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DIAZ ON TRIAL BY COURT-{ARTIAL SHIELDS OTHERS oe Rebel Leader Arraigned With 17 Followers, Says He Had No Accomplices in Revolt. OOOL BEFORE JUDGES, Mexican Notables Still Trying to Save Him From Death Sen- tence—Madero Unmoved. MEXICO CITY, Oct. %—Righteen Detooners faced the court-martial ‘Vera Crus when it went into session at 6 o'clock yesterday morning. The court wae preakied over by Gen. Davila, _ Feliz Diaz eat in a centre of the group and appeared entirely compored, ac cording to a mpecial despatch received ere this morning. In his declaration to tile court he said: “Tam the only one responsible for the Movement. Ihave known Col. Jone Diaz Ordaz for many yeare and I won him over to my side. The other offvers did Ret know even the piace to which they were being taken. 1 had no accomplice ince there wan no time to make prepar- ations for my Movement.” Of the twenty-fout prisoners likely to euffer death for their whare in the re- beltion thirteen are commissioned oft cers and the remainder sergeants, Diaz when not in ¢ t ts detained in the Municipal Palace at Vera Cruz | Bfforta to save the life of the rebel Felix Diaz are being continued by men of high standing in Mexico. The Su preme Court to-day instructed tne Juda at Vera Cruz to suis of the sentence pronounced by martial on Dilay. President Madero refused to accede to, the demand of the Senate that he should wend Cabinet Ministers (o make a report! regarding the rebellion at Vera Crus and | the military trial of Gen. Felix Diaz. In! eis reply to the Senate, which was deliv- ered after midnight, he wivised the Sen- eters to send a commitive to obtain the | information they desired |The Senate! @ubsequently adjourned without taking | action. Reports reaching here from varlous that the ad: nue to | y activity. nt Madero last night @emmiesion of students that he would | Hot interfere with the applicution of the @ull rigor of the law in the case of Dias, | told a characterising him as one who had re | velted on account of personal ambition and as following the exumpie of his uncle, ex-Preaident Porhrio Diaz. “If the great President Juarex had eso adie to shoot Porfirio Diaz (when wee Sg rel and Diaz a revo- Iutionist) the nation would have been freed trem thirty years’ of tyranny and “ss lant 2 Mba added P: eident Madero. JUSTICE COHALAN GETS Society Girl Athlete Whose Betrothal Is Announced in Paris PTiss CONSTANCE, WARREN. AM. PRES A. pHoTe ' ( “News 0d dditics i fegintered at the Gothain Mote Kirk Kal AN 1OUS INQUIRER—No, lerk had never seen him betore. txseh Is not a new play by Barrie. Mony underground wires have been Prendergast charges pulled in the city condutts, Comptroller Woman with antiseptic hands Is the lateat discovery of the French sclentists, raisers. ustoms tar on baby baskets and cradies reduced by Board of Ap- The appeal came from Brooklyn merchants. More than a thousand babtes disappear in Chicago e ery year, Hundreds of suffragettes and thirty frage cooking contest at the Food Show. J. Pletpont Morgan ges Museu clubs were asked to compete in a suft- ry a@ response of Natural History a chalcedy stone with j4 moving water bubble in it, Came from Callfornta, not Wall street. Enthusiastic Hull Moosers have deluged the nurses whg attended Col, Ro velt in the Chicago hospital with proposais of marriage, Northern Pacifle Ratiroad Company | of an educated ape. It seoms to ‘ably certain that the ¢ Bowling at 6.20 A. M: tw no less a nu cause the alleys are in All Souls’ Unt Taare heir has "t Kot the measlen, dwance, Watertown (N. Y.) folk say, realist Churety, be- For the first time In many years not an action for divo: New York County Clerk's Office yesterday. NEW YORK HEIRESS HIS “KIDDIES” SAFELY LANDED FROM CEDRIC. But He Had to Count Them Over Twice to Make i Sure. ‘Phe eeven children of Supreme Court *Jusuce Daniel F. Cohalan, who have been spending the summer in Ireland, Were gingerly and joyfully delivered to thelr happy father to-day by the woary ind nerve wracked crew of the White Btar liner Cedric. Justice Cohalan insisted on counting “kiddies before he would accept three —— he began, but the youngsters hopped about ao restlesrly he had to begin over avain, Several more attempts fatied and the Justice war com- Pelled to assume his sternent judicial Manner and line bis offspring against the rail before he could audit them ac- curately. ret O'Leary, thelr aunt, whe chaperoned the children on their trip across the sea, asked anxiously, “Ate you sure they ell here, Dank hadn't vou better count ‘em agatn replied the father, “but sately ashore as quickly experience siuce she and forth across th return trip of the Cohulan kiddies was Something new, rather different from storms and | Bs, but, in many re- aspects, quite as thrliling. Ing hy Each of the Conalan youngsters boasts | O'Leary for a middle tedious repetition of children we Ailleen, nine; Kathleen, elght; dy,” five, and the am ‘OL twelve; Donatd twins, Florene Omitting uut tie | Ki ENGAGED 10 WED A FRENCH COUNT Constance Warren, Society Athlete, May Become Mar- quise de Lasteyrie. PARIS, Oct. %.~-Migs Constance War- ren of New York is to be @ Countees and may become a Marehioness. Her engagement was announced to-day. Her ance :# the Comte Guy de Lasteyrte, eon of the Murquis and Marquise de Lasteyrie, The Comte is tne son of an international marriuge ‘the Marquise wus Mise Gooulake ster of Me. Mise Wasren le tne da of Bla wins, George Abeniy 44 Fifth avenue, this city, and « niece of Mra. Robert Goelet, Sho is heiress to many millions ana runs Miss leo nora Sears @ close race fo women's athietic championship. she ade her debut in iW6, and has been called (he best swimmer, best oarswom- a best pedestrian, best sprinter, best waltzer, best composer of + best handler of horses and dogs, t shot at glass balls and one of the b players Newport ever saw In August, 1910, the ox miles from Batley’s B: tion's by, mooalight and the following July swam three and a half miles tn ih ewport waters in one bour and fifty. five minutes, On a hot day in June, 1910, she walked twenty-eight tales with her favorite bull terrier and afterward at- tended a ball. The only thing Miss the | Sears has on her ts flying. 1a of medium boyish face, deep yes and lark brown halr without The young helrese has w round, ana Dermott, bota old, | he Cedrle was hardly out at * pefor up “Paddy boys, four years a reh, red, safe and happy. A Mttle later the Cedric was startled by & report that the twins w lost, ‘There was a hue and cry. The twine Wele tudid, 08 It conunued througa- out the trip. If the twins or Paddy ‘Were in aight some of the other young: ters had disappeared. ‘The nervous condition of the crew was @ugmented by the frequency with which Hans Schwank, a German dwart acro- bat, two feet elght inches tall, tried to emulate the Cohalan crowd in getting nce they found the dwarf asleep in @ ‘coal bunker. When the Cedric docked he could not be faund at al! for e His manager, Joseph Boganny, came upon him taking a nap be. berth, ’ Arak & suspicion of a curl, und keeps her welgnt down aa nearly to 107 pound: as she can, though she complains it has & tendency to reach 118, She 1s as rentious in social duties and charity as in athletics, and jy a regular attendant at the opera In May, accompanted by and brother, George H, Warren jr, she went for a motoring trip through’ Eu rope, ‘The family is expec back Nov. Mr. Warren is a member of the New York Stock Exchange and of the Met- ropolitan and Union Clubs. His temily has long been distinguished in the his+ tory of New York and Connecticut, Mrs, Warren was formerly Mise Georgia Williams of Stonington, Conn. 84,024,000, The statement of the actual condi- tion of Clearing House banks and trust the week shows that they hold $4,024,000 reserve in excess of legal requirements, ‘This Is a de- crease of #.A04,964, from last week. companies for wusven of Nos the soctety | Miss Warren swam! her parenta| e was fled What Makes a Happy, Haine? Home DOCTOR TRES SUG, HIS MIND AFFERTED BY ROBBER'S BLOW Williamsburg Physician Found Dying With Gas Tube in His Mouth, \ | in the Dr, Albert N. Mchrenlender, a Wiil- lamaburg physician, who has @ large practice, made an attempt on his life to-day in the rooms he was occupying at No, 156 Vernon avenue, When he was jfound by Herman Aaronson and hit wife, the caretakers of the house, he was unconscious as a result of gas asphyxiation, and litte hope for hts re- covery is held out by the doctora at Cumberland Street Hospital. Just a week ago Dr. Mehrenlender was lured by a fictitious sick call to } Penn strect, Williamsburg, near Broad- Way, at 1.80 o'clock In the morning and | there two highwaymen biackJacked him jand robbed him of @ valuable gold |wateh and chain and $14 fn money, \s he recetved the heavy blow on he head the physictau had not been tn lids normal mental health and his friends 1de to the re- wits of the assault of a week ago, j last night Dr, Mebcentender seemed | particularly depresie He visited a (druggist, a fend of bls, near the house [where he made his home and spoke i vaguely of suicide. He returned late to his rooms, Some thine shortly after mid- |nlght Aaronson and his wife were awak- ened by an odor of Kax which was so | Strong that they felt som of its effects | themselves. They found the doctor lying on his bed with @ tube from the opencad &8s cock ted im his mouth, | The police of the Vernon street station, Inext door, summoned an ambulance from the Cumberland Street Hospital, but the surgeon who carned the un- conscious doctor to the operating reom said that there was only one chance in ten of his recovery. residence in England in the future, Charles Free, Uving on Eighth street, starpied the paying teller of the Girard ‘Trugt Company to-day by demanding 91,000,000 uhat he sald he had on deposit there. A policeman took eharge of the j visitor, —e—— World Wants Work Wonders! morrow, « THE EVENING WORLD, Green and that he intended making his BAY RIDGE SUBWAY BEGUN WITH SILVER SPADE ‘MID CHEERS | Chairman Wilcox Digs First tension, Starting Celebration. William R, Wilcox, Chairman of the Public Service Commission, turned a [ehunk of dirt with the silver blade of an ebony-hand! aven lyn, thin afternoon, Ridge, Fort ourth 1 xpade 1 Sixty-elghth street, and all Hamilton and the ; parte of Sow Brooklyn united in one shrill shriek of joy. For that was the official beginning of ork on the exten- sion of the Fourth avenue subway, now nearly completed to Forty-third street | The turning of the first precious spadetul of earth was the climax of a day of official rejotcing, which had been arranged by the Citizens’ Celebration |Committeee of One Hundred, as it waa | | the signal for the beginning of the mona- |ier parade, wherein 4,00 people took | pant | The Invited guests of the Celebration Committee andthe Fourth Avenue Bub- way Assoctation assembied at 2 o'clock the grandstand on Fourth avenue, between Sixty-elghth street and Bay | Ridge avenue. Among these were the ifive Borough Presidents, the members f the Public Service Commisdion, Bird {Coler, former Borough President of Kings County; Willlam §. Hurley, @ member of the old Rapid Transit Com- mission; William = MeCarroll, former mber of the Public Service Commis- n, and engineers of the Public Service ‘commission. Stephen V. Duffy, President of the eration Committee, opened the cere- nether ‘ montes attending the turning of the dirt with a brief speech, then torough President George MeAneny, who 1! also Chainman of the Rapid ‘Transit Committee of the Board of Fs- timate. Alfred E. Steers, Borough Pres- {dent of Brooklyn, concluded the formal speechmaking, and then President John | f, Sullivan of the Fourth Avenue Sub: way Association, turned the silver spade over to Mr. Wilco: ‘The spade had this Inseriptio ewented to the Hon, Will! Wilcox, Chafrman of the Public Service Commission, by the Fourth Avenue Subway Celebration Committee of One Hundred, and used by him in breaking Rround for the final section of the Fourth Avenue Subway from Forty- third to Klghty-ninth Streete—Saturday Oct. %, 1912, at Fourth Avenue ani Sixty-elghth street, Borough of Brook- lyn.” After Chairman Wilcox had performed the ceremony, Alfred Craven, Chiet Engineer of the Public Service Com- mission, handed the official permit. to commence work to M. J. Degnon of the Degnon Contracting Company, which ha contract for the digging. ‘Then followed the parade. ‘The parade passed over the proposed subway to Elghty-sixth street, and was in (en divisions, Includ- Ing school children from both public and parochlal sehools, civie and industrial bodies, floats and bands innumerable. It was reviewed by the officials of the cele- bration and thelr guesta at the stand near Sixty-elahth atreet ne el CZAREVITCH IMPROVING, RUSSIAN EMBASSY REPORTS. ‘ar’s Washington Envoy Bases Statement on Cables from St. Petersburg. WASHINGTON, Oct, 26.—Regarding the nature and extent of the injuries from which the Russlan Crown Prince is suffering, Mr. H. de Bach, First Sec- retary of the Russian Embassy here, to-day made the following statement ed upon cablegrams from St. Peters- burg: “In consequence of an accidental con- usion which brought on partial inter- al hemorrhage, there was a rising of temperature, but the conditions have positively amellorated.”" ‘othing more 1s known here as to the cause of the Injury, but it is belleved neTaved on itn face mR. the route ¢ Cc that It was received during some of the athletic exero'ses of whlch the Crown Prince is fond, and in which he is a lowed to indulge without resetraint, — BOY KILLED BY AUTO TRUCK. Stop It, Then Jumps Starts It, Cai and In Run Down, Willlam rago, seven years old, tried to-day to make a @laything out of a five-ton automobile truck belonging to a meat packing concern, The vig vehicle was standing in front of a shop on the street floor of the building at No. @% Van Nest avenue, Bro where the boy lived, and driver was in the shop, child starjed the truck without but ‘he could not stop tt or hat frightened him and he to the pavement, but tripped and ward, A wh Passed over his driver of the truck, John Bergman of Corona, 1. 1, ran out and stopped It, Dr. D. A. Piseca of No, ‘Taylor avenue, who was passing, the boy was Killed instantly ——-—— STATION IS PARTLY OPEN. Beginning to-night at midnight, Grand Central commuters will have a complet mation, when the opening of the subur- ban concourse will mark the comple- butehe: the the The ditheult —_———____ tion of the fret compartment in the Demands 81,000,000 . [great terminal, The building will be PHILADELPHIA, Oot. 2.—Declaring [opened in Ste entirety tn January that he was the husband of Hetty| Thereafter work will proceed much more rapidly on the property ehan has been apparent in the yeara ft has been under fence, By 195 the group of ter- minal buildings will be finished, Announcement was made yesterday by the management that the object in open: ing the suburban convourse in advan of the main part of the bullding ts to enable passengers using the suburban track level to gv direct to the subway and street, |The new concourse will be on public lexhibition as well as in use all of to- r~ SATURDAY, OOTOBER 26, 1912. Zarth of Fourth Avenue Ex- | Brook: | of May; ‘COURT APPOINTMENTS | ARE HELD UP BY FIGHT ON MURPH'S PROTEGE FINDS WEDDING FE I TAFOL; PASTOR YELLS FOR POLICE No Johs Will Be Handed Out] Sealed Envelope Handed to! Until McLaughlin Case 1s | Minister Was “Fat,” but Sug Decided, Declares Tammany. Eestive OF Chere, CAMDEN, N. J., Oct. %—When the | The fleht between men on the court-| Rev, Thilo Gore, pastor of the German | jattondant eligible list and Justices of Lutheran Church, had transformed Miss the Supreme Court over the appoint: | Morenc Essex into Mrs. Daniel J. ment of one of Charles Murphy's! MeNichol last night the beaming bride- {Alstrict captains was renewed to-day | room handed him a fat and interesting when Abranam 8. Gilbert, Republican | jooking envelope. candidate for Justice of the Supreme! The clergyman, elated at his seeming Court, submitted briefs to the Appellate | good fortune, thanked the bridegroom division, Joseph MeLaugilin, an at- | for his liberality, wished ti couple the tendant In Justice Goff's court during greatest of good luck, bowed them ous, the Hecker murder trial, {a the may | ¢losed the door and opened the envelope. over whom the fight 1s being made. | Thereupon were revealed to his unap- In October, 1911, Justice Goff, having Breciative gaze several neatly folded | * < slips of tin foil, apparently removed @ vacancy to fill in the court officers’ from rolls of Neufchatel cheese. squad, transferred McLaughlin, then a) The clergyman dashed out of the hour captain in Murphy's own election dis-|@fter the coupie. He didn't find them. trica and @ keeper in the Tombs, to the | Then he went to the addresses given by |the happy pair and was informed that jcourt position, ‘The maximum salary | they were not known. for a prison guar! js $1,200; that of 4) Mr. Gore -reported the affair to the court officer $1,800. Molaughiin had police, He didn’t mind being cheated taken the Civil Service examination, | out of his fee, of course, but he thought | but was far down on the list, being | that Investigation might show that the | 6. 170 and the young woman had | made several misstatements, So far the | | police have been unable to pick up the; trail ‘This transfer aroused the men on the igible list, ahd they retained Attorney Ibert to make the legal fight for tilfecnennene | them, Justice Bijur granted an order restraining Comptroller Prendergast | from paying MeLaughiin his s ALLSTR | Justice Ford then came to the r of Murphy's prot Fach Supreme | Court Justice is entitled to appoint four | court officers, three to be taken from | the eligible list; the fourth is a per-| A brisk buying movement accompanied sonal appointment, Justice Ford. pre- | the opening of the stock market to-day. viously appointed a man from the| All the leaders moved up for fractiona! cu competitive Ilst as his conildential at-| dances during the first tour on @ tendant. When Ibert obtained | Moderate Inquiry, Steel was prominent, the Injunction Jus d transf Puts Lath aie ale oa all his personal attendant to Justice Gort) Puce, Conper oat _ . | ef also ruled strong. lund named Mctaughiin for the non-com- | “Sutwequent dealings continued to marie | petitive position, ‘This plan worked | F ranien alttolen ihe volunte af well and Murphy's man ts #tili on the is aimmered down, b, Reading * feature of the} Jol final hour, Responding to a steady buy- ing movement. the leading coal issue rose to Steel, Union Pacific and Copper also bettered their initial gains considerably. d realizing caused slight con- cesslons at the end, but the Hat was} well up at closing time, Since Attorney Gilbert won the open- ing battle in his campaign for the Civil Service eligibles It has been noted the Justices have not been very active in making appointments, Twenty va- canclea exist. Several men at the top of the Civil | Service list have sought to make th wink peace with ‘Tammany, but tnvartably| yi nn a have been told no positions would be | and of wet eames as comparal witl, se filled until the McLaughlin cave is de- elded by the Court of Appeals. ee MESSAGE FROM CRUISER SAYS “NEED PROTECTION.” Flash Picked Up at San Diego, Cal., Purports to Be From Command- er of Des Moines at Vera Cruz. SAN 10, Cal., final figures «i fol Amal Copper. ‘can 4-0 Simeit siger Mw 7. O8;; Oct. %—A wire less message from Commander Hughes |. "M). si { of the cruiser Des Moines, now at Vera| (il. Wiel & | ni tBa Cruz, was picked up in part here last | Com I ai.. 4 night. It was directed to Washington | pistiliers and was badly garbled, but the operators clearly made out the words “badly tn need of protection.”” The rest of the message was unin-| [ner Mot f telligible. Ka 6 Nude WASHINGTON, Oct. Navy and| (oul & + State Department offictals were puazled| Mo K, 4 her % to-day over last night's reports of @ YY, Central: + af wireless message from the cruiser Des OLe W. Ss Moines, at Vera Cruz, intercepted ac : * | San Diego, Cal., and addressed to Wash- %| ington, containing the words “badly in 4 need of protection.” The full text of the it message Was not reported and some un- & easiness was falt. No message what- H ever had been received from the Des * Moines last night or early to-day. Q The State Department has made the 1” usual inquiries of Mexico regarding the % expulsion of Dunn and Caracrist!, two Americans, put out of the country “un- der article 31" of the Mexican Constitu- tion, i Marcon! Going to Vienna for ROME, Oct, 26.—William Marco leave wil —_a the Military Hospital at Spezia artificial eye. LITTLE GIRL FOUND DEAD, [it atirintor neveral days, ‘rom there DOUBLE CRIME SUSPECTED. | he goes to Vienna to be fitted with an Police of ston, Ma‘ Believe Mother Drowned Child and Then Committed Suicide, EASTON, Mass., Oct. 26.—Evidence of @ murder and ulcide was found in Langwater Pond, North Easton, to-day. The body of @ five-yeur-old girl was seen floating on the water and a wom- an's hat and hairpins were picked up on the shore nearby. The police ex- pressed the opinion that the little girl was drowned by a woman who ended her life in the same wa: A wearch of the child's clothing rr vealed no means of identification. The Why Endure Pimp les and Blackheads? If you wish a skin clear ot pimples, blackheads and other annoying - eruptions, begin today the regular use of Cuticura Soap assisted by Cuticura Ointment. No other method is so agreeable, police began to drag the pond shortly ] after the girls body was taken ashore. | go often effective and so eco- da Hi Pca nomical, RUNS OFF TO WED STUDENT. TREATMENT: —Gentl th Leaver Cottese to Marry! smear the affected parts wit Miao Marwherne. Pri Cuticura Ointment, on the Charlottesville, Va., Oct News of Elroy, a student at the University of} rub, Wash off the Cuticura Virginia, and Miss Marguerite M Ointment in five minutes | PI ’ ece Biate enator FL G. Prime of New York, hax Just come out| With Cuticura Soap and hot here, Me Weft college. Inst week | Water and continue bathing A met Mine Prime at. the Marbis Washington Hotel in New York, Prem |f0F some minutes. This that elty yea a to Charlotte treatment is best on rising | it e they Were married Oct, 10 iy weturcane “land retiring. At other times | McElroy {8 a son of Mr. and Mrs, W B, McElroy of Providence, Ro TL, and ts @ grandson of the late Joseph Bannigan Rubber King." Miss Prime's parents live at Upper Falls, N. ¥. use Cuticura Soap freely for | the toilet and bath, to assist in preventin inflammation, irritation and clogging of the | Pope Aids Typhoon & rere. ROME, Oct. %6—The Pope to-day sent | Pres, the common cause of | $2,000 to Manila for use in relleving [these distressing facial erup- | aupecete from the recent Philippine ty- tionsand other unwholesome } conditions of the complexion and skin, | Hoy need mot tay them until you try them, Al. though sold ererywhere a liberal sample of «ui >_—-—- AC FOR TO-DAY, in sets., 5,05\ Moon ‘rises,, 6.16 THE TIDES, High Water, iP. M Soap and Ointment will by, mailed free, with 10 book, “Nadrens “Cuticura,’” Dept, Bis ‘Boston, 748 FTender-faced men "share Ja comfo 9.38 eure Soap Shaving #ich, Formerly A. T. Stewart & Co. , Fourth avenue, Eighth to Tenth street _[——_—_> Che Most Important Furniture Announcement Of the Year A purchase of $225,000 of Fine Furniture from W. K. Cowan & Co., the well-known Chicago makers of furniture produced along the classic lines of the Old English Masters and after choice examples of American Colonial. To be sold—as soon as it can be unpacked and arranged on our fioors—each picce for one-third less than the Cowan price. Opening date of be within a few days THE WANAMAKER JEWELRY STORE will present Monday, October 28, ihe following remarkable offers in Sterling Silver and 14-Karat sale to announced Gold, sustaining not only the high character of the store and its wares, but its reputation for moderate price Spee SILVER MESID BAG: IMPORTED— $28 TO $32 GRADES FOR $19 Only 52. Every part sterling silver, 925-1,000 fine—mesh, frame and chain nd them only because changing the design. he importer sacrif Frau fr and not skim m3 tod oS mumby wened, others perfec fe eneh enany dd very fuil on are usual ched, hand- desirable narrow, pin ‘ engraved, engine square-cornered, an The mesh is shiz about 414 inches deep. very soft, yet very strong, and ‘To offer bags like these at $19 is to do something that has never been done before. STERLING SILVER SUGAR AND CREAM § THE $16 GRADE FOR #10, A plain rich substantial design with Louis XVI. orna- mentation on the handle. Large enough to serve four people. "The Sugar bowl is 14g inches deep and 31 inches in diameter. TO MATCH—STERLING SILVER TEA SPOONS 83.85 A SET OF SIX OR #7.70 DOZEN This price is close to the actual market cost of bullion silver, for silver has only recently gone up another 10 per cent. The spoons are the weight of the average spoons. The design is Louis XVI. 14-KARAT GOLD WATCHES AT LOWER PRICES—MEN’S AND WOMEN’S MEN'S 14-karat gold watches, plain polished cases, thin model, open face, Waltham or Elgin movements. 816.50 for the $19.50 grades. Same case with 15-jewel Waltham or Elgin movements, $19.50 Sor the $22.50 grades. WOMEN’S 14-karat solid gold watches, $13.50 for the $15.50 grades. Case has revolving pendant and movements are Wal- tham or Elgin 7-jewel, open face. Same case with 15-jewel movement, $16.50 for the $19.60 grades. All sold with our regular guarantee—we keep them in good order for one year without charge. Script monograms engraved without extra cost. 14-KARAT GOLD BRACELET, 818 GRADE FOR $12.50 With jointed catch and safety wire, which holds the bracelet safely on the arm, The bracelets are hand-engraved with rieh design 14-KARAT GOLD BEAD NECKLAC $12.50 GRADE FOR 48.50 Roman gold finish, full-weight gold heads. and with perfectly 4” safe clasp. For personal gifts—or to lay away for Christmas —the opportunity ts without a parallel, Jewelry Store, Main floor, Od Building, eee eee An Important Offering of Domestic Carpets and Rugs Will Be Made Monday. Details Will Be Given in Monday Morning’s World Fourth Gallery, New Buil