEW FEET, Nelson found a olg blue magazine pistol on the floor and the Chinama: was lreld as a suspictous person, He was La la iryman, of } It was a ll docked it was time to go home, sent one of his body guards for Pol man Wade, Ilo said he was afraid he would be shot in passing the Church of the ‘Transfiguration, the shadows of which afforded assassins a good place to hide, He was being led into his own door by the policemen when the bomb went off. only a few feet from where he had been oy ling at No. U1, Most of the force was downward, a being torn through to the cellar fee box door was demolished, but ne was hurt, The man who planted bomb had come through from No. 195 Worth street to the backyard, suid hi Gee, twenty-one, @ o. 18 Mott street. later when “Big Lou He he The present trouble between the tongs started last Jan, 5, when Lung You and Ching Pun, Prosident and Vice- Pre t respectively, of the Hip Sings, were shot to death at No. 21 Pell street Ls igeenmuatramarncae as | » hill and dale, summer porch and city street are dotted with Young straws. And the ‘men under the straws are men who value \style for the conscious superiority it lends. Only Brooklys Store, annie: : yy: Matter how hard may have been the! sulte. : emely to all nigh rag. thomasiens feoenly 8 Fat task of the moment, or the day, whon| GREETS HIS VISITORS WITH sleep, with barely enough ener- 2° Ras ne peared to be altogether HEARTY WELCOME, have Y thes and roll into | Sur, of himaeit his next move, | When the parlor ts fairly full of vis- se ia BY Mie ioiag ; a oring)iters, Mra. Bryan or dames Fran. Sneie BeO8 In the aiste cried | Doyle, his wealthy friend volunt The scouts of Wall atreet (of whom fear Sacirday afternoon, as Mr, | ergeintatarins.” from. ‘Tehiladelphia there are more here than any man who an fought past policemen and ser.|fAPS quietly on the door of the ‘nns was not watching for them could tmag- Heat-nring to Két to the apeakoras |%netum. By this ime they have cir ine) are gard and wild-eyed in thetr orm tu utter his Jeremlad agai culated about among the visitors and effort to inspire in themseives the gitt|New York, Tammany and Wat! street | have found out the reason why most of ight to know what is golug | politics i (ena Ore Shere, A 5 acon A as “B he telegraph operators of nerves did not seom to hear him, When |'y “conference in the inner room. M>. | the two great systems dripping and dis- |e Dad finished throwing brickbats at! Bryan gnawern the Knock Ih peraon hevelled, not only as to collars and jonas who had protested against his| 72, 8¢@ him come with both hands shirts, first for competitive busluess Ooening’ hia month. were shouting for| Quemtratoned In Kreeting throu the and then to keep it moving rapidly | to go on, when they eat thore sore. | never guessed ao many Kind friends had and ev until they go about blue! ugiy and sllently, each one trying to! favored him by thele well Whthont under the eyes, mere thrust bars and) shgw by a fixed grin that no New Yorit saying ao, each one understands che sautties in the anechanics of news |de@lgato cared what Bryan eatd or did, | ty ryan ie rather put out that gending. what did he do ther one should have heen kept ne But Bryan, in one way ther AND THEN THE SMILE OF PITY, | Kors £ to another, listening copt the actual handling o@a t | NOT DERISION, ting ba ngs wi ky) s doing the work of one and alll with a » which had in tt no de. | Out slpehieg: pind (Allowing Any who ef them, and more. rision, but only the warmest expression |e “chance to uot a little of it aut ott Panamas and Bangkoks at Popular Prices He is conferring and conniving and| of friendly pity, his eye awopt up and their systema, There are costain. a . ‘atriguing more than any other leader sar her prea falien, aes and: he mirers ot ar Bryan wio could on politictay lesa In in| Ped speak of hhn in a telephone booth i. te an Papper event pr | REzeRS, wae hed spanked ®, naughiy. boy without atre ng their lungs to @ con: | ; er : telephone and telegraph, with men at a] ‘The physique upon whtch such self! ““wefore tim, bebind. him on elther ade, | 110t Brealey dimtance, Republican and Demoorat' control is built is not merely a matter Mrs. Bryan, who developed into | uo Fifth ave, 4 who are tying fo belp at binder of @ big frame, strang muscies ene, ap inBuitely tactful manager, 006 474 Fulton Bt, ns swe oe Ma, cc Pa. lucky day to nominate @ candidate for Preaident. The next day was Saturday—and ev- erybody knows that you never finish anything you start on Saturday. The next day was Sunday, the Lord's day, and day of rest upon which thou shalt not Jabor. Hence the adjournment till Monday. Jerry C Foley of Indiana, is a practl- cal joker. At the convention he has been Mving with alx Indianapolis de- Dainty, Cool and Comfortable $4 Tub Frocks: a§ | 98 tectives who took @ lay-off to attend the big nhow. The detectives arone to- day to find thelr pocket-books and revolvers missing. After they had told thelr troubles to the Baltimore cops and given the manager of thelr hotel nerv- ous prostration, Foley returned their belongings, and hasn't pald for refresh- | mente ainoe. | ‘The Statesman at Baltimore who, next to Bryan, has immersed hin if in most glory, ts young fuke Lea, the boyish faced Senator from Tennessee, | who has been one of the leaders in the | Wilson camp. He has made friends among all factions by his vigor, is and parliamentary skill, but n where has his stock ascended higher | than among the thousand newspaper: | men. “What's the matter with Lea as @ compromise candidate?” asked a new: paperman among a group of a dozen who were talking with Lea in the lobby of the Belvedere, A poll showed he was the unanimous cholce, and the proposal wouldn't be as wid as it aounds, ether, except for | fact. Lea was born In 18% ‘To be Kible for the Presidency must he be thirty-five instead of thirty-three years old. | “If you boys can get tho vita! statin- tics at Nashville fixed by noon to-mor It Fills Your Wants. So delicious you want many cups; so strong you get many cups. WhiteRose CEYLON TEA Uniformly Excellent. | White Rose Coffee, 3 Pound Tins, $1 | Credit Terms: | $3 Down on $50 ‘ ry ACCOUN' OVEN Table Sits, Olictoth B Wood « ZV etures Ho is ah 2190: AVE 0% World Wants Work Wonders, | a To-morrow, Tuesday ENJOY the comfort of a cool one-piece tub dress that looks double the value. Why worry about your supply of morn- ing dresses when you can buy little beauties at this Bedell price? One Model Pictured Dainty Zephyr Gingham There is a style, a fabric and a color to please every one—newest striped ginghams, checked chambrays and ginghams like one here pictured, and striped percales, 79C Linon Skirts Worth Double the Price Stunning models in white linon; smart empire girdle, y ss] C¢ I4and 16 West 14th Street-—New York 400 and 462 Fulton Street —Brooklyn ( 645-651 Broad Street —Newar Registered te Trade Mark by oe Half a Century July Clearance Sale Suits, Dresses, Coats, Etc. Tub Dresses, $5.00—250 Smart Dresses of Colored Striped Tissues and Linen, Formerly $6.00 to $10.00. Linen Dresses, $8.75—Also a number of Pique and Lingerie Dresses. Formerly $12.75 to $15.00. Lingerie Dresses, $12.50—Also a lot of smart Linen and Pique Dresses. Formerly $16.50 to $25.00. Lingerie Dresses, $19.00—Of French and American = make, Hand — Embroidered, — Lace Trimmed and made by hand from beautiful Lingerie nd Voile. Formerly $35.00, Woolen Suits, $12.75 to $16.50—Of remain- ing Spring and Summer Woollens, White, Navy and Formerly $25.00 to $35.00, Linen Suits, $10.00 and $15.00—All Linen. es. Formerly $15.00 to $25.00, Waists—Several special lots at $2.50, $3.75 and $6.00, James McCutcheon & Co., Sth Ave. & 34th St., wagttiien