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HARRIET HUBBARD And the Summer Girl with Two Lovers. caer Mre. Aver: Lam a summer girl just home from a long yacation during which a dozen men were attentive to me. Out of this dozen there are two I like @nd each has told me his attentions wus serious. Now, how am I to decide which I shail accept, if elther? They are not In the least u.. vise, yet I think one day I am fond of gue and could be happy with him, ang the next day If the other ‘one comes fo see me Tseem to like him best. One Is 9 young man in business for himself and very generous. He certainly treats me Mke nothing was too good for me. He “has blue eyes and {s very jolly—a good dreveer. The other ie a clerk in a pack- ing house. He was at the hotel with Ws mother and two sisters, but 1 don’t care for his people. They are too quiet. He has dark cyes and Is tall, and he eays 1 am the first girl he has ever Yoved. Now, what, do you advise me to do? Your admirer, DAISY 0. There is nothing so original about tke letter that {t merits spoctal atien- tion. It Is because it fs so like many others that I {cel prompted to use it, not ata text. for my friends know 1 y way of a st. ing ts that come to me Place for the as I read The Eventng World lovers’ letters, of the we: about their love One perbays of eavth forty knows someting of the sent call and too often miscail love ‘The girl who wrote me the letter print: ed to-day is not in love with elther of the men she suggests marrying. ‘Nhe very fact that she Is pr d to lat me @eclde for her sat! settles the condition of her heart, w man has yet made an impre:sion upon, The gir] who sums up the me: Svitor by stating that he 4 and ts a good 4 ris c way from the proper att ing a matrimonial selection Tt is a thousand pties men and @o not ure the same common sense and judgment in selecting Kfe partners they use in affairs that really are of trivial importance girl, young inex. penlenced, will se or any article to wear some ‘show of thought and intcitigence, She will 1 ich neither AYER quire whether the goods fe of real vaiue or shoddy. She will not pay a high price for cheap fabrics, no matter how pretty the color or pattern, and when she makes up her mind she knows whether the goods will wear well, and all Its posetbilities of service, She witt take days to consider the out, the trim- ming of a summer gown and when she ad in for every flounce n she is meditating a chdice of a husband, # daily, hourly companion for the rest of her life—a bargain that 14 to days of the earthly pilgrimage for twe soné—she apparently has never given this most solemm matter ten minutes serious reflection. time for two men cnough to be the wife of either one. Love vhat is worthy of the terribly abused name thas to be founded not only on physical attractions but on the char acter of the personally pleasing man whose looks have awakened an Interest. Looks are sil to be deceptive. T think they are a fair guide to a man’s nature 42 a woman has learned to read them. “A blue-eyed man—a good drewer— and a money spender." How many a young wife to-day in tears regrets the thoughtleseness that led her to place her hand In that of a Dear giris, it you were going to wear one style of dress for years wouldn't you Ike a week to deolde on the pat- refully and honest!y mental and physical, of the then candidly @ct them against your own and deelde whether a union of the two for life will mean happiness and inspiration for good to both, or wre: aggravation of weak- union result. hearts a A mar. outward yoarance and a debo' manner is the gue to jvorse couse. AU ma nse nearest son antagont ives are for any re the helght of folly ery HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. BATHING SUIT BROKE OFF ENGAGEMEN This bathing sult broke an engage- ment. It belongs to Miss Sallie Kers- tris, of North Tonawanta. N. Y., and Wesley Kinlamb, her erstwhile flance, says It should be at least three inches longer in the skirt. He dared even to fay so to Miss Kerstris, who resented the erference and declared she would never marry him. The bathing suit is made of red, green and blue cloth. Upon tae day of its purchase the en- gaged couple attended a reception of a mutual frieud. Home one dared Mirs Kerstris to don her bathing sult. She did so and sent for Kinlamb to come and see it. He refused indignantly, and the young girl, clad in the offending sult, walked into the room where he stood with the assembled guests. Her lover turned away from the shocking sight. “How do you like it, Wesley?” she asked. “It's awful,” he gasped. “You can’t wear that thing at Crystal Beach.” “I intend to wear !t," replied Miss bee Kerstris, stamping her foot. “If you go with me you must have “that skirt made three Inches longer.” “I won't go to Crystal Beach with you, I won't speak to you.” Upon these words Kinlamb angrily left the house—and as yet the skirt has not ea enc and the engagement is off, What do you think of it, Evening} World readers? Which was right, Sallie) or Wesley? CUPID’S PRACTICAL JOKE. in; the profusion of bables, yes, the bright fa SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS. Boston yout » at the pension, and its lan it seemed to | ; so foreign that he could scarcely nal and kiifl-hearted, barbarous ant fd and splendid, CUAPTER 1. Friend and Lover. HE came back instantly, j orally, spirttualiy, phy teenth and eighteenth | highly clvilizea hae tt planned she will have a reason | and putting her head with some «i and additions, He stepped | pointing with her and in ten minute: but his voice was were Indescribable. er been taught wa: nees to wear anything that shop and bought s mother, with the clphe= ito a print shap, beautiful old tea mean happiness or evisery for all the TAKING AN INTEREST IN AFFAIRS. My dear girls, let me assure you there is no such thing as caring at the same she sald: “My what to do with 7 day writing home; tern. The way tO chouse a hustand ts) eigh the claret, but on sonora to this eff founded only on a pleasing and can only be the forerunner of mis- “BUT YOU ARE SURPLY NOT GOING TO PAINT YOUR DOOR THAT COTORT" found a delightful and rare head of Turenne. longed to any one else, nor to allow anybody else to When, presently, he got! back to the Pension Bel wear anything that belonged to him. over his recovery, sealed his lps. self, her belongings, her himself. made an {dol of his only sleter, yo such § passion. stiff, embarrassed way shown any with him, stralt- ey out of danger. Gado he found the senora sitting on @ camp-stool on the veranda. She wore # wonderfal flowered dressing gown. Her hair was what she would herself have called ebou- ‘The entire absence of any consciousness on the sonora’s part that she wes doing anything rem&rka- ble, anything to which he could possibly object, added to the fact that she bad nursed Bim, cooked for him, worrted over him, wept over him, and now was rejoicing with all her own generous, loving heart Shd was superintending the process of having her front door painted a bright shade of blue. workman was very old, incredibly shabby, one-eyed, He was nat @ painter at all, in poorest proteges. When he was up again the senora removed her- rvants, tradespople, and all the paraphernalia of a sick-room down the cor- ridor, and El was left ajone, sttting up in a very. gorgeous new dressing-gown with his room all to pamlyzed and lame, was one of the senora’ She ‘had about fifty, and M. Arnauld was perhaps the feeblest, snuffest and moat unpractical of them all. But to have heard the senora one would have sup- posed M. Arnauld to be a Boucher at least, The jenora hed mixed charmed with it. She had suggested the panels, which were to be of olive green. Bhe had an excuse for giving M. Arnauld @ fob, which was best of all. “Now,” my good Arnaul taste you have! Now Eli had lived alone all hic life, in a way. Hi: father had never understood him, His mother had 10 had died three before, and had been able to give Ell only craps of affection as were left over from that the paint hereelf. she was saying, “what What a beutiful color you have How charmingly you have done those panels, I am enchanted. When I want & thing well done something always says to me, Sead for Arnauld. ‘The old man smiled, cooked his eye at the door gravely and remarked impressively, ‘Madame Is It was not until very recently thet she had in aj ing in dealing She had not neglected him; yet Ell had keenly felt | Plen comme le ctelt tho difference. For under his cold and reservd ox- terlor, loaded with trons and kept habitually In‘a coat, was a warm and very hungry heart. As he sat by the fire now, what he wa: was the infinite kindness and pity of the senora’s and the tears that rolled down her cheeks when he seemed about to choke! The delight, yes, the genuine, unmistakable delight, that showed Itself | in her mobfle face when the doctor pronounced him the senora greeted him with a gay Mon cher M. Boston, One, two, tree, four Pefcelving Ell, It fs very ‘an'some. you have been out @ long tim rir, It 18 not prudent—that.’ Ell acknowledged this, explained that he had been DOTTED LINES SHOW 1 | starr exrexnen. THE EARTH’S YOUNGER DAYS. KINGDOMS FADED 7,000 YEARS i AGO. Panama hats are invariably rather ex-| settlement at Osiris, and the objects found !naure con- tinulty from the fnal stages of the pre- historic age to the period indicated by | jhe remains from the royal tombs. | Sclence ts now satisfied that the great Abydos began with the pensive headgear, but there 4s probably founding of the kingdom there. pot another in the world of such value @s' the specimen in University College, @ays the London Express. Modern workmanship. This hat ‘Is an @nolent land of Isis and Osiris, \ {The collection represents the research | rok done by Prof, Filnders Petrio at \ Abydos, and by Drs. Grenfell and Hunt search for papyri in Pt fa the Fayum, and some of the relics 2 pantthlals sori old. |) Baree turies “ound PAn unbroken stratified sericea of de- posits, ranging over four or five cen- |yet to be cleared—but much sculpture, “It 4 2,000 years old, but to-day it Is as ranging from the sixth to the twent le as the finest example of sixth dynasties has been discov and also a number of granite, limestone ptlan production, and on view be- and wooden sarcophagi, and a good deal Gide it are other antiquiles from the) of funeral furniture, Dr. B. F. Grenfell and Dr. A. 8. Hunt faave devoted themselves, on behalf of the Graeco-Roman branch, mainly to a emic cem collection—Greek and demotic, ‘The present year’s explorations into! The exhibition at University College is past cover every period of the fairly representative of the year's rec- , but the most important solen-|ord. There are mummies of men, chil- flo result has been the accurate con-|dren, dog: @ection of the prehistoric and the his-| numberless ments. — Mitia dic. Ronly: not so bad: Where the hot corn Mow York City.” $10 FOR A “LOBSTER” LIMERICK. Don't be a “lobster.” But you can aee one without being one, and you can have fun with one without getting into jall for it as the Virginia Hsutenant of “Bo just try your hand at writing a “lobster” lmerick, something lke this, ‘He was eating a sweet corn cob, sir, Which made his caressing gob stir Sald hie girl with a smile. ‘Back to Coney Isle! waits for the lobster." - . The Evening World will give $10 for the best ‘lobster’ limerick about any ‘Nobster,” no matter where you saw him or what he was doing. _fend your verse to "Lobster Limerick Editor, Evening World, P. 0, box too !nterestal to observe how the time was passing. Tae senora grew grave, dignified, serious: you ste our cnere belle ville for the first time! Nat- mousteur 1s overwhelmed, emotioned, never en anything 8o fine. not scold, no. There 1s @ oup of hot chocolate for monsteur in his room. Fil smiled at her gratefully and tried to say a word ‘The senora's face was not without wrinkles. ‘OTH TO WHICH had lost the soft contours of youth, THE FIANCE OF 388 KERSTRIS WANTED} Te-couldiexpress that seomed a| never gloomy. kind above all; childlike, Infantine in its trifle to Ell). But {t was never hard, on the contrary; strange to say—sometimes almost innocent gayety and sweetness, He dressed and went out into the streets and got a good general idea of the old city, unlike’ any other on thls continent. werything In the French quarter interested him the signs, the people, ny restaurants with thelr sanded floors, giving dl- rectly on the street; T understand. “Have you ever been to Boston?"' he asked, growing impressive In his turn. The senora shook her head dubiousty It 1s In New York—Yes Ell was so staggered that he had almost to lean “I know not BY FRANCES COURTENAY BAYLOR. don me for corre ation, Wut rom it personal preadtn, length and the sublimity of F leally EM Ww ihe did speak h Boing to 4 t you chink ing? drown, gray? Ht would ba hideous! id have this lovely color I will go to now,” said EM. “But before let me return you this, and thank you for the stamp you so kind She looked from him to the pennies in his hand and from the pennies to him suddenly, blushed az she had not done since she was alxteon, and then went off into a peal of laughter. Then, with her usual tact, seeing Eli there bewildered, embarrassed, and not too pleased, jaar Monsleur Bostone, I know not I thought not again of the stamp. And to give back like thees t» not usage. bunch of violets, yet. A box of bonbons if one ts well-elevated, possibly, But sous—ney aye! ra) I will keep—as souvenirs. Yes, as souve- nina!” lent me.” With this she suppressed her lingering amusement | violently, sat down on the camp-stool, and devoted | herself afresh to the blue door. | Ell returned to his room and spent the rest of the but his thoughts were with the senora. At the table d’hote of the Pension Bel Gado every nationality under the sun «cemed to be representad. | Dhere wax a perfect be Ell was the omy Amerte: n presen French, Spanish or Italian, wi On the first day Ell produ & bro} bexs of monsieur not to polsor villanous logwood any loser. this house is tmported from Fra pronounced by gourmunds unsurpassed. sure that monsieur has been deceived by cipled wine merchan a having a re r t by a wa health takes the liberty vo make this suggestion.” Ell had prided himself on that claret piqued. Ho tried it on one or two of his n departures, Unsings, splutte profound bows and profu that his claret did not find favor in Ne and he gave In, substituting the New Orle It was not long before he found his way to the | senora’s room at the end of the corridor, It was not a private room by any means. body in the houre, and, it presently seen almost everybody In the neighborhood, way to It. And of this he was no bad Judge, for ne | goon formed the habit of dropping in himself every day hefore going for. his morning walk about the city, There was first a large room, with a big desk cov ered with papers; a big closet full of medicines; ing table at which a toothless old Spanish woman, who weighed 200, was stone deaf and never wore any stockings, wad nearly always to be found cutting out| lowed to far mysterious garments for madame and her poor. "Nobody cuts and fits like my good Martina,” scnora would say, "She works herself to death for us ingrates."* There was a beautiful old Louis Quinze cabinet, a yellow satin sofa, a recess at one end hung with blue silk and lace curtains. There was an aviary next to It, full of birds, mak- ing such an uproar that one could often scarcely be heard. ‘There was an altar at one end that Ell felt very badly about. ‘There were so many ligai artificial flowers, such a variety of saints, such a lot} of tinsel anil tissuc-paper. He, never did get thoroughly reconciled to that altar until It came to pass that he found on ft one day, under the largest brass candlestick, nies, and behind that candlestick a photograph of EM Whitaker Perkins. In the doorway hung madame's parrot needs, affairs of her friends; the news from the great world of Europe; the decrees, tests, fasts of the Cathol Chureh, were poured out upon BI-Bi's head, panied by such tender leaves of lettu of sugar, endearments, fatter have turned any human bdeing’s head. BI-B! knew that the senora had fallen in love with Eli a month before she knew It herself. That parrot stuck in Eli's craw for a long thine. a sallor's boarding-house— | 15 BIG VAUDE- and St but kismet. Her old blind cat, to which she was al-| most as communicative and quite as kind neh far better It suggested so strong’ matic old poodle, who understood F than El! did, were more bearable against the ¢ront door for support, fresh blue paint It was Monsteur Arnauld who with @ bow, paint-brush in hand, filied his hiatus: pavements, the old court-yards filed with fountains the prevalence of verandas, the bright drei and flowers, jJaloustes, enormous green shutt The work of investigation is not yet ompleted—several gigantic tombs have Yet {t was in this room and to love the senora, (To Be Continued.) MAY MANTON’S HELPS tlon, but the height, ton mentally, od By fd’ “But you are surely int your door that color, fee brown or gray would be Then she sat down of forelgn tongues, ‘The cooking was something delicious. ‘The wines, whether German, e pure and excellent da bottle of his own second he had a message from the himeel¢ with directly rbors at table The effect was dramutic, to say the least. For Those Who Make Their Own Dresses. lace trimmed, makes, at the back is Jald In fla: inverted platts, and the front can be shaped for the dip or round walst, as preferred, The quantity of material required for and skirt, and 1s com-| the medium size Is, for coat, 5% yards Jored gulpure lace | 21 inches wide, 2% yards 44 inches wide, 2% yards 53 inches wide; Cor skirt, 8% material 21 inches wide, 8% d by means inches wide, 6 yards 32 inches, seams. At) wide, or 6 yards 44 inches wide. are deep box| The coat pattern 4135 is cut in three thelr entire! sines—nmal! or 32 inch, medium or 36 for late summer and early auty art mode} Is made with coat, anner, | oF ront® and backs | yards ly and is shape of under-arm and fronts nd that extend | {leaves the throat open, The sleeves are| Tho skirt pattern 4069 Is cut in eines This ts n sketch of the fashlonable;be obtained through The Bvening costume which May Manton describes| World by following Miss Manton's In these columns to-day. Patterns may ! directions, \jength and give grace and freedom. The| inch, and large or 40 inch bust measure, neck {8 finished with a big collar that| It will be mailed for 10 cents. |the new big ones, laid in box plaits and| for a 2%, 24, 26, 28, 30 38 and 3¢ walst |finiahed with roll-over flare cuffs, but| measure. It will be mailed for 10c, the cuffs can be omitted and the sleeves| If bovh patterns are wanted send 9 Beneath them can be| cents. worn any of those now in vogue without] If in a hurry for your patterns send danger of rumpling or crushing. | an extra 2-cent stamp for each pattern, The skirt 18 cut In seven gores, that| and they will be promptly mailed by are curved to fit the figure at the upper| letter post in sealed envelope. portion, and to produce the fashionable} Gend money to “Cashier, The World, ; flare at the lower portion. The fulness| Pulitzer Building, New York City.” Amusements. | Amusements ATTA BI na y 4 cH: Permanent Stock On, E. Wilson, Florence Reed, aint ae oth hy Ington, 2) others, tn the Rollickiag ‘Tals Afternoon, 3. ‘This Kventng 9.20. mp crmedy, IDR. Bit SHANNON’ S pity BAND — 123d Sif teeunucns Leweting, Venger, 2A, PAIN'S Ste" aNeens | toe by. Base Rr 14th St. Theatre, nr. 6th ave, Mata Wed. & Sat, ro| Brendon Tynan t's, hear her talk to it was a liberal New Orleans educ'! tion. All the gossip of the nelghborhood rants, mendecities and miseries of hi the gossip of the clubs; the peccadilloes and pe | aia of the boarders; the thefts and fallu he servants; the crimes of the tradespeople; | coresrestsre: Robert Emmet or iss all the | Biggs vajoleries, as would hat he learned to know HOW SHE FOOLED THEM. GIRL TENDERFOOT’S WAGER. f “V4 like to git one of them Bastern times have a trick of doing. the Swift Current your wager. sald the stage driver with Hf sneer that brought the color to my! mookingly. -Caroline Lookhart in Lip- pincott'’s Magazine. of the average Westerner at Eastern | people had gradually grown to be a You couldn't do It.” aald In a startled voice. 1s premature,” d, cartridges, and I'll git no takers, gered the stage driver. “Oh, yes you will,” I answered, and |my Ips came together as they som Good Sense tenderfeet up on exclaimed the stage driver, terles, and they have unearthed a large Ifke that," expos- “Don't do nothia' ‘The habitual slur tylated “Doc! Robinson. “No woman ever went over that pass. alligators, and there are toys and personal orna- sitive polnt with me. “Any particular reason for thinking that because a man wears a collar and qefiantly as I rose washes behind his ears once in a while “you a‘l hear, I have taken the wager. Is lacking ja physical courage?” I asked y¢ 7 lose I will pay my bet. Several pleces of statuagy have been brought over, and also some remarkablo of the earliest kingdom, has been) portraits on wood of the deceased per- in & town whioh had the ultimate, sons found in the various tombs ex- fate to be inclosed as the temenos of plored. to know how many persons \ p ° “Mebby not.” sneered Big Steve, “bat -lare easily, quickly, and per- I'll bet an ox-team couldn't git no tour-} excitediy, ist over that pa: would you like to bet?” nd I expect there was an angry Silence had fallen And if you do,” ¢ “you'll git your ca’tridxes 0: we'll take ‘em out of his hide.’ And this was the origin of the most exciting venture I have ever had, The | next Morning T started for Swift Cur- to hire a gulde to show me the terrible Swift sparkle in my eyes. uppn the table. “TN bet a hunc@d round of 9-90 rifle pass. NOTHING EASIER. Mr. and Mrs. Balley, recently married, were beginning thelr housekeeping, and were doing the work STRANGE LITTLE TA!LORS. —thre shape doesn’t m “Most curlous are the sewing or tatlor birds of India—Ifttle yellow things not much larger than one's thumb. ‘To es- cape falling a prey a young couple nor the age, or sex. snakes ayd the tailor bird picks up a dead leat and files up into a tree, and with a fiber for a thread and its ill for a needle sews the leaf to a green one hanging from the tree. The aides are ‘wewed up, an opening to the nest thus formed being left at the top, That a nest is ewinging in the tree no snalce or selves, mays th . was having some troule]and Prices. an SCAN Oe one of the presents, a fine upon tho wall of the dining-réom. ce haia He tateine, ‘ad asked the young wile, “to put up shat a et It pluriib,"” he thy, con't you aba asked in SOLD NOWHERE ELSE, IN JAMES 8S. COWARD,|w™ {the | 268-274 Greenwich St., near Warrenst.X.%, RLTENBORN Se caro Catalogue, | Amusements THE DAYS Brooklyn Amusements. tt Gupte rcalway pertormence. | c's MON TAUK wan eat PASTOR'S » i Sgt FLORODORA 20 & 30 CENTS. x THE DONOVAN: : ee COLUMBIAnE tt ae veainy HELI a, oa A eR Be VANE EYRE. BRIGHTON 2. i ae E=4 Wright, Hunt & Co, Smith Mons. Durand, Veraon, others, Brass Martne HAMMERSTELN'S, 424 ARADISE ROOF GARD! Eve. 8.15) .. CREATORE & Excursions. VILLE ACTS | His BAND OF 60, | BARGAIN MAT, (S0e,) SATURDAYS, ACADENY Or en seen oxrone se BOSTONIANS = ROBIN HOOD ||| THe SWITOHBACK Prices $5,60.76,1.00. Mats, Wed. & Sat, 2. Bve, 8.16 AND RETURR | SUNDAY, SEPT. 14th | BROADWAY ress: late "Wet, & hae Meaty. tees | SALLY cue ALLEY. lee VALLEY RAILROAD tal train will leave, oe THE EMPIRE THEATRE, roadway & 0 OWal SJOHIN | Sener hegre” DREW TAPE DWM MEAN, once THEATRE, AST WE jext Wee! Evenings, § 20 CRITERION THEATR Evenings, $15. Matinee e 3 NEW SAVOY THEATRE say 1 He A Boas. { ROBERT EDESO: SOLDIERS OF} HOCKER THEATER at 810 Preoively. Mat all else-|oeuxs EVENING, BOX OFFICE OPEN 9 A. Mt Our Business is to FIT) Madison Sq. ARDEN. LAST NIGHT, | i JAPAN BY NiuilT. SOUVE er, |) tdinabo—— "| TH THE MATINEE AT THis THe ATRE. Madison § ware Theatre, Shoe Erunt® THE NEW CLOWN. Diway & 44th ot For Everybody. ‘W. i. Glial bavi wiitow You would be surprised! > FORTUN, Bway & \fectly fitted here, who can THE ROGERS BRUTHERS In iMARVARD inot be fitted at WEBER & FIELDS’ syste) TWIRLY-W | ons ng Ms d HIRLY | |AMERICAN (2). 0°35 a Sop tects eh Te MAT. DAILY DiWi¥ Bon Hesquers| the’ Shoes — [Del st. Biba au ee a Manhattan MVM es |_ CAPTAIN MOLLY. Casino’ er £15 A Chinese Honeymoon York, 230 Sta. Aig ®t Yandt and Desbrosses oe Brooklyn “Fulton BE). turning ty. Manel inoue inack, a ber Tiexetomersat ‘erry Stations ‘WOexts and $M and 121 Rroadway. rom Brooklyn 150. editions) LONG ISLAND D RAILROAD DE ANG. 5) Sullivan's |BuBRALD AX ACHE, ORB EACS. foaled ISLE.| Leave aces ¥ 9.90," 11-00 A. aL EN PDP 64, 7. 1. | 119 to 7, 3.10. 10, 4.40, 5.20, 5.40, 6.08. S40 PS g aaaltionet 1 civ, 1240 PL ML) ite: Last 3 WEEKS at minutes after Jum at. | THE Fatal, ha oe ieee . 15 ve = th, GRAND: wedding | Hiatt [BOU— Shae. ah / HEARTS ARLAME. | “Siz. are Line Steamers 7: CAR re LET SHES | ponerse KING HIGHBALL,|2==TLE 4 ROR i] RoRED is a oaenenee ARGUMENTS as wink | BY CONSULTING THE ALOE FISCHAR saesnseunes” Mrs, JACK World Alman uditorium, B'way & wun. | 3.30. Dwiy | DEST SHOW IN TOWS KEITH Sind), | BRAS Acre 9) 14th at, | PRIC 1800 tote Te 4a ce Tecnely Treated Wal ae ROOST a nai, cite