The evening world. Newspaper, May 24, 1916, Page 3

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BRAVE \ONiEN SAVE CHILDREN AT TENEMENT FIRE sls One Crawls on Ironing Board Across Air Shaft and Rescues Girl. The screams of childron were heard through tho airshaft of a five-story tenement at No. 631 Fifth Street when fire was discovered in one of the @partments shortly after 10 o'clock this morning and the cries inspired two women to heroic action. Across the airshaft on the third floor Mrs. Bertha Weiss saw tho frightened five-year-old daughter of Mrs. Sadie Taube. She knew the mother was out. Mrs. Weiss stretched an ironing board across the space from the win- | dow of her flut to the window of the Yoom in which tho child was scream- ng. She crawled over and carried the child back to safety with her. Above her on the fifth floor Mrs. Bertha Wendholtz gave her infant @aughter Lillian to the care of a neighbor while she crossed over on a fire escape and rescued the two small daughters of Mrs. Bertha Kreutzer, who was also out when the fire was discovered, Mrs. ‘Taube had in the meantime returned to find the house afire, and she ran into the blazing Patrolmen McLaughlin dragged h ck from wi ppei to be certain death, telling her that her child had been saved, although at the time they did not know of the Tescue. The fire swept through the apartment of Mrs. Greenberg and of Mrs. Taube before it was extin- guished, Adjoining the tenement {s the Vir- haliway. Murphy ainia Day Nursery, where sixty-three children had been left by t ers who were at work. were taken to the first floc ready to leave, but it was not neces- sary. POSLAM STOPS ANNOYING ITCH Brings Relief and Comfort With First Application. When any itching skin disease ef- fects, or even when any slight erup- tional spot begins to itch and burn, Poslam and you may be quite t that the trouble is having the right treatment. Itching stops and THE EVENIN | They’re Going to Americanize the Male Hyphens by Reaching Their Wives and Children and Caring for Them and Educating Them in Home Economics. By Nixola Greeley-Smith. Who put the hyphen in hyphenated American? 1 don’t know who committed that dreadful deed, but I can tell you who 1s going to take it out—yes, steam roller it, flatten it out so flat that even Fy a poor political candidate looking for a campaign issue won't know that there ever was such a thing. The General Federation of Women's Clubs is about to tackle the hyphen, and, of course, obliterate it. For when did 2,500,000 women ever make up their indi- vidual and collective minds to go after anything and not get it? Americanization will be the slogan of the thir- teenth biennial convention, which opens to-night in the Seventh Regiment Armory. Americanization by Amer- ican clubwomen. Fifteen thousand delegates, repre- senting two and a half million members of the federa- | tion, will be present when the convention is called to order by the retiring | President, Mrs. Percy V. Pennypacker, followed by Mrs. William Grant, Brown, Chairman of the Local Biennial Board, and therefore New York's official hostess to the 15,000 guests. I thought New York should be very Thaw had Bide Ms ay, as|has had the advantage of several Proud of its hostess, by the w if or| Years’ residence in this country be- Mrs. Brown and I sat In the Inne) tore he ig able to send for his family sanctum of the Biennial Board offices) When his wife arrives hoe is perhaps in the Hotel Astor yesterday after-; already half Americanized. The club noon while she told me of the coming} Women of America want to reach this jforeien wife.” campaign against the hyphen and of! gi jen M BINGE FEAEUALISH HPO IASID OREGE | WOMEN THE WARDS OF T isa concerted study of household eco- tlitd td datesultal “How?” I asked. “Do you believe nomies which will aim to put before! that many a foreign man is married to | ' every American wife and mother|his hyphen, that it is his wife that Knowledge of what Mrs, Brown de-|links iin with the country of his aed ak anced ration—and!Prth and prevents his becoming a American citizen?” h, no,” Mrs. Brown replied. ven the same advantages, I think omen are Americanized just as soon real which by providing every housewife| « with an elementary knowledge of the chemistry of foods will prevent her | 8OO6 OC OEOH e 4 dOd3 oo FI-PE-990O-O4 co ee t | o B99O9OO \9 is 3 ¢ rian Lambert, : the eighteen-| é year-old school | . girl, who loved % : and lost her love 12 Papa ee COT) | Helm's —_ wooda $ |three months ago, and for whose iz State holds responsible | 12 | William H, Orpet, twenty-one years \4 > |old, and at the time of his arrest @ MRS. Wwieatam Sent omowne | By PoLee G WORLD, WEDNESDAY, MAY 84, 1016. ‘Fed’? Women Say They’ll Take the Hyphien MILLIONS BEHIND | Out of Hyphenated American This Week DEFENSE OF ORPEI. = NEW'THAW CASE Cyrus McCormick Aiding Son of Gardener and May Tes- | tify for Him. |\NEW WITNESS FOUND.| _ | Girl Chum to Testify That Marian Lambert Hinted at Suicide, 7YTPS93OC Marguerite Mooers Marshall. eclal Staff Correspondent of The Evening World.) WAUKEGAN, Ill, May 24.—Will the power of money free Will Orpet as it freed Harry Thaw? Will a golden shower of dol- lars wash away the blood and} tears of poor Ma-) C39 99206000-o |junior in the University of Wis- consin? | years old, unmarried. unknown gospel in Lake County Reha Probie, Democrats Most scatning adjectives are bition, to this dead child, who, at tt NTONIO, Tex., May 24.—Nae deserves as an epite the bition and Wor Kranted a conside older the State Democratic More experience ate foraiven ne , tion met @ rebuff to-day when the Corte much.’ fae Lake c mittee on Kesoiutons and Platform pre. it that way ntence ed a report which declared against on Mari planks advocating these reforms. The ite tr committee report will urge the renomfe nation of dent Wilson and Vices it Marshall mm tte | ese the money other side,” and will the tangible, and; of course perfectly permissi e | for wiv the pet defense by MeCormick ‘millions, Joined. to You can always make intangible yet marvellously potent prfect salad dressir ¢ p chological effect of those millions,; set Wil Orpet at liberty, as angtner | golden key uniocked the doors of Mat- teawan for Harry Thaw? With the opening of court this morning there began the examination | of the sixth panel of veniremen, Be- des the four men sworn there Is ne man in the jury box tentatively accepted by both sides, George F. Dolph of Freemont, clerk, twenty-one BY USING Austin, Hichols € (©. Ine. New York PURE h OLIVE OIL and Apple Cider Vinega’ It a table. the fnest homecmade dreast vou'va evel st make them with *TSinbeam Olive Ot! and “Sunbeam” Vine- They have never yet failed to produce the best results. é Dorothy Mason, a school chum of Marian Lambert, bas just been an- nounced as a new witness fo: defense. Miss Mason will t that she told Marian a week the girl's death of Will Orpet’ agement to Celeste Youker, that Sfarian looked surprised and unhap- py and that she made the comment ‘Sometims I think life isn’t worth Uving.” Miss Mason's older sister is a sis- ter-in-law of Mias Youker. Miss Mason's testimony will differ great- ly from that of Marian Lambert's 5 other chum, Josephine Davis, who Try I ° has asserted ever since the tragedy arian was not jealous of Miss Youker, that her infatuation for Or pet had waned, that she had neither any reason nor any desire to kill herself and that In her most despond- ent moments she had never hinted at suicide, —————— ALLIES BUY OUR MEAT: LOCAL PRICE GOES UP Even Argentine Beef, Mutton and Lamb, Controlled Here, Bring Big Advance in London, Meat buyera for the allied armies Your grocer has them In stock or will gladly get them for you if you ask Austin,Nichols & Co.,Ino, Wholesale Distrib'rs, New York. o. It has been announced that Cyrus UWeor our city and every other in the from committing such dietary crimes | as serving potatoes and macaroni at} the same meal. SOLVING THE PROBLEM OF LARGER WORK FOR WOMEN. New York's hostess was a model of her| matching | charming appropriateness dress—gr cloth, with chiffon sleeves and a waistcoat that) rivalled Joseph's coat of many colors. | Mrs. Brown and the other members of the local Biennial Board have been at work for months getting ready for/ if not sooner than men. The idea would be this—that if a foreign family came to New York with the intention of settling in a small town, in Kan- sas, say, the Woman's Club of that town could be notified of the newcom- ers and could make them, in a sense, its wards, by seeing that they were given every opportunity to absorb the spirit of the new community and in 80 doing become Americanized, an¢ |looking particularly after the women The thing that has impressed me most about the different State delega- tions which have come into New York in the last two days,” Mrs. Brown added, “is the wonderful disinterest- edness and genuineness of the women. MAN WHO STARTED ~ CALVARY CHURCH DOOD D99 949904 05.04H64OH3-05G0.500 Men in the same circumstances would be talking or playing politics. But the one idea of the club woman is service.” “The thing which has impressed me most about this gathering of the clubs," I ventured to observe, “is its tremendous usefulness to the middle- ged woman. There comes a time in the life of every woman, after her romance has beea lived and her chil- dren are grown, when she must say to herself: ‘Of what use am I? Of what use is anything?’ And to the child- less it comes sooner. This moment to-day’s convention. The strain of these preparations, the worrles Inc!- dent to receiving 15,000 guests and making them feel at home in New York, had printed the tiniest thumb- | print of fatigue under her big brown eyes and made them seem larger and more beautiful than ever, Otherwise she sat at her desk smiling Ike “Pa- jence on a monument." But who! n't smile on top of a monument] above all worldly worries? It is high the skin feels immeasurably grateful, | another matter to sit in a whirling | Cpmes to men too. It comes to every is cooled and soothed, Continue as] hubbub of women and answer ques-| stimulate themselves with work and necessary to eradicate the affection} tions all day iong— | With politics. For women, it seems entirely. In the treatment of virulent] anda more varied t to me, the club serves as a similar eczema, acne, pimples and all s e}think up whe stimulant.” affections, Poslam’s results ma e} from the measles, Mrs. Brown smiled. “Do you know quickly felt and seen. Poslam Soap is non-irritating and as|t pure, antiseptic and grateful to the skin as a soap can be For sample, send te stamps to Emer- ncy Laboratories, 42 West 25th St., New York City, Sold by all drugg Advt. Reduction Sale of Cloth Suits and Silk Suits HOW IT WORKS—— Bear in mind thar Atylen ix inost of this that t the selection of eat extran ale whil on Her ment grows w The HAMILTO GARMENT Co. oe »| that I call membership in the Federa- “The club movement to elin tion a post graduate course for ms » hyphen,” Mrs, Brown began, i ration that you ried women?" she asked t intro. not Am a man unless duces women Into the larger and less Americanize his wife as well Personal life, It is the gateway to f his work or| Service, Of course, he added, “[ know ons may make the| OMy in the most general way of what a citizen, the| the purposes of the Federation are, schools nay take care of the children, | but Lam certain that Americanization But who looks after Nttle foreign |—Americanization which will track ther who sits at home with small] the hyphen to its last rallying ground, of ny. first-hand the home--is one of our main pre- World? The husband | occupations, “Another interest 1s home econom ies, the spreading by the women’ clubs of increased knowledge among housewlves of dietary values of what is called the balanced ration, which will feed her family properly and economically at the same time." ph De FIRE TRUCK OVERTURNS. | Smashes Electric Ranabont in Brond+ way and Injures Fireman, Automobile Hook & Ladder Truck No. | 25 caught In the tracks of the old cross- |town line at Elghty-sixth Street and | Broadway early this afternoon when re- j turning to quarters on West Sevent | seventh Street from a fire at Ninet | Street ando West End Aven’ | turned. A small unoccupied in front of a r rant r r the big truck and engine bounded perhaps and st things that she does not understand The children, with the talk of str H ind stranger people, bew! mericanization en born wif | th and over- jectric runabout stand- z hen the acetd nut all Jumped an cept Fireman Bernard | fered bruises of the sible fracture head a of the right arn It Hospital for treat. ngine was badly dam- aged and a wreeking crane w - |taken to. Rosey | t | ry to set it upright © auto —____ DRESSED AS A MILITIAMAN. | oo yy acre [na ae eee FiRade, Oe IC Ree ED of the fin "vipa! riosired je | nd no part in the revolt, but was One of tho first “tips ‘ecelved ——- | BRANDT, STABBED, WILL LIVE a party of St. in the courtroom was this: "“Wateh Clear Peddler Tells Coart Fi LELApyen Esa iaaiead A | whe Bont out on Kast r Mon- Wilkerson.'’ Waukegan is the home al 7 Sure ny Reports, for a practice march, which enc papi ROH i < t, Brooklyn, was held yes-| Marked improvement 18 reported to- | about the time the boys reached ime 'son of a blacksmith, he educated y for trial in Spe celal Sessio) 7 | ay tn ai condition of Wi a.| o. himaelf, studying as @ clerk n jaw | Magistrate ndy in Centre randt, ‘Treasurer of the American! yy, ' . 5 5 offices, working With his books far P c urt on & sharge ot Wearing @ uni-|Surety Company, who stabbed hime) SENATE WANTS NO KNOW |i. ht, until he was elected orm Hke that of the en tines on Monday. He Will recover . ANY "ACE |to office Why Not a New Suit for |} for ko phat of the, According to the hospital authoritica’ "| LR ANY AMERICANS FACE | 10 eee re ee a etnies ry Polonsky was rested © a exuiar meeting of the Execu ¥ % ne! Oreovel one has onl 7) Decoration Day? of Capt, Charles Guinaclius freakutes, |Commitics, of the company was BRITISH COURT MARTIAL|ccoupant, Moreover, one has only, to Plenty of natty Navy Blues from and mil Kovarik, chief investigator | ye but it was said afterward usapeemernctand RIDE M nN vk "the nor nine brit. n to choo! f you of the National Veterans’ Relief Corps, |that nothing but ordina siness was LEER ee ell-shaped head, yenerating bril~ ston auitn vou cant afford to [f Kuvarie saw Polonsky pedditng cides | Before. tic cummitteor MSIE #8 | WASHINGTON, May 24—An tne |Jlance uf lis ey to relia Uhat Ro rkable opportunit nd cigs te fa 29 frents, President of the come | (uiry into the safety of Aim ansin| has brains and that he probably os Are t treet, mn y and ued t | Ireland ts ordered tn @ resolution re. [knows how to uso them. | You sono. the actual cont’ of production, hat, withoug | tion with th cd favorably to-day to the Sen-| NOW ‘ie imnroerin Ne ithe. defen A Wide Choice of Models in aw rat. the PURI Oe Oe ate by the Foretgn Relations Com-}onen ho starts to play bis cards, will Every Size company for which h rked had or- miites. It Mreets the State Depart-|sweep the boards. Is that settled THE NEW SUuMor any ne Grek SH 50 Oar ~~ ==* # | ment to ascertain if Americana ure| opinion another instances of the mya~ you to see our attractive models “HYPHENATE” TALK ANGERS WOMEN RAID RECTORY, in danger in any of the courtmartial | {0700# Pe f dn Palm Beach Suite, Summer le - = ~ areas, and, if #0, What etepa should | MNATION I8 FOR Dresses and Sport Coats, We are — - i tania ch Bar inican ia maiteea iia MOST OF CONDE ' manufacturers and can sare you So beth German-Amertoans Nett Gat Eaiech Paeneteee to —— THE DEAD GIRL, womey o ir Surnmer Owt fe. 7 * al . anid the Gthan an money on your Su __ Hand to Heat Roonevelt, ¢T, Conn., May 24—Wom-| 5*YEAR TERM FOR BANKER, Finally, as 1 said the othor day, the BE CURIOUS! German-Americans of Elizabeth, N, ( MnaLehe ave an \alaenachnpeaens severest moral condemnation is being a ners, angered over selections | t Po “ ° sroused: by recent utterances: of duties mude by the actin, |Joho 1. Finnegan of Rome, N, ¥. | yislted 06 bo B Matetds erreur M soe odore Roosevelt against hyy “ * ; 3 aumnbert db: is 0: th Ce Visit Our Showrooms Eve fered 6 Ont ¥ Father Gaspars Panik ity of Embessiement. | nunity, Hut, and this ix to mo tie You will not be urped to buy— i eer iy area a 4a und Methodius $I n ¥., May 44.—John! most extraordinary feature the The values speak for themselvea! anes oa " ny one to de- hureh, ft t » N. ¥., charged! situation, tho dead is receiving No Mall Orders Filled at Sale Prices foes Res _ aa mn ner eet and ff funds he | most of th se Who defend De ent organization w De am Now 1 Y ry ‘ atile to he ie effected Friday night, when the ie to Ene Nupar ot » pleaded guilty wit Orpet Herly hoatlio to he. Hfth Ave., N.Y. |p teincorany eettrs, dostave te Meine. hors at ae MApee sutn fe cpurt esee 4 ‘ "t meyer, President of the It » living rooms, Policemen 1 “1 to five years in At-| Dim, ni os4 have no pitying Near 3let Street Bank, and Harry Hobeler of Roselic, |Pather Panth, who had barred the cha Judge Ray ‘will endoras | word President and Secretary respectively, (ber doors au inst (he anvadere, and ma 1 for commutation to tae “Concerning the dead, nothing but probably will be re-elected, ROW IS ACCUSED Tinsdale’s Activity In Pressing Charges Against Trustee Called “Inconsistent.” Edward J. Tinsdale, an attorney, with offices at No, 180 Nassau Street, who ts said to have put up $20,000 in order that the Rev. Joseph W. Kemp might be called from Scotland to be- come pastor of Calvary Baptist Church, {8 now charged with “incon- sistent” conduct in connection with the present row at Calvary. It Is hinted he may be asked to withdraw from membership, The fight, which has split the con- gregation, is over the alleged mis- conduct of an employee and «church quire into “Whi etivities I am charged with,” said Mr, Tinsdale this morning, “they were engaged in with the con- currence and approval of Dr, Kemp, as 1 am fortunately able to show by letters in the pastor’s own handwrit- ing. Moreover, Dr. Kemp did some investigating on his own account, I have a letter to prove it. “I should not feel as I do,” con- tinued Mr, Tinsdale, “if I was not sure that, owing to conditions over which he has lite control, Dr, has been forced to withdraw his sup- port from me in my efforts to per- form what I believe to be a merito: ous task It has come to me that the which has been appointed ime was named by Dr, f. proval of Dr. Kemp is plainly shown le in case » chureh, see what they do," he he was ex ntl d thirteen arrests Kemp | H. McCormick, President of the In- ‘Harvester Trust,” and multi-mill- fonaire, will take tho stand as a character witness in young Orpet's defense. That sounds like a perfectly simple statement. But in the ten MACNEILL CONVICTED ATDUBLIN COURT MARTIAL President of Sinn Fein Volunteers Found Guilty of Taking, Part in Rebellion. tion; DUBLIN, May 24—John MacNetll,| In Lake County Mr. McCormick ap- President of the Sinn Fein volunteers | parently holds nothing short of the and a professor in the Irish Uni-/| position of grand seigneur. And you versity, was convicted to-day by a may, remember that one of the his- court martial of participation in the | toric privileges of that historic figure rebellion, was the right of the high justice, the MacNeill, formerly a civil officer in| middie and the low. Will Orpet's the Four Courts at Dublin, was tried! father for years has been superin- secretly, having been arrested on hi8|tendent of grounds on Mr. McCor- return to Dublin. It waa reported | mick'’s estate. I have been told in that he clashed with Sinn Fein lead-| perfect seriousness that if Mr. Mc- era regarding the advisability of | Cormick would but appear in court starting tho rebellion and left the 'y @ few words for Will" the Irish capital before the revolts broke | errect on the Lake County jury would Jout. Tho authorities, however, Sheree be ertenger then What of ginieel aay leit MacNeill was connected with the| other bit of favoring testimony. mre Will Orpet's chief lawyer, James H. | Sentence will bo promulgated with: | wiixerson, is one of the Harvester {Rie (Aay/On wo, Company's attorneys, @nd it is freely rumored that he is receiving a mu-) nificent fee from the Harvester Com- pany’s President for his services in defending the boy whom the State trial no other bit of news has created locally such an extraordinary sensa- | It was known that MacNetM disap- | peared on the day of the opening of | the disturbances. Another account of | his activities just prior to this credits him with having sent out a notice trustee. ‘Tinsdale ts accused of “in. | M2 ving i charges with a particularly cowardly | consistency” by some of the congro-| vuilinvoers that had Deen artanged for | 404 deaptoable murdor. It 19 also as- sation in pressing the charges. Now| Baster Sunday. | His arrest was re- serted that if the boy is not freed at Mr. Tinsdale tg walting to be called | Ported Se, geal pes ft Com.| 20 end of the present trial, his before a committee composed of Ora| mons on May J2 declared that but for| thera employer will back a fight B, Contes, Raymond St. John and! the action of MacNeill, who broke|!n the highest courts of the State. J. Gritlin Daughtry, appointed to in-| the hack of the rebellion, the military INDIRECT INFLUENCE OF MIL- would have } n fighting still. LIONS BEHIND ORPET, One thing is incontrovertible—the Indirect influence of the McCormick millions is on Will Orpet's side, And ‘BRITISH WAR OFFICE AGTS IN KILGALLON CASE Orders an Investigation of Arrest of Far Rockaway Boy in Irish Revolt. | LONDON, May 24.—/The War Of- fluence seems stronger than all the human pity and pathos, the heart- breaking futility of Marian Lambert's death. Thero fs no millionaire standing be- hind the bent, shrunken man witb blue eyes, feverishly bright, who fice, at the request of Ambassador} found the body of his only daughter | Page, to-day ordered an investigation | frozen in the snow one February | of the case of John Kilgallon, seven-|dawn, There ts no unlimited bank n years old, of | student at Saint Fi a's Dublin, who was arreste Rockaway, College in nd brought account for hiring expensive special counsel, for ferreting out recalcitrant witnesses. And in the courtroom I t my efforts to clean up cor-| to England on the charge of having|eannot but note the difference in the tain conditic which seemed to neod| participated in the Irish rebellion. | attitude of the two fathers, ward cleaning up with the full ap-| The Ame rican Ambassador's request | Q. dressed, Orpet is well glowing was transmitted to the War Office by | with health and ready to smile at the lotter written by the pastor on t Stor OD) the Forely : ‘ Pri fused ents knowin of Kilgation's case | *i#ghtest encouragement, Frank I ‘Tinsdale refused to discuss al was a, or r vho| bert wears his rue, with a difference. roe, Ynedale retuned to discuss a | was ot 10, when bis parents, who ire at r Rockaway, de inqu then the American Embassy been active trying to get at the Shabby, shoulders bowed, eyes glit crouches in the left to him, a teringly fixed, lo chair that Is tacitly jood should be spoken” !s apparently ternational Harvester Company, the|1ing here wholes days since the opening of the Orpet | Pound, to an observer from without that tn- | yesterday outbid New York dealers and domestic beef that had been sell- le at 14% to 15 cents |a pound was bought for export, to be sold at wholesale in London at 20 cents. | Argentine beef, that had been selling here wholesale at 13 to 14 cents a so was engaged for export in large quantities at a cent a pound over American beef. Argentine mut- ton and lamb, the former now being 1 to 2 cents and the latter 3 cents a pound cheaper than American-raised sheep meat in a normal market, also @re eagerly purchased for shipment to the allies. “The outlook,” said A. H. Benjamin of No. % State Street, “is for even higher prices. Meat commands @ higher price in Europe than here.” The big Western packers own ranches and slaughter houses in Brazil, Uruguay, Argentina and Aus- tralia. New Yorkers pald yesterday at re- tall 30 to 87 cents @ pound for porter- house steaks, 26 to 30 for sirloin, 17 to 20 for chuck and 22 to 25 for pork loins and chops. SP eer FP SITE FOR A MURRAY’S CLUB HERE. Jack May to Open a Counterpart of London Establishment, LONDON, May 24.—Jack May, an American and the founder of the well- known Murray's Club here, believes New York {# ripe for the counterpart of hie and Saturday Three Hundred and Fifty 25-inch Boas Two Hundred and Seventy-Five 32-inch Boas Every one a genuine guaranteed LONDON OSTRICH BOA London eathor(@ 21WEST S4USTREET BROOKLYN STORE 522 Fulton 8 f Hanover Plac London night club and will leave for ° Ameriea soon to organize & ‘or ~ am sd Murray's. “Many well known theatrical managers in New York,” suid May, “have asked to start such @ club in New Yonk. Meme ry LAN} i acretly enforced, [Tt won't be possible to get in just by pure hutsing white of wide |New Yorkors | Chocolate Cocoanut e dining out In the, ning, dancin, ike qrornoon tea. There will be af | Cream Cakes those features in my club there WEW YORK. | | | | May be correctly described “unex ceptionably smart” the best things that have been presented at 825 and under as Not all the 5 suity in the new Fashion Shop, but those which have en- ; the jc greatest popularity, whose ranks have — been thinned out for that reason, Taffeta Silk suits, with the newest peplums and no peplums—the uncensored Parisian models with their inspiriting youthfulness. . Sport suits of every variety, wool poplins, velo ur checks, silk failles, twills and serges. No charge for alterations. The Suit to Fill Your Exact Desire at About Half Price | , Fashion Shop | i Nineteen West 34th Street woe SUTomorrow, Thursday, May 25t i $20, $22.50 & $25° 8 Suits for Summer | In a Big Reduction Sale : 75 a

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