The evening world. Newspaper, October 21, 1914, Page 2

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TPS: SUE wag aha ae Be told told ma Hot io ielt range, and at daylight they shelled the enemy > A Taube scroplane was brought down and later » Zeppe- Pe | and it is declared that the guns of the British vessels yi nted for 1,600 Germans in killed and wounded in ad- ape ae ) @ition to putting six batteries of artillery out of action, ‘eg In the mean time German submarines tried in vain to ©) sink the British ships. ‘France Calls 300,000 Youths i Into Field for War Training BORDEAUX, Oct. 2!.-The youths who are now ap- Proaching the age of cightcen and who would be called to the P colors in 1910 have been cailed to report for preliminary = Hy training. y . os This will provide an additional 300,000 men. They will > be trained by officers especially designated by Baron Pierre * de Coubertin. | ry. PARIS, Oct. 21 [Associated Press). -The French official | i, coftmunication given out this afternoon says: | ER oe “During the day of yesterday the attacks of the enemy | ~~ were particularly violent at Nieuport, Divmude and La Bassee. = sd They all were repulsed by the allied armies with great energy. | Baas “At all other points the situation is without any notable | . 28 LONDON, Oct. 21.--From Berlin, by way of Aaansetien, | we comes the following statement, given out by the German | yee, ~ War Office: “After many weeks of spirited resistance our | troops have taken several of the forts near Verdun, This opens the way to an attack on the main forts, An engagement bet wee: German torpedo boats Pruasian coast, is reported from Stockholm, according to a Central News despatch from Copenhagen. No details of the fight or its result are given. Ground Gained Toward Dunkirk, It Is Declared To-Day in Berlin’ To-day announced that while severe Nahting ts in prog: of the Veer Kiver in Belgium there how an yet been uo d ‘ i ie stated that the Germans are gradually gaining ground in the Beneral direction of Dunkirk, The rman right wing le slowly advancing «from Lille, ard although the allies are maintaln.ng a parties etub- bern defense they are being purhed backward The Nehting ts maid to be general all along the right wing, but there| Pe BO indications that the haitie tn entering a dociaive The assault on Verdun continues, with the German heavy artillery © Feducing the outer ine of forte, Additional artitiery in being 5) from and when tt arrives it is exy Al slong the heights of the Meane the fighting continaes without any Gecisive change at any point PMP Of the following wireless fre “OMola! headquarters » Herlin “t Oot 20 that the German troops advanciug Blong the coast from Ostend met hostile forces near Nieuport on the Yaor Fighting has been going © Oct 18 west of Lille; the attacks of the enemy on Oct. 19 were repulsed with heavy losses to the enemy, From MRS, CARMAN HAVE PISTOL (Continued from Mirst Pago! , BAB: Bhe came in the kitchen back door—the rame one sho went out of : la ‘ @ When Mra, Carman came back there what did she say! A, Nhe sald “1 obet him.” "| have j have been more. Q Heit an hour? 4 @ Did you coe anything Im ber hand? A, A re’ a @ What bind of a revolver? A, Dark looking revolver, | + @ Mew big was it about? A. So long (indicating three inches), @ What did you dot A. I just stood there, @. Did you touch bert A. I done grab her arm, @, Did you say anything to bert A. DP tell hor she mustn't go into the Q. What did she say! A, She say 1} needn't worry, she alu't golng do mere. 7 @ What did Mrs, Carman do then? A. Bhe went into the office. * Q What did you do? A J went into the oMce too Q. What did you see? A. Woman lying on the Moor, riggs Q Did you know ber? No. Q Who else was there? A. Dr, Carman and a short man @ How long aid Mra. Carman stay there? A Not more than half a minute. Q. What did Mra. Carman do? A She went out through the walting Feom; | went back into the kitchen Q@ Did you go into the oMce after att A Yeo @ Who was there? A. Mrs. Powell, Mrs Carman’s sister; Dr Carman | and the short man | @. Was the body then on the foo @. Did you ane the tody removed! GQ What dit whe ask you to do, If from the floor? A No janyths A She asked me to say Q. What did you dot AT went}! didn't nee her the night before back to the kitchen and finished | downeloine after dinner washing dishes ES my room to bed A Yeu, Mrs Carman. call and DEMS, CARMAN CAME TO HER) Witroduce me too man ele may woe ig ROOM IN MORNING. Mr. Levy @. Who came to your reom 1] Q What did you say to bin in Mow mording? A. Mra. Carman, she camo Wery early after daylight, Tt was be | didn't wee Mre ¢ fore balf past » @. What did she say? A. She said, member Mre Carman comiig inty rman after di 1 Q After the shooting do vou re hope [) anid, “Hf enything happens to you Ill burn some letters | tah care of your little boy.” MADE A FIRE TO BURN .@. Did you see her at LETTERS. t that “Wednesday morning? > Mys. Carman, she cried fire and she put letters tn the stove . Did she have @ talk with you in | aud burvad tham up kitchen that morning? A. You Q. remembi Mre. Carman Td pero her downstairs inst | father after the shooting? A. Yes; on the second evening she told me she pagroas was talking like an | wanted te seo him te get the revelver & i 4 wont upeteire, When helv | eame down he went out to the barn. you remember seeing me and Mr. Beaman on Wednesday even rman was there te to come in as ted to aoe me testifying at the Nd NOS] | Coroner's inquest and crying on the tile submarines in the Baltic near Rugen Island, off the | stand? Q Why aid A Yen he had told mm and preparations for this are under way." On ws Q. Did you tell the truth that day? ALN the direct examinat OFFICIAL GERMAN REPORT. and Me. a Mra. Carman was now ard amninat the ¢ table, chin in hand; were fixed upon the witness, 6 very fond of Mra. Car- an, weren't you? A. You. Q When ale auld if anything hap- BERLIN, via The Hague, Oct. 21 (United Preas).-The War Office pened to you she would take care of » along the line) your Httle boy you felt very kindly elnive remult ed Q. When wae that? morning Q. Didn't that you am peculiar? RELATIONS THOSE OF MISTRESS AND BERVANT. Q. Thero waa no relation of triend- linens, except that between miatrean t to the And servant for aix weeks, waa there? ected Chat the posttipn will be taken, | 4. No. Q. You put the dinner-on the table Tureday night and then left, WASHINGTON, Oct 21—The German Embarey to: » | net? 7 an Embarey to-day announced re Q. When Mre Q. How wan Mra Powoll di AWA dark skirt and a light wal her cold eyes!) Mra. identified her Q. This in Mra, Powell? A. You Q And you are wure ste had on a dark skirt and a white waist? A doctor's to you except, “I shot ‘em, see?” A. Bhe told mo not to tell nobody sho done it Q What did she say about not telling? <A. Bhe say that first off A. Wednestay lor of here strike did it. Then she say. “I ace Carman came into the kitchen after dinner how was ahe| Golder, Mre, Powell and Mrs. Conk- dressed? A. Hhe had a kimono and) !!", haw! on her shoulders, la Q. Could you see her underciothing? | A. No air, Q. Did it eeem to you peculiar that whe should appear in the kitchen eo wed on a warm night? AT ver neon her downstairs in a ki before dr God we OOO: SHEARS He might a) Did she aay anything to your | Mitty Q. How many times mitted perjury in this Once @ Dit you say anything to her? @ Hefore she came in was Elisa- A. Quite some time. | A Tk might haw |been fifteen minutes i is eho help your Q % Q. What did you do when the shot was fired? A. 1 went Into the | Just atand Q, What did she talk to you about? the Kitchen did wan wolng out? A was in the kitchen | HAD NO IDEA WHERE.SHE was @, You hadn't any Carman wae @ . At that time you Amith about Mre. Carman’ participa ton in thi inst words te ein had run eut of the ki Q. From the time Mre. Carman went out till she got back, how leng| ‘' a time hed dt minut wae about a minute. Q. On the ev at what time A. A little after ® o'el Q. Who did you see there? A. Mre. arman, Q. Did you speak to her? ' | alr guess i a the] early the following tell you then not to say she bad done the shooting? A. No, sir, She only said for me not to may that she had dean downatali @ Did Mra, Carman ever threaten you in any way? A. No, sir, The negress we 3 to grow darker color am the @e cross-examination @rew on her. Her volce became lower and lower, but her nerve never faltered, She did not use for an answer even when ad mitting perjury, She began shaking head to emphasize oross-exmunination noed at the reporters, soow!l- them taking down ® amasing new matd, gli under her eves. Q You told Mre, Carman not to go into the officet Why did you want to keep her After that I went to] Q Did you see Mr Levy that day? out? Ao T didn’t want her to shoot again Who did she may she had phot? ant nodding her her anewore “You told Mr Corby," asked Mr Graham, “that you cried because you were vexed because the Dintrict-At torney tried to make you tell the truth you think she had ahot Pr. arman's presence? AT told hin T thought she ahot 4 , Where did M i “What did | kill that woman for? I) the kitchen and tolling you to build une went ‘into the office & fire? A Rho anid sho wanted to hy Q You didn't been shot except that know anybody Hn YOU went into the @ door into the door locked” the shooting @ Did you do it? A. Yor, 1 madp | whieh family could 6 Into the office th Q, Was the door ween the watt hing to you about her i Q. That was another lie? ‘as the short m waving and forth | eut ef the house. Pat yi sd on Wire. Cares gait, br able wring "Sid We or te the Mune Baas tee Cae t him, see? Bhe had Iver hidden under lace had the hawt en 7|MA®&. CARMAN DIDN'T SPEAK IN| a Batiey lying mment on the wo- shot. Just say she sho m. Q. Did you see anybody except tro) little short man, Ge the office? A. Mra. Vowell, she cane Golder, in in @. Mow long after? A, Not ao very | wer? t well stuod ap aud Celia Q@. Up until the time you were in the presence of tho persons in the | *bout the meaning the jury out. At subsided, and Mr. with his or Q. Did Mr. fico did she may anything you tell nobody, Cel! ‘That's all she say to m SHE DIDN'T BAY ANYTHING TO ANYBODY. Q. When you went into the doctor's office and found tt waan't Dr. Carman who wan «hot, but an innocent wom- an, did you say anything to any one in the office? A. No, air, Q. Within a minute after the time you left the kitchen you had came the presence of Dr, Carman, who came in later, and you didn't anything to them? A, No, alr, 1) jdn't. Q. When you said to her you | wouldn ive y you meant God would perjury? A. Yea, would forgive tell und that God would for- for anything but murder, forgive you for at anything, or at any other time you believe Md forgive you? A, I believe haven't any fear of com- perjury? A. I don't want to, nn't want to go to jail? A. No, 1 didn't want to make perjury va you com: wg Colin? A. Jofore the Coroner's jury? A. You, wir Q. That was No, 1, but didn't you amit perjury to Mr. Levy? A. No, Q@. Didn't you swear to a false statement that you didn't see Mrs. Carman after dinner? A. Didn't swoar to it; 0, alr Mr. Graham produced the aMdayit, won it! A. It might] The ifteon minutes, girl wouldn't admit: she had Inight |#Worn to It knowingly Q ‘Then it was a lie? Q Was it true or not’ the Court apked after an objection, A. No, air, it weren't true. Q. You talked with the Diatrict-At- torney about thia case before you talked to Mr. Levy? A. You, air, I think ADMITS SHE LIED TO DISTRICT- ATTORNEY. Q. When you told your atory to Mr r Bmith that was another compl | Q How lung would it take to walk| Wasn't IT A. Yeu, sir | from the kitchen down to the window of the doctor's office? A i a Whe Mrs. C that Mt hat were Mrs. Carman's firet| ‘hs! | hon she came back?| ly" A: Yes, alr beth then? A, didn’t tell Mr. crime, but © ning of the shootin id you go Upstairs 1 went right on to my room, When she came to your room the night before Ktement of the District- Attorney hollered t The «irl sald Platt Conklin, Mes Carman’s father, half an hoi sked her if she had neon anybody passing the window Bhi itted telling Mr Conklin had seen nothing TOLO CONKLIN SHE HAD SEEN. NO ONE. Hed or net. evidence showed It to me and anid, | y anything mony Mr Mt “But Your Graham, and t aay that if counsel wanted to argue Mrs, Carman that morning? airy ry think Ho] der on the last day of | ator: care of ime. Q. Did anybody in the Carman fam- money or raise your wa “L told him To was vexed after A. How's |of Mr. Graham itlon came to nothi were all sorta of objections | grow objections, The Justice for the jury to decide tm her tpetts . THE EVENING WORLD,.WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 91, 1916. JURY WHICH IS HEARING CARMAN CASE; CHIEF WITNESS |i. i: ss.ttst mg o's po at she is te th ing a le, ourt int rupted to a lie, he'd send the attorneys raham went on xAMMInation. rman come down to ‘ning, Wednesday? Carman had break- ci breakfast that m A. Dr. and Mra. fant together. Q. Did you see Mr, Conklin with 1 him to take the pistol in the house ret the re. No, sir. SMITH. Q. You didn’t tell the second Grand | Jury either? A. No sir Q. Mr. Hmith was the first person you told it to? A. Yes, sir, that wos about two weeks ago. Q. Did you if you'd seen a pistol in Mra. Car. Man's possosmion the night of the |murder? A. 1 don't remember being | anked, but I didn’t tell them anything | about it | Q. You didn't tell about Mrs man's viait t Ing after the s t the first Grand Jury ask se ako you ha n't told any uit the revolver? A. Nobody naked me. Q. You wanted to conceal from the Grand Jury Mrs, Carman‘s particl- pation in the crime? A. TL wasn't asked about that Q. When you came on from Free- port to Mineola with Dr, Carman to ao before the first Grand Jury didn’t Dr. Carman te! H you to stick to your * A. Yeu, sir, he said he'd take ever promise to. gi Q. Did anybody offer you onythingy © re, Carman wasn't even in the ch Saran he say he will ta sir, Mrs. Carman gave me §5. Q When? A, July) A. No,| MRS. CARMAN GAVE HER $8 TO KEEP QUIET, Q The day after the murder? ing did she] A No, air, tt) must have been Auguat 1 @ Were you working for Mrs. Car- man August 1? A. No, sir, no, no, tt must have been July second; that wae it, two days after. Q. Did, you understand that payment for keeping your mouth shut? A. Not that $5 exactly Q. How many other $s did you expect? A. None; she hand me $5 and aay for me to Q. From the time you told this) story to Mr. Smith you have not changed it? A, No, sir yep quiet Q. Never one No. Where did you go after you left | the Dintrict-Attorney's office? A. | went to New York City with Micks. Q Mr. Hicks, the colored lawyer, whom you never saw but twice be- o, wir,” eald the girl with @ ner-| fore in your life and alone? A. No, |sir, he have his socretary with him Q. The secretary of Mr. Hicks, the | colored lawyer? A. You, sir Q@ Where did you got A To a lady named Keith, at One Hundred and Thirty-third street, No, 120 Q. Were you @ guest? A. A boarder, Q. Pay your board? A. No, air, Q. Mr. Hicks, the colored’ lawyer, pay your board? A, No, sir; the aunty here pay tt. Ynce more the nore and mo Mr. Graham, keying ned over the rai |went away th 'var District-Attorney, read from the type- thin was Mr. | Graham hell, A. No,| Q. When was it Mra. Carman asked| you to get her father, Mr, Conklin, as she want } outof the house? Q. There wax no ¢ save the members of the household? A. No one, air. 4. Didn't Mrs. Carman know her father was in the barn at that time? Objection by Mr, Smith sustained Q. He was in the yard, wasn't he? A. You, sir. Q. Did you tell him that his daugh- | ter wanted to see him, that she wanted to get rid of the revolver? I didn’t tell him anything about revolver, [ only told him Mra. Car- | man wanted to seo him. Q. Did you tell the first Grand Jury | anything about Mrs, Carm, ]. If you were to commit perjury | Said to you xhe wanted to # volver out of the house? A FIRST TOLD THE TRUTH TO MR,| A. About 10 o'clock. | 2 A the | having, a fow of the questions and answers her head and smiled in making her denials, as for instance, when she was asked if she had told Morton $5 was! \ | negro lawyer, and others, Q. Did you know at the time you Lawyer Hicks wan stective named Burns working for a¢ A. You, wir. Q. You've never done a stroke of | work since you left the Carman’s? | A. No, air. Q Who bought your clothe: My cousin. Q. Don't you remember making 4 stutement in New York City to al red law a graduate of Har- | named Ferdinand Morton? A. | No, wir, I made no atatement to any- | one but to Mr. Hicks, Mr, Graham, apparently mindful of A |Celia's admiasion that she was exed” last July when Mr. Smith Hered at" her, began shouting at the girl, She responded by raising her voice slightly, | Q. Wasn't Mr. Morton present at this interview? A. [ don't remember. | Mr. Graham, after a tit with the| written record of that interview or examination In Mra. Keith's house in | New York, The answers Cella made at that time, according to the min- utes, Indicated she knéw nothing of | what had taken place at the Carman) house the night of the shooting, save that she had heard the report of a volver. Smith objected a second time to the read from the paper Mr. an he had no knowledge that it was a true transcript of the examination by Mr. Hicks. ‘The Distriet-Attorney has a copy of these minutes,” Mr, Graham said. This aroused the court to an Indig- of Mrs, Carman's r iraham, I'll not have you making statements of that sort,” Jus- tice Kelby said. COURT REBUKES LAWYER FOR THE OEFENSE. “I've told you that before, and I'll not have it, If you want to tostify that the District-Attorney has a copy of that paper, take the witness stand and testify in the proper way.” “T will later, not now," Mr, Graham retorted. Continuing reading the questions, Mr. Graham got Celia to admit only recorded in the papers in his hand. Home of the questions and answers she admitted remembering. She shook that she thought “Dr. Carman had got in a fuss and shot somebody.” ‘The witress showed signs of ner- vousneas as Mr. Graham kept pump- ing the typewritten questions at her, She took out a pink bordered hand- kerchief and rubbed her lips with tt repoatedly, Also with the back of her black cotten glover. ; Celia admitted that Dr, Carman had apoken of seeing a colored girl at the window and that she said “Wender why they are mixing colored folke up in it?” Q. Diin't you think it meant you? 5 sir, 1 wasn't thinking about Qw around air, but 1 wasr in particular w Q. You we *t you the only colored girt you knew? A. Yes, thinking of anybody n L way that. not afra A. T cere | time? him tounly? (A. Who? ¢ who, sir? taken In charge talnly wae not 1 reme! Q. Did » over to tt 1 ware vat Dr locked up put in jail Td been told bE might b Q. Didn't both Dr. Carmen Mra. Corman tell you that you mi be locked up as a witness? A. Y Q. When the doctor brought you over didn't he give you 28 cents car fare to take you home? A. Yes, he | did. @. Did everybody in the Carman house know you were lying in your testimony before the Coroner? A. Yea, air, Dr. and Mrs. Carman knew it and ao did every one cise Q. Did anybody offer to bail you A. Dr. Carman told me that locked up he would pay my ieht along to my cousin. SHE LEFT mM STRANGE MEN. Q. When you went away from Mineola you went with stra; men ee lone of them Mr. Hicks, the colored | lawyer, @ Burns man, didn’t you? A. Yes. Q. Did he promtse you money? No. Q. Tell you he'd see you had a good A. No, air, he didn't say noth- ing about no good time, he just say ard would be paid id you ever complain to Mrs. bout staying in the house? A. No, air. Q. Were you ashamed to complain? A. No. I was sorry for Mrs, Car- man. It was with answers Ik Cella C an met every att: Mr. Graham. He was unable to make the least Impression upon her testi- mony. Thrust as he would, she was never confused for one minute. When the defending attorney sought to trip her with veiled questons she detected the pitfall and avoided it with a simple answer, Elizabeth Carman, the twelve-year- old daughter of the defendant ap- peared in court for the first time to- day, She sat on the edge of a chair just behind her father and mother. | Her tightly braided yellow hair was fastened at the back of her head with a big red silk bow. As she ducked her head, peering one way and an- other to k Cella Coleman tn sight, ashe looked strongly like her mother. The witness was questioned about her departure fro mthe Keith home and her establishment in Bouth Ozone Park. WAS UNDER GUARD OF BURNS DETECTIVE. Q. You went there with a Mr. Amos? A. Yes; he was a Burns de- tective and I was told he would take care of me, Q. Were you entertained by Amas? A. 1 went to a baseball game with You never went out of Mr. Amos's house without a guard? A. Some one went with me, Mr, or Mra. Amos, Q. Who made your clothes for you? A. L don't know who the lady was. you gratul- Q. They were given nto me by| Q. You got them free? A, Oh, yes, alr, Q. Did Amos ever ask you what testimony you had given before the Coroner or the Grand Jury? A. No, | Did he ask you if you'd write out the testimony you'd be willing to swear to before the second Grand Jury? A. Yes. Q, Didn't you know when you were by Hicks and then bq Amos that they wanted to get you to change your first story? A. No, ir, 1 Q. Did any body tell you that you would be locked up if you did not change your story? A. No, sir. Q. Didn't they say anything like that? A. They told me if I didn't tell the truth E would be locked up. Q. When was that? A. Just before I went to the Grand Jury, Q. Bo, just before you went to the Grand Jury, that unless you changed the story you had told there before you would have to go to jail? A.T know I got to tell the truth. Q. Yes, or no? A. I told you Q@. Yes or no? A, Yes, sir, sure. HAMMERED AWAY IN VAIN AT WITNESS. Yor an interminable period Mr. wham dinged at the witness con- ning the account of the murder which she had written for Amos, the colored Burns detective, He tried to show that Celia had written the “new and bigger story” to avoid going to Jal Graham asked leave to put yidence the whole statement al- | leged to have been made by Cella to MRS. CARMAN AMUSED BY Morton, the colored lawyer. The WOMEN CROWDING IN. Mrs. Ca pletely returned when the afternoon nession opened. She was chatting almout wayly with her lawyors and watohed th: doors with frank a battling for entra for admission sometimes threatened hair pulling | Q. Didn't you tell the first Grand| and face slapping. Jury that somebody gave you money] prayers for adizission and of protesta did not wan to go back to Free- to keep your mouth shut? A. Yea, | Court was not in ‘this time, ‘There w. an‘s composure had com: | mert between o rush of women at the | ined to allow it at & long angus rv. Graham and Jus- tice Kelby, The ruling was that the paper might be offered later if au. thentigated. Diatrict-Attorney Smith took up usement. The | the rediregt examination. Q. Do you remember telling me in that room in there on the firet day ‘The chatter of| you came here to see mo that you for rejection sometimes rose to, port? A. Yea, air. shrieks. Mr. ¢ to Cella Coleman from the minutes of her examination before lawyer Mor- | Wee! | Mrs. ton ham continued his reading | 'Q. Until you came and went before the Grand Jury had you told Mr, Hicks, Mr. Morton, Mr. Keith, Mr. or anybody elxe, you had seen Carman own before the shoot- With All the Purity and Whole- someness Which Belong to Candy Special for Thured: ora a i BON 1e, fial ieee 10c We Also Offer: ig crystalli - jose lumps of sweetness which you used to love to chew in the | long ego. These are the identical ee a eaeahing: peg haps made a little better than the old-time dainties; resented in the two pepular flavors of Lemon and R vor Sono Box LBC Did you tell it to me five Mine before Seu went into the WHITE HOUSE SOCIAL (AFFAIRS MAY BE cuT WASHINGTON, Oct affairs probably at the White House this winter be- cause of Mra. ficials said te o1.—All social be abandoned day that the question had not been taken up formally, but eare to hold even nners and receptions to the Supreme Court, the Cabinet and Congress. Se eee OLA WITH WOUNDED MUTILATED, GERMANY CHARGES IN PROTEST TO NATIONS. BERLIN, Oct Sayville, L. 1.).—The Imperial Govern- nations ¢on- cerning alleged violations of the rules of the Geneva Convention by French franc-tireurs (sharpshooters) and reg, It es charged the French have killed or mutilated wounded German soldier @ fired on ambulance’ filled with wounded and bearing the Red Cross flag; that they have invaded German hospitals, robbed the hospital the horpital equip- ment; that they have fired on Germen doctors who were attending to tho that they hi others captives, that they have field clergyman, whom they treated as a common erim- accompanied by davits from various physicians or Cathol{ Don’t Merely “Stop” a Stop the Thing that Causes It and the Cough will ARERERAMNL SARE AE RED, h is really one of our bes it warns us that there is in- flammation or obstruction in a d Therefore, when you th, don't proceed to dose ys jot of drugs that merely the cough temporarily by deadenin, throat nerves. Ti inflamed membranes. made remedy that and will make an ol more quickly than you ever though: Put £}4 ounces worth) in a pint bottle aad fill the botti with plain geanulated sugar syrup. ‘Thi gives you a full pint of th lective cough remedy you ever use : the cause—heal the Here is a home- ts right at the cause void disappointment, ask you: for “#14 ounces of Pinex,” anc don't sccept anything else.A guarantee of absolute satisfaction, or money promptly Fure and Women’s Read 34 W. 34TH ST Firet Store from Beosdwas 276 Lome oo $10.08 occasion—serge, filvonenty et and navy blue, of- fering an unusual BRysonty'r * COATS ey ionable models and FURS st ieee Tcl slat ileal gpvé THE PIECE. Quick Repairing duplicate your exactly, no matter where orig- prescription Best Quality Crystal Lens, 50. | Special Lenses Proportionately Low Chulich éSons Oculiste’ Lx Gon B'way, at John St, 350 Sixth Avo., 22d Be. 10) Nassau, at Ann St. 17 Weat 42d Street, Breoklyn; 498 Fulton St., cor. Bond was filled. New York: 184 223 OPEN ALL NIGHT BALE OF COTTON DANCE § TONIGHT! Aewerve Tadley by ‘Phone, atte a

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