The evening world. Newspaper, July 24, 1912, Page 16

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’ ] , 4 4 THE NEW t- In Modern Textures IRELAND. ERIN'S PRODUCTS 10-DAY IMPRESSED WITH THE ART FER EOF EATS and Craftiwork Are Utilized the Magnificent Designs of the Ancient Celt—Marvellous Beauty of us Book of Kells. the Famo Pa \i Fhe Bvening World to give ite r making over of the Emerald Is! ordinary results in the industries BY MARY SYNON, Special Commissioner to Ireland for the Gaelic League of ® proce: America. DUBLIN, Ireland, July troduction of manufactures of vart- ous kinds, but has also emphasized the art revival which is utilizing the forms and designs of the ancient art of Ireland in modern textures and in craftsmanship. The beauty of coloring and the perfection of in- tricate design shown in the weav- ing, the bookbinding, the wood carv- ing, the enamelling and the embrold- ering done by the various schools of industry that have arisen in the country as a result of the Irish Re- vival, goes back for inspiration to the Irish art treasures displayed In the Dublin Museum, in the library of Trinity College, and in the Na- tional Gallery in Ireland. To artist and antiquarian the art found a home. In order to appreciate the remarkable culture expressed by the art treasures of these storehouses {t is necessary to realize that at the time that some of the finest of these examples of illumina- tion and metal work were executed in Ireland, the rest of Europe was in @ state of barbarism, The disintegration sf the Roman Empire had plunged the continent Into darkness in which neither art nor Hterature could flourish. Ireland, set on the extreme Western edge of Burope, isolated enough to work out her own forms of art and to preserve them, progressed until not later than the eighth century, and, possibly, during the seventh, there was made the wonderful jiluminated manuscript of the Gospels, the Book of Kells, now in Trinity Col- lege Library and acknowledged by schol- are and artis the finest example of fits kind tn the world. ‘WONDERS REVEALED IN GREAT BOOK’S PAGES. | A etudy of some of the pages of the | @reat book—one page !s turned every day and there are in Dublin forely scholars who remain for months in ord te study the pages covers—in certain to eerver with wonder that the progress of centuries has not advanced art, For in color, in form, in design, the Book of Kells has everything that modern t!u- mination, illustration, coloring and de- sign approximates—and a great deal more. It is a commentary on the Book and on modern art that copies made of | ft less ‘than thirty years ago and set close to tt in the library already show evidences of fading colors, while the Book itself pseserves unfadingly its eplendid, softened shades of reds and ‘dlues, purples and green: lows and rose. The Book ‘s believed to have belonged to St. Columba, if it was not actu written with his own ftw title to the fact th st wan preserved as t treasure of the gn the monastery of Kell chief establishment Order in 1) In 1 atolen from the church, siripped of the gold and precious stones that ornar ed its covers, and burir wods, where it was f days and two months.” | Bishop | trle of Meath, sec he was manuscripts to Trinity College tn 1 xists of 29 leaves of vellum twelve inches by n Nearly every & world has pa the shri under their the ob- impress most valued whe th Cort ut! red possession of it while It paseod with his vonderf Irish are any single lua ta result emulation yas and the tmprovere tions, The suse artists, those who prod Kells, the Book of Armas the | tne Rook of Durrow, also claimed to be a fragment of St. Colum work, and the other scores of most gorge fhations took thelr art from an source is disproved by the int ence of the work, whch « been brought to # perfection except fis own had clearly grown period | for before the time early Chi attached to adopted es £ | for dagh prov foun look “MISS MARV SYNON of Ireland has long been known as having had an important influence on the development of modern art, since at the very opening of the historic period in Ireland there appears a well defined style of art, distinctly Celtic in character, and of which no trace can be found in any country except those visited by the Celt. This style not only left its impres of these other countries, but took root and flourished only where the Celt crudest nes, 7 amazing om ch Is lave developed the pure Irish art, it In design, printing. eat suc in ping and 9 ne. ft Chalice, chalices, revival will in e artistic § suppressed, far t ‘This is the FOUNTH of the series of articles arrai ors the full knowledge of the which is producing arts and literature of thet country. the famillar query | guards in the Dublin Museum. “From the mines of Ireland, answer of the well informed. For not only the quantity of gold, but researches of geologists ahd archeaologiate, have 1 the existence of gold In the Irish A | 2-ounce gold nugget Donegal has a e existence of great mineral wealth in the Irish mountains has long been more than a conjecture, and it is the hope in Ireland that the ‘industria? time extend its opera- , tons to the opening of the natural but long neglected resourct The Irish ready Irish art with very industrial utilized the art forma of ancient wonderful results, 16.—The Dublin Manufacturers’ Exhibition, held this week in the Rotundo Rink, has called the attention of Ireland not only to the industrial progress that the country {8 making and the In- Thristian character and utilized it in the service of religion. EARLY ART TREASURES DONE IN THE METALS. As well as the manuscripts the Dublin Museum holds rare specimens of price- value, notably the Chalice of Ar- whore beauty cannot be described, #0 dependent 1s it upon the softness and richness achieved by fineness of metal work and enamels with Jewel insets and ‘the Cross of Cong. The Tara Brooch, composed of a metal harder than silver, formed by @ combination of silver, cop- per and tin, and containing insets of gold work and enamel, and the Roscrea Brooch of the Petrie collection, a: amples of the sort of work done by Irish jewellers at a time when in other parts of Europe gold, silver and other precious metals were being used in only fashion. Brooch, contemporaneous with the Ar and oertainly executed before the tenth century, example of fine metal covered, brooches, book nelets, crosses, gospel cases, Klets assert the widespread | culture of the Irish people long previous to the civilization of any part of West- ern and Northern Europe. Where did the gold come from? te of visitors to the The training of Irish hands and Trish minds in the reproduction of the beauties of design and coloring has proven the adaptability th of Ireland—Dublin, nent seeks Irish va od lution in ntinua ‘event HOW REVIV one ary 1 writer work ly 5 render the present « fon of the past." of the Irish Art also revealed the vell as the wealth + ration that there ts xhibit of thelr mod which has the the Mexidiliiy of ea genius in some dec jewelry For work ever di The number of varieties of the of the countr: revival sense The muntetpal the three principal tre. on the art GHOST IN HOME "THE EVE AY EMPLOYERS woud ) [ALL RIGHT RAISE MY SALARY IF How MucH! Toor An inverview) | Ti-thy Tat Dirremence) (wie Teun me Ano | GET out! NING WORLD, iets OF PREST HAS SMASHING TNE Bay State Pastor Tells How Furniture Is Hurled About the House at Night. SOUTH HANOVER, Mass., July %. Ghoste—violent ghosts—have driven from the parish house of the Church of the Sacred Heart the Rev. Father Charles F. Donohue and his household, Father Donohue said to-day he would not attempt to explain the “strange phe- nomen: “I cannot account for it at all,” he asserted. “For two weeks and longer the strangest things have been going It is all very mystifying. “Why a few nights ago I was compelled to sleep on a cot just outside the room where Miss O'Connell and Mrs. A..B. Hoban and her daughter were sleeping because they had been terrified by their furniture being thrown ‘about the room in the dead of night. I had placed my alarm clock on a stand nearby and barely crept into bed when T got e clock was hauled downstairs. the clock again placed it table, for it was still goin the Tara is the finest shrines, bell a the al Klondike has the people ts in innate, Belfast and ‘oration, book- and clothing ‘The dreams of Pe- | O'Ne! ALIN 11 have been | eh the work of the Gaelic y in Ireland,” as! characterizes appears to realize the fact th 4 has a past, has a histor: e, and the only body tn Ireland Mt, | has a ART IS HELP. ING INDUSTRY, th Art departinents craftsmanship that {t has opened, only impor employment ) important class of young and women, e changes Ireland wrought by the revo- the land tenure system in tant results of vival is that through of artiatic thas but a empecially the the economto have ed the necessity for work vpon the eo number of women Mme traditions Ireland | and trainin thes ement has opened @ means Of livell- | history, nen ort at of of the ar had left them totally unfit of remu heir position ean only be ative the the ir Southern fl war crafts | Gaelic League and one of the great had I gone to bed a second the clock was hurled acro so violently it was broken, et 2.0 A. M. ime before the room It stopped hood that they rity, and 1s doing more to br the old world social prejudice against manual labor than centuries of political agitation have don ‘When I was forced to earn my own living,” said a Dublin woman whose in- terest In the wood carving classes has been of great benefit to the workers be- cause of her husband's official activities, “T was absolutely helpless, except for a natural aptitude for modelling. There was a.certain demand for wood carving, but T had no apprentice's certificate. Finally I was admitted to a shop. It nt social ostracism then, but it doesn't now. That's how the Art Re- vival has helped the girls to self re- Mance.and self-aupport, for the associa- tion of art) and crafts has opened the way td several new trades for women.” The preservation and utilization of Irish art forms in Ireland ts now be- ing accompanied by a movement for the publication of the wonderful Irish manu- script literature that the Revival has discovered and given to the world. Un- der the auspices of the Gaelic League, an, the American Ei organizing an American soctet: the Gaelic Literature Association, for the publication of the Celtic manuscript treasures. IRELAND A LITERARY CENTRE LONG BEFORE THE INVASION, The discovery of the great mass of Uterary material in manuscript form in Ireland has not only given to the world & fresh well of lterature, which has been responsible for the only original note in Engilsh poetry for more than a hundred years, but has called attention to the fact that literature was not only well established but general throughout ai neral value in their content @ long mountain range of culture, show: ing ® much higher standard among the mass of the people in the era covered than any other nation of Europe. “The oxact extent of the Irish Iitera- ture still remaining in manuscript hi never been adequately determined, Dr. Douglas Hyde, president of the for the preservation of Gaelic ripts. “'‘M, d'Arbois de Jubain- ville (of the University of Paris) has noted 133 still existing manuserip’ copied before the year 1800, and the whole number which he has found ex- isting chiefly in public Hbraries on the Continent and in the British Isles amounts to 1,009, But many others have Produced by the Irish before the seven- enth century, and still existing, would by BROTHER OFFERS $500 FOR TRACE Not the slighest trace of Miss Dor- Snodgrass, the twenty-four-yoar old nurse, who has been missing from her home In Mount Vernon for more than a week, has been police or her Interest was added to the search to-d the arrival of a wealthy Edward I. Snodgrass, of Berryville, V: and his Immediate offer of a $00 cas I. had been run down. amateur detectiv of reward, would work. Detective Silverstein has not aban- doned the search as yet, but he admits that he has run down every clue and bas found no tra the nur ‘was positive, the girl steadfast in her statement. she had every opportunity to know Mis. Snodgrass, as she saw ner many times while visiting the servant in the rider home, No. 140 Wallace The maid did not speak to the girl, but noticed that she had a@ turban hat with black trimmings and a smart pom- pon on the left side. Mount. Vernon Snodgrass wore a sailor hat. tan Although Miss Snodgrass was seen Monday, tt was not until to-day that the new clue was reported to Lieut.- Detective Michael Silverstein of Mount Vernon, who is leading th started again for the city. Beyond this information no word has been received of the Snodgrass girl. search of the hospitals and morgues in the belief she was suffering from heat stroke proved fruitless. It wi: thought likely she could be walking about in aphasia without being recog- nized. The idea that she may have accom panied Dr. Smith, hous Mount Vernon Hospital, when he went abroad Thursday is douted by most of her fellow nurses are sure she never was even friendly with Dr, Smith; certainly they were times, as Dorca, OF MISSING GRL Absolutely No Clue Found of Dorcas Snodgrass, Trained Nurse of Mt. Vernon. found by relatives and frie: of the . G. E, Gibson, No. Mount Vernon, declaj afternoon from a & week ago. She rreet. When she But leather handbag, tan linen skirt and white shirtwaist worn the day she disappeared were noted by the maid. DETECTIVE STARTS TO WORK ON THE NEW CLUE. hunt. surgeon of 8 ridiculous, The doctor tt Finland as a second class passenger on the President Lincoln and was known to have only a little money. A statement purporting to come from Miss Snodgrags's flanci trical engineer, F. the effect that he believed her body would be found in the river, was to-day indignantly denied by Schmidt. new facts were related by thé engineer in an interview with an Evening World brother, He sald he hoped} » always willing to take an intereat when there is prospect immediately get to missing maid in the home 6 Cooley he saw in Twenty-enird street Mon- day afternoon about 4 o'clock. As mis- tress and maid were rding home Mon- hopping tour Miss Cummings casually remarked, saw Miss Snodgrass while I was walt- ing for you," Questioned by Mra, utbson, the maid ‘Then for the first time she was told of the «isappearance of She remained last Wednesday Mit They the young elec- Edgar Schmidt, Several lived near the hospital most of the week. The talk about dif- WEDNE SDAY, JULY 24, 19 12.” DO You Twink THAT) DONT KNOW T OOnT THN ~~ (LE HAVE Gor Wo UNDERSTAND ?I Morgan, Returning From Abroad, Refuses to Talk, But Wastes Lot of Words and Energy You WERE PRETTY CLOSE TO KAISER Saying So G GOT No THINK even! MORGAN RETURNS, ANGRILY VOWING HE DOESNT THINK (Continued from First Page.) he nearly had @ colision with the re- porter. “Who said so told you that? “It was cabled to all the newspapers here,’ was the reply. “Well,” snapped the milloinaire, of !t? For God's sake, what of it? “Winston Churchill made a speech in Parliament the other day,” began to explain, “and"— “What did he say? Tell me what he said?” said the financier, as though the reporter was trying to conceal a crimi- nal mystery from him, “HE DID, DID HE?” he shouted. “Who wisat the reporter the COMMENTS on in the house and Miss O'Connel,| Ward for information leading to the| THE KING OF WALL S7REET. my housekeeper, ia in such a stato that|fnding of his alster. He sald he of-| «yte called for a bi . she oannot remain in the place. I real-|fered the reward after lie had conferred TL INHRLEONT AUST GER here {ge how the story sounds, but it Is true,| with other members of the fainily in| tre teat rs HER CHEK Ohi eee nevertheless, that I have acen pieces of| the local police and they had assured | ti? fea? Of ® Rear break with Ger furniture dashed to the floor and broken) nim that eve! le man; with no possible explanation at hand. every possible clue to the girl] “ttumph! He dd, did ne?" . Morgan turned to go away. Morgan,” said the reporter, loath to give up his new-born hopw, “do you think that means war?” “How should 1 know?" Mr. Morgan replied without turning. “How should I know. tam, and”. “He didn’t tell me he was going to war. He didn't tell me anything about At, put his mighty fist not I have got no think. U have got no think, even.” “Well, all right,” said the reporter, backing off, “but is ft true that you are going to finance the Bull Moose movement?” HEAVENS, HE DOESN’T KNOW WHAT A BULL MOOSE IS! Now what ts a Bull Moose?" roared derstand? 1 Mr. Morgan, casting his arms in the air ays in dy 02" ‘The Roosevelt air, “What is a Bull independent move- AGHR'RH," bellowed Mr. Morgan, and fled until he ran into a group of ladies who barred his way. “Did you go to Europe to avold a Stanley Committee subpoena, Mr, Mor- gan?” came the plaintive but insistent voice of the reporter trom out of the crowd on the compantonway. le! she lke a half-back bucking the centre in Yale-Harvard game, According to Mr. Morgan's fellow-pas- sengers, the sad-eyed young reporter was not the only sufferer from M Morgan's pecullarly ferocious form 9% shyness. ACTRESS-COLLECTOR ALSO CURS HIS WRATH. Miss R. 1, Stanwood, an actress with Blanche Ring's company, undertook tre duty of taking up @ subseription for tic ship's orchestra, Everybody she aad approached gave something up to the me she tackled Mr. Morgan, whom sae had left to the last. Miss Stanwood approached him with fear and trembling, meeting him on the stairway to the main saloon when aw one else was around, ‘Mr. Morgan," she said, breathlessly, “I am taking aubscriptions for the or- chestra and’ “Don't know anything about tt,"* growled Mr. Morgan, and charged off toward the deck, Later he sent @ check tor the fund. On the night of the deck dance Mr. Morgan appeared all alone, half an hour before the time set for the dance, and settled himself in @ chatr from whica the best possible view of the festivities was to be had, Trouble began as soon as he was comfortably seated. “Why ten't there any music?” He IN- A not the for to he de- manded. ‘Aren't they going to start the since been discovered, and great num- | reporter. music? What's the matter? Way don't ders must be scattered throughout the| “I want to deny first that there ever|tney do something? Tails is like a fountry in private libraries, while num- | was any family opposition to me on the | funeral.” ers more are perishing or have per- 1M! har lke. I hi There a great scurrying about of [Hagnd Ge manlaat vaURAle Vall part of Miss Snodgr folks, I have of nes ubainville quotes a | Pil rid te thi ewards and the orchestra tumbled intu German as estimating that the iterature | Visited the Crider home only three twenty minutes ahead of Morgan sat alone, grinning thelr places time. Mr. like ® boy throughout the dance, speak: thousand octavo volumes. Law, ference in our social relations is not| igs ty no one, but following the move ni Heine and sclence were _inciuded in| worth commenting on, I am an elec-| ments of every couple, beating time Half the manuscripts inthe Revel Tren /OW® and f do not care a hoot for! and wife of tne chief enmneer of the Academy, and th i their | Social position in Mount Vernon, newly completed Boston, Westchester ontents Aled thirteen volumes contain: | SHE WAS GOING TO WAIT FOR | 2nd Mount Vernon Railroad, seemed re- nk r 3.0%) pages, or about 10,000 HIM. Jtuctant to speak of her liking or dis- pieces.” i |ilking Schmid a husband for her In many of the lbraries of Germany the Irish manuscripts have been better, preserved than in thelr own country, In fact, tt has been the interest of German scholars tn the Gaelic languag that has been one of the notable forces in its revival. Dr, Kuno Meyer, who with Canon O'Leary, the author of the first novel in Irish, was given the free- dom of the Corporation of Dublin this year, has been one of the great forces in the study of Gaelic. In the Continen al Reviews he been for years en- aged in the service of calling atten- the beauttes of Irish literature nforcing the argument that in Tre ai tent and land there Ith of 1 ative work without parallel in lite existed a we are sorte 2 nei “I have known Dorcas for five yea and we have been engaged She was very happy and was willing to go to brother-in-law and wait for me to come in the winter, when everything would be ready for our marriage, phe disappeared Mra. Crider notified mi nd I have been looking for her ever since. “The only thing I can think of js the possibility of her mind being affected by the heat go she does not know what no confidence in the Monday, although she {s doing. I pla: report she was s ty yas ce Mi California with her sister might have bought the new tn the day and become iil afte J, & John Le Criger, sister of Dorcas Sop of ike, As soon sister, passing off the question with @ denial that she ever said she opposed Schmidt, Miss Snodgrass is a South- erner, and in the eyes of those from south of the Mason and Dixon line there wide gap between a member of the lyams and Snodgrass families and the son of @ janitor in the Mount Vernon public schools, Her parents came from Martinsburg, Virginia, where her mother is now, Her father John Tabb Snodgrass is United States Fish Commissioner of Oregon. h. ‘and | education and took @ course in electri elty from a correspondence school, Miss Snodgrass is educated after the manner of Southerners above the middie sta- hat ~———- “But you were with Emperor Will-| See here!” Mr. Morgan turned and | der the reporter's | “I don't know and I don’t think. | Mr. Morgan dove through the women | Mieetio fi an epilep! | Schmidt received only a grammar school | with his feet and turning over between his teeth an unlighted cigar of magni- ficent proportions, ‘The Corsair trailed the Olympic to her pler at the Chelsea docks and as soon as Mr. Morgan's baggage had been ex- Pedited took him aboard and set oft up the Hudson, He had a “Ntle chat at the pler with two of his partners, Henry Steele and H. P. Davidson, On the Corsair to greet him were his son-in-law, W rson Hamilton, and a number of the grandchtldren with w he ‘s just as playful and tender ai Is gruff and brusque to the world ho doesn't know, and doesn't want to know. ———__ PREDICT LONDON FAILURE FOR HAMMERSTEIN OPERA. Impresario Said to Be Contemplat- ing “Barnstorming” Tour Through United States. Oscar Hammerstein is preparing to “dump another fortune into his Lon- don opera scheme," according to Charles Klein, the playwright, who re- tur from Europe to-day on the Olympic of the White Star line. Mr, Klein does not belleve Oscar can face anything but a loss until he gives up trying to cater exclusively to the Lon- don aristocracy and cuts hix prices in half. Orville Harold, a fellow passenger with Mr, Klein and one of Hammer- stein's American tenors, agreed in part. Mr, Harold safd Oscar was very home- sick and Was even contemplating an opera barnstorming trip through citles which are not closed aga him by| his contract ‘vith the Metr-politan di- recte It Is true, Mr. Harold said, that there is a clause permitting Ham- merstein to buy himself out contract for $200,000, but it has a string on it; the offer ts subject to rejection by the Metropolitan people. —————_—_ REVELLE’S CHAUFFEUR DIES. 2 of Car in Danger With Sick Man at Wheel, Occupa: Alexander Rosengren, a chauffeur in the employ of Fleming H. Revelle, a publisher of Riverdale, with offices at Twentieth street and Fifth avenue, Manhattan, who dropped unconscious at the wheel of a heavy touring car yesterday afternoon, imperilling the life of Mrs. Revelle, died to-day in Fordham Hospital. ‘The dead chauffeur had been in the employ of the Revelles for several years and when he stopped the ma- chine yesterday on the top of a hill at Jerome avenue, near Woodlawn Cem tery, Mrs. Revelle asked him what wa te matter, Receiving no respons she told him to go ahead, as there were other cars coming behind. The woman waited five minutes and touched the chauffeur on the back. He was unconscious at the wheel. Dr. McSweeney of Fordham Hospital ~as summoned, He said the chauffeur ad pt SCHOLARSHIP TO BARTENDER Young Beer Passer W Prise of rinceton Club, Chicago CHICAGO, July 2.—John Larsen, nine- teen years old, employed in his father's saloon as a bartender, has been selected by the Princeton Club of Chicago for ‘a scholarship and will have his expenses paid for four years at the university by the club, Larsen graduated from the Evanston Academy in June, paying his expenses out of his own earnings. It was his habit to do considerable study- ing after the saloon was closed at 1 o'clock in the morning. As a student at the Academy Larsen made a good record. In addition to lead- ing his classes he was @ good baseball and football pl After an investiga- tion of the boy's habits and home life he was selected man of all around ability.” ‘The club selects one man each year upon whom to bestow a scholarship at Princeton KEEP A BOX OF POSLAM HANDY THIS SUMMER The heated term brings a host of an- noying skin troubles so quickly curable by Poslam that a box ready at band is a necessity for summer skin comfort. Its over-night use will clear inflamed skin, undue redness and many eruptions. For the cure of sunburn there is noth- ing better. Surf bathers who apply Pos- htly before going into the water find a preventive of sunburn. Posiam banishes mosquito bites, tak- ing out the sting and poison at once. Stops itching and drives away soreness. Eczema, acne, tette provi is, and a. forms of itch are rapidiy mastered by this perfect remedy for every skin ai:- ment. POSLAM SOAP, used daisy for toiet nd bath, makes every c.eansing opera- tion a doubse means of hea:thfuness to the skin. Incomparable in its benefits to tender skin, particularly to infant: Antisept d soothing: jabsolutely pure. All druggists sell Poslam (price, 50 cents) and Poslam Soap (price, 25 ents). For free samples, write to the mergency Laboratories, 32 Weat, 95th Brest, New ‘York City, of that! | “GOD STRIKE DEAD LORD DEVENPORT,” STRIKERS PRAY London Dock.nen at Mass Meeting Join in Calling for | Death of Man They Call Foe. LONDON, July %.-Ben Tillet, the labor leader, prayed publicly at a mass meeting of the dock strikers on Tower! Hill to-day for the death of Lord Dev- enport, whom the strikers consider the (bitterest of their enemies jemployers. The strikers in Tiilet's audi. | ence repeated after him tn a thunderous chorus: “Oh, God, strik> Lord Devenport dead.” James O'Grady, who withdrew yes- |terday from the House of Commons be- | cause the Speaker would not permit a debate on the strike, referred to Lord Devenport at the s»me meeting as the earth's worst criminal, Many men were Injured to-day in a | feht between striking dockworkers and |atrikebreakers at the Clyde Shipping | Company's docks in the Wapping dis- trict of London, The strikers, parading the streets to the number of thousands, | | broke ranks as they passed the Clyde ‘docks and, rushing the gate, tried to | preak It down or to scale the walls, | Police, coming to the defenders’ rescue, clubbed the strikers off, | In some quarters it is reported that a general strike of transport workers will be declared July pilates halon | Ice Forma Up GLOVERSVILLE, N. The temperature was 5 A. M, yesterday at the fash! summer colony of Caroga oake, 1 here, Ice was formed aad fruit veget bes were damnaget, 23rd Street | SPECIAL Drawers, tion 23rd Street animal and killed it imong the} |The Largest Ketail Uptica James McCreery & Co. On Thursday and Friday, July the 25th and 26th MEN’S FURNISHINGS. 200 dozen Soft Silk Shirts....1.65 Tennis Trousers of Flannel or Serge. values 5.00 and 6.50, “Auto” Dusters in various colors. values 4.00 and 5.00, Beach and Bath Robes of Silk Mix- tures and Terry Cloth. MEN’S UNDERWEAR. White Gauze, lisle finish, Shirts and usually 50c, Fine Ribbed Lisle Thread Combina- 1its,—athletic and regular models. usually 1.75, English-made Lisle Thread Athletic Shirts, shaped model. 60c¢e each MAD DOG BITES Two. Policema’ Six-Year-014 Girl a Are the Victims, While six-year-old Helen Bartch was playing in front of her home, No. 100, West Bighty-elghth street, to-day a mongrel dog, apparently mad, rushed upon the child and bit her on the right ankle. Policeman Patrick Bend: ley. hurryi to her aid, was bitten on the right. a The dog then sen f lowed by the policeman and a less crowd which had gathered vai ee little girl, Bendsley finally cau it Cv The policeman went to his heat st Nine th street, © was given surgical The child was cared home House in the World We effect economies in the buying of raw material—in the manufacture of Harris Glasses in our own four factories and in the handling of our tre- mendous volume—that enable us to give you most for your money, in conscientious service and in Good Glasses. Harris Glasses cost $2.00 or more and are Guaranteed to give you complete, lasting satisfaction. 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