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1) _ arrived at the conclusion the whole re- port must be true. The ease with which the reporter en- tered the Rockefeller estas would set \* piclon working. There wae no guard at the gate near the station, Up the | oited road, now worn with heavy trucks le ow stone from the quarry, no one in authority chme to offer a check to } further passnge. From one road to ' another the reporter walked and met i no one but laborers. At a turn in the 4 |path which jeads to John D. Rocke- —— \feller Jr.'s mansion a heavy negro wal | directing a gang of Itallan laborers. He turned his head as the intruder passed. The negro was Bill Dunstan, the cause of most of the trouble. Ho it was who |discharged several Italians who grum- | ied about working under @ negro and | backed up his discharge by force. Dun- stan fs In charge of the eighteen negroes | who carry rifles at night lest the ven- = Dfrq | Meance of the discharged Itallans and INJURED MAN ESCAPES. (ticir organization be visited on his ime | mediate master, Supt. Briggs, and his Joverlord, young Rockefeller. It would have been nothing strange if Dunstan jhad ordered the visitor off the grounds. Revolver Duel in Tarrytown ‘Street Follows Demand on Him for $500. ° Crowd Chases Wrong One— * 1 |The sign at the gate read plainly Searching Rendezvous Near |againet entering _ From one of the caretakers further John D.’s Estate. | along the road it was learned that the) two sons of John D. jr. are tn the fall granite house near the conserva- Garetul search te being made in the tory, recovering from measles. Thetr her lives secluded in the big man-| sion on the top of the hill. Since the first warning of trouble he Woods and about all suspected render- Yous in the neighborhood of John D. Rocketelier’s estate to-day for a woun e4 Black 4 agent who thas one of Joseph Drago's bullets in his leg. Drago ts employed on the Rockefel- Ser place in Pocantico Hills and owns & fruit store in Tarrytown whieh hin| wife looks after. Four years ago, while Hving in Paterson, he says, the Biack Wand tried to make him pay tribute, WE he refused, whereupon his house oes to visit the children all laborers | are sent to another part of the estate, | BRIGGS NOT TO BE FOUND AT HOME. Supt. Briggs was not in evidence, house was reached by a cut the new lald part of the grounds, It trees and dense s. The reporter Was burned. Since then the words had scarcely reached the path which lano Nero” have aroused the greatest | leads to the front door when a big, fear in him, loose-Jointed negro step out from the bushes and requested the visitor to, stop. The negro’s hand was thrust in his right coat pocket as he listened to the request for an Interview with Supt He would sec, he assured the . after looking him over care-| Repeated ringings of the bell at Mrs. Brigan ‘A few days ago an agent of the same band believed to have sent threatening letters to John D. Rockefellr’s family ahd-employees wrote Drago he muat pay %600 to the society, He was ordered te be in his rtore in Cortlandt ‘street, Tarrytown, with thé money yesterda, Unterrified by the bands of guards stectives all over that section of coun- | ty try, the Black Iander showed up on time, and going up to Drago whispered “Mano Ner Drago putled his hand from his pocket, but instead of having this pocketbook it clutched a revol ‘The Black Hander backed to the stree at the same time drawing a revolver of Bis own. A duel in the street followed. BLACK HANDER CUT IN LEG SY DRAGO'S BULLET. . The Black Hand agent was a poor shot. He emptied his rovolver and then turned to run when @ bullet from ‘Drago’s gun went into his leg and he fel: with a curse. A crowd gathered. The man who had fully. the Briggs door brought with a girl of about five years clinging | her skirts and staring wide-eyed, Mrs, Briggs declared her husband was not at, home and would not see any one, “I gannot speak to you. I | nothing to say,” ghe repeated over and over again. | Md you recelve any Black Hand warnings?” asked the reporter. speak to you. Ido not know t this affair, I am very} but T cannot discuss the matter further.” And Mra, Briggs entered the house, During the inquiry the negro had stood with his lack to the house, Aw the reporter came down the steps the muard turned and the butt of a ree| yiver, a big revolver, showed over the | xp of hiseside pocket. He conducted | ¢ Interviewer as far aw the turn In the roid. Out on the highway an autos | been shot got to his feet and staggered mobile wiilzzed by, entering the gates toward the railroa There he the estate, The car stopped near @isdppeared after he had held a crowd Eriezs's house and a keen gray mus- tac taiking a moment @t Day with his revolver. The crowd with the negro guard who again come then turned on Drago, who began to run, has not) ail American born workmen, stirred out of the grounds, and when he| camps of the two brothers may be only through may fan to devastating flame, stood on a «mail hill surrounded by high | D. Rockefeller enta THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1914, som and a daughter. Funeral services | will be held at the home of his intimate | friend, Gifford Vinenot. Burial will te] WHS HS BODY TO wren opog Would Make Foreigners Pay for Upkeep. Sopt. 6—Panama continucs a 4 great share of attention by the British press, The opinion was cur- [rent to-day that the Government ts | likely to abstain from pressing {ts arbl- j tration propusal untt! after the election, | with the hope that the United Stat “wa | will then amend the bill. The British Foreign Secretary, Sir Ed- ward Grey, in a@ letter to the Gateshead are under your orders and are sworn’ in ae deputy sheriffs.’ “No truth hat report, the sheriff ’ replied shortly, i “Thon why do they carry guns?” asked the reporter. | “Do they?’ And the sheriff gave the aignal to the chanffeur. It was true that no piece of armam bieger than the baby cannon sticking out of the negro guard's pocket wiile before Superintendent Briggr’e house | had beon wean ar far. In daylight the was no display of weapons. | Dusk came on and it grew darker | 7. until the aimoat inky blackness of a| L country night descended. The reporter | informed a hotel keeper of hia intention to enter the er “You'll be stopped | now, all right,” said the hotel man. | “The Burna men came over from Mrs. Riley's boarding house a while ago and | went up the road.” | ~ TWO CAMPS OF DIFFERENT! WASHINGTON, Sept. 5. — Dr. KINDS. | Medee, the noted scientist, who died | There was no algn of life on the road, /4t the Cosmos Club of cancer, af centric Sufferer From Can- cer Will Be Buried From Gifford Pinchot’s Home. The 99 Ttallan Iaborers had retired to an iinesa of several weoks, willed chamber ih in sepreeeniacinea 8 thelr houres and were asleep crowded his body to Prof. Edward A. Spltzk iu Chala Wines coeierein | Jon the floors in the atifiing rooms. THI jotervon Colieae, Phitatolshig nae ang {he United States Government concern- Iphia, #0 the ing the Panama bill. He adds that there | bodies were weary after the day's to!t use It for Aim for the $1.60 which the Ol King allows them. Another day of blasting In the quarry and digging out roads was be- fore them, Sodden with sleep they were quiet, ieaving all to thelr agents, the men who sleep days and keep the wealthy awake at night. Over on the | Will'am G. Rockefeller estate a fe miles away hundreds of laborers also were asleep, But they slept differently. Their wages were better and they are The two noted pathologist may reems no doubt that the Senate's adop- | rection and to study the cancem cells tion of the bill providing for free use of And ascertain If possible the cause of ‘the canal by American coastwise vesse the discase, Ii haa not been uncommon |ag well as American ships in foreign for medical men to will their brains to made under certain conditions is a vio- | sclence, but it 9 rare for one to #0 \iation of the Hay-Pauncefote treaty. iL) of his entire body, | Strong regret at the spirit in which F. MeGeo sent for Dr. Spitaka a8 tho Panama question Is being discuased soon fs he realized that death was sear on this side of the Atlantic {8 expressed and made arrangements for the transfer py the Westminster Garette, the of his body to Philadelphia for use on Government organ, whose editor, J. Al- the dissecting table, fred Spender, is considered as possibly Dr. McGee never had @ firet nee the next Brilish Ambassador at Wash- other than "WJ." He signed and in. ington. ey, . sisted that he be addressed by thone | yon ra eitottal, have had'the veosioe Initials, without a period after elther. In| tect that might have been. anticipated 1888 he mi & noted physician, jn the American retort that Europe t# Anita Newcomb, daughter of the iate| strewn with examples of this alloged few ‘niles apart in location but they | at opposite poles in other regards, In one dwells peace and contentment | and sleep after a day of work fully | done and fuily paid, In the other there is a smouldering fire of discontent that Up the road to the gate of the John | Prof. Simon Newcomb, lecturer on hy-| perfidy. This only serves to generate the reporter mada | lene at the University of Callfornia. heat where light ts wanted. his way In the dark. Two figures, dim- | ly moving shadows, came from behind | . = = a gray vtone pillar, i} Hold on,” said one stepping forward, R. H. Macy & Co.'s Attractions Are Their Low Prices. where do you think you're going “To see Mr. Driggs,” said the ads porter, ‘The man was carrying @ rifle which | S Herald Square Broadway, 34th to 35th St. a Ostrich-Trimmed Velvet Hats, $9.89 Our first ‘‘Week-end Special” of the new season in Trimmed Millinery. he shifted in the hollow of his arm. “Get back!" he commanded, The reporter went. On the public roa\ ‘a, the sections of road which do not run through oRckefeller land—a deputy sherifi was patrolling. In the lights of the station there was another and one was seen walking up the track which passes the estate, Yet villagers will assure you there 1s no (ruth in the Black Hand rumor, No one wishes to sity anything about the troubles of the Rockefellers, The Ol King is now tn Cleveland, Ma notified his son yesterday of his Intens tion to stay in Cleveland indefinitely. ¢ oe HELD JOB BY DECEIT. Civil Service Employee Four Last season we inaugurated a series of week-end specials in Trimmed } | Millinery at $9.89, which met with phenomenal success. These specials were invariably Hats that would sell regularly at $15.00, and even $16.50. ith this offering, which will be on sale Friday and Satur we resume the weck-end specials, and shall feature in them the best of the new fashions, We illustrate a black, silk-velvet, roll- trim Hat, encircled with a white “Lobster-Plume” that drops over the backof the brim. Black-and-white ef- Re Years Under Another's Name. Patrick Regan of No. 19% Tillary street, Brooklyn, has been working for the city since 1908 as a fireman in the DuMeid street baths, Brooklyn, under the name of Thomas Farrell, whose civil service papers Regan came in po He {8 survived by Mra, MeGee and : | FULL SKIRTS HIDE , an henna STOMACH BAD? BELCHING GAS AND “SOUR FOOD? WANT 10 FEEL FINE? © et your stomach—which portion of the food did the demage~ LINES AND CURVES. MORGANTOWN, W. Va., Sept. 6, Declaring that “nature's handiwork” 1 given ite full due in the rounded curves And lines that the present style of gowns worn by women accentuates, forty well known young society giris in this city agreed not to wear any dresses pa terned after the new plaited full skirt. In a petition which they are now circu- jating among the women here the new creations which the modistes have de- creed shall be the style for the coming season are denounced as “hideous and tending toward artifictallt; “We intend to boycott the new crea- tions of the dressmakers,” said one of the leaders in the rebeliton to-day, “They are not gowns; they are anything one wants to call them. And, further, they are not sulted to one's personal of Kown—the an’a gown should fit her form fully and in contour. The new gowns have no tn- ty and are prosaic in the ox. THY TINS, Wonder what w ust take a little Dia Sredena the inchpeion ox Millions istress. ‘8 a INDIGESTION, l] SOURwEan Gag HE. High Water. ASL: roo i Vor 2.02 an7 952 from 8.30 A. M. to6 P.M. Daily. Vale prices. Sets, Initialled in Gold Every piece is absolutely perfect. in our shop on the premises. ‘educed One-fourth stock, in complete assortment, so thi Austrian China at 25% Less Than Usual An assortment of odd pieces from which luncheon and tea sets can be assembled at very little. The deco- ration is a gold lace border with pink flowers. Tea Cups and Saucers, each. . Dinner Plates, each Breakfast Plates, each. Tea Plates, each. . Bread and Butler Plates Preserve Dishes, each. . Oalmeal Saucers, each Continuing the Macy Semi-Annual Sale of Fine China, Cut Glass, Lamps, veins Fixtures, Bric-a-Brac and Art tes _unexcelled, because we have drawn upon our vast manufacturing resources here and abroad, which we operate at a saving averaging 25% to the consumer. and discontinued designs from other manufecturers have been included in the sale, at savings from 10 to 50% on regular market Our regular price, $8.97. being decorated with a gold line in addition to the initial. initials ready for delivery, but if necessary will have yours decorated to order later, as required, and broken pieces replaced readi! R. H. neacy & Co.’s Attractions Are Their Low Prices Herald Square ares In addition, overlots $6.89 for Hundred-Piece Porcelain Dinner to Your Special Order Elsewhere, $12.00 The design is simple and attractive, We have most Our Own Open-Stock Schwarzburg Dinner Ware from Regular Prices This reduction, which will be available only during the remainder of the sale, applies to six equally desirable patterns. These patterns are always in sets purch d now can be expanded ly. Sixty-Piece Glass Service Elsewhere $4.00. Our Price $1.98 This service is of plain, thin-blown glass, each piece absolutely flawless, For ordinary use this is considered highly desirable Glassware. There are one dozen each of Whiskey, Mineral, High-ball, Champagne and Water Glasses. Peerless ‘‘Straus’’ Cut Glass do you? Well, don’t ae UB ed Sottate Wr is ‘a revolt; if sour, = upset, and what you just ate has fermented into stu ps; hes; belch d acids and eructate undigested food; breath foul, ton; wee eerie taba litte Dit in and in five minutes you truly will wonder se of men and women to-day know that it is needless to have a ba stomach. A little Diapepsin occasionally keeps this delicate organ regulated an they eat their favorite foods without fear. DIAPEPSIN DISORDERED STOMACHS PANES INE FIVE MINUTES. DYSPEPS! ARTBURNS Broadway, 34th to 35th St! @ second barn and again he by Cregier. Two blocks from the second barn Drago leaped a fence and went into a lot owned by James Bird. There Cregier overtook him, wrested his revolver from him and handcuffed him, Not until his arrest did the crowd Know that Drago was fighting with en agent of the Black Hand. Vhe Kocko- feller employee was locked up. pottte Has ROCKEFELLER’S NEAR NEIGHBORS EVEN *'AR ‘ TO TALK NOWADAYS, When dawn broke to-day over Pocgn- too Halls the guards who stood at the @pproaches to the Rockefoller estate all ight assembled im the hollow of the quarry and slipped the shells from their rifles. All night they had paced along 8 run out into view, Four men under arma rode session of And presented himself as fect: Jominate, but there are dark the crowd came close ected 17tO ew, ‘ fects predominate, but there are dark J, pay and pointed his patil pin the 23, t8e automobile and none of them got Farrell. ‘The facts were disclosed by blue, brown, and taupe with white, || pursuers fell back. OE ele data® nee be la tane acting Commissioner of Accounts Rico, as well as other combinations, | Policeman Cresier came up and Drago porter pointed ont the Auto fo a bye | WhO to-day made a report to the | aibiied under 0 bara. Crosier wes Thai's Sheriff Doyle ot, Mayor. Regan admitted that he had | after him and defied the Itilan to pwn and his men.” informed the | posed as hai sy 9 rive ae r er ara | Mabke Drage then ef bystinder and the reporter sought the Murphy, who has since dled, Regan et | Me o5s eek up, Yew alsset. wheres Tired Maulnet Beare Tee, they MP ny Nia ine would wet the Juni | OCOOOO@OQOOOQOQOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOO: | Bumber of men headed him’ of. Stil ''Sp'im'nut ieokine for any Black Hande| {Maed for Farrell by representing him. | Q | @ating his revolver Drago went vu: fr 8 | self as Farrell, The Superintendent of | ent under he aald, > business here is | | | | the baths put Regan to work when he fo eatoh the two remaining me h t i K men of the Hie pay four who held up several men down at | Presented Farrell's papers. the Lake three weeks ago, The two| was 3 @ di We have caught confessed and the other two are around bore somewhere.” SHERIFF TELLS OF THE START OF THE TROUBLE. | Then Sheriff! Doyle told of the troubto | on the Rockefeller estate and what led up to it. | | “Whether there is a Black Hand or- | ganization among the 500 Itallan labor- ter's employ I have ‘no y ing sure, It Is always the | {prost and lung troubles, a Hane are employed to A tors for this or some t the men pay day and of from twenty-five cents CLT For Consumption If the volunta f any ly written words of grati on ein all “parts of. t IN n'a Alterative, of coughs, cold to and give to you f 'praine of those them—in_ many | other society m |take tribut t who declare it benef cases coupled with the writers’ statements ine a dollar, with the remar! Ti be | that 4 restored them to health, ‘This te « arou: . reek,’ re sample taken from mi nd next week.’ The laborers say | ample ti Keademy. O'Neiit, Nebraska. | nothing from fear and in this way a bie [revenue is gathered by these qmenta. | The negro foreman Dunstan discharged several Itallans who were known to be leaders, The discharged ones left vow Ing Vengeance. Shortly afterward ke Rene Was poured over a house where & et ‘About ‘seven y was attacked with dreade: Tuberculor could not al speak out loud and coi had three hemorrhages, rai of the time and ered with night wweats, fever and chills, A specialist of CUT OUT THE COUPON The Sunday World, Sept. 8, AND EXCHANGE SSF 0 Ree $1.98; Elsewhere $3.00 to $4.00 A quantity of richly cut pieces in the newest patterns, many of them suitable for gifts. Among them might be mentioned Berry Bowls Celery Trays Bon Bon Baskels Bouillon Cups and Saucers, each Salad Bowls, each, Cake Plates, cach. eee 21139¢ Also at the same reductions, Aus- LLL NMA LETTD trian China Plates, Tea Cups and Saucers, to match, in an assortment of artistic border patterns with gold, follows: Pitchers Mayonnaise Bowl and Plate | | P| 23, | ee etal: +331 Fern Dish Flower Vases fad ‘ fl Bread and Butter Plates, each. 1... 15c| tee Cream Trays Sugar and Creams Tea Cups and Saucers, each. . 23¢ Main Floor Tables and Basement, Fall Overcoats for Men Nothing “defines” a man quite so accurately in Autumn or Winter as his Overcoat. The Macy showing of London and American made Overcoats, fresh from makers of international reputation for style, are tailored in up-to-the-minute models—yet every one of them embodics that subdued and refined taste that spasests “Fifth Avenue” or “Regent Street.” na word, they are the latest word in Topcoats—and yet they are sufficiently inexpensive to suit a modest pocketbook, IT the roads or lain in the rainsoaked man inpe 4 of tur informer 1 sbrubbery, alert and silent. Fresh men, | With lis family, ‘The house was fire fewer In number but with to fear "0Me time after midnight and the Ital- and guard a¥ainst, Issued from the puiddenie irom te ty ee Te leet quarry to take their places, Day and! Right the watch goes on, supplemented by sheriffs, who patrol the roads out- | tide the estate warning mght strollers from the vicinity. been report ening letters sent to persons te, but as no off- clal nottice was sent to me of such com- munications, T cannot say how much truth there !s tn the report. “Tut what about the guards now he King of Money ts ‘n danger, In| Patrolling the ertate?” he was askod. the days of old, when the ifo of the |. Thien of {hen are my men.” replied wi Bheriff Doyle, “They keep on the public threatened, vassals stood y, The others ler arms through the night that the| three in the danione King might sleep secure, Last night! \1 eighteen burly negroes with repeating | Yiffes, three Burns detectives and three | Aeputy sheriffs from Tarrytown watched that the von of the king might siccp. For the lives of John D, Rockefeller and Bis bon and his Krandsons are menaced, | ‘Messengers of the dreaded Black Hund | have stolen through the grounds some fume between dusk and dawn and left the message of terror on the steps of the Rockefeller mansion, This happened pee ten once and no one saw the of the threat. The life of Supt. Briggy, the young boss of 600 1/1 paid laborers, was also marked. Around him Constantly is a guard, and he keeps to the house after nightfall. Newly arcived | @m the grounds, to take his place, runs | $ 00 are Burns agents, nd three at nigh’ Tam told luke charge of the negro ,"* But they say the guard of negroes & BAVE Best Credit System-—One 4 Room Suite, including Buffet, Chi eyes, me sepetns wide eau AWetk Closet, Dining apie aud 4 Leather Seat NEW YORK CITY Knowledge of men on the aquedyst, value $61 strong men and wat in the master's chair, Tappan 1s looking about the 600 Italian laborers on the Rockefeller GRANO RAPIDS FURN/TURE Call and Make Your Own Terms ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. Delivers this entire Goiden Oak Dining olumbus, Oho, pronounced my case hope em ‘Noarly five years ago, I heard of your Alterative ne at with the re restored 1 procured a ult that I acon found myself to health, For the past f a 1 have been able to contin y hing, and though I have always had y echool work, La manual i if faithfully Femed, uble to per: Fr. 1 cons m taken, cellent ‘onsumnp| r EUpertor permite this (Signed) SISTER MARIF. Sisters of Bt. Francis, Alterative ts effective tn A May Fever, Throat buliding the twin poisons, opiates drugs, or sale by all Drug Stores and Aak for booklet tellin wi write to Eckman Labo Pa, for additional o} 4 A Collapsible Aluminum Drinking Cup (WITH COVER), or An Oiled Paper Cup in Case AT THE FOLLOWING PLACES: Low Price-——Cash or Credit 42 120 West 48th Street 14ih Street and Avenue A i ate 512 West 42d Street 242 East 59th Street ©, ‘ 4 West 125th Street 399 East 148th Street © 1704 First Avenue estate with @ view of beginning a course BROOKLYN ALBANY (@ Seana SIs seeriocii, will te 352 Livingston Street 638 Broadway e@ ALL HANDS PROFESS TO KNOW 897 Park Avenue ROCHESTER e OF NO TROUBLE, NEWARK 34 North Water Street 4 In daytime there is nothing about the 2064 Washington Street AL TIMORE 2 Sante 2, nieaeee Sho Breoence of tons. HOBOKEN 403 North Howard Street é ‘or’ 4212 Washingion Street PHILADELPHIA the two fot ear Metastases a 8 JERSEY CLTY Ninth, Darin ‘and Jefferson @| gemed to know just what was the 4 Room ry 205 Central Avenue treets 4 Boe, exe tes pee asatinns *69° *89°° 109" | isiasis | 3 © ¢96er to axert that there was no truth Complete ot \@ “ORDER NOW-== a3 S ia the reports ne 3 Rieck Sand messages is CAT. Sewing Machines 9 one aS 1 ‘ORS see carmen 166-152 Sth Ave’ Cor Selb St," "are = Next Sunday’s World ¢ London-made Top-Coats, $24.75 to $44.50 Cut in the fashion men of taste will affect this Autumn, and are made of those dignified English Tweeds and Homespuns (smooth - face also); knee-length and quarter-lined. London-made ' Overcoats, $24.75 to $47.50 Tailored in rather heavier material; warm and cozy without sacrifice of cut and distinction, Style and workman: ship being equal, the heavier coat Is the more distinguished air to the m of taste. BUT the heavier coat must show graceful lines, © are as grace= ful as they are comfortabl.—the high- est praise we can offer them, For High School Practical in fabric, color and ey lew three garments would torn wardrobe, but her choice Frocks may be added at her pleasure, charm of ycuthful variety. Navy or Black Serge Man- Tailored Suits, $19.74 Pronouncedly | pri be the plain, 32-inch coat a » garment. It is lined ieed satin and has an pocket. The skirt has an inside belt, and double folds to op- posite s of back and front. Sizes 14 and 16 years. cravat trim the bodice panel, woolens | &! eal nucleus for the girl-student's cc ay cover a rage of fifty such combinations, all within a moderate price-range, Street Frocks, Promenade Suits, Dancing American-madeTop-Coats, $19.75 to $29.75 Every earmark of over-seas style and the prices, of course, have not to bear the expenses of importation, They are superbly tailored in soft, attractive ray velours and vicunas, and lined to the edge with heavy merveilleux silk, Fancy Top-Coats $19.75 and $24.75 Varied in style for the man who de- sires a garment. slightly unlike that worn by histriends, Not by any me oddoreccentric, Rag! juard Chestertield models all of E crigin—made in this country of Eng lish and American high grade woolens in quiet and tasteful grays and browns and subdued mixtures. Some are quarter, others ha!f-lincd, The Latest Styles in Autumn Suits The prices ere $14.75, $18.50, $24.75, $29.75 und $38.50 Sufficiently inexpensive to till the place of 'tween-season wear, yet in rance and distinctive style equal to the latest iumph of the custom Fifth Floor, Broadway, These Coats, Suits and Dresses and College Girls Practical, above all, in price. These {-weather and invite immediate selection by their Mannish Double-Breasted Topcoats, $13.74 This model unsurpassed for rough- and-ready wear, It is shoe-top length, has buttoned patch pockets, a three- section belt of unusually wide pro- portions and shepherd's check serge lining. Gray or brown mixtures, in sizes 14 and 16 ycars, Panelled Serge Richelieu Dresses, $11.74 Navy or black, with the satin Richelieu collar opening over a wide panel of Hercules braid that extends alty gst to hem. Crimson velvet ribbon straps and pies 15 and 17 years. Second Floor, Broudway. aol di from 8.30 A.M. to6 P.M. Daily. Arrived from Paris By the Last Steamer Rich, Genuine Leather Hand-Bags, With Flexible Metal Mounting There are large envelopes, small en ' velopes, large squares, small squares, and many odd shapes, in the finest : tones of brown, blue, purple, gray anc } in black. Prices are $19.89 to $44.89, \ Wonderful Belts to Wear: With Dress or Suit : Velvet studded with steel ornemen~) tation. Kid and patent leather with? curious, button-lik. clasps of silver or} gilt. Suede with enamelled buckles. Suede, strapped, laced or medallioned with another leather. Steel-studdec, silk with steel ged sashes. Em _broidered cloth-of-gold with Rhy clasps. And handsomest cf all, elastic velvet buckling with replica diamond} clasps of rare design. At 74c to $8.49. j Main Floor, Rear. Cabinet and Costume Fans In Many Shapes and Sizes Each encased in a daintily decorated } gift box of odd shape, heavily padded ; and lined with satin, There ts chiffon ornately pailletted with silver an zold around a hand-painted medallion, land-painted, hand-embroidered chif fon with pearl sticks tinted to match A series of delicate, hand-painted me c on net, with gilt-etched, carved sticks of tinted pearl. A bone Fan carrics companion paintings, beauti- ; fully executed, on both sides. An} 4 oddiy-shaped, fragile thing of tace is{ trosted with the tiniest of dawn-tinted ¢ paillettes, and mounted on pearl sticks re same opalescent tints. Prices trom $4.89 to $63.50. Heat-proof Asbestos Table Pads Sold exclusively at Macy’s and priced 259% lower than the ordinary kind sold elsewhere. pads, containing flexible heavily flannelled on both f asbestos, sides and joined so as to fold either way, are practically everlasting and proof against even the most careless handl To theca reful housekeeper they are a necessity, for.they provide the only means of preserving the fine surface of the dining-table from the effects of hot dishes and spilled liquids. — This pad is the only one we know of that Mai is guaranteed heat and mois Prices vary according to size, from 42-inch Pad for $2.97 to a 60-inch Pad for $4.89. Extra leaves, 42 to 60- inches long, are 89e. Special Pads will be made to order to fit tables of unusual proportions, at very moderate price: Main Floo h St. Rear, C The Published Works of Woodrow Wilson, Peculiar interest attaches just now to the writings of the Dem- ocratic candidate for President, who is renowned as a scholarly, accurate and sympathetic hise toria AHISTORY OF THE AMERI~ CAN_ PEOPLE. In| Five Volumes, tastefully bound , , $9.74 THE STATE, One volume. , $1.79 FORGE WASHINGTON, - One volume. Be ERNMENT IN | UNITED STATES, $1.34 Muin Floor, Rear ——- Boys’ $1.00 Shirts and Blouses at 68c A manufacturer who works yj remnants of men's shirtings into Shirts and Blouses during the dull season sends us this lot, to sell at the special price of 68c. They are in every detail of fabric and finish a standard $1.00 garment. The Blouses are made with attached collar or neckband, in a large variety of light, medium and dar! Stripes, and are laundered ready to wear. Sizes 6 to 16 years, The Shirts’ are coat models in light and medium stripe effects and in plain white, fastened withe ocea peart buttons, laundered pe wear. Neck sizes 12 to 14. Hecond Fleer, S5tb