The evening world. Newspaper, December 28, 1920, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

=~ EVENING WORLD THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, DECEMBWR 28, 1920. | ~ MESSAGE OF $10 GOLD COIN | MORE GRATEFUL 10 WOUNDED WAR HEROES % elpers will bear me out, that when, Never have I heard euch swe 732 wo say this to tho boys they would drawn out music as that bugler—the THAN THE CAST % Men Still in Hospital Cheered by Proof of Publie + Gratitude. —_——— is not published, Monday they gave me all the space they had, but I want to go back and: tell more about the Commodore Hotel luncheon, becat for care, efficiency and generosity it will NEVER BE EXCELLED. THE “MAKINGS” OF A PERFECT DAY. If Mr, Bowman had Invited 500 we would have thought it a wonderful act of generosity, but to tell us to invite 1,600 runs it Into an extrava- gance of joy-giving. Four firemen were in attendance, assigned by Chief Kenlon. A stage had been buillt,,a piano furnished. There was a dressing room for men und one for women. Our guests at this luncheon were not only patients from hospitals, but were wounded men taking training with the Federal Vocational and were fufnished by W. F. COIN AS “SOUVENIR.” Distribution of Fund Given by Evening World Readers to Go On All Week. By Lilian Belt. When I was in Europe writing ar ticles for a magazine I once had three Christmases in one year. One in Berlin with our Ambassador Andrew White and the Diplomatic Corps, Dne, twelve days later, in Petrograd, and in February I had @ third in Beypt on the Nile. But the Chiistmases we are having hm the work of The Evening World's @istridbution of $10 gold pieces to wounded soldiers have got that ex- perience “beat by a city block.” 4 For Monday—yesterday—we lad our second Christmas, Mrs. Gennert, Mrs. Horton, my daughter Lillian and I went to the Clinic for Func- tional Re-education and gave vut $250 in gold to the twenty-five boys who are there. And all the week we shall be visiting hospitals—mopping up! At the clinic I was glad to give our gold to one brave woman, Mrs. Theo- dora Marconi, ambulance driver. She was driving an ambulance In July, 1918, in Italy, near the Piave front. A shell blew her ambulance completely out of existence, killing «ll but six men and wounding her so thit she is crippled for life. I do love to honor a brave woman who has done the work of a good voldier! Everywhere we were greeted with miles of welcome, because here the boys know me; and Mrs, Gennert met several old friends trom Fox Hills. Again and again we heard stories wf back pay which could not be col- fected, so that our money was doubly T welcome. Oh, if the public only, Gf KNEW! Everybody tm this hospital had a topy of The Evening World, and there were many eyes in which unshed| Such a silence. heard a pin drop. tears glistened when we refused to Dine, “Private Edward Fisher, Com {isten to their thanks and told them pany L, 165th Infantry, 423 (Rainbow that never, while life lasted, could Division,” and I our gratitude to them be expressed. | 2d stand at i i. bugler played taps Do you know this, people sher, and al our honored I honestly believe, and 1 tht Shaw, John Wilbur we owe much. boys looked? There are no words. Picture to your- overnment and other agenci Ge on sal vided. Would YOU grin? YOUR eyes shine? voice grow hoarse with feeling? We again, lette by the boys themselves, this public appeal. done. I had borrowed @ bugler from Gen platform. He sounded stantly and faced us. 1 there, what The done, how the pul scribed our fund attention, and stili on the job, had furnish: programme and would STA jo until the nee od soldier had been supplied in so fa) as clothing, jobs and entertainmen could do it, How they yelled when I sald that. me over the wire, iss Bell, Fishet ed five minutes ago. OF AMERICA. attention —out of respect t soldie! my de: high, mather hear it than recelve the $10) the very skies, in gold! | “out your leht Do you know why I think 0? | rat, Dave9 | present. and everlasting truth be THOSE $10 GOLD PIECES WERE) came apparen' WELCOME. | Zotar the graves of thone who sleep a Foard | to whose co-operation and that of Do you want to know how those) I could not tell you. | self how YOU would feel if you had” been in huspital from one to three} years receiving what entertainment laries—had offered you, and then a great newspaper had wakened the public, whom you thought had’ forgotten your sacrifices, and you got what we of The Evening World pro- | Would | Would YOUR | had been told over and over n and by our own workers, that a certain agency in Fox Hills would not permit The Evening World to enter its hospital since we started So I decided to tell them ALL just what was being Weigel, and with him 1 mounted the in- 1,600 heads snapped around told them then WHY we were : Evening World had blic had oversub- by over one-third. How that faithful body of patriots, the Stage Women’s War Relief, was ed us our ¥ on the! ds of the last wound- Then I told them about Fisher. How I cajled up his hospital, and a voice PAY HONOR TO A DEAD HERO Then I gave his clear notes seemed to cleave Out your lights!” A verse I wrote for them came Into | my mind as we stood there and Its FUND HAS DOUBLE CHEE Now Know They Were Not Forgotten; Wounded Heroes Get Xmas Remembrances ——S, | } With All r t *| Saturday having been a » sf | reaume of interesting facts t nedtion with. the raising of th | accounted for by the cashier's | ment, the total by more than $2,000: Nobly dead, we dare not werp! New York Photo-Kngravers' Union, Penniless as most of them ure—| Oy their fd min wa denending Bapioyes Witiguosoore Works’ Br 10 oney thom for Theirs tha vride to die, defonding! Mion ae COMMIT Tee aes kept evans si be eae emding | FOr #hem pratan and prayers are blend- RN Josie 0. f months by the ernment, ing tng. | Mount. Vernon Wate Tabor Un Land of mine! all the small comforts and luxu! you and I buy every day—YE Many of them intend never to wpend this precious $10 gold piece, but to save it as a happy memorial of The Evening World's campaigh to rouse the public to a patriotic privi- fege! Honestly, I weep when I think of it. They need all sorts of things, That $10 would go up like smoke if they bought what I know they want, Yet—| not THIS $10 will they spend! Oh, if only Thad all the money I after a long breath, the buzz of joy ous talk began, “Miss Bell, 1 am the one that car. wounded.” his picture, Fisher, you will remem: ber was tortured iy a German prisor camp for refusing to tell the size an location of bis command. During the e ake ese wound e) hopping up nd calling for three, These two parties of ours were di: need to make these wounded men} cheers for the proprietor of the Hotel | ferent from any othera we had ever Commodore, Mr. Bowman, for Mr. heard of, in that the boys were in- It was here that I found Andrew|Sweeney, the manager, for The| vited to bring with them the One Be- His leg has been amputated the thigh and the Cawley. midway between knee. He signed up to go to the Com- modore luncheon—but a hemorrhage ~ prevented. So the photographers got a picture of him just as our gold piece was be- War Relief, party. WHEN ZIEGFELD ADDED TO TH ing handed to him For ten days The Evening World has given me the privilege of conduct- ing a whirlwind campaign to $10,000 in order to give the 1, wounded soldiers, sailors, marines and any other ex-service men and women still under treatment in New hospitals a Christmas that would never forget. And in spite of the fact that I had the splendid as- sistance of a: corps of secretaries, atenographers, expert accountants, and the enthustastic co-operation of the editorial staff, I wag so tired that on Thursday when T went to do the only shopping 1 did, I sald to the starter in a department sto; “What telephone do I take to get to the shoe dupartment?”. He said: ,"I wowld advise you to take one of these elevator: Ya rather use a mall chute if you bave one!” I replied. Then 1 told him what I had beon @oing and he said he was an ex-ser- vice man, and we both laughed and became the best of friends. But tired! What of that? We wers 1 rags and fragmenta, but #o glad, delighted, at going over the th $13,500 up to Friday night! were at Wox Hills that wounded who had been dischar eured were to be returned the} eir wounds having broken ou I Want to take care of thone Promptly at 3.30 we left, for the o'clock teu drinkers were already a: | sembling, It so happened that R, T. Fishe: Director, Board of Vr Re-education of Wash he came to the pla‘form and spoke few and welcome Tickets had been issued to # of the the favored Commodore 1 Roof. cial performance Frolic,” 80 away went from the New Amsterda There, by thi Ziceteld jr, poys were seated tables and el with soup, half broiled spring chicken each, creame spinach, salad, ice cream and an thing to drink ‘they wished, But just before anything was serve I went out on the floor and the bug! aguin gounded attention. again we all stood at attention whil the bugler, from behind a row palms, sounded taps. This time came in even sweeter tones, as 1,500] ence was deeply impressed, en to the first luncheon, they at - dane! be; we ad iat Sa a “| phat great company seated them- | selves in silence, but in @ moment, I had no sooner left the platform than a boy came up to me and said, ried Fisher off the field when he was I was so thrilled by the coincidence that I asked the photographer to get luncheon boys kept JOYS OF “ THE PERFECT DAY.” ing, was in town and our guest, so eful words of appreciation| wounded still In hospitals to a spe- Midnight boys to the generosity of Florenz Then I re- peated what I had sald.of Fisher and from a distance, and the whole abate Here we had MANY who HAD no But, al though strangers to us at first, we! recognized that they belonged to our | © kind of soldier parties by the wa Baa toy on M.[Charin Sehweinert. Sanctorum Lodge F, A, Lad, the following: Mri $10; C. W. Valentine, (fl; E HL. Haste, $! Batte gon, $1, and Harry Jones, $1. alle: the following: Mrs. Miss Ruth McCaw, $5; Misi n “NOT ALL COUNTED Belated Contribu- tions Checked. Total May Be Increased $2,000. A total of $14,655.56 already has been with hundreds of additional contributions—received over the week- end and yesterday—yet to be tabu- lated. These, they report, may raise Twenty dollars was contributed by William Belkn J. Cawinsion, $1; ry, $1; R. Miller, $1; My M. Eighteen dollars was contributed by W. J. McCaw, $8; ANDREW CAWLEY, WOUNDED SOLDIER, RECEIVING his #10 GOLD PIECE From LILIAN BELL. holiday, asked them to ris¢! represent less than half of them. The while the eyae test will be published in The Eve- ning World to-morrow, together with Ghirard, McKinley, J. A. Mulloney. | Lenox Hill Veterans’ Club. Whitall, contributed ‘by BE, T. Cane in con- e fund. | depart- , $1; 3 Edith id girls, a good floor and wonder Evening World, for the Stage Women | joyed Woman—a mother, a wife, si and for my helpers—for everybody in fact who had had any- thing to do with the success of the ter, sweetheart or+a devoted And of this privilege they wer appreciative. El had the time of my own life, since wished I had eaten that s|-~the one on my p *| home and mother and and § just looked at THE I want to tell Mr. Ziext in meeting that [ ne beaatiful girls nor a "| show. Tr, h- more ning to end. 80 The * maculate mentality which previourly enjoyed. Irving Berlin came in 4s ¢ Jattractlon and Mr to introduce him, w pride. He sang his own soldier se |the boys yelled. Then the: for Ziegfeld and he was hau! the floor laughing and prote: Remember that I saw with at oa | : a, er ‘went to the courtesy of Mr. Ziegfeld courteous and able corps o} ile of it nts. Then home tn the same m ries which brought them-~ able, safe, ta perfect day! Sue A INFE. BRL a Tike Balute yielded to the temptation of pretty happy conscious llove and pride and gratitude of the| public with memory busy at the end | | Company, $ ful jazz, d nurse. ‘e deeply But when the "Midnight Frolic’ be- gan 1 forgot all about the boys and I have chicken ate I mean—but those girls made me forget food and soldier boys more refined There was not a suggestive look, nor song, nor hint, from begin- A young girl would be perfectly safe in taking her moth idnight Frolic’ sure of getting her home in the same state of im- she had LED with ong and y yelled led upon ating. my own eyes the care that was taken to feed every soldier, sailor and marine who Midnight Frolic by the and his ft assist- jotor lor- somfort- of the Str the sig- nt ee ial | Ziexteld asked me ch L did BOYS, st the PORES. ES USAT McCaw, $5; W. A. Cotton, $2, and ‘Miss Elvena Taylor, $1. Century Audit Corporation staff. ‘Tivioet Hideo Tweninal, 370 Pine Street. Morning World Pressroom, $16 con- oon, | tributed by 8. J. Livingston, 8. Madi- McCool, Mea M. Hayes, Charles Kult, Ken-) , Henderson, Rogan, Logan, John elan, O'Brien, dy, nedy, W. Wende Hauptoon, Employees of , Bergman, C. Vroom, W: W. Feggis, W azoyer, C. Taylor, J. Corbett, L. 4. Corbett, M. . Cortelyou and G. Alberts; | L. J. sborn, Luke A. Lovely Post, No. can Legion, $12- Twelve dollars James W. Po and Catherine James. Eleven dollars contributed by Flor- ence Glaub, Alice Davidson, tose Cox, | Rita Lodyguine, Mild Bolstein, Catherine 8) Mason, B. Hartin, J. O'Laughiin, R, M. Tofano, n, C, Kumateader, K. ree and H. Peters; nt bn N. Y., $11 h MeMuruay, ¢ P.O. Cletts Ten , Mou ry Phillips, Mr. and Mrs, John F, Mc- rks of Bronx Branch, Pub- J Carty, © lic National Ban Henry B. Lane, Schnasi, Mrs. Clara Brower and V Galvin Fenlen, H, &. Willard Babcock tions, $8. Classified Ad York World, $6.26. Five dollars eu N. Smit Marshall, Livingston, pany, Lena M. hi George E, Davis, Mrs Mrs. A. Cable and dau 8. Rich, Theres Mri y, Mra. Mary Herrman, W t Fuculty and + gineering and C Pure Science, N Commercial leg Union In Gist Veteran, schmidt, Mrs Balterfeld, rs, Grundle H. Mauer, sherman, C. R, | Bonner, 8. 'T. Abbott, | Four dollars each: ing Elevator Boys, Wheeler. Radus & Sons, Ino. iH. C. and Pegey, B. tery, G M. Hawkins, F. 5. Knoud, $2 Mrs. thd Misses | thea H. Wi Mins C. Powe! Phelan, K ‘Santa deyys 9 followed by Sunday, It has not been Exwloyecs of Bureau ol -Asscmata” atid possible to complete’ checking and pamn™ ct: jeeii ‘ tabulating the great flood of contri- , ores a You could have! putions to the Wounded Soldiers’) Mm, | Fund received since last Friday ni The acknowledgments printed below £n, “ contributed ey, Sophia M, Pacey ed ball, Mildred Department, G, Stutz, Mildre; » CC. A. Sullivan, William 0. King, Empire Hardware Com- Chapman, O'Reilly & Son, Thomas McDonaid, O'Connor, Mahoney, T. and Ruby Lottomley, ker, An Irishwoman, the Br w York University, Assurance Cam- Daniel Winne, Hunt, Sandford, Frances V. ow York Build Three dollars each: Annie BE, Med- hig, Annie K, O'Brien, N. Wight, N. M. Robetschek, L. W., Bobble Tucker and Horton, A Friend, Kendrick, E. Kendrick, M. Hansen and O, Elmerdort Hawkins; Dorothy Ww, $2.28. \w Two dollars each: Muriel G. Ahrend,| ant Claus's Sister, paenk, ts oe mee Epare A, Bates 5, ‘ower, ol p usye, Eh. 1 iy hy args Web Ruth Lewko: Jugagad tle-tash gous’ dlmem witz, Berthe Raison and Mrs. ney, A Friend,*James H. M illiam J, Ra: ae R. Schwartz, D. B. M., 1. O. Spanish America L, Van Biaricum, A Friend, E. Katherine Lawlor, Robert O'Kee! W. McFarlane, Louise F M. Poillon, Mr. and Mrs. B. G. Mrs. E. John H, polt,. Boyd, Stein, | mous, B. M. C., Ethel Ault, Gol | Mother and Friend, Mrs. T. C }Two Friends, Charles F. | Mrs. J, V. Keller, Miss H | bury, B. W. and H. G. M Grunauer, $1.75. Ong doliar each: Paul | Constant Reader, Mrs, Mills, 8: M. Tecker, Abraham Van Horn, lansky, Sergt, Edward A. “Bobble,” $15.00 Tatum E W. Whita- , Ameri- by Overett A’ Rose, C. R. E. Cc, A Swanson, A Friend, KE. G. and M. G., George W. Quirk, nie Wheeler,’ Mrs. Hopkins, Stantey Dennii dis, Mrs. Carrie Simmons, mous, Anonymous, ward’ Coffey, Anonymous, Ca E. Kilmartin, Eunice Belknap, eney, Ty A. L. Duck- Angier L. Belle Mead McManus, W. L. T. Cyllins, Mra. chion, r G. Schi Mrs. J. Miss T, Frank: Publica- May C Jensen, sew | Marta NeW lior, Edwin Brower, M. apdier’s Mother, J. A. Dwyer red mous, Edward J. Heiner, F KF | house, Miss B., Mise Jenni dyke, W. Shaeffer, Anonymou: J. Malone, B. M, F Anonymous, Miss Mary Mono! Ww Thomas P, L. Cham- pr'W.|Anenymous, A Friend, A Frie Geupiande avy, George B.| 1° Hiddies, William ronyn, L. Woehike, Mins Jersey City, |AnOn mous, Ancnymous, M nter Violet, C. Mem m H, anductor Non abe Conductor No. 494, KE. an Street and Hortens: anson, In will ry AY * Le berger. ——_ 70, HELD AS SWINDL’ Aged Woman Acc’ ent Stock Deal. Bigg, Mrs, Memory of a A. Goid- day, L. 8., ns, Mr. and Jacquillard, Doroth: 0) bail after plend! guilty to © charge of grand lure | fore Magistrate Sill |ton Heights Court | ©. Hoke of No. jnue declared Mrs St VoriIn obtain Mrs. A 2B failed *o deliver the stocks. Records we Rerane, to show that Mra. m Involved in court proce various times sinc 1884, Champion Bail Jamper tn Peter Criscuolo, all Morre) Russo, Conti and Scotti, satd Ay police to be the world's + CAUBHEY, |nail Jumper, landed to-da Vhite Plat i by Police . W. Slat- J. Silverme of Mt. Vernon. A Friend, Dora-|¢ under Indictment r, M, J. L.,{allewed theft of a $1,700 w trom Jacob Senmidt of N He had: the hae ln easion when arrested fi r, 1 the DISTRI BUTION OF GOLD. 60. Friends, United Steel Corporation Employees (additional), IsRbel L. Loomis, Emma L. Gllmar- | Veteran, Lady Love, C, F. Bonner, M. jman, A, Williamson, M. M., Anony- Hofman, Mrs, D. . Yanser, A . Kiely, A. J. K., BE. O. Berg, Ethel J. Evening World Reader, Mother of a Soldier and Sailor, C, F. Mrs. W. Kent, Mrs, H. Leonard, Lin- M, Shannon, N. H, Lan- Hardy, H, D,, Charles Barckard, Rose Paulus, Miss Marion Shannon, kham, A Friend, Phyllis, Anonymous, Mrs, 'T, Glasson, an Hills, Jeannette D, Ta: c., A Sol- M. L- Beaumont, Anonymous, Mra. J. Schoifle, K. Wrigle, ©. Anna Voglin, seventy years old, wag ing Nicholas Ave- rom her for the purchase of stocks arid produced im court pur- Vogiin had od tomo! Schmidt car in nes Wilm! ESS R FOR WAR H EROES $e MACHINE GUN NEEDED TO GUARD SEIZED LIQUOR Federal Agent in San Francisco Has $2,000,000 Worth in Vaults. SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 28. URCHASE of a machine gun to guard intoxicating liquor soized and held here by Federal authoritios will be recom mended to Washington, it was an- nounced to-day following an In- spection of vaults where the liquor la sequestrated, Collector of Customs Joun O. Davis said the liquor was valued at more than $2,000,000. Fear that the crime wave now reported in the Baet may spread to the Pacific Coast underlies the proposed recommendation for a machine gun, Davis said, cheemmnetipe FOR THE MOVIE Several of 'Em Give Rubbernecks Thrill by Opening and Closing a Signal Box, A striking marvellous methods Police Commi flanked by @ sergeant, @ detail three men from Traffic Squad opposite the bridge entrance. on duty nearby, they shooed back made notes on a pad hung Inside tl box and then closed the door. Meantime two moving camera men feature "weekly" away. box door and madq his exit, ¢ movie men folded thelr tripods ai disappeared. The police march back to their station » house, were — grindii minutes late, demonstration of the sioner Enright is using to stamp out orime, was given to-day In City Hall Park during the morning rush hour, Led by @ Heutenant of police and marched to the signal box on the Park Row side of the park almost ‘There, alded by other traffic men large hurr¥ing crowd who suddenly drew up to see the police in action. versed earnestly for a few momenta, ploture employed by a movie As the cop closed the signal 7 crowd went on its way to work, five BO IS DROWNED ASTHN ICE BREAKS BROOKLYN PARK Parents in Panic When 25 Young Skaters Are Thrown Into Water. Twenty-five children were skating on the pond in Cooper Park, Stewart WUliamsburg, shortly after 10 o'clock this morning, when the thin ice broke. A dosen ‘boys and girls were thrown into the water. The screams of the floundering chil- dren and thelr companions ‘attracted and Maspeth Avenut POLICE ON THE JOB— [aticnact Gass and James Decole. S| They rushed into the pond, which ts ‘but three feet deop, and began to save the children, They drew out Richard Geisha, ten years old, of No. Beadle Str who was uncone scious, The children began to ery “Matty is drowned! Matty is drowned!" and, continuing their search, the two men discovered the body of sleven- year-okl Matthew Knitta of No. 17 Beadle Street. They applied artificial resptration, but the boy did not re- spond, An ambulance from the Greenpoint Hospital had been sum-~- a of A body the surgeon pronounced him dead. Richard, suffering from im- mersion, waa rushed to the hospital. News of the accident soon spree few minutes hundreds id ch of their children, Re pond in sea Lines were formed and one of the|ice and made @ thorough search for) | Dr. policemen stepped forward and |other bodtes. It was fully an hour| woman, opened the signal box. He con-|before they succeeded in persuading ial a es Hy | hood to leave the scene. No. 146 Morris Street, Jersey City, Healy of Engine he nd ed brought George to safety, The fire. to the City Hospital, where a pul. motor restored the boy. to conscious. aa a result of exposure. moned, and after examtning the boy's 4} cil stripe, a black overcoat and tan through the neighborhood und in a of fransie mothers and relatives besieged the serves from the Herbert Street station were called. The police broke the the excited mothera of the nelghbor- Nine-year-old George Mazaura of wae sliding with several companions ‘anal this morning Fireman George ‘0. % attmeted by the screams, dove under the ice and man and the rescued lad were rushed ness, Healy ts in a bad condition, 2,500 CANARIES REACH NEW YORK FROM GERMANY First Big Shipment Since Before var Revives Trade in Local Market, HE canary bird market in New York, which has been virtually empty, received ite first large consignment of the sing= ors since before the war to-day, The steamship F. U. Luckenbach of the Luckenbach Line docked at the foot of 8rd Street, Brooklyn, with 2,500 German rollers and # number of parrots, The birds came from the Harte Mountains, ‘The canaries sang frequently all the way across the ocean, in spite of the cold weather, f More consignments are expect~ ed to follow, TELLS OF MAN WITH HYPNOTIC STARE * i ae Tali, Dark, Heavy and Wears Pew * 5a) culiar Bloodstoné, Declares Mrs, Ruickholot. at The man with the hypnétic stare whose influence, according to the story told by Mrs, Ruth Ruickholdt confined in Jefferson Market prison under $10,000 bail, caused hor to mis- represent Herself and obtain money and weart apparel worth thous- ands of dollars in six states, is sit feet one inch tall, weighs 250 pounds, bas black halr and black moustache, - wears & brown suit with a fine pen~ ott cular Mrs, two He ts corporas shoes, He also wears a bloodstone searfpin, she adde Rutckholdt gave the police hames which this man uses. ponnected with a financial ton in Boston, Maas, she ee to talk to prison, Mrs. Ruickholdt refui newspapermen at th Mme, Galll-Caret te Marry Her Acw companiat. 4 CHICAGO, Dec, 28.—Mme, Amelita Galli-Curcl. the grand opera star, an« nounced her coming marti: Homer Samuels, her accompanist. who was named by her former hui iI Curct, In the divorce: au ich his wi whi fe brought against him, ~ ljast January, Mme. Gaill-Gur atta ex- pected to marry Jan. 16, the ahe goto her naturalization papers Molo- urph:; BL. n War E. B. Y. Baker, A Friend, Ivy Alt- d Star Hocker, Cart B. Vo- Ryan, theron, Dale: Frien nony> therine 8. a A Vivian enthal oA Anony- Lott- Groen- The Store is closed at 5 P. M. daily GB. Altman & Cn. MADISON AVENUE - FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK Thirty-fourth Street Telephone 7000 Murray Hill To be continued to-morrow — on the First Floor An Unprecedented Offering of is, Mrs. han, A nd, the Jacobs, Gold- ER. regular pric no* | ned $100 | ings at Jatt. 1, Rowe, by the champion in the Jeuten: iv SH in. to bay ee Men’s Outing Flanne! Pajamas at $1.65 per suit This is a phenomenally low figure for Pajamas of this quality (being, indeed, less than one-half the e). The material used garments is domet flannel of superior grade, and the workman pis of a high ord Men’s Outing Flannel Night Shirts (of the same quality materia!) are also on sale at $1.35 each Thirty- fifth Street Ce ee | ) | | een een ects een. in making the er. | | | | |

Other pages from this issue: