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a F- a a oe ee Oe ee —_ » Totes In Ne Y vied Jast 1 home to Vance W, Tor! rand Mrs, W. L. Torbert of Delaware. Dr. John R. Mackai officiated. Mrs, Daniel R Wright and Mrs, Edward H. Mac- | kepzie were the maid's only attend. | ants pest man, | After a v » Mr. and Mrs, Tori live in Roslyn, Ld Miss Natalie Livingston Forbes, | “d@aughter of Mr, and Mrs. A. Holland Worbes of No. 27 W Fifty-second Street, i r eut. Clinton M tl pm in the Forbes home The mi of Miss Virginia Pulleyn, of Mr. and Mrs. | John J to Walton Pearl Kingsle nd Mrs, Darwin | P, Ki Lea, Riverdale, will take rnoon in the Pulleyn est One Hun- dred and } Wilber will be maid of honor, and PORN NA OTS My FAO ie NRO Society Mr. and Mrs. James Colby Colgate of No, 46 West Fifty-seventh Street, Who a week ugo announced the en-, agement of their daughter, Miss Bu- | san Everett Colgate, to Dr. Mather Cleveland, now announce the engage- ment of her sister, Miss Hope H. Col- gate, to William Travers Jerome jr. No date has been s Wedding Miss } Gertrude Ray Hamilton, daughter by a former marriage of the Baroness Raoult de Graffenried, was married yesterday in Calvary Chure Fourth Avenue and Twenty- | to Paul McCulloch, son | « McCulloch and the late | e Levenworth McCulloch. | The ceremcay was performed by Dr. Todd and was followed by a small reception at the home of the boned do Graffenried, No, 446 Park | = venue, ‘The bride’ was given in heb i Broadway and Forty-seventh Street, at marriage by Bayard Dominick. :ciss| F; TRICIAN. , Violet L. Hamilton was maid of; ALL KILLS ELECTRIC pie ee h 7 onl ttend 4 bert ¥ Brockton eae hee ae Gite’ Me Was Working on “Tatking| Probst was supplying new lamps to ets were Theodore Crane, Dr. Peter! Sign” Above Pekin Restaurant, | ‘he sian at the time of the accident Irving, Menry Hull, Harold Roth- well, Herman Murray and Harrison ‘Wright, lat Miss Vera 3 Mr. and Mrs, Edward B. Mackenzie of No, 435,Riverside Drive, was mar- |= A reception | will follow | Miss Harriet The engagement of win Campbell Woodward of | n, Ohio, to Ewing Reginald mn of Justice and Mra, Eugene of } est Fifty-second Street, has been announced. Mr. Phil- bin was graduated from Yale in 1911 and from the Harvard Law School in . He is a Léeutenant in the Gixty-ninth Regiment Miss Sara Helm Thweatt, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. A nder_ Stephens Thweatt of No. 6 One Hun- dred and Fiftieth ried to Donald McLe {iber, son-of Mr, and Mrs, Harry Wilber of this city, next Tuesday night in the North Presbyterian Church, Dr, John R. Mackay will officiate. Miss Helen vill be mar- the other attendants will be the Misses Nancy Ruth Thweatt, Dor- othy Helm Martin of Philadelphia, Isoline Campbell of Atlanta, Frances Caldwell, Isabel Hoehf and Mrs. Allen E. Madden, Mr, Madden will be best man, and the ushers will be} Alexander 8. Thweatt jr, Gerald B, Fennell, Alexander White jr., Willlam Hall, John French and Harold ker. Mrs. William Ross Proctor of No. | 82 East Thirty-ninth Street went to Pittsburgh yesterday to spend a few | days with her mother, Mrs, William | H. Singer. (ORES SSSR EEE JEWS IN JAFFA STARVE = IN FLIGHT BEFORE TURKS: Thousands Wandering Helplessly in Roads After Sacking of Homes and Property. CHICAGO, May 23,—Privations of the Jewish population of Jaffa, in their flight from their homes before |~ the Turks, were described in a letter | recelved here to-day by Adolph Kraus, President of the Independent Order of B'nai B'rith, from Bir Ceeil Arthur Spring-Rice, British Ambassa- | dor at Washington. The letter en- closed a copy of a cablegram received at the British Embassy from the | Foreign Office in London for the in- formation of the various Jewish bodies in the United States, The vablegram said: “During the Passover the entire Jewish population of Jaffa was ex- pelled toward the north, Homes and property were sacked. The popula- | tlon in flight was robbed with the of Turkish authorities: connivance “Jews resisting pillagers were ranged, Thousands are wandering helplessly on the roads and are | starving. ng of the} colony is i y und dis- ease, Ma young Jerusalem Jews have n deported northward o an un destination, The} forcible ation of the colony Is immini WOMEN! OTHERS! bs Ject to fits of Melancholy oF examined for tron deficit John Probst, an electrician, who lived _- | fell from the top of the electric “talk- kenzie, daughter of! ing sign” on the Pekin Restaurant, News Oddities lyn Navy Yard, Took fourteen tugs to drag the big liner there. GRPENWICH VILLAGERS paid $6 each for tur- nips and carrote—at the County Fair in Washington Square. THEY ARE TAKING a census of coal in France to prevent any one having more than one ton at a time. WIFE asked Domestic Court to decide whether beating husband gave her was proof of affection or that he was tired of her, CALIFORNIA DOG has adopted four coyote pups as playmates for her two offspring, he —__—— | PENNSYLVANIA POSTMASTER threatens to re- sign because as fast as he gets woman assistant sho marries and quits, Five have thus left him in year, and was 160 feet above the roof of the restaurant. Whether he received a No. 1468 Webster Avenue, the Bronx, shock which made him release his hold on the tron work is not known. was twenty-five years old. OBITUARY NOTES. Patrick HM. Travers, aged seventy- one, @ retired battalion chief of the New York City Fire Department, \s dead in Brooklyn Hospital, He lived at No, 687 Greene Avenue. Edward W. Serrell, sixty-seven years old, son of the late Gen, Ed- ward W. Serrell, is dead in Park Ridge, N. J. Charles E. Brown, active In Ma- sonic circles and long connected with the Corn Exchange Bank, is dead at No, 686 Flatbush Avenue, Brooklyn. George D. Melville, twenty years ago one of the best known clowns In an. a, is dead in Jérsey City, aged sixty. Coffee Drinkers Will Close Out Thursday About One Hundred WOMEN'S TAILORED SUITS Formerly 35.00 to 65.00 20.00 This collection of suits has been assembled from the regular stock where Included are suits of tricotine, gabardine, burella, black-and-white worsted checks, in the season's most desirable models. only a few suits of a kind remain. Women’s Gingham Shirts Specially Priced 5.75 Separate skirts in smart outing models in vari-colored plaid and check ginghams. BONWIT TELLER. The Specially Shop le liman & 2 Misses’ Afternoon Dresses at the reduced price $15.50 offer very remarkable value These Silk Dresses represent some of the smart models of the season, and feature the wanted colors. (Misses’ Department, Second Floor) Fifth Avemw -Madteon Avenue, Thirty-fourth Street FIFTH AVENUE AT 38™ STREET Thtrty-fifth Street & CO, Cn. of New York i iii ; i share Yo LD, WEDNESD (ot fase — at * 23, 1917. ‘MAY x, Broadway at Ninth, New York Great SKIRT News for Young Women A Sale of 2,000 Sport and Outing Skirts—All fresh, spic-and-span-new $2.95 $3.75 for our $4 and for our $5.50 to $5 grades $7.75 grades Elinor $3.75 Another tennis or golf skirt which unbuttons to the foot. This skirt /boasts the ne pocket. Nine Smartest Models of the Season in our judgment New York has seen skirt sales but never one like this, Never such materials, such workmanship, such tailoring and such styles at such extraordinarily low prices. These 2,000 skirts are as new and fresh as the morning. Not one has ever been shown before. Every skirt was made by one of the best-known skirt manufacturers in New York—a man who only turns out the finer sorts of skirts. The nine models were specially ch osen from nearly a hundred styles. They are the pick of all the skirt fashions that have come out this year. In style and material these skirts are exact dupli- cates of skirts that are selling today in our and other stocks at $4 to $7.75, Nearly all the materials in the $3.75 group are imported, and include besides staple linen, cordeline, eponge, gabar- dine, the loveliest snowy-white novelty checks and stripes, as well as imported materials with woven dots of color which are guaranteed not to fade. $2.95 skirts are gabardine, cor- deline, ratine, linen. The skirts are so well cut and proportioned that they will fit practically without alterations. Lengths 35, 86, 37, 38 inches. Waist bands, 2314 to 30 inches, Extra people to serve you on Main Aisle, Old Building and Young Women’s Store, Second floor, Old Building. Just in time for the first big holiday of the season—Memorial Day Women’s Jersey Cloth Suits for Very Little—$12.75 ‘This is our lowest price of the season for good-looking jersey cloth suits. ‘The opportunity is limited to just fifty women—for the maker had only a few suits of a style or size left on hand. Sport models in rose, apple green, gold. Patch pockets and belts are the features of most of the suits; sizes 34 to 40 in the lot. ‘Thursday, Down-Stairs Store, Old Building. Hazel $3.75 Smooth-fitting over the with pleats at sides which flare out to give just the fullness needed. Marion $3.75 Copy of one of our imported skirts. Please note the wide soft girdle and the deep pockets which give ton- neau hips. Sally $2.95 A tennis skirt. Unbuttons clear to the hem, and has bellows pockets, which might comfort- basket ably hold a ball or two. Women’s Sweaters for many needs among these at $3 to $9 To call particular attention to its large and comprehen- sive stock of all kinds of sweaters for women the Down-stairs Store makes some very unusual offerings for ‘Thursday | $3.65 for shetland weave slip-) $7.80 for fine jersey fibre swhate | | on, sweaters of wool; fitted ers with deep sailor or shawl collar waistline; rose, emerald green,|and sash; copenhagen, corn and corn, orange, navy and copen- | rose; sizes 86 to 46, | hagen; sizes 38 to 44, $9 for pure fibre sweater coats; | $4 for all-wool shetland weave | plain or Norfolk models with | | sweaters with shawi collar and jsashes and sailor collar, some crochet covered buttons; various stitched; sizes 38 to 44 colors with white trimming. Down-Stairs Store, New Bldg. | Children’s Low Shoes—Priced ‘Remarkably Low, $1 to $3.75 Good-looking Runps and oxfords. Made of servi materials on comfortable last. Shoes for all ages the little tot to the large growing girl. canvas, tan, dull and patent leather. able fon from White nubuck, white Prices in some cases are as low as today’s wholesale cost 11, $1.60; size 2i'to 615, Oxtords for boys and girls of dull or tan leathers, $2.50, $3, $5.60, | Tan play oxfords for boys and girls, $1.26 to $2.25; pumps, 26c more, Down-Stairs Store, New Bldg, Ole eh, {fase fre ——| White nubuck or white can. vas pumps, with ribbon bow, $2 to $3.76, according to size and materials. Dull _or_ patent leather pumps, 22, $2.50, $3, according to nize and quality, Biack caifskin pumps—sizes 4 to 59, $1, $1.40; sizes 8), to 4 hi ALL CARS TRANSFER TO “THE HOME OF TRUTH 59th to 60th Street Opening Display of Summer Millinery Thursday, Friday, Saturday a HMM Ee At Bloomingdales’ This Summer's fashions in hats are entirely new de- from the modes. Many of these new sc and adaptations will be displayed, in addition to the creations of our own designers. Among the hats will be found— Lisere and binations Lisere and Felt Combinations Hair Braid Combinations Navy and White Satins Polka Dot Foulards Transparent Novelties White Italian Milans White Milan Hemps Leghorns Hatter's Plush Com-|Lyons Veleet and Lisere Combi- nations Patent Leather & Kid Novelties Pasted Feather Hats Tailored Banghoks Tailored Panamas Tailored Wenchores Tailored Felt Hats Georgette Crepe and Tagal Combinations June Bride Hats Special Prices, $3.95 to $12.95 iilinery Salons, Second Floor At Bloomingdales Pre-Decoration Day Sale of Men’s & Y ouths’ Suits at $14.85 Can Only Last a Few Days Longer "At Bloominydate’s | The May Hosiery Sale There were only 1,000 suits in the sale in the first place, and the big selling made big gaps in the stock Nevertheless, good choosing in Serges, Worsteds, Cheviots, Cassimeres and Flannels’ ‘ In two or three-button sacks, double- breasted and belted backs. Full, half or quarter lined—many of them have silk yokes and sleeves. Sizes up to 46 chest for tall or stout men ~ Special $14.85 White Serge or Flannel Trousers, $4.65 A pair of these trousers should be in every well-dressed man’s wardrobe. * White Duck or Khaki Trousers, $1.49 to $2.49 Also good assortment of serge, khaki or alpaca coats and dusters. Second Floor, Offers Opportunities to Save Money on Your Hosiery Expenditures. Vast stocks of stockings, consisting of cotton, fibre silk, lisle and thread silk, at very special prices. skirts, dresses, wai: Piping Rock Khaki Kool La Jers Crepe de Chine Striped Taffeta Plain Taffeta Lining Satin needle bow, chine fully guaranteed, No Interest ALL CARS lem TRANSFER TO BLOOMINGDALES Ex 43 SS "AVE: A Special Sale of 10,000 Yards Seasonable Silk Remnants 65c,95c, $1.25, $1.55,$1.85 yd. A weave for every purpose—-women's suits, coats also an almost endless assortment of shades. range from 27 to 40 inches. Main Floor, At Bloomingdales? etc. Included are black and navy’ Widths Printed Silks China Silk Georgette Crepe Shantung Failles Dress Satin Printed Sport Messaline Pongees Shirtings Plain Pongee Corean Silk Habutai Novelty Silk On sale on special tables in the silk department. Extra sales clerks in attendance Main Floor At Bloomingdates “New Crown” Machines “(New TreasureMachines” Two High Grade Makes Moderately Priced These makes are cause they are work as higher priced shuttle machines. “New Treasure’ Machine, $18.75 Four drawer automatic drophead model, fitted Full set of attachments with each machine, our “best sellers” be- capable of doing the same with coped Each ma- New Crown Machine, $25.50 Drophead model with golden oak case, neatly finished. each machine we give a full set of attachments. “New Treasure’’ Machine, $23.75 Four drawer drophead model in enclosed case. Included is a fyll set of attachments. Any of the Above Machines — $1.00 a Week With No Extras Basement Lex.to3dAv. hates [I