The evening world. Newspaper, May 29, 1902, Page 3

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FRENCH VISITORS MR, REID'S GUESTS Went to White Plains This Morning ona Special Train and from There to Ophir) Farm. | The French visitors and a number of prominent State and nattona! officials were to-day entertained at luncheon by Whitelaw Reid at Ophir Farm. The | guests went to White Plains on a spec fal train of parlor cars over the Har- lem Hallroad. They were taken to Ophir Farm in stages and autos pro- vided by Mr. Retd. The {nterlor of the mansion was lav- ishly decorated with French and Amer- ican flags, while a Hungarian band, which furnished aweet music, was hid- den behind a bower of palms and ferns. The tables in the dining-room were ecorated with cut flowers Part of the morning was spent in in- specting Ophir Farm, and the French visitors were much impressed with the costly stables, coach horses, riding | court, dairy, observation tower, from | which a magnificent view of the Sound fs obtained, and other features of the | estate, | The luncheon was served by a New York caterer. Mr. Reid and Count Rochambeau occupied the head of the table. Mr. Reid said the reception and dinner was a private affair. Among Mr. Reid's guests were the Count and Countess de Rochambeau, Count de Lafayette, Admiral er, Gen. Brugere, Ambassador Cambon, Mayor Seth Low, ex-Mayor Abram 8S. Aewitt, Gen, Webb, D, Ogden Mills and about forty others \., BRITAIN'S GREAT NAVAL INCREASE Thirty-five Ships Added in| Past Year, 75 Are Building) and Plans for 27 More Are} in Hand, Kaljain, his employer, with a hammer this morning, M. Caraman, a cigar- | maker, put a revolver in his mouth and tried to blow out his own brains. Caraman is in Bellevue Hospital at the point of death, His victim's body in at the Morgue. Both men were Armenians, They occupied adjoining rooms in the fiat of Mrs. Barbara Loubert, at No. 80 Second avenue, where the tragedy | occurred. No motive for the murder has been After beating out the brains of J. S., May %.—During a discur- estimates in the House of Commons to-day the Secretary of the | Admiralty, Mr. Arnold-Forster, repu- | diated the suggestion of Sir Charles | Dilke (Advanced Radical) that the Government's shipbuilding programme discovered by the police and a pecullar fact is that though the room In which the murder cucrred presents ghastly evidence of a frightful death struggle, Mrs. Loubert, who occupied an adjoin- ing apartment, says she heard nothing until aroused by Kaljain’s dying groans. was so small as to create a bad Im- | Victim Had Money. pression abroad, | Kaljain had kept a cigar store for The Secretary pointed out that during |Many years at the southeast corner of the past vear thirty-five ships had been | Second avenue and Third street, which completed and that seventy-five vessels |!8 In the same building in which he lived. were under construction, including |He had no relatives in this country, twenty armored cruisers. In addition |but was apparently well-to-do and was to this colossal Increase of Great Bri- | Widely known in the local Armenian contemplated immediately proceeding tered his employ and took a room ad- tain's aval resources, the Admiralty |Colony. Several weeks ago Caraman =| with upward of twenty-seven other joining his from Mrs. Loubert. TRIED TO CASH STOLEN CHECK. Police Got Jersey City Man, | Bride Has $25,000 Breach;Candidacy for Who Also Had Trousers that | Disappeared With the Bank | Paper. 7 ing—Husband Missing. A shabbily-dressed man entered the | Justice Greenbaum in the Supreme First National Bank in Jersey City this Court to-day reserved decision in the | afternoon and presented for payment a check for $1,000, The check was pay- able to the Crew Levick Company, whore office js at Monmouth street and Hoboken avenue | The paying teller suspected that all was not right and he called Special|Ward Line, was begun some months OfMficer Robert Ferrier, who arrested the|ago. On Jan, 10, Chase was arrested man and took him to Police Headquar-|as a result of the action. After a pro: ters. ‘There he said he was John Goggin, thirty-two years old, of No. 244 Tent atreet, Jersey City, ‘The police learned that the, office of the Crew Levick Company had been entered during the night and a check He: Us da pair of trousers ‘stolen. The of-|days, and then Chase, It Ie alleged, dis- fice had been entered by ns of alappeared. His wife says she has not mea key which had been hidden outside the joor. Goggin had the stolen trousers with him when arrested. and the cashier of the company Identified them as his prop. erty. The cashier also identified the check as the one that had be' Goggin was locked up. MEMORIAL. DAY WITH THE PUPILS, Patriotic Exercises Held in the Various Public Schools —Flowers Used in Honor- ing the Flag. n stolen. Memorial exercises were held to-day in the various public s¢hools throughout the city. All were quite similar, that at Public School No, 8, on Hast One Hun- dred and Twenty-ffth street, between Second and Third avenues, belng char- acterintic, There, as soon as the pupils assembled, an opening hymn was sung. Followlag this one of the classes recited in concert President Lincoln's Gettysburg apeech, Another class then stepped forward and surrounded the plano, on which had eon draped a large American flag, On the flag one of the members of the class laid @ rose, # Illy and @ violet, em- blematic of the red, white and blue of the national colors, An apostrophe to the flowers and the colors wae then delivered by the entire class. Brill another class san ai the conclusion of which of the clase stepped forward and placed 4 flower on the flag. | vy ie 0 exerciaes losed with an adress the princlpas, TB, Barring: iJ ser on the City of Washington, of the} ise, to the Little Church Around the Corner and were married FIGHTS SUIT OF | WIFE FOR DAMAGES | of Promise Action, Begun| Before Wedding, Still Pend- it brought by Edna | $25,000 for breach of Alloway for ‘The suit against Chase, who was pur- Miss Alloway relented and Chase On Jan, 90 the two went was released. ‘The couple lived together for two! seen him since, She belleves he is in Mexico Counsel for Chase, in making their! application for a dismissal of the gult, | rt_that, the marriage acted as ay termination to the action. | WALDORF GUESTS WATCH FIRE STIR, They See, Too, a Waistless Woman Appear in a Cloud of Smoke— Small Blaze Prostrates Fireman. A woman in a white flannel skirt and no waist on, rushed out of No. 24 West Thirtythird street this afternoon and yelled fire, A cloud of smoke pursued ther and instantly the street was aiive with people. Heads popped out of the Waldorf windows actos the street and | the engings came racing to the scene, There was a fire in the basement of No. #, The ground floor in occupied by John F¥Forsythe and the second and third floors by M, Block, ladlew’ talior, When the smoke from the basement came upstairs Block waa Auing a wom- an with a flannel putt Bhe fled, but the vix girls and two were not a0 y fast, They were back the smoke and had to root of No, 22. A fireman who ventured tnto the building was overcome and had to be carried out, The fire was put out in about ton minutes, ‘The damage wan auld to amount to 6,000, mostly from water and learned how the blase who (he waistieas woman cas dalncroraudmaaiaa wa coddcndedeinan dimanche ical ih lad acide miata ake ca LIRA THE WORLD: THURSDAY EVENING, MAY 29 KALJAINS ROOM Last night Caraman went to his room shortly after 9 o'clock. Kaljain did not close his jgar store until midnight. He went directly to his room. No one In the house professes to know what happened after that, but at 2 o'clock this morning Mrs. Loubert says she was awakened by groans coming from Kaljain's room. She passed into it from her room and was horrified by the sight which confronted her. Kaljain lay dying on his cot, with his skull crushed and his features beaten Into an unrecognizable mass. The bed, walls and celling were spattered, show- ing that he struggle had gone on all over the room before Caraman got the better of his victim. Found with His Weapon Without making outcry Mrs. Loubert passed into Caraman's room and found him dying. He was strotched across his bed. In his right hand was his revolver, and on the floor beside him lay the ham- mer with which he had beaten out Kal- jain’s brains, A partly emptied whiskey flask stood near by. Mrs. Loubert aroused Charles Helwig, one of her roomers, and sent him for the police. Patrolman Archie McNeil was sitmmoncd, and finding signs of life HANNA SUPREME; DOWNS ENEMIES Presidential Nomination Depends on Re- sult of Ohio Election—To Make Personal Canvass. (Special to The Evening World.) CLEVELAND, O., May %,—Senator application of Francis Dane Chase. for |Hanna’s complete victory in the Re- \a dismissal of the |M. promise, has ot Convention here control publican State demonstrated his supreme the party in Ohto. He has inflicted such a crushing de- foat on George B. Cox that the ques- tion of who is fn control will not be raised again in this State for some tlme. The politicians who are leaving town | to-day are firm in the belief that Mr. Hanna will be a Presidential candidate. Many thought his power would be gone efter the death of President McKinley. His control of Ohio 1s now unquestioned Senator Hannu will make no an- nouncement, nor will he be led into any statement concerning his Presidential aspirations until after the Ohio elec- tions this fall. He will take an active part In the campaign, and if the Re- publicans sweep the State he will make his intentions known BURGLAR-LAWYER JURY DISAGREES, Travers Offers No Defense, but He Scores Triumph for a Second Time—Two New Trials Ahead for Him. Matthew Travers, the burgiar-lawyer, scored another triumph this morning when the jury, after being out hours deliberating on his fate, told Judge Moore that It could not agree: “I'm pretty tired of this,” sald ers, “but T Just can't plead gullt, v- Travers ja worn almout to # skeleton! by the worry of his several court trials. A sentence of thirty years stares him in the face, Two weeks ago he was convicted of entering and looting th home of Dr, Plerce, of Richmond Hilla. Last week the prisoner, acting aa own counsel, secured a disagreement of the Jury with regard to his case. In the present instance Travers prace tically conducted his ow case, ale though Lawyer Clarence A, Edwards advined him, He made no defense, It was the opinion of the court officers that If a defense had been offered ‘Tre would have been acquitted. It ts probable that the present charge will mow te diemissed and vers tried on charge of robbing Police Mer- for! een gere tently Reem OE RC RRR » KILLED HIS EMPLOYER WITH A HAMMER; THEN ATTEMPTED SUICIDE WITH PISTOL. | iJ. S. Kaljain, a Cigar Dealer, Murdered as He Layin Bed by M. Cara. | man, Who Then Shot Himself. in both men he summoned a Bellevue Hospital ambulance. Though his brains were spattered about the room, Kailjain, who was a big powerful man, still had a grip on Ifo. When the hospital attendants attempted to pick him up he grasped the sides of nis iron bed so tightly that the bed which had been partly broken during his death struggle fell to pleces in the ef- fort to wrench loose his hold. Kaljain muttered almost, inaudibly, ! Murder! Murder!" while he was being carried to the ambulance. Kaljain died at 4 o'clock this morning, hour after his removal to pital. Caraman is lingeriny the builet passed through the upper lobe {his brain, and it Is hardly possible for = I he hos- h on. thou) of to live. nip th men Were In thelr night clothes, showing that thelr quarrel had arisen some time after Kaljain wen to his room. The pelice searched the papers in thelr rooms, but found Iittle to throw Heht on thelt Identities or give any cif to the tragedy. ‘Among Carainats papers were letters from W. J. Lyone and Dr. Chadarian, of No. 167 Stuyvesant street, Brooklyn. Cards tn a et showed hi ¢ had been In the cigar business 196 Lexington avenue, 145 East third street and at Third ave- que and. ‘Twents-seventh street, 5 ieee peenannol in employee of Kal- ain’, Ba found C.K. jd this morning that Caranian was a gambler and that he had fre- quent quarrels with Kaljain over their business relations. SUGAR MAN'S AUTO Kit’? Dunley, Famous Great | Neck Constable, Chasing George Arents for Three | Days Without Success. | For three days old “Kit Dunley, a [famous Great Neck constable. has riding up and down the road between Great Neck and Long Island City try- jing to arrest George Arents, Vico-Pres- {dent of the American Sugar Compan charged with violating the law by driv- ing his automobile too fast | The constable's ‘horse has some fine {pointe, but they don't include speed. , According to “Kit,” it is not surprising vhat he has not caught the 4 n, {as he says that the auto m [thirteen miles between vac two ¥ on Tuesday in twenty-six minute The instigator of the action against the sugar man {s J, B. Webb, a Wall 'streot broker, who lives next to Arents. ;Webb owns a lot of fine horses, and three days ago, he alleges, while out driving, the whirling auto of Arents so scared nis horse that he ran away, jcausing Web to drop his high hat. The hat was smashed by the auto and Webb got angry. He pit men with stop watches along the road from Great Neck to Bayside jand they Arents went the distance jat a tw Then Webb got |the warrant_and gave it to Dunley werve, If Dunley catches Arents the case ‘will be heard before Justice of the Peace Dodge on Saturday. Webb and Arents are not the onl, rich men who are at odds over thelr horses and the auto. George P. Dodge, President of the Mineralized’ Rubber Company, and W. L, Btowe, anotner Wall street man, had a row In the Great Neck station yosterda une Stowe said that Dodye's aut riding horses threatens to re had caus: to run ty REMORSE LED TO ARREST. Anxious About Woman He thot, cher Returned, | Bmitten with remorse, George Hatch- er, of No. 43 Twentieth street, Brook- [lyn who thrice shot Tuesday night Mrs, Elizabeth Bartholomew, of No, 24% | Nineteenth street, returned yesterday to rm her condition, and was arrested by Acting-Capt. Hayes and Detectiy | Burnes and Pay. In the Butler Street Court Hateher paid he did not mean to shoot the wom. an, He declared they had a heated argument near his home about another {*! woman, and that he fired into the air Bartholomew, as He was away Mre. etting too abusive, \to sea lane w held. ————— BROOKE LIEUT.-GENERAL. Favorable orton Bil for Rew t Rank, WASHINGTON, May ?%.—The Benate Committee Affaire to-day authorised a QUTRUNS OFFICER, WIFE FAILED IN HUSBAND CHASE, {Man Ran from Home Halli, | Clad Later Was Caught a Mile Away Going Like a Record Runner. The screams of a woman and the Jehoute of her husband whom she war purauing caused a commotion in Sev- enth street at dawn to-day, As aroused Sleepers ran to thelr windows the wo- man arkel thelr ald. Before any one could respond, however. the man had | disappeared, and the 9 weeping bit- teriy, went The man was Charles Dobrynzkl, of o, MA Seventh etreet. His wife said that he had beor acting queerly of late and that she had to watoh him con- tinuaily, To-day rhe awakened as he Was creeping stealthily from their |apartments in his underclotzes. He wax jalready at the door and dashed away as she went after him. | The hustand disappeared around the | corner of Avenue A, It was twenty minutes Janes Halllg of street, Ike a record later when . COL Bast | nekt running | st the corner | Of Avenue A and Twenty-fourth street. | Halligan gave chase agid soon caught | aim. "A" potweman eurkmoned an | bulance from Bellevue and the was held there for examination. STEAM DRUM BURST. IN SILK. FACTORY, |Great Excitement at the Hen- shall Brothers’ Mill in West Fifty-Second Street, but No One Was Injured. am- man A large steam drum or cylinder, of steel, burst in the silk mill of Henshall Brothers, on the third floor of the six- story bullding at No. 617 West Fifty- second street, early this afternoon, A dozen windows were shattered but no persons were injured, though several| had narrow escapes. The other part of the buikiing Is occupied by the Eagle Manufacturing Company, ribbon makers, They employ about three hundred hands, but few were in the place at the time of the explosion. The drum or cylinder was a new one) and had been tried this morning, It was used for holding silk to be dried. The majority of the forty men ami women employed by Henshall Brothers went out at 12 o'clock for luncheon and} only a few persons were in the room when the cylinder burst. One end of it) split apart with a loud report. Those in the factory ran out and the! rest of the employees of the Eagle mills) hurried to the street. Capt. Schmittberger, of the West Forty-seventh street station, heard that an explosion had taken place at the factory. He sent a patrol wagon full of men. They added to the excitement} somewhat, but ft soon quieted, KIDDER’S BODY HERE. ——_— Family of Late Banker Arrive on Steamship Majestic. On the steamship Majestic, which ar- | rived to-day, was the body of Willlam| of Kidder, Peabody #& Co., the! M died in. Lor Alle enjo: his and \children, | nd the family returned on} t was caused on the : of John Lancaster, | nger, to send a tele- a Tt ts against the ruler immigrant (9 attempt to com- with ap nen shore until nt has reached s Island, JUMPED ABOUT Until He Found the Right Food. What a hades some people go through because thelr food does not supply the right kind of nourlshment to the body. Take the following for example; A gentleman in Baltimore says: “About two years ago I vegan to ex- perience a peculiar depression occa- sionally with pains in tne back part of my head and down along the spine. Gradually my eyesight began to fail and my memory grew poor. A general nervousness set in, 1 used all the will power I could command to help myself, but was forced to give up @ good position and seek the ad- vice of the family doctor. He sald I had neurasthenla and sent me to a great nerve specialist. So for four months I was massaged and dosed with medicine, but all to no benefit then I went to New York and con- sulted Dr, — He sent me to an- other great specialist, and he In turn} sent me to —— Sanitarium, where 1) stayed for a long time. “It was the same old story, I was dosed with medicine and massaged and bathed, Finally T left there and went to another specialist, who told me | would only live a few months This rather frightened me and 1) placed myself under Dr. ——. He sald the stomach was at fault and probably T had not been given the right kind of food, “He put me on a certain line of treatment and insisted that I use three or four teaspoonfuls of Grape- Nuts each meal, I was under his care for several months. 1 steadily improved, until now I am fully re- stored to both mental and bodily vigor. He explained to me that Grape- Nuts contains a goodly portion of omer cl to her home ile MO COMER Sonnet 1902. ! PRIVATE DETECTIVE GOT PROOF AGAIN —————— +42 Crane Is to Be Arraigned To-Day for Alleged Larceny of $30 Mrs. Downs Gave Him. 13) Nassau merly resid- Brooklyn, algned this nue Police Ci for before Magia: for alloged s well knows J, and when pocket from Woodruff pledg- im his influence to a ton, an 8 accuser Is Mrs, 10) blond, about thirty years old. her of former Co an Schumnker, and residing at 18 Park place. Her sister Is the of hur C. Salmon, formerly oration Counsel and one ps In Brook wife Assistan & Co, at No. w days ago were prominent Heights society and became Soolally conspicuous in the functions of the Riding and Driving Che Downs {3 particularly a graceful and pioturesque equestrienne. Mrs. Downs asserts that Crane called BROTHER WANTS SISTER DIVORCED. Banyer Ludlow Says that Wealthy Mrs. Warren and Her Husband Were Insane When Married. (Special to The Evening World.) WHITE PLAINS, N. Y., May %.—An action was begun in the Supreme Court at White Plains to-day to obtain a di- voree for Mrs. Elizabeth Clark Lud- low Warren from Louls P. Warren on coma seecdeaalns teats 2.8 ST WRONG MAN) rea furnished room about three ozo, He Ingratiated himself into | Ner Rood graces and promptly advertired | his business and the remarkable work | he had accomplished as a sleuth. Mrs Downs and her hustand have been sep- arated for some time and she suspected that he had been untrue to her. She Wanted to secure a divorce from hini, She confided In Crane, He declared that }for &0 he would ka to Chicago, shadow her husband and If postsble secure the evidence for an absolute di- vorce. Mrs, Downs promptly produced | the money. | Crane went away. Mrs, Downs was 50 fous that she kept watch of | things. She cinims she discovered that ; Crane did not lenve the city, but simpiy Went to the Hotel Savoy, where he en- Joyed himself, ‘Then she had him ar- rested, Crane pleaded not gulity, He Admitted that he xot the money from Mra. Downs and sald he went to Chi- cago and shadowed a man he thought was Mr. Downs as far as the Savoy where he secured evidence of n_char- acter he wa ter, When Mrs. Downs looked the man over she turned up her ose In a dissusted manner and snapped | That is not my buvdand:; he was a better fooking man than that, and ish tn dress and carriage.” Mrs. Downs, it Is said, has an en- gawement with the Kelth-Proctor Cir- cait Company for vaudevilie appearance is having some remarkably striking ‘ostumes made for her debut next fall, HOLIDAY BILL SIGNED. Mayor Approves Aldermanic Reso- lution in Behalf of Employeen. Mavor Low to-day signed the resolu- tion passed by the Board of Aldermen Tuesday granting to the employees of all cltv departments a holiday on Sutur- day follow'ng Decoration Day. Maj, Edward Hetherton, the Mayor's messenger, at the Instignation of Sec- retary Reynolds, hustled up to Grand Central denot early to-day, where he met the Mayor on his way to the break- fast tendered by Whitelaw Reid to the Wrench visitors and secured the neces- sary signature. Comptroller Grout machinery of his office at paring the payrolls for ‘Timmerma’ promptly set the work pre- Paymaster ‘the ground that both are tn: ne, War-{ ren Is in the Poughkeepsie Asylum, while Mrs, Warren Is an {nmate of Dr. Granger's Sanitarium at Bronxville. Mrs, Warren owns real estate and bonds valued at more than $150,000, and on account of her incompetency her 8B. Altman & ds. June 7th, and during June, July, August and | ter, Is the committee of her estate, brother, Banyer Ludlow, of Westches- it is he who brings the divorce ceedings. Mr, Ludlow sets forth that the coup! are alleged to have gone through som form of a marriage ceremony while Mrs, Warren was insane. It is also charged that Warren, who Is an ex- fi yrs of 8:30 A. M. September, their store will be open between the 4 Saturdays: 8:30 A. M. and 12 Noon. policeman of New York, was crazy at that time, Paine’s Celery. Compound Will Secure for You the Health that Other Medicines Cannot Give, ITSTANDS FIRSTAND HIGHEST IN PUBLIC ESTIMATION.’ The Use of One Bottle Convinces the Sceptic and Unbeliever, The tone, character and quality of the testimonials published in favor of Paine's Celery Compound have firmly — established its position in the homes of all intelligent and thoughtful peo- ple. y Paine’s Celery Compound has al-’ ways appealed to the sick and suffer- ing with honest statements and solid facts, Some doubters—with--honest purpose—have taken the trouble to write to and in many cases have interviewed the writers of published testimonials. In every case they have been thoroughly satisfied) and -con- vinced that Paine’s Celery Compound effected cures that were marvellous, aetonishing and happy. : Paine’s Celery Compound claims @ fleld not euccessfully filled by any other remedy known to medical sclr - ence. It is the medicine on which the poor, disappointed sufferer can _ rely after all other medicines fail, when doctors give the patient up ag incurable. To the weak, debilitated, nervous, brokon-down and despondent Paine’s Celery Compound gives a new and joyous existence. It etrengthens the digestive powers, renews the blood and acts in the vitalizing, curative, thorough manner that makes it the grandest help to suffering men and women that the world of medicipe affords, The best test that can be applied to Paine's Celery Compound is to use ft. DIAMOND DYES color, ‘True to name them. and Nothing can equal announce, that beginning and 5 P.M. CHOICE ~ GROCERIES Last week we offered our customers a set of this popu 1 Pound Best No. | Tea, any kind . 35¢ 1 Pound Best Mocha and Java Coffee 2-Pound Package Best Homity....+.++++++++++ (-Pound Can Best Block Pepper...... Pint Bottle Peerless Worcestershire Sauce Pint Bottle Liberty Pickles... seve 12c ALL FOR $1.50. | 8c | | Box of 1,000 Tri | 1,000 sets ready —more if we need then. fine, juley Mensina Pr To ton! 30 FOR 25: Eee B48. 4 9e 8c 7c Boston Baked Beans, Trump) rand. pisin or in aauce mn. 10 Potted Ham or Tongue, « ree ee er in ne 0.1 rest LB MONS, nes Specia ot the va elative merit u ne I. “Remarkable Ofer. Fancy California Prunes averaging 66 to the pound Hy the Bingle Pound we make this Jam, Liporty Brand, frit ® Gatract, Moores Root rand, Deer @ butt rand, Pinca Ke K yO POUND FOR cut out and pre purehe (THE 5c can FVENING WORLD) phosphate of potash, a nerve and brain food, and that the food being partially digested the system could make use of It easily, At any rate 1 got well and both the doctor and myself knew that Grape-Nuts made {t posaible. “T aincerely belleve that practically all of our nervous troubles are caused by imperfect nourishment, It waa fortunate for me that I could get ueh a food as Grape-Nuts, You can use this letter, but don't publish my epant ‘® hous, and] favorable report upon the bill providii Biso of eecapin, om the Queene! for th rome: 4 please. County ‘ie ed bed rank oF Tloutonant-c aera wil tum Co,, Battle Creek, Mich, - « i i mila ek Lo re ce was tabi EWN * } The Famous | Pride of St. Lou's, Milled to our special order by one of the best flouring mills in America, CHQICE ROCERIES FREE THIS WEEK! so gratifying that we repeat the offer again, this time giving it with a splendid assort- ment of standard groceries—an assortment that is ordered weekly by nearly every — housekeeper. No advance in prices because of the free set 2-Pound Package Triumph Oats....-..+++++ Large Box Blue Ribton Ta :le Sait. 1 Can Essie Maine Corn. Pint Bottle Liberty To:nato Catsup 14 ePound Box Acure BIUC.....+++seee reese enee THE TABLE TENNIS FREE! First come, first served; but if we run out by Saturday leave your order and Groceries and Table Tennis will be delivered early next week. lar game. The response was of Table Tennis. umph Parlor Matches... . | Sponge Lady Finge Social Tea Biscuit, Patapwo Brand, Mary- Liberty Brand, yi. Ol ‘9. oF 3 for 4, Blood Red or 2 tor quart Cider Vinegar, our Bert, quart battle aie

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