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TERS ATTACK ~ LONE YONKERS caR AND FHT POLKE ~ Mayors of Westchester Cities May Call Out Militia to Keep Lines Open. 48 STRIKERS IN JAIL., Ordinances That Prevent Use of Strikebreakers May | | | HIGH SCHOOL GIRL | WHO LEFT NOTE GIVING HINT OF HER SUICIDE Be Repealed. As an answer to the organized tacks on Westchester street cars yes- | terday, destruction of railway prop- erty and blocking of tracks, one car, heavily armored, was run over the| Yonkers-Manhattan line to-day and four in Mount Vernon, policemen on the platfo: at intervals of 100 feet along the lines. Edward Fishbeck, a former United States soldier, was at the cuntroller of the Yonkers cur. Scores of strikers and sympathizers yelled threats to “get” bim as the car passed, but Fish- beck declared he would stick to his post. His determination dissolved in the tears of his sisters, Ireae and Nellie, who boarded the car in Getty, Square as it finished the fourth trip at- guarded b: ms and others GERTRODE m< Gowan MISSING SCHOOL GIRL LEFT SUICIDE NOTE But Parents Think Gertrude Me- Gowan, Who Failed in Studies, Found Work and Is Hiding. and hung on his neck and begged earch of the morgues, hospitals, him not to endanger his life. factories and department stores of the The girls forced their brother to city was continued to-day in’ the hope stop by standing on the track. He that one of these places might yield a wrote the letter to Presi. clue to the whereabouts of Gerirude dent Samuel Hoey of the carmen’s, McGowan, sev 1 years old, the union: | nigh schoot om disappeared last “Dear Sir: Henry W. Fishbeck, Monday front her No. 4 do hereby sever all connection with Kosciusko Street, Brooklyn. While the Yonkers Railroad Co., hoping this sh ft a note indicating her purpose meets with the approval of Division to suicide her family and ~« 490, and I am perfectly satisfied with nds do not believe she has onde the publication of this r! her life. They ure inclined unk A clerk from the office, John How- she has obt 1a positio i - ard, took out the ca aft ing somewhere in Mar tae ductor, Willian Batley, had Fear of beln Ast ie stoned by a crewd which fought the| father discuvescd ached police. The strikers at « went to| the second ime to Hace the court to get a warrant for Howard, | first year class was what prompted who, they declared, was not qualified by fifteen days’ experience to hand acar, The car was withdrawn fr service after it had been again by rioters, to leave home, in the opinion of She had told her family Passed her examinations 1a nd when her tather attended ning of school last Monday to parents. attac s verify rently took Michael Corbett of No, 15 Garfi fright and i. She was place, @ motorman, was arrested by last seon at Monday after ‘ after the hoon, When a younger sister int Police Sergeunt Hirgins atte THOT egked Her as. ane wan leaving the Bartle. Michael Carley of No. 176! house with a sult came, ‘The gir te Woodward Avenu as arrested try- feet eight inches in height, ing to aid Corbett, Mrs. Carley came hs 115 potinds and has brown hair nd blue es, She w dressed in a UB -And.selacd the akirt of the pollce- | 2nd blue ayes he was dress { } “DONT BE WELL” ‘MOTHER WROTE BADE SUNG ASTHE “You're Not Worth a Cent Outside the Hospital,” Says | Letter in Alimony Suit. HITS CRUELTY CHARGE. Young Wife Who Penned “Novelette Confession” Co- erced by Parent. In an effort to relieve his client of the $250 a month alimony now being pald to Mrs, Asta Asche, whosenovel- ette is the basis of Herman T, Aache's suit for annulment against the nino- teen-year-old bride, Attorney Gustay Lange jr, filed with Justice Pend ton, photographic copies of a let written by Mrs. Asche's Helga O'Connor, while was recuperating last len Springs sanatorium “This leter,’ Mr. Lange told the | Court, “shows how this young oride was coerced by her mother into bringing this sensational sult against her husband and reveals the entie | plot to mulct him out of alimony.” | Justice Pendleton said he would read the letter, “Simultaneously the lawyer for Asche presented to the Court and to Lorlys Elton Rogers, counsel for Mrs. Asche, an endearing letter from Asche to his wife begging her to re- turn, ‘This letter, it was explained, was written before the “novelette con- fession” and Mrs. O'Connor's ietter » into Asche's possession, cerpts from the mother’s letter upon which Mr. Lange laid stress fol- low “Ge dow ef mothor, the former August in a Jack (a New Haven lawyer) Gutzell (one of Mrs, Asche's wyers). Ask Jack if he hammers through the deal in a lump sum if you are to give him money out of your allowance or if he ts to state to you ® sum, You give him $1,000 f he gets you $50,000 through pushin —— and ——. Asta, smack to it jnow. Things are getting nearer (to settlement), You stay longer where you are, It ts good for you and good for the case, present “Begin to drive. Meantime let Rogers (the lawyer) tegse old man von Bremen (Asche's partner) about his money,’ “Teasing old man von Bremen, the lawyer told the court referred to an Junsuccessful offort made by Mrs. | Asohe lawyers to examine von Bremen about Asche's income. Writing of a mutual friend who had man’s coat and was drag to the ben talking to the mother about the rested. petenders: Lat this ibe taken) Ag tein) one Weng in denying chat your Mayor Lennon decinred the effort | notice buck was hurt in dancing. (Mrs, terrun cars yesterday was a mistake] Until yesterday no effort had been | Asche Apt hee ee eek ore . ment of her hurt her bac ag &nd an incitement to riot Made, (0 operate cars in Yonkers Tee nee eee wan shontd Gladys Mayor Fis of Mount Mount Vernon and Pelham since the! write to him he will prove himselt F 1 { : ‘ity and a G hts he can get found that a special meetin inning of the strike, Sept, 6, There | guilty and all the frig Board of Aldermen to are local ordinances providing that no| See at last to make him size up that | he has y. Don" ve ees Meda He ori. |e has to pay. Don't be well, Asta, postponed twenty-four hours. | ther A ay cent outside of the hospital.” | the law. It will be held t | , Mayor Fiske received a report to- |, Avche in his letter to his wife, The Mayors of Yonkers |day that a striker was heard to say wey Deat-Aata Vernon threaten to call |the Westchester Mpany's offices! itis not the same little Asta T met might be blown up, He ordered spe- | : 5 " a militia to keep the lines open. R Jin New Haven ast y. What a " c cul pw * to wuard the building. jehange from the sweet little woman . Judge Beall, in the City Court, post. | ————.- who kissed me goodby when I left for poned the arraignment of eighteen \t n gifnice on fenaey LT Aa eed of ‘toting: yesterday be. | "Asta, you know in y wn heart peer eee OF Moline 2 ent |that thens is not a pa of truth Hee thelr police accusers wore too jin you accnsation of cruelty. Durin busy to appear. The Ju surprised | Jour marrie f six weeke Lh © sympathizers with ¢ h |loved you tenderly with a pure and epeairike eye: tha tkeaek, ute, 4 |true affection and you told me re- he made trom the bench mDOF Mins stedly that you loved me and cared turbances heretofore een pune me ished 1 nomin, in Yonkers; Axtiy you know who is at fault! ew er our en- nearly the whole police force ts mad: ’ { WA thee Fane up of men who formerly were et always a bad influence lxv ins | on you. that she ia moody, “unjust | a srivite ateararalin ind Jealous of anybody who has your Tt was my privi heiaaldy "to; Jaffection. You sald she had always wee the disgrace and me brought ae ee | mide, you very a Appy. ; | on this city aterda Times s+) ry - | n e now und that she ts n Fa ee Convention to Act on Sym-| destroyer of happiness; she ts yours, strenuous and tuation so large! on Se aunty Were \ as the present hold no 1 eh pathetic Walk-Out Plan Ast ou have lone me a terrible} conduct. So far as this ¢ > : Injustice and T feel you must realtac feerren violence, terroniang Slimly Attended jit bs this time, Our home Is open t| 4 i you and [ask you to come back. { citizens and rioting on our stre =a am keeping the apartment in the hope | will not be tolerated but will be pun The American Jeration of Labor} that you will soon see that your inune | ished by severe jull sentences regar 1-| nvention whieh met to-d in Ree. [band ts your best friend and will re. | Jess of the previous standing of the) thoven Hall to form plans for a sym- Fin ke sna E> wo’ MAY UAtart Jif) pathetic strike in aid of the rmen | a a a | was slimly attended, Only about 110 Two BOY STOWAWAYS lolegates were present. James P. Hol o Ir te he New York State if ” Hea President of the atric | jena | Suid te be an unlucky number | Piremen's were abs Hugh) Atter a Few Nights in Parks and ast wo in @ bottle of Frayne, State organtaer of the A. F Hes i Doorways They Are Ready The session was held behind locked | to Return Home, door It the convention received! John philtips John Margone, wuthentic reports it was told that th each fifteen yea do and claiming 200.000 membur the United He-! providence, LT r home, were | brew ‘Trades, who quit’ wor oT Ee 1 in the Childre Court to- Wednesday ng tor the ew] 4 i sanded until the | Yoar colobration, went buck to work! suthorities, could communicate n| Wiis morning with the exception of} ter eeman Imbriato | 900 hatmakers, | sald th wand Into the Police reports gathe day show] siigabeth on) early (0:dny there 40s union members out on, ad, food und shale | sympathetle strike The 3,100 brew. | and aske me ery workers who quit work last week] Margone | Justlee Hoyt he a for a readjustment of hours returne| Phillips left Providence two. w | |to their posts yesterday and to-day.| ago te seek their fortunes in ’ The work of paying the $55,000 | York, stowink away on a ELL-AN Ss strike beuefits to the striking carmen | They’ were ed by the ‘ 18 proceeding — slow! Payments) who, when the iat ye vi | were not started until to-dy As| Were more than elghteen yeara old, | Absolutely Removes 20 eee fee en v2 Wein * the union for t hres Weeks ind Aa Margone and Phil. | Indigestion. One package | }!\\- "thes! {iu n igiay Chousnnaa aging the wights, They | ‘ it is expected by th road f thelr money tn China provesit. 25eat al denegists, AONE, MUL ater R WET eel eowneca at, the boys sald, they | ad jobs siept int vays. Hoth said kK W, Whitridge, head they y sent home Avenue Hu tinued gains ade and that a77 var servi Mroke Shull in @att on states. Frederich Brandt machinist, of 11 Housman. Street 1 home early tore rends at No on of the at the street St tured #4ull and uany bru & Hospital tT iy "; cal saiinsiitia Aiea Medhein\ dabei hiek 1 teedaintane iniaennamnendae deena THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1916. IRR RTT Aero ” Would Have Been No War He Says, If Great Britain HEADED BY ESTATE Had Compulsory Training “HETTY GREEN LEFT PICPEVOVD OLD OD HEDODEOOEDODOLENIEDDIEDOLODODEDODEE al Valuators Place $20,000,000 | Figure on It—$15,000,000 on A. N, Brady's Property. $10,000,000 ON MORGAN'S, John D.’s Mark Is $5,000,000, | While Andrew Carnegie’s | Is Zero. a) and real estate me public Tentative perso assessments for 19 WAS FOUND IN BURNED TTAX ASSESSMENTS ss voto 9 | COTTAGE; BELIEVED SLAIN| FIGURE MURDER “OF WRS SMALL Were Near Scene as Flames Were Burning the Woman in Cottage on Ossipee Lake. | MoUNTAIN vr When the W, ON. HL, Oote & body of Mrs Frederick 1. Small is buried. om Thureday sasket will bear a Wreath inscribed “To My Love"=sthe gift of her husband, now held one charge of murdering her. Evidence favorable cropped out to-day that he knows that n charred the to the defenme Small contents “there are tare en in the vicinity capable of coms $ oy hy h the books oe paiheanbi | mitting crime.” So when it was $e: ‘ " of Ta y ' ported that four men rowed up Os- ¢ Among the big p al property Lott sipee Lake just as the flames in the senamnents the ox Hie late ratty Small bungalow were killing) Mrs. Green is all. It is estimated by Small the authorities imeedtately the ot tax experts to be worth arched for them as possibly ‘able + $20,000,000 ne next hig throw some light on the affair, ° 3 tux valuation ia that The men were said to have rowed $ % tate of the late Anthony N away after inquiring “how it hap- » Which is set at 100,000. = | pened.” To-day a boat with twe : Edward H. It. Green, son of Hetty > Ha: - tSase pairs of oars was reported found % Green, Is personally aswersed at $10,- | _ — | "bandoned, near a deserted shack 3 000,000. While it is admitted that the! down the lake, and the authorities 2 Tax Department may have trouble BIG DROP IN PARALYSIS; jare trying to ascertain whether ‘hia $ proving that Mr. Green is a resident | had any connection with the ineldentt , » of this city and not of Texas, the tix-| TRAVEL BAN TO BE LIFTED! tvicence now betore the promeeu: , ures will stand until it Is shown they tion shows that Mrs. Small's ‘hody 4 are erroneous, Mrs. Sylvia H, Wilkes, | -. ‘ had been smeared with resin betord % daughter of Mra, Green, is assessed at | OMly 26 New Cases and 14 Deaths in are atarted = $10,000,000 for personal property vala-| — Reported to Health Bureau in | Small is close to a nervous breake 2 ations, Last Two Days. down. He has eaten and slept but 2 > The J, P, Morgan Estate is assessed ee , little since his arrest, 4 © at $10,000,000 and th te of Chas cases and deaths from infan- | — ne $ $ W. Harkness at $10,000,000, ‘There ty| He Parstlysis reported by the Depart “SALE"’ OF A WOMAN : ‘ » : ment of Health for yesterday and to- | H P — no personal property assessment ‘ : f day show a marked falling off $ { uinst J.P. Morgan, t wan ex-/ Qi show a marked falling off as BRINGS ON BATTLE é IAN HAY BECTH Inined, becuse he isn't a resident] cumpared with the number rerorted POOR EO Died Da ROM P1041 O9490-06-00 506% here, new case: i wix deaths reported e ving 2 * Edward 8. Harkness is personally | Yesterday. atid ten men ses, and |ONe Killed, One Dying as ;Result By Marguerite Moo rs Marshall. at $5,000,000. Mary W. H eight deaths te The lst fol-} of a Fusillade in Roadhouse? " * t “The Fi ¥ \- weaned for the same amount ows £ , Jan Hay and Capt, John Hay Belih, both of “The Firs: Hundred Thou eswed for the Ee EW Cade Near Chicago, sand,” have just come to New York. Capt. Belth helped to organize, drill ohn D, kefellor is estimate) to Yeatertay.! CHICAGO, Oct. 2 Seven : and put into soldier shape this initial unit of Englishmen who responded perrnel property vAusd as) ti ttt eg 4) Tronghe: wkeroivae battle coves att to the call for Kitchener's Million at the beginning of 0,000 ane clty, Nistiniee: m he Brooklyn 5 | “sale of a woman for $200 in a aubur- ; " Sine rae yen OW reputed to be a billionaire. Joha . 2 ib us, in “The First Hundred Thousand,” one of the viv- 1 Hocker poasnuey | — (result that one of the men waé shot dest and most intensely human of all the wae stories, ("On NMS Wermonaity 10-16 |to death and another was wounded For the two mea are one, and that one before the war |! RonehicGh ihe Gereanal txxollac] . | Probably fatally, Fifty or sixty shots was & young Scotch schoolmaster who wrote quietly ¢.¢ i917, It wan explained by un of- Manhattan . 6 5 | were fred humorous romaaces. fclal of the Tax Hoard that inasmuch | Hrooklyn ‘3 o | The slain man was “Peggy” O'Day, I talked yesterday with Capt. Beith at the Biltmore. as Mr, Carnegie swore last year that) Queens rs 0 0 |B eelepakennee bascwt a, Hartman, one He is & tall, slender, erect, inconcetvably “ft” young he had no personal property here | Itiet + 9 © | titoneh tevin ee man, this novelist-Captain of the Tenth Service Battal: oe ee heey hot appear for eh PY 6 According to the story told the po- fon of the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders. The *H\Vry L. Davison, partner of J. p,| Dr. Charles Banka, sentor sur-| tice by Si muel Harri owner of tae Highlanders are an old and proud Scotch regiment, who to this day go to Morman, ix mally aawoaved on $1,-| Keon for. the ‘Fs erel Publ fialh Sin a lochieniken there "Baa. ; M valuat | Service, this afternoon. said d battle wearing kilts and Tam o' Shanters. Thetr one concession to modern cit eniie-tk wows pom: aie Ta Kraphed Surgeon General flue, | been a dispute over the price. utilitarianiem consists in wearing a khaki apron over the kilt so as not to 600,000. is James Speyer. Wili-| recommending travel inspection from 4nd Hartman, with two associat . h ferbilt's p 4 Ity is @s-| this State be discontinued. Dr. Banks all heavily arm drove up to: the ai ‘s fire jam ik nderbilt's personalty is @s-| this State be disco ed. Dr, Banks 4 afford too vivid a mark for the enemy's fire timated to be worth $2,000,000, Made-| expects a telegrain of approval by |foad house in an automobile and, ate After helping to train the first hun-) — - _-—— ~'tine Talmage F Dick's personalty | to-night. The Jersey quarantine | tacke ‘oprietor and two t+ dred thousand for eight inonths in}education or with getting a start In is assensed at but $211,000. will be lifted rrow ers, He 4, “1 English camps, Capt. Belth went to/ life. And nothing more would be Tho figures for 147 on the most | re eicreson the front with them In April, 1915, | necessary In ight months we valuable cen of real tate in Man- | HARD TO QUOT SLASHES WIFE AND FLEES: He remained in the trenches eleven | {ined the first hundred thousand for hattan, showing where a few changes) ye ig Cot. Pribitchevitch who | : actual war, and it'y much harder to have been made from 1916 figures are : News Dian We nein months, winning the Military Cross| teach min of thirtycfive or forty than an followa: | Save the allies will take Constan. band, So He Used Kaite, for distinguished service in the hattle | it is boys of elgiteen, ‘ a tinople pretty soon bi 24 of Loos. “I don't know why they] " in many Instances the teach- Hauitable e Mra. Concetta Drea: wae ” nog dostly, {49 meant a complete reversal of the | years old, is in the Reception RONG S NAO WEAGR TORR. en f life and of their way CENTENARIAN FOUND DEAD. with ner taco siashed in everal places ‘I simply found my name in the| o¢ bout life, Discipline is cr - an the result of her refusal to-day to res gazetto after the battle. You see,/on absolutely new and strange thing PM | Woman, 110 Veare Old, Killed By turn to ker husband, Pasqual from there weren't very many ollicera left/to many modern men, — When thes iil liam oo x Kecaping Gas tn Hom whom she separated several montha ago. i eGeibany were Iren it usually consisted of singe” Holling s Mra, Mary Forge, a widow, sald by | the netic are tool for P n my p . a“ clout on the head from father, ‘The net tentative increase her relatives to have been i10 song, Te police are looking for Pasquale,, “When they found I hadn't stopped | which by no means taught thom tes, rea) estate valuation of 1917 ov sd Wan thagit ys Mrs, Dragano has been living with anything or got In the wuy of uny-/apectfor hin, As soon aw they got will be mot. more. than $40,000,000 fay book si. her mother at No. 320 East One Hun- thing, they had me come home last | old enough to earn a little money they which Is but half of what 14 considered | 429.0% wit ired and Fourteenty Street and_workli tinued cheerfully, | besan cherishing something which anormal inerea ‘Thus, the total ten- | J: fferson . in a shirt factory at No. 402 Bast spring,” he continues they culled their personal indepen- tative estimate of 1916 on all real estate| Ing from an open Hundred and Fourth Street. Her hue “Bince then T'vobaen Instructing the | dunce: which meant, when It meant. Wem 4 sor oe | he turning on_of thacdet. eeu: brags gn Me | Nino bl a | urning 0} he Jet ix supposed day and ewed his pl Ir new regiments jn the use of the ma-/anything, rudeness, lick of considers no tentatl 1 of personal vals liq have been accidental Ses Pores asg Mgyrenewed hie ples to chine guns, which are the great thing | tlon, selfishness, They were 40 afraid uations for 1916, which brought Cort | wag born tn Austttn lashed her e eto America to | Of being servile that they would not.» much criticism, was dat naw, Luss coi hitton whieh {even be elv, This wax finally reduced t work for the Allies’ Exhibition whic “Vin not inuch of a believer {na lot Tt was said this afternoon tha {s to be opened in Now York shortly | cp this talk about personal lierty,” tentative total on personal vale Sve OX for the benefit of charities in which | confided Capt, Bet “t believe in for 1917 will be leas. th | aoe + a two American women, Lady Fajet| that famous do finition of liberty dollare very. tikely in ¢ f " a. Aan ch ayn t tls the balance left, hood of $40,000,000 | A may EOal ine ise Oh he AE> Cow man ater be han Carita ei cael Te mke Condi be Kae: cenalate 66 99 miral—are especially in’ ronal freedom to secure the free- | that they “went ea with | e O “You have taken half of your story | dom of the whole, deal of Manhattan real esta ‘The F undred Thousand’ to ‘T remember one ian whom ft) ing that owners should h ample | of ‘The Firat Hun lous'fob of turne | Studied With a great deat ot tah wrtunity to recoup from past e e describe the tretaen: 1. | He was the reuchest type of Cornish | pression. In Brooklyn and elsew ing that inchoats group into real s0l- | nines and te bly: had ontisted | whore there wera booms, considerable in a as tons dicra," L said, “The question of com- | when In a state of exhilaration, He {jacking up Wes done é ning is one | rex 1 his commanding officer as > pulsory military training he had been in the habit of resard which all America is discussing. DO) ee iiploven ant Of reward. SEPARATE TRIALS FOR “Be fully informed be- you believe in it?” he faces of the poor. Hix Seraeant 2 t “absolutely and emphatieally."| Be considered a! art ot mit ROFRANO AND BRONDINI fore you buy,” says Vogue, said Capt, Beith, “My experienc tS | two daya! spree. Atte eaten he expensive coat or convinced me that it is 4 necessity | yun iwiment was brought to hia! meio suit is the for England and 1 bellwe it to bel one day that when he was fined ct! First of Prix Accused in Mur- ate io the ‘ong you buy: ee eee eae genera: (Gislaual superior” neneete, '% ler of Giamara Will Be Called to und do not wear If England for the past two Benera: | rien and punishmenin were made t . tr tions had given all her young meu | uphold the ul of ‘being ' Bar Next Monday Her #20, 825, 830 such training there would have been That man in now a Sergeant hinself », former Deputy | and $35, are suits in all Be Ae caule Germany, Waew tustl deter nar Ne army bel mi ant! @) the representative models, most of us did to fight | completely changed Heed f ieday f d because sl 4 “I believe in compulsory t 1 ay y Not we “We did learn, but we used up military service not merely as a national insurance but for its ef our best men asa sacrificial stop fect on national character,” con GMOse, | 2 le thy 8 were a tinued Capt. Beith, “Of ‘course itenant nbly , pre sated Compulsory military | America cannot tell what may Histriet Jus « ning natio insurance | happen to her. We've bottled up We pa inst war. No nation can al ermany, but what about Japan ford to be without it What if she should mobilize that the 8 ny for the “Then you doubt one of our mo dark horse, China, and descend | jury next ae flustrious pucitists, who suid that upon your Pacific Coast? The rare nein Americh went to War a tilien men) fact that you are surrounded by | F 1 would sprig to arms over nigh two, oceans merely means that Martin enting “Exactly that would bh ( you must have a very larne navy Kofran: or greed Capt, Be | and you haven't it. If it hadn't rae n | ninpened in Briand | been for our navy Germany . 7 the patriotism of Asie t could have invaded England in ? ; of native stock, at What the early months of the war, There N - good would they Hdn't} would have been nothing to stop (\\) know_how to fight? hor: Wonks f “To trust the defense of your ; : i country to the milion men who I i nadia rs would spring to arms over night Phil aly H like trusting to a mil it S fe two men hi “ p the defense of their ie = reoM j field against a pack of wolves. ws ' GO AUEAD NOW TAUGHT DISCIPLINE TO THE IN ! f I tale ste igre , ‘ DEPENDENT BRITISHER We Mikes st ‘ I's all righ Ne gravend 4 “It jan’t thal 1 believe in remaining 1 gers’ strike has b ettle slanding @ nigh at I » 2 their 4 4 N cate in Ton and bi SF dor HN w tbyt fered t Killed ea to live to do it” Capt. Heith interjected | Pe veien th aviest ar causually—-"is the old Lord |? 1 . Roberts urged for 80 siiite, Hol sere tr our ani lent rene hla i then fo of his 1 t ; 4 him. fo wo weeks " i Wat ne ' ‘ - wouldn't i 1 he A 1 1 Hack prospects, wouldn't interAye with pWere eoriously injurtd 4 Because the new Fashion Shop makes its largest dis: pla It aiso has the 60 and 4 at At the New ys nere handful, as at other shops, with their hief displays at $40 to SOU) You get the coat that you will wear and continue to lke--the big, mannish model, at $20, 825 or 30. th at moderate prices, America i coats, but there are hundreds each an authoritative production, tin large lower prices No Charge for Alterations. eBegll Nineteen West 34th Street Fashion Shop