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- TOWNIS AROUSED BY GIRLS DEATHON } NFOREED OY Re Winsted, Conn., Blames Man Charged §With Detaining Young Women in Auto. PUT UNDER $2,000 BAIL. “™~\ \ Haddad Arrested After Inqui Into Killing of Miss Poole, Known as “Model Girl.” ‘Gnas tee raft Corres of The Eve. WINSTED, Conn., June 13.—Since the Geath of beautiful Anna Poole in We Litchfield Hospital here, Thura- Gay, an ugly feeling of unrest has Qeen growing in this busy town on the lower edge of the Berkshires. Miss Poole comes of a clean living, atendy New England stock, and her- eelf & graduate of the high achool here, had as good a reputation as -amy ‘gitl in Winsted. She was a medel held up to younger girls by Qhelr mothers. She died of injuries Fecsived on an automobile ride, ten ays ago, with Joo Haddad, a Syrian fruit vender, whose Oriental geniality ‘mong the young women of the town and prosperity have not made him aay too® popular among Winsted young men. Wadded was arrested by Chief of Police Wheeler at the order of Cor- omer Herman, charged with being Neriminally responsible for the girl's @eath because of his reckless driv- ing. He was released immediately on $2,000 ball, furnished by his relatives, Jeseph and Farce Haddad of Tor- Fiagton, and his sister, Sadie Haddad, ‘Bere, who assists in his store between ber peddling trips with laces and em- brefdery through the surrounding evuatry. TOWN 18 ANGRY AT MAN WHO BLAMED FOR ACCIDENT. ‘This staid town up near the Massa- @epetts line may take good-natur- ity the fame which has been given te it by Lou Stone, writer of weird @n@ ingenious humorous tales re- animals and nature gener- By, but the Poole tragedy cuts deep. wants to talk about it. By @ameral consent, after the quiet fu- feral of Anna Poole, Sunday after- fngoa,. the subject will be left to the @sthorities for discussion. Jeo Haddad, slender, dark, with @pwing black mustache and deep set, Q@esk eyes, hung about his store trough the day yesterday. Few cus- fomers greeted him, and as evening eame on be dropped out of sight and feft the work to the women of his family. He feels the resentment of the town keenly, but by the advice of Rs lawyers he has nothing to #ay Bimeelf at present. Questioned, @bruge bis shoulders, shakes his bead sadly and looks away. Discus- goa in high brow magazines of “The Melting Pot,” in which races of all the world were fused in this froe Jand, have eager readcra in New Bagiand. But Winsted does not think the materials thrown into the Melting pot here have fused well. ‘Winsted does not want to be # melting pot any more, There ts a Widespread sense of humiUation that @ girl who was the admiration of the tewn should have met her end through breaking her usual conven- tdenal routine of life by going on a $e ride with a foroignor, a married ffult vender. There is little in the Fecorded story of the accident which would bring censure on Joe Haddad, be were not married or an allen, family has a number of stores the Naugatuck division of tHe Wew Haven Railroad. Ono sign of Bis native ability to get ahead finan- y was his purchase of # racing tomobile, in which he makes fre- quent trips between the Haddad @ores. He visited the store in Tor- Mington a week ago Tuosday. On tho he encountered Miss Poole and girl of about her age, Miss le Fant. KS GIRLS TO RIDE HOME IN HIS AUTO. |Phe girls had gone over on the to visit friends. Both were acquainted through Litchfield ) @8 they worked as operators the telephone exchange at Win- for a time after their gradua- thon fron#the high school. For more than a year neither of them his taken employment. The circum- stances of their families wore auch that there wus no need for them to werk, except for the thrifty tradition of their pegpie, and they both became obavinced of this after working for two or three yea Haddad knew both because they had gone his ice cream stand for their lunches from the telephone office the street. pulled his car in to the ry ted the girls, and told them that Hf they wanted a ride home he was about to start. His car has only two seats, with wide, flaring mud- ds just back of the seats, over Be rear wheela, The girls dared cach her to accept the invitation and mn took it, Miss Fant took the seat de Haddad and Miss Poole sat on vy mudguard, ateadying her- utting her arm about her oulder. Haddad started for but soon turned off the road, He said he thought wild all enjoy stretching the Into one a little longer, The in which he might have * GIRL LEAPS 4 FLOORS THROUGH A SKYLIGHT; BEGS TO BE KILLED Despondent, She Jumps From Window and Falls Into the House Next Door. The ne!ghborhood around Waverley House, No. 38 West Tenth street, was aroused at 1 A. M. to-day by a wom reams, and the street was soon allve with excited artists and others clad in bath robes. The sounds of distress were coming from No, 40 Weat Tenth street, a studio butlding, with a skylight covering a number of compartments, but several doors had to be broken down by Policeman McGrath of the Mercer street station before the shrieks could be located. In one of the rooms was found Miss Estelle Nobaj, seventeen years old, bleeding from many wounds. She had jumped from a fourth story win- dow of Waverley House, next door, where she had been a guest for two weeks, and fallen through the studio skylight, She pleaded with the po- liceman and Miss Maude E. Miner, head of Waverley House, to kill her, and begged on the way to St. Vin- cent’s Hospital to be allowed to dis, She became unconscious before mak- ing any explanation other than that she was tired of living. Miss Miner said the girl had been a waitress. and a place was to have been found for her next week. BOSTON, Henry | June 13.—Rev. F. Allen, former rector of the Church Dr. of the Messiah in this city and of churches at Stockbridge and Amherst, died Inst night. Dr. Allen the last fifteen years in E Was well Known to tourists through his religious work in Lucerne and Florence their homes stretched into an hour and then two taken his guests to hours, As he stopped to refresh him- self at a hotel in Sheffield Miss Poole saw David McMahon, a Winsted man, sitting on the porch of a real estate office near by. GIRLS APPEAL TO FRIEND TO ACCOMPANY THEM. she said (McMahon Is of the nickname frome schoolboy ‘Joe Haddad promised to take us straight home from Torrington and he has been carrying us all over the country, He has been acting all right, but it does not look well for us to be going all over everywhere this way with him, but we can't help ourselves, now we have started. We can't walk home very well, and anyway we don’t like to fuss with him. Won't you be o good boy and ride home with us? You can ridé on the other running-board on the other side of Joe.” McMahon promptly excused him- self from the friend with whom he had come from Winsted and made himself as comfortable as might be on the opposite fender from Miss Poole, Haddad, who was in a perverse hu- mor, still refused to start for Win- sted. The young women did not argue with bim—satisfied that Mc- Mahon's presence would protect them from gossip—until 10 o'clock, when they insisted, backed by McMahon, that they must start for home at once, From Canaan, Hadded had started through Norfolk at forty miles and more an hour, Passing the home of State Highway Commissioner MeDon- ald, in Norfolk, on a broad, level stretch of downgrade, the right rear tire blew out. Haddad reached for his brake. The machine skidded and the driver could not get his hand from the brake to the steering gear quickly enongh to control it. The car swung into a gutter and up a rocky hillside. Miss Poole was flung headlong against a rock and Miss Fant and Mc- Mahon were hurled against the bank, Haddad was held in his seat by tho steering wheel. Miss Poole's head and face were terribly crushed. Long strands of her bronze hair were torn from her head. She barely recovered consciousness, after she was brought | to the hospital, before her death, | ‘The circumstances under which the | girls were put into a position from | which they could only extricate them- | selves by calling on a neighbor for the protection of his company, and Had- dad's reckless disregard of their good | names, as well as of the life and limb of the whole party, as indicated by Miss Fant’s and McMahon's narrative | of the ride, have not made Haddad's position among his neighbors here more easy. Many young women have been sternly questioned as to whether | they have been his guests on his many long rides and an uneasy suspicion has| worked its way into the beginning of the summer's gayoty. Orientals who come into Winsted and the neighbor- ing towns are not likely to receive a cordial welcome for a long time to come, spiestcnence cane. | pearance will attract atte THE EVENING WORLD, CUPID’S HAPPY HUNTING SEASON PREFTY GIRL MISSING; JERSEY POLICE CAN'T FIND TRACE OF HER Clerk With Whom She Had Been Friendly Has Dis- appeared Too. A general alarm for fourteen-year- old Matilda Loenser, step-daughter of George Steffano, a wealthy con- tractor, has been sent out by the po- lice of Orange, N. J., following the strange disappearance of the girl Fri- day morning and futile efforts to dis- coverMby what means she left the city. William Ford, a thirty-four- year-old grocery clerk, with whom she had been friendly, resigned his position and disappeared at the same time. No trace of how she vanished has been found, though the police have visited railroad stations for miles around, nor has any one been found who saw either of them after Ma- tilda left home for school at the regu- lar hour Friday and Ford packed his suitcase and departed from his boarding house that morning. ‘The girl was to have graduated from the eighth grade grammer school in West Orange next week, and had just completed her examination suc- cessfully. For three weeks past her growing fondness for the grocery store at which Ford worked was noted by Steffano, who dmmanded her to cease seeing Ford. She simulated obedience, and apparently had not seen him for several days before the disappearance, ‘The police believe that her unusu- ally small stature and child-like ap- jon wher- ever she may go, as she 18 but four feet eleven inches tall and weighs but ninety-five pounds, At the time she left home she was Waring a white dras trimemd at neck and wi with lace, a black belt and shoes, tockings. She in bl aired, and is pretty. pisonatininte- <li HEY, STOP THE SHIP, LET'S ALL GO THERE! Kenneth Buchanan Is Off to Costa Rica to Form a Simpli- cists’ Society. No monopolies, no idiers' profits, no interest charges, not even a bos to watch you as you do your day’ task is the scheme of existence that Kenneth Buchanan of Bacup, Lanca- shire, England, is going to attempt with a colony of British citizens in Costa Rica. Mr. Buchanan sailed from New York to-day on the United Fruit Com- pany's «steamship Calamares. Ho described his colony as an experi- ment on the part of the Simplicists' Society. “We expect to have elght hundred in the colony,” he sald before sailing. “We have already bought land suf- ficient for 250 families and we ex- pect to have at least 150 families in- talled by Christmas, Our ideas of simplifying Ife are based on the pringiples of Dr. Theodore Hertaka of Vienna. The colony will work in a spirit of cooperation and the woman. may work @ 0 as to be relieved from ity of marrying merely to be supported through life. Education will be the chief depart- ment in the colony's government and all the colonists will be taught to re- spect the rights of others.” ——_— APPEALS FOR SUFFRAGE. ad by De. Shaw je Votes for Women, The general Federation of Women's Clubs, now In session at Chicago, was asked to-day by Dr. Anna Howard Shaw to follow the action of club women of twenty-eight countries by en- dorsing woman suffrage, The request, a telegrain, wae went to Mra. Anna J. | H. Pennypacker, President of the asso- elation, It sald in my return from the quinquenn! meeting of the International Council Women in Rome [ found your. invi and sincerely regret my Inabilit: cept. T trust that the fact thi delegates of twent countries ed unanimous! ution favor- at the fon to be the mucst of the Federation | Savage Landor, to ac-/and others who have questioned his SATURDAY, JUNE Wwe 4X =i) GOL ROOSEVELT REACHES LONDON FURES AREQUET \No Disturbance of Any Kind When the Ex-President Ap- pears at Station. LONDON, June 13.—Colonel Theo- dore Roosevelt arrived in London to- day from the Continent, accompanied | daughter, and Philip J. Roosevelt, his cousin, None of the London “furles” was at the station, so far as known. Ambassador Walter Hines Page was waiting at the station to meet the former President. With him were the members of the Embassy staff, Lieut.-Col. Arthur Hamilton Lee, former British military attache at Washington, and now Conservative Member of Parliament; R. Newton Crane of the American Society in London, and a number of other Am- erican citizens resident in the British capital, One of the first to welcome Col. Roosevelt was the Archbishop of Canterbury, who had travelled on the same train and who greeted him on the platform. “My visit to land 1s purely @ social and scientific one,” sald Col. Roonevelt to the newspaper mon for whom he held an informal reception at Col. Lee's London home. “T have come here to lecture before the Royal Geographical Society on the subject of my discoveries and adventures in Brasil and also to weet friends. I will not discuss politics—elther American, English cr French,” REFUSES TO TALK ABOUT RIVER OF DOUBT. The Colonel was questioned on every possible subject, from the controversy @roused in connection with his dis- covery of a river in Brasil to the passage by the American Senate of the Panama Tolls Exemption Repeal Bill and the prospects of his candl- dacy for the Governorship of New York State, His reply in each in- stance was; ‘I have nothing to say.” “You may not expect atement from me,” was his answer ae to whether he Was going to issue a statement on the aubject of the New York Governorship. One of the Colonel's first visitors was Dr, John Scott Keltie, Secretary of the Royal Geographical Society, who carried @ number of maps for the use of the Colonel in his lectures. The lecture is to be delivered In a small lecture hall, so that the audi- ence will be composed entirely of those Fellows of the Society who made early application, There ts to be no discussion, and while it has not been disclosed whether Col, Roose- yelt will make any reply to A. Henry discovery it is understood that this ts not considered neceanary here where there has been no tendency to attempt " woman suffrage may inspire th National “Federation to “ate” ‘irallar to discredit the sincerity aad the use- by Mrs. Nicholas Longworth, his Pi a British explorer, | y) " U im fulness of the Colonel's exploratory work. AT LUNCHEON WITH U. 8. AM- BASS8ADOR PAGE. After being the guest at luncheon of Ambassador Page, Col. Roosevelt | proceeded in a motor car to Chequern | Court, the country residence in Buckinghamshire of Lieut.-Col. Lee, where he will spend a quiet private; week-end. Among the guests of Ambassador Page a the luncheon were the Span. ish Ambassador, Alfredo Merry del vi Earl Grey, former Governor- General of Canad: Earl Curzon of Kedleston, former Viceroy of Indi Sir Horace Curzon Plunkett, thi ricultural expert; Douglas m Freshfield, a former president of the nical Section of tl Bri Association; John Singer the American artist: Geor caulay Trevelyan, eh Henry James, American author; Edward M. House, of Henry | former Union| ‘abinet | Lieut.-Col, Arthur Lee Roosevelt, as well as the members of the Embassy It je that Col, Roosevelt may see King George before his de- parture from England. His Majesty is spending a week at Windsor Castle, but no arrangements have been made for a meeting, —_—e—— IMITATING DRUNKEN MAN, COP WATCHES BURGLARS Then Gets Help and Catches Them in Theatre Where Stolen Goods Were Taken, Clever work by Policeman Fet- scher of the West One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street station early to- day landed a bunch of burglars who had veritably cleaned out the lad’ tailoring establishment of Mrs. Mary Jaffe at No. 9 West One Hundred and Sixteenth street. Seven hundred dollars’ worth of loot was recovered Fetscher noticed the door of M Jaffe's establishment was unlocked. He decided on a poliéy of watchful waiting and hid himeelf in a door- way across the street. After a few minutes three young men alipped into the place and emerged with a big bundle of goods. Tho policeman removed his hat and coat and club ered along the street, giv- excellent imitation of a drunken man, The burglars took him for such and paid no heed to him, They curried the stolen goods to the stage entrance of the Mount Morrie Theatre and returned to the 138, 1914. _— So They Can Cut Bodies Up and He Won't Stand For It. Coroner Tim Healy, on the job in defense of the Board of Coroners this morning. Standing alone in the board rooms of the Coroners’ suite in the Municipal Bullding, Healy glanced at the unopened desks of Coroners Feinberg, Hellenstein and Riordan and then relieved himself of @ statement that he has felt coming on since the Mayor yesterd ap- Proved of the City Club's suggestion to have the Commissioner of Accounts Investigate the board. “I join with my fellow members on the Board,” Healy began, “in wel- coming an investigation of this office. ‘Those who are in favor of the short ballot want to abolish the Coroner's Office, They are backed by an ele- ment of the medical profession who Want to got the bodies for autopsy purposes. In Massachusetts they have succeeded in abolishing the Coroner’s Office and now they take Please with them. And the relatives have no redross. “If the people of this great mu- niclpality knew just what was be- hind this idea they wouldn't stand for it a minute. We know how strongly opposed people are gener- ally to the cutting up of bodies. At present we have charges against a Coroner's physician because he held a body for twenty-nine hours before returning it to relatives, and that something I as a Coroner will not jtand for.” Antonio Dalessandro, Chief Clerk to the Board, was the only other official present. He intimated the charges made by Dr. Otto H. Schultze, Cor- oner’s physiclan now up on charges, against the Board were largely re- sponsible for the notoriety attaching to the Board and the subsequent de- mand of the City Club for an investi- gation. DANGERS OF STREETS! 33 AUTO SPEEDERS BROUGHT 10 COURT Twenty-five Fined $25 Each, and Nine Who Can't Pay Are Sent to Jail. The city's crusade against speeding automobilists resulted yesterday in the arraignment in the police courts of Manhattan and the Bronx of thirty-three speeders, according to figures given out to-day by Chief City Magistrate Willlam McAdoo. Of thowe who wore charged with ex- coeding the speed limit twenty-five wore fined $25 each, sentence was sus- pended in four instances, tho cases of threo offenders were postponed and one was discharged. Nine of those tallor shop for a second raid. When Mra, Jaffe's stock was all removed to the theatre Fetacher | called up Headquarters and asked | for a bunch of men from his station. | They came on the run and tho! theatre was raided, Some of the men | inside made desperate efforts to cape and detectives had to pursue through the galleries and even into | the fly loft, Jumping and swinging | through space like a bunch of bata. | Ivadore Marks, one of tho captured men, climbed as far as the water | tank In search of an exit that was | unguarded. He, with Morris Cohen, John Merino and Herman Glazer, ali young mon of the neighborhood, was taken to the West One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street station. dward Brower, the night watchman, was arrested on the charge of receiving stolen goods, They were sent to Harlem Poliee Court later in the day to be arraigned, — a New © WABHINGT @ new count | adh series of | 1908-1908 onal ‘of Plattabu Senouneed by we | Magiatrate fued were unable to pay and went to jail. The Seventh District Police Court, over which Magistrate Nolan pre- sides, was the main gathering place for the speeding clan ‘The magistrate heard eleven cases. Of those arraigned before him nine were fined each, and in the cases of the remaining two sentence was suspended. Magistrate Harris, in the Fourth District Court, passed judg- ment in ten cases, Seven offenders | were fined &: “ach and the cases of the other three were postponed In the First District Cy Istrato Marsh, in the Court, heard two cane. urt, hird District One offender Taare Krotel in the In the Sixth trate Court ifth Divtrict District Court | Murphy suspended sen tence In one case and Magistrate Mreul, In the Tenth District Court, | BY ELEANOR SCHORER. CORONER HEALY RISES YANGRY CROWDS SURGE TO DEFEND THE BOARD jARQUND LORIMER BANKS | IN BEHALF OF PUBLIC DEMANDING THEI CASH allt | Doctors Want Them Abolished| Chicago Police Forced to Use the bodies away and do an they! Mag-|° a Clubs and a Riot Call Is Issued. CHICAGO, June 13—Crowda of bright and early, took up his cudgel | tearful depositors, whose $4,000,000 in deposits are tied up, to-day aurged around the four Lorimer banks geek- ing some assurance from the bank officials that their savings have not been swept awny. The La Salle Street Trust and Savings Bank, whore forced suspen- sion was followed by the closing of the three outlying institutions, stands in the centre of the La Salle street financial district. Police were kept busy maintaining order in the crowd that began pushing against the doors, The Ashland-Twelfth Street Bank in the heart of the Ghetto, was sur- rounded by a mob of angry, excited depositors, who struggled with the police, fought with each other and made vain attempts to batter the doors, over which hung the impres- sive sign, “Under State Supervision.” Three times the police were forced to use clubs to disperse them and at one time a riot call was sent in when angry men threatened to amash the doors, Women wearing shawls, with ba- Dies in their arms, paced back and forth along the police lines, sobbing and gasping out both prayers and wnprecations, One woman threw herself at the door, screaming. Rev. W. D. Cook of Quinn Chapel kept an all-night vigil in front of the bank. “I'm sick, so sick,” he said, with tears coursing down his gheeks, ‘Tell them I'm sick and need my money and they'll give it to me.” Daniel V. Harkin, State Bank Ex- aminer, who closed the four banks yesterday, declared to-day that “the worst ts over.” Another neighborhood bank, the Calumet State Bank, wax ordered closed to-day because a largo portion of its resources is tied up in the La Salle Street Bank. Like the other small banks, the Calumet Bank may be reopened suon in a solvent condi- tlon. William Lorimer, whose seat in the United States Senate was declared In- valld, is president of the La Salle Street Bank. He and his sons own but 920 of its shares. C, B. Munday, vice-president of the bank, owns 2,606 of its shares, and t¥ declared to be its leading spiri AGCUSE LEADING SURGEON OF RUINING HER ARM Woman Patient, Suing for $25,000, Says Flesh Was Burned Off Her Hand Through Neglect. The fashionable and wealthy rest- dents of Orange are much interested to-day in a suit for $26,000 that has been filed by Mr, and Mrs, Edwin H Colpitta of East Orange against Dr. John Hammond Bradshaw, a leading surgeon in that section of New Jersey In her notice of suit fled in New- ark Mrs, Colpitts charges that, sho has lost the use of her right arm be- cause of the neglect and carelessness of the surgeon, She declares that on Jan, 20, 1913, Dr, Bradshaw oper- ated upon her in her home, No, 136 South Munn avenue, and that while she was under an anaesthetic he al- lowed her right hand to lie on a hot steam radiator until It was burned so badly that the tlesh fell from it Mrs. Colpitta sues for $20,000 and her husband for $5.000, Husband and wife declare that they have e@pent thousands of dollars trying to get hack the use of the injured arm and that it has to be treated every day In an electric oven, Mr. Colpitts is connected with the Western Electric Company tn Manhattan Stop Your Suffering Nervous, Debilitatet, Catambai enor AM Le en Prom Indigestion ste eit sithing you ag when weil, av wile cating tt AN-A-CEAWATER ‘Tho Naturqt Mineral Spring Water Nata Laxative.) Doves what Soda, Mewin, Inop, Charcoal, Opiates i fas ae : = all aeons gl SUBS THRD PLAN FR PARK” NEN CHANGES I BLOG Borough President Hopes It Will Settle Long Contro- versy of Factions. In an effort to put an end te the wrangling and discussions which have been going on for more than two years over the proposed developthg of Park avenue, from Thirty-second to Thirty-fourth streets, Borough President Marks to-day placed betere the City Planning Committee « plan worked out by E. P. Goodrich, ene of his consulting engineers, which com- bines the best features of the two plans for the improvement now under consideration. The third plan was prepared only when It was found tm- possible to reconcile the adberents of the other two schemes. Civic organizations, committees in and out of the Board of Eatimate and influential property-owners on avenue have been hopelessly e locked over the selection of oh@ of the plans. The Collie plan, contem- plating a broad plaza between Thir- ty-third and Thirty-fourth etreeta by the filling of the present cut on the east alde of Fourth avenue. so that the street car tracks are carried up to and across Thirty-fourth street at grade, has received powerful support from the Fourth Avenue Association. The other, known as the Parsons plan, ham been backed as vigorously by the Murray Hill Association. In the Parsons plan the eftrance to the Park avenue tunnel remains south of Thirty-fourth street, thus obviating a grade crossing In the surface railway tracks, Although the new plan worked out by Goodrich combines the grade im- provement of the Collis plan with the street layout of the Parson's scheme, it includes many radical suggestions, including the shifting of the north- bound subway entrance to the recess between the two towers of the Sey- enty-first Regiment armory. It also provides for the continuation of Thirty-third street across Fourth avenue and does away with the long filght of stairs pedestrians on the, east side of Fourth avenue are forced to traverse. President Marks regards the @r- rangement for a continuous north- bound vehicular roadway and side. walk as one of the best features 6¢ Goodrich’s plan. Another advantage is that the city will not be invebved in damage suite for changes ef grades if the borough enginesvfe plan is adopted. Woi Dead, Boarders Held. TROY, N. ¥., June 2.—Mre. Mary Cofi- nell, fifty years old, a widow, was towsd dead with @ broken neck and clad euty in her night clothing, on the sidewalls ja front of her home, shortly after mig- night. Edward and Patrick Nugent, brothers, who board at the house, ere held pending an Investigation. ; TIZ" FOR ACHING, SORE, TIRED FEET “‘TIZ" for chafed, sweaty, eaentiien and corns. You're footsick! Your feet feel ¢! puffed uy fey aching, sweaty, they n 5 rin makes feet remarkably fresh and sore-proof. “TIZ” takes the pain and burn right out of corns, callouses and bunions. “TIZ” is the grandest foot-gladdener the world has ever known. Get » 5-cent box of “TIZ” at any drug store and end foot torture fer o whole year. Never have tired, sweaty, smelly feet; your shoes will fine and you'll only wish you had tried “TIZ" sooner. Accept no substitute, 436-440-442 WEST 518! ST. RUG*°CARPE FIRE PROOF STORA‘ for Household Goods, Founded in 1863 TELEPHONE 5567 COLUMBUS SAE St -nygsed a fine of $25 on the lone of- Pe brought before him. Bend gue itamee ety