Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
c NEW NEW YORK TO BE LAUNCHED ON OCTOBER 30 Super-Dreadnought and Texas Will Be Biggest Battleships Afloat. the iPRESIDENT EXPECTED. First to Carry Fourteen-Inch Guns, of Which There Is a Battery of Ten. The new New York, super-Dreadnought of the heaviest type and with the Texas inch, .45 calibre, is being touched up for her launching from the construction dock at the New York Navy Yard a week from to-morFow—Wednesday, Oct. », She will have ten of these 14-Inch guns, mounted along her centre line and able to deliver @ broadside-on either side of the ship. To carry the weight of such Wi® Buns, together with their protective turrets and heavy! mounting platforms and swivels, she was butlt 57 feet longer han the Florida and with 4,000 tons displacement, Which {s 1,000 tons more than the Arkansas or the Wyoming. The New York and her sister ship the Texas will be the biggest battleships afloat in the world when they go into commission, DIMENSIONS OF THE GIANT SEA FIGHTER. Here are a few of the figures about the -biggest battleship: Length on de- the first battleship to carry guns of 14-/ Bow View of World’s Biggest Battleship, ‘GEESY'S ' WRONG’ THE EVEN IN G@ WORLD, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1912. The New York; Girls Who Will Christen Her BOY WANDERED AWAY WITH LITLE BROTHER | ipl OF 15 WHO LEAPED |WEAVER’S AUTO RIDE the BOw VIEW of THE NEW YOR | NEVER DONE NOTHIN’. “AGAIN, BUTT sil rs FAULT-NO SIR! “Took a Rumble” § for Sake of “on-the-Square Queen,” but Is “Pinched” All the Same. ‘Flatties’ Always ‘Had Goods on Him Before, but They’re “Framing” Him Now. While cheerfully admitting there has been ample justification for his many past troubles with the police, Wiltjam Johngon—who fs known as “Geesy,” ex cept where ofMctal records are con- cerned—is convinced and ready to try to convince any one who will Hsten to DEATH PARTS PAIR ON THRESHOLD OF THEIR NEW WORLD Great Wave Sweeping Liner | Kills Wife on Eve of Begin- ning Life Anew Here. ' pomvvanenr HUSBAND IS DESTITUTE. Penniless, He Seeks in Vain for Money to Bury Her Country She Loved. ves Four wanders despalrinaly | New York, @ stranger in al strange city, his wife's body lying tn the Morgue, He is stranded, his last penny having been pald for the embalming of her body. A month ago the two were happy in the belief that they were leav- him that his Intest arrest is an outrage. If them flatties didn't have tron heads, so he says, they could easily have heard the talk around Frog Hollow that | “Geesy” had got mixed with an on-the- square queen, and for her sake had taken a rumble, The fatties—which ts to say anound the West Forty-aixth street, where “Geesy” has been Aving since his departure from Sing Sing, three weeks axo, and lafd hands on him at 9 o'clock last night, when ‘Geesy,"" dressed in a brand new sult and wearing a tle pin that glowed as brightly as any real diamond, started to call on ‘his girl. ‘They told him {t had come to be the clothes policemen—urked 4 doorway of No, Keneral belief he was the mah who had signet water line, S feet; breadth, ex- shot at James Phillips, a watchman, In treme, at designer's water line, 9% feet the New York Central yards at Sixtieth ‘$ inches; mean trial displacement, street and the North River, on the 0 tons; mean draught, 28 feet 6] night of Oct. 1%, Also they accused inches; coal bunker capacity, 2,880 tons; bim, assuming thelr first mduction to {uel oil storage capacity, 400 tons; and |be right, of having returned to the Speed on trial’ not less than 2 knots an ps as LEFT IS FTI DENIED OF VIVID IMAE IMAGINATION yards the following night and havin hour, 1. i. 7 \ escaped by virtue of his handiness wit Tho New York wili cost about $.0n,-| Skipped for the Ninth Time] ‘a revolver when surprised by. raflroad 00. Her keel was laid in September, ‘ | \detectives in the act of breaking into WU, and-when the big hull slides into and Had the Police and {a box car, Despite his denials and his the water a week from to-morrow she insistence he had a most important em ; " + y s His | will. be about & per eent. complete, ac- Judge Guessing. In Love wantin Man Who Jilted | Young Broker ker Admits LLL UT beh ed aptly uy a ording;to the naval constructors. sh tectives to the Forty-seventh She fe not due to be finished until Her, Say Neighbors—Her to Wife of Trip With Miss |i sation. wt was charged May, 18M, ‘but the men who have her pik with felonious at and attempted construction and equipment in hand| Th® Wanderlust runs in the blood of Body Recovered Taliaferro Was Fiction. robbery, cay that they will beat that time by] little Chesley " Canebammer, ne y : |GEESY “TOOK @ RUMBLE” AND 13 several months. covey, nna Candioee, tue. sourteen» SQUARE Now. N ear-old lad has wandered nine times " " fa ase cr mobert aA: @tocker, Hodes hay in| The entity of the itt who teaped| The casual efforts of young Mr.Deane| mig morning Geeay could not re the constructor in charge, will be the| from his home, No. 1550 Minford place in Larrabee Weaver, a broker, employed 1M) strain his indignation when an Hvening responsible official at the ship's launch-| the Bronx. Three titpes he has taken'|ffom a West Shore ferryboat into the the office of Spencer, Trask & Co,, to| World reporter ‘called on him ing. He will have charge of the valve] his younger brother Mratia, aged eight.| North River during the review of the | ti fe understand whate perfect] ‘Say, feller,” te eaid. ‘I want you that will rele the hydraulic steel) And every time he has had a new story | navy by President Taft a week ago to- | have lls wife understa brought | to print It in the paper, #0 the gal wilt {rlggers, which will lift the immense | to pilgale the police and\those who sym-|day has been revealed by the identifica. devil of a fellow he was, have Biredild Poblater Cm ico clactilad ala Bids Nall from the solid to the sliding ways, | pathise with his apparehtly forlorn 6on-/ ¢ion of a body found in the North iver | SAAPITONA cinbarrasenstnt Ubon) ¥eabe | Sea: J0) Shee Waa ne This in itself is an entirely new] ajtion. ' atreet | Mr. Weaver's head. told her I was going to take a rumble a 3 «,,,| Off the foot of West Fifty-second | After « call was made at his office,| and reform, They're just trying to Method of launching, and when {t 18]! The two youngsters were picked ‘up 1 ht | I considered that for the last few months| by Policeman McKiernan this morning| °* ® Police launch last night. | Yesterday, by: Col. Taliaferro of Virginia, | frame me mow because 1 got a bal wore than 2,0%,0%) pounds of steel per|on Sedgwick avenue. Charley asked| Thomas’ Kelleher, @ saloonk re atte (Uncle of Mise Hatth Taliagerro, the els a4 . mt rae oe oe te hi tionth has been incorporated into the| him where the baseball game was. be-| NO. 61 West Forty-second street, Me tress, and Mr, Ables, the petite little | Gopher G ng. |, T usec to, all right hull, one can appreciate the danger to/ing played. He did not know the Red| fled the body as that of his sister-in-law, | stage lady's step-father, Mr. Weaver but not since T took me rumbi : ‘oth hull and workmen employed n|S9x had won the championship. He|Mary A. Shepherd, fifteen years old,|made a written atatement for publio -|_ “Wien they frat cauant mo etealin the launching by anything in the na-|nhad three seats with rain checks at-| who disappeared from her home, | tlon, wherein he admit ed he had wiitten | feée “erty why they call m ture of a premature launching. tached in his pocket. He told the! ga west Forty-second sirest, on the| a" untruth to his wife from Long] they had the goods, 1 didn't ma ‘ stor iley, Com: . Branch, last summer, when he tdly| then, and 1 wouldn't be squealin’ now, Naval Constructor J. E. Bailey, policeman he and his brother had beat] morning of Tuesday, Oct | :, mander GB. Bird and Lieut.-Coms| thelr way from Chicago on the brake- | "0 . ‘pretty and popular | Roasted of a midnight auto ride with {it they had me right. mander W. B. Tardy are others who| beams, and accounted for the clean ap-| Miss Shepherd, a pretty Hor peo: | 28% Taliaferro and Miss Leila Frost, Geeay, who has spent the best part ot have been active in the work of suver-| pearance of their clothing by saying| @!l, was @ telephone operator. Her Pe | another actress, in the “Rebecca of|his twenty-three years on the wrong + vising construction, and who, with |that they had washed them after the| Ple have successfully hidden the exact | Sunnybrook Farm" company. side of the bars, was so vehement that + stocker, will continue that work right | dusty ride, The story impressed Jus-| cause of her suicide, but neighbors say| ‘The visit of the Colonel from Virginia | wrath. up to the thme the new mavial monster | tice Mayo in the Children's Court. she had a love affair with a young man/and Mr. Ables followed the publication, | his five-foot-three frame shook with Koes Into commission, While the Justice was undecided as! onsiderably her senior and that the ane . t Wednesday, at the letter i utes ‘ “Thi "y mot me first in je “i «i wis 2 case, the «| tion, which was ed in evidence bi ony. y e right then, te OFFICERS’ QUARTERS WILL BE| to the disposition of the case, there) rouncement of his engagement to an-| ton, which w In eviden: arve . o | came into court B, H, Hutchinson, . ap aay aeepond- | Mrs. I Shortie Weaver, in her] I went to th tory and I made it RET ANG eed pantry to| Acting Court Investigator of the Big| ther drove Miss Shepherd into despo applicati re Justice Greenbaum! so hot for them there they sent me to The alow tam a iH nipbullding. in| Brothers’ Movement, When he caught| ney: : Lear. | for alt pending her sult for separa-| the Juvenile Asylum, 1 was a bad kid, earlier customs in. shipb' F are . - ; tie Meapectyand thus te with réapect to] sight of the youngsters, he ssid: Her youth, good looks and general ¢ !ion from Weaver use of Miss Tal- | sure enough. np, penpects Ihe nik cuitiad'ts deasl “He Charley, you here again?| cumstances appeared to favor her | jaferro's name by Weaver brought Col. i pinched me for Bein castccaits cuaticradek: ot taicie ‘and Charley. aot mewniti@tdemearce covery from her melancholia and her j Tatlaferro and the young woman's step- | arson. ‘That was‘on the square. but| stipe from tine memorial has been| sponded: “How do you do; Mr. Hutch-| family even chatfed her, it is sald. She father lm ly to the front. ‘This they ought to have kiven me @ medal afi; the “Jackies " quarters have always Inson, left the house on the morning of Ost. {Is the aifdayis which young Weaver sles '6e santlig me us. The! Big rs Deen “for'd;” hence the “fo'castle.” With n the story came out of Chariey:s/ 16 to go to « neighboring store and did} made and airaad ab the renull Of thele | Make NG Un a va, Hollenreran the Arkan¥ag aud the Wyoming, how- Wanderings. And his stepmother was| not come Lack. yee bs poe.Re sheaenh dir eae : street Was being spoiled. We burned ever, thiy feature was changed about, |sent for and she cried over the chil-| about an hour after her disappearance, | “AN article app ared in the New York | trem out, 1 set three fires meself, asd the officers’ quarters were put for- | who declared that she was the] wiiie the Mayflower carrying the Presi- | !€Wspapers Oct. 16, 112, in which what | did my bit for it like @ man, and-vne omcers’ quar stepmother ever, Sho sald that! Gi vay passing along the lower end|PUrports to be a letter from me to any I got pinched a dozen times ward. On the New York the officer#! wien Charley could be prevailed upon| dent was p wife is printed. In tlds 1 y f the line of battleships, the river waa] Wife is printed, In tlds letter ts the then and 109%, but I always will be put aft again and the sailors tg go to school he always brought home | © following statement: 1 nw pes went forward, the best kind of reports for efficiency | dotted with launches and excursion | fol erie 4 : ee a ges working Bou » ent 1 retary ‘ dep ut the spirit| boats, and the echo of salutes was ra\ is h&s been a busy and plea t) able sd en Bam Wric- { President Taft, Secretary of the and good deportment. But ¢ pirit 5 y.| week, with more good times pl son, a tugboat ain, interfered with Meyer, Gov. Dix and Muyor Gaynor are|of the wanderer would overtake hMm| ting back and forth between the sky. | week, with more good times pi sR ag dene Ee org among the notables who are expected at|and he would disappear. This was the scrapers and the Palisades, a crowded » Monday evening a J 1 ‘got five years for that, and I've just the launchingvof the new super-Dread-|ninth tlme he had wandered off and| weer shore ferryboat put ut from the | nese party b Katherine Nichols, | 1 Kot f the launc rele isc Calder, daughter {the third time he had taken his little| porty-second street slip bOund for Wee-| Tuesday evening Edith Taliaferno and “What war your business?” asked the Of Congressman Calder, will-amaeh unc(brether. Franke sald that he wasn't | yoycne% young giti in a house dress | Leila Frost gave a fareweil to shgoen| pnneter Bee ORarOLena Grok. the veosehe|Meerey of Ole OF nOpeHE emten hel URN het: Jy 7OuZm GE) 1:0 NOUNS EES@@|| eS girls r London} “Gn, 1 was stealing rope, then," bottle champagne over the vessel's! sient out hecause he latd on his arm | 8 to-day, wh b Ret 0 vow. Kathleen Fitagerald, daugh-| or? went to sleep. ‘The lads were sent | bY the rail. ergteage ete lated r 1 ‘ peneee 4\ TueraLe the ean “aus tor of Congressman Joun J Fitagerald,| +4 tye Children's Society and thelr case| As the ferryboat approached the|f Sunnybrook Farm nse 0 sal’waitine fotme, Baa Wana chet will agsist Miss Calder, as Nower girl. |Win be investiguted, battleships the girl leaped into the| the best times of my. lite party ec Pee nag Prod gray Dado per Tha. yrim looking plain ram | bow eet ale EET river. The alarm was given, the|vroke up at 3 A, M u Lae ee ia Sa Lave To WROKe Rin ually seen in ‘a battleship is inissing i aie 4 ches | Leila, another fellow and myself took |t00 Sle si ge 7 frum oe New ir, whch ta how [NOVELIST ROBERT BARR: |tarryions was, stoped and unonen| aie, ancter felow and musa took hg or abana her. it'you sould ety aes ¢ the more graceful | sped toward the girl fr eo- | « E 0 ed} goo her you'd know which I to 80 DE almal N g o g reels valle Ra a Hs ran to Jalen. a 'wentyenit ran toga rumble athe way fou ° e! zi, i py moonlight, in Haith’s blg gray haven't turned a trick since I've n SECONDARY BATTERIES OF THE) AFTER MONTH'S SICKNESS, (rescuing: crest resaued ner, | Ba nnanat fe maven GuPraa aio tinee ea HUGE SHIP. coer Lia Ho report Of the: dleappearance. of ete ould ton the oceaston| tend to. Say, if I'd had my gal with 4 & « vas de to the police, but| 1 6e P ay ‘oolish bully and flattie: Apart from {ts ten M-inch, 46 calibre: in| the girl was ma mentioned I hot in an automobile | me when them foolish bulls and flattles “piles,” as they ally designate these\Prolific Author Was Known in| members of her family kept iets with Miss F uferro, and did not| nabbed me, I bet you T would ‘a’ kept big guns, the New York will be a long efo Became yspapers for record] go to or any other pla my date with her last night , ways irom defenseless, ‘even. without, Detroit Beta ree en of the finding of bodies. Within an|her on that occaelon In an aut Geesy will be arraigned in the Weat this set of the ‘biggest guns afloat, ° Prominent Abroad. hour after the body of Miss Shepherd] 1 was st at her mother’s e, | Side rt eee aera Ewe Pte | LONDON, Oot She-Bobert Bay, the | wan taken tothe Morgue last night it| wher Was Kiven to her. and it submerged ti to tubes on each sid . s : 4 w. | Was tl » Lever met her, and t the hu twenty-one 5-inch rapid- | Scott!*h novelist and editor of the Idler, | was identified by h brother-in-law Pid ee an Ik wae'not in any autos I * fre guns, four 3-pounder saluting guns, | died during the night of heart failure at ase ea Donte with Kewor of Shak Gee enn EMPIRE CH 0 l-pounder ser automatic #uns for his residence at Woldingham, Surrey, FUN FOR part nor was f ne with her at that boats, two Sinch field pleces and two| ii. hed been ii! for @ month The enecens.of many 0 time or at any ime 10 DAYS’ ‘W-calibr machine guns, will be due to the great game, 1 ake this statement in order to ¢ | y The New York, i fitted as a flagship rt Bam was born tn, Glasgow, | More on heavy coated paver, to eis that’ haa? tenn and wil accommodate 63 officers and sixty-two years ago, He wes educated | Sepg with every copy n In papers and in onler FR ayer 1.000 1 t Toronto and taught for séveral years | World, Am extra, separa p full Justice to Miss Taliaferro and Each; o: ten Idinchers cost $82,000 anada. In 1876, he joined | should. not b vel Aisa Wiroat | If not entirely satisfactory, return at and the platform for each the Detroit ree Pre In ad save y (Signed) ‘our expense f thos fellows cost.un even $50,000. | ¢ as @ news man At Sunday's World, Size of «ame IN) Oe LARRARER WEAVE ; < t with enough ix61, when he came to England to lve. | {uses wide by 24 inches dev, Led os No Cents velocit, in any ordie fater he found the Idler — pery armored er twelve miles’ with Jerome kK. Jerome. He n Lived 10% Venrn, |USED MAILS TO CHEAT U. S.| Money a away, and it costs $400 for one round Of qany novels and contributed to num- World.) | ammunition for each of, ther, eros periodicAls up to the tlme of his Conn, Qet lozeia Sente for Offence th Down Week . he ship's beant eth Mow ber death and ce 4 al of Mrs. Mary A. Pellett in} Here. 1st eet fseway in the Pa r n 1802 he published “In a Steamer | x, n occ 1 to-day, Mrs, Pellett sc loset is made from the very Vane and/along about the time «iain and other books, followed after iB Web aeas fe capri lonuent ce nie pe ertered ook; fly rubbed that engineering feat Ix accomplished tar, if not at the rate of one a year, |“! 1 er nervic ti tat ¢ 4 gal ‘ * i down there ta; Mal "dtpom | lave ti the oldest woman in and polished; with hand-carved posts and ga the New York will go down there to) sii’ at frequent intervals, From on bien a his scheme Covernmne ful F ih lens claw feet swell prove thet she can ease her Way! Whoge Bourn’? was published in 199, {Paria T at her hom of duty on cotton laces imported | Hf lery, Full cut French lege and claw fect: ow i Fertaty Rane |__| phe“Facetand the Mask" in 18d, Broadway were largely attended byt COU teeny piieaicntrey ne French plate front door and ends. Sells retaii And with this new New York coming Midst of Alarms" in the same year, |tIves and many iriendty in the in the criminal branch he Federal agng to her lawhing party, the old yoman Intervenes’ in 18%, “Phe |from surrounding t , rath Regularly New York, the fasship of Rear-Admiral Many" in-1M7, “The Countess — _ t ” t at $45; Hampson at the battle of Santiago, is "dn 18, “The Strong Arm’ and x Our Pri resting down in Philadelphia, with all! ine unchanging Bast" in 1900, eae a py 1 inerc en fur Price . movahle equinments stripped out of | ViNe, Wl, “Over the Bowel set aa to twenty days mprisen NITURE toga, eo) L | Maker," published in 1910, Mr suarentee, to case of HCZIMA Tozzia received by registered mail cou clos nmi ofS on A ARE hereto Merinonia often iuce team iaiy |] MINEG. COMPANY ; age and Cecil Clubs. He was something | ratlectiy “leas whieh were undervalued covet ine Ped « Drops [of a traveller and had « fail for photums | al 1g pone raga war duced which Andicat 56-58 W. 22dSt., New York, N.Y. oniage alamye eu Rew us Hanes . + nthe Fee | raph. «1g ad, the frauds were extensiy Ky plain: | ing their native country for a land rich with promise whick would yield them a abundance for their dectining years, They took passage on the Freneh Mner Tat Savole with sufficient money to make a start in America. On the Savole in the steerage they sep- arate the men from the women during ¢ voyage. The women are piaced in one compartment, which opens on to! the well of the ship through an tron. | barred wate, A similar compartment in. | closes the men. In fine weather they | meet In the well or deck promenade for the steerage passengers, On the night of the 16th a terrific stor: gates on both sides of t closed and a sailor pla guard, The storm in through the morning hours and was at | ite hetght about 9 o'clock The breaking of day did not serve to! diminish the fears of the sengers, most of whom able to sleep all night. one and the Inere: women pa. had not rolled in the tre sea and waves washed ¢ ks. Th women shrieked and ham- mered at the tron be given the society and protection of | the men folk, The sailors assured them thelr fears were groundless or preserved | silence altogether. HUSBAND. attack on the gate, shrieking the name of her husband, The din of the storm drowned her volee, so it did not reach his ears. Kach roli and lurch of the ship Increased the terror of the frenaied ‘woman, and those behind her at the Rate were equaliy fear-stricken and {mpor- tunate in thelr demands te be released from the ship's prison A steward along with | some women, The gate ned slightly and, like a tlgress, clutched the bars. ‘The women behind her pushed her through th ning and sth knocked aside the fatlor kuard and rushed into the well, screaming tho name of her 0 » husband struge crowd at tl 18 Krasping the 1 throug and with his white ver rs an pressed against them ho beheld his wife, with outstre: hands, ap- Pealing to him for ad. The sailor guard hu 1 after the terror-steicken woman, before he | her, a great wave swetp of 4 Savole and caug! both woman and sailor in its fe embrace, had subsided duced’ to amall si When the great wall of water and the torrent was re- eams gushing through the scuppers Mrs, Faur and the sailor were lying unconscious on the deck |The distracted woman had been. hu against an iron stanch: before th | gaze of her horriged husband and her eyes never opened on him again | WANTS TO BURY WIFE IN SOUTH | deen | The steamer | nding they GIVES HER LIFE To B ed Mrs. aur was tn the forefront of the! OF SUNNY FRANCE, | Mrs. Maur and the Into the ship's bh e hurried | pital and attended by We Dr. Mace of the ship's corpy of sur geons, Mrs. Faur's skul had heen trav: | tured by the blow she recelved, he sallor had escaped with @ few bruises, | jAn hour later the little woman, who | Jad left her own country with’ high | 9 fomthe new life in the #tranger's lland, wa dead, The ship arrived in port Saturday nd the body of the woman was sent to the Morgue distr husband | gave ali he possessed to have the body almed, that it might be shipped ek to the south of France and burted the flelds they t 1x0 w Faur knows not wher ie going et the money to pa the return of himeolf and his wife's body to France He haunts the Morgue and * |dock in de not knowing whithe Ito turn, He is fifty ars of age his dead wife wae forty-ax. The Jong heen married, but had no NA CLOSET| World, Oct. 2: ee ©) IT MAKES LITTLE DIFFERENCE WHAT YOU NEED— - - omemmmse ™ FOUNDED 1856) BROKAW BROTHERS MENS & BOYS CLOTHING HATS & FURNISHINGS Gloves for real comfort as well as good form. Most men have fixed ideas about gloves— the style that pleases one is not always pleasing to others. The immense variet; Ca of styles and colors, both Foreign and mestic makes, in our Fall Showing of Gloves, covers all differ. ences of glove opinion. Special Real Mocha in reindeer shades $1.65 Regular $2.00 Vaiue Huator Place & Fourth Avenue SUBWAY AT THE DOOR-ONE BLOCK FROM BROADWAY! Batablished Trade Mark Half a Century Special Sale Laces & Embroideries Nets and Novelty Laos inch new fancy Mesh Nets in White and Ecru, $1.25 to $2.25 per yard. New Shadow Edgings and Flounces—From one inch to 45 inches at 1244 to $5.00 per yard. Black Allover Laces, Nets and Floyhcing at greatly reduced prices. Novelty Bands and Edges—An assorted lot in Bohe- mian, Venise, Filet, Shadow, and hand embroidered at 25c to $2.50 per yard. Regular values 50c to $4.00. James McCutcheon & Co., Sth Ave. & S4th St. walBPPett tora a= Dress Shoes for Men Patent Leather Button Shoes with tip; cloth or kid tops. For Evening Dress, Patent Leather Button Shoes, with plain toe and Black Cloth Tops. $6 to $8 Pumps, made to fit snug at sides, in Patent Leather or 4 me $7 Dull Calf Sixth Avenue at Nineteenth St. McGibbon & Co. 3 WEST 37TH STREET Just off Fifth Avenue Are offering many Interesting Values in French and American Lingerie. Smart Models in NEGLIGEES and TEA GOWNS, TWO-PIECE SETS (Night Robe and Combination) 5.50 to 9.00 SEPARATE NIGHT ROBES .» sores. 1,38 to 5,78 4 COMBINATIONS 1.65 to 8.78 Also FRENCH HAND-EMBROIDERED SETS... 7.50 and 8,75 M. NIGHT ROBES.. 2.95 to 4,75 COMBINATIONS. 3.50 “ 6.75 Our Reputation for Reliability Is Established Its promises. Our suc: nf, businens to endure must, tive op to, Ite nromt aie uccee } stehaseas” ¢ lowent meusaltstion tree 9 Dr.McBride’soince B LFATENT SUCTION TRETH FIT, ¥ rar and i844 Street Full Set Teeth, $ Gold Crowns and Bridg e Work, $5 a Tooth 7 nouns TOG. SUND. ye AND abv io VO" Street, Near Hoi owolnge King dt NEWARK OFFIC ental arto & Mar A WORLD “WANT” AD. WILL GO AND GET