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) t RICH MAN'S WARD INTHE ALMISHOUGE Lawyer Robert N. Waite, Whose Daughter She Claims to Be, Pays City $108 a Year for Her Keep NOT HIS CHILD, HE SAYS. Attorney Declares that Young Woman Is the Adopted Daugh- ter of a Brother, Now Dead, and Signs Contract with City. The strange. insistence of Grace Waite, @n inmate of the almshouse, that she ts the daughter of Robert N. Waite, a law- yer, of No, 257 Broadway, in the face of his denials, comes to light again through publicity given a centract made between Mr. Waite and the Commissioner of Charities. This contract was executed on Jan. %, 1903, and by its provisions Mr. Waite agrees to pay for the mainten- ance of Grace Waite at the almshouse at the rate of $108 a year. “It Is a puzzling case," said Superin- tendent Merwin, of the Department of Outdoor Poor, to-d “My attention Was first oatled to it last August, when I received a letter £ idence say- ing that a girl In the almshouse there claimed to be the daughter of Robert N Waite and that this city should take care of her, “The Providence autho they had sent several tles sald that essages to Mr. * Waite, but could get no eatisfaction from » Widow, Mrs, Maddox. In this elty matca him. city. n they sent the girl to this Canled on Waite to Pay. “Since taxing cha ge of this depart ment [ have mide t a po'nt to dosist that all pers vble to pay anything stoward the support of relatives in t Almshouse shall do so, 1 cot after Mr. Waite and tinaily he agreed to pay the} city $108 a year, the bare cost of her keen. “Mr. Waite told :ne that the wirl was not his daughter, but a relative who had lived in his famity. He sald he had a large family of his own and svuld not afford to keep this outcast, although he had tried to get her taken care of by private persons. “I instructed Keeper Roberts to give the girl extra care and she has shown considerable improvement. She con- Unues' to assert that Mr. Waite Is hor tathor. When she came here hep nery- ous system was broken down as the re- sult of neglect.” Robert N. Waite is a well-known law- yer. He has been murried three times, but had ue children by his last tw wives. 15} trst wife he had thir- teer, children, of whom six are said to be living Mr, Waite was First Assistant United States Distrlet-Attorney for the Eastern Disiics of Pennsyivania when only ‘Wenty-four years old, He met the s een-year-old daughter of a sea cap- tain and married her. She died in 1890, Wedded Two Widewn, Two years lates Mr. Waite ma. ‘The not a happy one, and after % they In. 1398 e mar Mrs, Harriet Bond, Mr, ite is Bvarly seven luis wite was iifty when ied her, Waite. when is the adopted f a brother of mine, who fs we ‘8 divorced. now ded, He fdopted ner when she WAS a little girl saw her at that time, but never suw her again until she was brought to this city from Provi- °. ‘My brother lived in the West. When he died, a few years ago, I suppose the girl drifted back to Boston, She has uo legal claim upon me. I am paying for her maintenance as an act of char- ity, Physiclans who have examined her tell _me that she is insane, showing traces of hereditary insanity.” An Ewening World reporter visited Grace Waite in the hospital at the lmshouse this afternoon. The girl is greatly improved and the physician in chargé believes that she will eventually recover completely. She has some diffi- culty in collecting her thoughts and ex- pressing them, but her memory appears to be fairly good, Once Very Benutifal, Bofore her iliness she was undoubtedly a very beautiful girl, She has big brown eyes, regular features and good teeth. She ‘uses excellent English. Other than for a demeanor expressing fright she appears to be as normal as any woman recovering from 2 sgvere physical and mental strain. If Robert N. Waite ys he is not my father ‘he telis an untruth,” said the girl, “It Is true that he las disowned But J am his daughter and his wife 3 my mobhe 1 am twenty-three years, old. M. mother died when I was‘elght years old, We lived then at No, 218 Carrollton street, Brooklyn. My school days were spent in Byooklyn. 1 ‘have three brothers and three sisters living. “When my father moved to New York from Brooklyn I met a young man who deceived me and I had'to leave home. I went to work as a saleswoman in a Bixth avenue store and lived in West Eighty-sixth street. The number of the house 1 cannot remember. “1 was taken iil and spent six weeks in Bellevue Hospital. When I was dis- * charged trom that institution T went tc Providence, R, I., where J lived in Jack- son avenue. T never fully recovered my strength, and, finally, [| guess 1. lost my mind, for 'l cannot remember much of what has happened in the last year. This Is a true statement of my dife, a ROOSEVELT IN WASHINGTON. Return Trip from ‘This Clty was Without Incident. WASHINGTON, Feb. %7.—President Roosevelt and his party arrived here on @ special train from New York over the Pennsylvania Railroad at 7.20 o'clock tor day, The rip was without incident. The President alighted from his car soon as tho train had pulled into the tation and, after shaking hands with the engineer and sfireman of the loco- motive, entered his carriage, which was in waiting, Acgompanied by Capt. Cowles. he was driven directly to the White House. He expressed himself as ereatly pleased with the meeting in Carnegio Hall jast nighé, referring to ae & great aud inspiring assemblage. A gah 7 Preside j them out. ‘told her mother what had happened, and TRE 7 YOUNG WOMAN IN WHOSE BOARD A LAWYER PAYS GRACE E. WAITE. eat WORLD: FRIDAY #:¥. ENING, FEBRUARY 27, 1903. ALMSHOUSE RED AREDCIAL' AWFUL TEMPER, Got Miss Norton Into Trouble with Her Landlady, a Fight with a Boarder and Caused Her to Smash Things. BUT SHE COULDN'T HELP IT. Whirlwind They Expect? RED-HAIRED GIRL CAN'T HELP HER QUICK TEMPER. Tt im m medtoal fact that a person with real red hair is tu- variably possessed with a flery temper, The pigment that col. ors the hatr is drawn from the ayatem. ‘This pigment is in the Dlood. It permeates the whole nervous system and though it ts impoavitie to analyze it into its constituent elements it tn known that it ts equivalent to ® pecultarly powerful stimulant that fires the nerves und thus Produces uncontrollable pax- CHARCED BY CIRL WITH ABDUCTION. |William Boyer, Musician, Is Ac- cused of Having Tried to Iil- treat Child of Fifteen at a Newark Hotel. “WIFE” FIGURED IN CASE. | William Boyer, a musician, was ar- |ralgned in Jefferson Market Court to- day on a charge of abduction. Agents Pessaro and Fogarty made the charge. It appears that Boyer advertieed for a companion to travel with his wife. He lealled, rigged out in a gorgeous uni- | form, on Yarda Jacobson, at No. 158 |East ‘Thirtieth street. Yarda, who is jonly fifteen years old and has been going to school, answered the advertisement, but Boyer talked with her mother und |Made representations that seemed sat- | Istactory, ‘The agents say that Boyer took the |girl to the Palace Hotel in Newark. | N. J. ostensibly to await the coming of his wife, His wife did nut appear, and | Boyer attempted “to detain the girl in his room, She erled, and the hotel people put Then Yarda went home and the police arrested Boyer. The agents say that in Boyer’s room, at No. 36 West Fifteenth street, t! found letters from young girls out of town. Boyer says his home is in San Francisco, The “wife appears to be a myth, — Fiance of Miss Constance Pratt, Dies at a Connecticut Academy. THE GIRL IS PROSTRATED. News reached here to-day of the death of Robert Stockton Pyne, nineteen years old, at Pomfret School, Pomfret, Conn., and there ig intense sorrow both at the home of his parents, No. 23 Madison avenue, and in the Pratt man- sion, at No, 44 West Fifty-third street. At the latter address lives Miss Con- stance J, Pratt, daughter of Mrs, Dallas Bache Pratt, and only a short time ago the younger fashionable set was great- ly interested over the reported engage- ment of young Pyne to Miss Pratt, Both Mrs, Moses Taylor Pyne and Mrs, Pratt emphatically denied the ré- port, “Our gon Js nothing but a cbild,” said Mrs, Taylor, “and entirely too young to think of girls or marriag On the other hand, Mrs, Pratt an- nounced “Constance is a schoolgir! and not yet presented. They are too young to know that hearts are a part of thelr anatomy.” Despite the parental objection, which was made entirely on the grounds of ex- treme youth, both the young folke ae- claved that they loved each other and would be married. “I am not a child,’ eaid Miss Constance determined) nd Bob and I know just what we want. Friends of the two were anxiius to see the match go through, as the young persons had been sweethearts since childhood, Their marria, would have united two of New York's ollest fam ie 3 Pratt's father is a banker, He and Moses Tayler Pyne are meinbers uf the Tuxedo, Metrepolitan and a doen othor clubs. Pity are Bons of the Its Vo. uth their Wives aie Colont nd Daughters of the Feevonae alts Eas arte taal ag DEATH ENDS A. (ONE DEAD IN FIRE SCHOOLODY LOVE) FOUR MISSIN Young Robert Stockton Pyne,|Scveral Lodgers Penned in Up- ation. Often this pigment will be drained from the system and the halr will change to a darker shade. Then—and I know thia to be true from long yenrs of observation—the person, man or woman, slowly grows milder in manner and In able to control the rising pnxstons. While thin pigment fs in the system, how- ever, it fs m physical imponni- bility to keep the passions in cheek.—Dr, Robert Safford Newton. —sae" the LITTLE MGA ON BROADWAY Water Main Bursts and Pours Into 80-Foot Subway Excava- tion, Giving Uptown Residents ar Impromptu Waterfall. The Market Court went up eleven degrees temperature in Jefferson to-day when Florence Norton, a very pretty red-haired darnsel, swept in with Policeman Burburneck, of the West Thirtieth street station, Miss Norton, who: ls developing ‘her histrionic talents in a vaudeville theatre, was charged with assault and battery and various other misdemeanors by her landlady, Mrs. Bllen Hardy, of No. 38 West Twenty-fourth street, When the charge was read the Magis- trate opened his mouth in astonishment as his eyes fell on the fatr prisoner. who stood demurely before him with her eyes at a coquett’sh angle. She was dressed in a tight-fitting Jacket and a tailor-made skirt that brought out the full round lines of her s;mmetrical form. A Spanish hat with a huge black Plume relieved the radiance of her hair and the rosy red in her dimpled cheeks, Even the mouth of the octogenarian cop on the bridge watercd as he looked upon her ruby lips puckered in a tempt- ing pout. But when Policeman Bur- burneck finished his story a buzz of| amazement hummed through the court room. Here {s the story: Wouldn’t Take §5 Check, Florence told the landlady yesterday that she was going away from there and she offered a check for $ on a New Haven Bank. The landlady said she Would not accept the check “Then you will not get any money said Florence sweetly. “I will hold your luggage, then,” sald Mrs. Hardy firmly. All of a sudden Florence's lustrous halr turned a shade redder and threatening flashes appeared in the coiled strands. The tempting lips set firmly and two deep red spots appeared in both cheeks and Miss Norton strode away to her room. The landlady: followed, The two entered together. Mrs, Hardy re- peated her threat to hold Florence's belongings. All of a sudden bright flames shot from under the Spanish hat, and simultaneously a small fist shot out, landing upon Mrs, Hardy's riwht eve, “Then they had it!" explained a: Ger- man boarder, who saw the struggle. “Mein Gott! how they had it! Sooch bumps, sooch tumbles and sooch fall Policeman Burburneck was sum- moned before the conclusion of the fourth round in time to find Miss Norton landing short Jabs on the landlady's ribs, He got between them and caugit a swing on the point of the Jaw. “Um a Whirlwind,” She Said. ARID IN| MANY HOUSES. Houses atong Broadway Ronlevard be- tween Seventy-ninth and Eighty-sixth streets are without water to-day because of s break in the big main at Seventy- ninth stréet. For two hours a stream of water wa spouted into the air, form- ing a great stream down the boulevard ‘and a waterfall of more than miniature dimensions {nto the subway excavation, whjch Is SO feet deep at that point. . Policeman Bevan, of the West Sixty- éighth street station, was on post when he was startled by a rushing sound, and looking- down the street saw paving blocks and gravel hurled high into the alr. The water, he sald, spouted to a height of fully forty feot. He telephoned to the station-house and the water department soon had a repalr gang at the scene of the break Waen they arrived a wide stream wa running to the edge of the subway cut, fifteen feet away. It tumbled down thé rocky bank, forming a picture thut looked entirely natural. ‘The gates at Eighty-sixth and Seventy- ninth streets were shut off and the re- | Pair men started to uncover the break, | Upon investigation it was decided that | the break had been caused Ly constant blasting at this point. Almost over the | main is a large derrick weighing about two tons. ‘The blasting and weight of | the derrick had caused the main to sag, causing a break Before the water was shut off theco were several feet of it In the tunnel per Floors, Badly Burned Es- caping Blaze That Destroyed Big Building in Lowell. WOMAN WRITER A VICTIM. LOWELL, Mass. Feb. 27.-One or more persons lost their lives in the fire 5 "My temper 1s up," sald Mlorence; which broke out in the Burbank block | «1m a whirlwind, and nothing can en here early to-day. me.” . The bullding was used for business, lodging-house and social purposes, street floor containing stores ond, Burburneck retired behind the f bed just in time to miss an arm Mrs, Hardy retired to her corner. Just at that moment Miss the the sec- third and fourth floors, lodging- Kittle Tooms and the top floor, a dance hall, | head in the door and asked timidly, ‘Ls There were seventy-five lodgers in the baie the manent house’ when’ { peers orence made a flying leap and nips rate he fire broke out and at! caught the intruding red helr wih lat He back teat. mene reported that lives) hands and pulled out two handt is, of peen lgat, Dut at daybreak it Was! hair, Policeman Burourneck aid, shat | said that all the lodgers had been ac- counted for. 6till, a search of the ruins was made, she would have pulled out tie he not interfered. rest bud He then trie to in- duce Florence to leave the house with and after several hours the body of|him. she sald she had just it rted in. | aes farah ¥. ala & magazin’) She picked up « dig matels clock trom writer, was found, the mantel and dashed it on tho floor. Later it was reported that four other |‘Then she tumped on With her ila eho 4 persons were missing and search of the plDRied i Bien ni wth the canpe he fragiy rulns was continued Rubles atheotion There were & number of narrow es-| every. pane capes and several persons sustained ai foe pee i plece and burns and other injuries, Irhen she pulled down the foldir The total damage, which involve and picking out @ fallow lal it on | Horace Bhattuck, owner of the block, | {29 4 "Look here.” she si 2 imay, the proprietor of five stores on the] wnh Wan arlil heat inte (uefaalmiye street floor, and Blanche ‘Foster, pro-| corner. "this is what 1 wou nve done prietress of the lodging-house, 1s esti.|(2 You, /f You had not thrown ap. ts eponge.' With that she seized a chair and emote the pillow a whirlwind of blows un the room was filled with a snowfall of feathers, Then she mopped sudden! mated at $125,000, partly covered by in- surance, The fire in its progress threatened the Belvidere Hotel, which stands next to] Any turning to Policeman iiursur, the Burbank block, but a heavy fire| suld wail: proved an effective barrier, ‘The| “Now 1 fee! a ittle better.” Howe Building, which stands next to Glad It Was Over. the Burbank block on the other side fi trom the hotel, also was protected trom| « me iad sald Li biuecgst fatntiy, ~ suppose 1 bettor,’ damage by @ thick wall, She Warned Every One She Was a and Nothing Could Stop Her, and What Else Could Wood. another red-haired gir}, put her | FLORENCE WHOSE @ \@ | Florencé, “but,” 28 flashed ) Wood's hair. What I did get was only jAgain, “don't get my dander up and get| a switch, You might not believe it, me started, f almost lost. my tempor | Judge. but T have quite a temper." | Just now.” Magistrate Cornell simply. gasped and her, Cornell. beautiful y Hberately any one “T guess th | me any mor I did not pull out more of that Kittle NEWPORT, R. I., authorities are solve the m fe by exposing weather on Newport body was found opp Mrs. T. Shaw Safe. where Jain Near where her and her ey she sald to Wien Miss Norton was arratgned in court no complainant appeared against y don’t care to trifle with lagistrat e only thing J regret is that ‘eb, thelr doing ystery down to die ORTON,-RED-HAIRED GIRL, TEMPER CAUSE i 3 $ 2PO9 990 099995000909OOO99 LT guess Twill have to discharge you, as there is no complainant here,” | and’Florence tripped out of court, “The man she marries," sald the | Court afterward, “will not have to com- plain about the’ monotony of domestic quiet.” nody “was found } to ng WwW n Who ended her h f to the bitter mous elift. Her ite the estate of she had de- after stroying everything that would give any de- idea of her real identity. 1t Js thought, er, that sho was highly connected and caine from Washington, young woman arrived here last May and went to the home of Mrs Danlel Walsh, where ¢ used a room. She sald that he ame was Barker, but never talked about herself and made no attempt to pe sociable with WOMANS SUICIDE RISKED HIS LIFE A DEEP MYSTERY Young Stranger, Evidently of! Fine Family, Found Dead on Cliffs at Newport, Where She Prepared for Slow Death. TRIED TO HIDE IDENTITY. 27.—The local | utmost in the suletde of a An open copy of Scott's “Iyanhoo" and A brass-bound ible, A little distance off were a box containing some luncheon and candy, and a parasol and some lextra clothing. A search of her clothing revealed two pairs of spe #, one of gold, the otaer of silver; a gold watch, a purse con- taining $1.40, and two parlor-car tickets, Jone from Los Angeles to Washington, | dated June 21, 192, and tne othen from Chicago to Niagara, dated Sopt 12. Medical Examiner Stewart, after an lexamination of the body, said that there was Uttle doubt that the young woman had died of exposure, The body was removed to the morgue, She was short and slight, and welghed 0 pounds, Her features were delicately formed and her form was beautifully moulded, Her auburn hair was short and curly, her cliffs w high-water The only Ja printed £ on A week ago Wednesday disappeared, int! a negro, the authorities | ROBERT EMMET ME nd) nothing while the Aytr mark tangible body Jus clow ri As up w le m from ¢ May 1 at Abrary, to ETING. —— walking and on, t Mise Barker” was heard of the above which er on of Con: which n mn knowledge Molle (iab Will | Anniversary of 1 | A public de under the @ Club, of J y t ie one hundred and twenty-fifth analve sury of the birth of Ireland's Robert Emme at ih Hal of York and Henders ‘ night, Mare b, ald | John M. Wale, of & ak owtne “Life of F vt nd James A. Murtha, jr, of Br will speak on Irish 'Mreedom ebrated sing will enliven the meviln; Peea) fst EP See hss ee replied. patriotic songs, we with stirring “FOR CHILDRENS | Seeing Six Little Ones in Peril from a Runaway Horse Po- liceman Michael Kenny Brave- ly Sprang at Its Head. ‘KNOCKED DOWN, DRAGGED. At the risk of serious injury Pollce- man Michael Kenny, of the Hast One Hundred and Fourth street station, stoped a runaway horse at noon to-day within a few feet of where a half-dozen children stood directly in the path of the horse, paralyzed with féar. was attached to awagon y John O'Brien. It toot fright Hundred and Sixth street and Madison avenue. At One Hundred and Seventh street O'Brien was thrown out and the horse ran on Kenny saw it at One Hundred and Ninth street street. At that moment about fifty children from the One Hun- dred and Tenth street school were crossing Madison avenue. Most of them ran otu of harm's way, but six of the smaller ones, paralyzed with fear, stood as if riveted to the ground directly in the path of the horse. The policeman leaped for the bridle. He was overturned by the onrush, but clung to the reins, He was dragged al- most a block, but stopped the horse within ten fect of. the children. Kenny's uniform was torn and he was badly shaken up. A horse attached to a furniture van took fright in front of Public School No. 14, on Norfolk street, this afternoon, and knocked down Delia Kats, eleven years old, of No, 139 Norfolk street, and Bessie Sadadusky, nine years olf, of No. 127 Suffolk street. The children were not seriously injured and were attended at The driver of the van is Bern- crachman, twenty-seven years old, 0, 109 Ludlow street. BIGAMY CHARGED AGAINST BARLEY The Superintendent of Track Construction of Lackawan- na Arrested To-Day. William H. Barley, superintendent of track construction on the Lackawanna railroad, was arrested to-day at bis home, No, 315$ Hudson Boulevard, Jer City Heights, on a charge of big- Deputy Sheriff Wood, of Orange County, New York, made the complaint Wood says that Barley was married in| Isst in Walden, Orange County, and hia| wife and four children are* living there. | One of hin daughters 1s eighteen years hd While at Lake, near Walden, in 1992, Vood says Barley met ear-old | girl named Marle Fro and} om June 27 of that ye was married to} ner by the Rey, B Count at War- wick, N. Y, He was ving with her when arrested Since September of last year Mrs. aBr- ey bas been looking for her husband. Depuly Bheriff Wood sald when Harley | Was arrested that he knew both women} afd thelr families. 6 |would call a ‘fish stor markable recovery by dropping cof- fee and using Postum, and when I fee and nervous dyspepsia and built himself up on the food drink. So I heard of one afler another don’t know how many I have known of some sort by leav “SHINE! SHINE! TWO WAS ERY Plucky Western Girls Adopt a/ Novel Means of Getting Rich Quick in the Wall Street Dis- trict. TICKETS ARE’ SELLING FAST. Brokers Surrender to the Pair from! Mlinois and Invest Their Dimes at| a Great Rate—Had to Work to Earn a Livelihood. Thie entities the holder to one shine at the Eagle Tonmorial Parlor, No. 71 Wall atteet, on Monday, March 2. The very newest get-rich-quick con- cern that ever struck New York was launched in Wall street to-day by two pretty young girls from Illinois. Marie Forrest and le Forrest, two sisters, the one only eighteen years old, the other two years her senior, invaded the financial district before the bulls and bears had begun to shout their wares on ‘change. These two enterprising maidens, both attractive brunettes, with the red-rose dloom of country on thelr cheeks and smiling misthlevously, were busy all day distributing tickets bearing the above legend throughout Wal, Beaver, New and Broad streets. At first the brokers and kings of finance turned to them the real icy countenance. “Don't want any women canvassers,” was the brutal answer that the Llinois girls had in the offices. By and by it was learned that the maidens were en- deavoring to earn an ‘honest living by shining shoes, and that, too, with dainty white hands. Then “the street’ fell. Before noon a thousand tickets hed been pald for at 10 cents each, and the question now is, How are Belle and Marie going to keep the contract? What they offer to do is to shine for one day the boots of every customer who enters the barber shop at No. 71 Wall street. While Marie is at one foot Belle proposes shining up the ofher. “I'll just tell you how it was,” sald the latter, as she spread out fifteen Uckets fan-shape for speedy purchase by gallant brokers in the Congolldated Ex- change. ‘Marie and I just came from Champaign, Il—accent on the Il., if you please—and we had a notion to start a manicure parlor here. Everybody seems to get rich in this place. We thought it would be easy to earn an honest living. “But in about three weeks we had not found a thing to do and our funds were on the last ebb, We were living then at No. 249 West Twenty-ninth street right {n the Tenderloin, and the things we saw there just fairly sickened us Marie,’ I sald one day, when we 61an’t know whether to have dinner or breakfast—aure, only one meal per for us—I'll do any mortal thing rather than live like these women around ‘her. I'll black boots.’ “Well, just that quick, Marte said: ‘Let's black boote,’ and now you know It all. We're golng to be on’ hand next Monday bright and early—practise up in the mean thme—and I'll bet we make @ lot. Just see the way they're buying tlekets!"" ——=__—— STOLE PICTURE OF PIRATE. An artistic thief got Into the coat room of Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, yesterday and stole an oll painting of a pirate. Combining the useful with the orna- mental, he took away a $40 overcoat be- longing to one of the students. The painting is the work of Howard Pyle, and is the property of Scribners, It ta valued at $100. In view of the fact that there has been a long series of thefts at Pratt Institute, the police are mating extraordinary efforts to discover this thief. NO JOKE, But 90 Lbs. of Solid Flesh. If Mark Twain should write a story about a person who weighed 90 pounds and increased her weight to 180 pounds (or double) in one year by quitting coffee and drinking Postum Coffee, every one who read it would way, “There's a joke behind that somewhere,” There is a well-known lady in Coraopolis, Pa., who actually made this gain in weight as the direct re- sult of leaving off coffee and taking up Postum Food Coffee. It was a very earnest matter and far from a joke for her. Her gain in general health kept pace with the increase in weight. She says: “For many years I suf- fered with stomach derangement and violent and oft-recurring headaches. It was not an unusual thing for our family of four to use 2% to 3 pounds of coffee a week. I was suspicious that my troubles were due to coffee, but as I did not like tea or cocoa or chocolate, there seemed no palatable hot drink for me to take at my meals, “Then it. was 1 heard of Postum and decided to try it. I was just con- valescing from a serious illness and was very weak and emaciated. I know it sounds like what people * but I actually went from 90 pounds to 180 pounds weight in one year, All the sallow- | ness disappeared from my skin and I now sarry my 40 years very lightly indeed, My change in health is so great that many of my friends make a joke of it to this day, but my on: I Kid Oxfords, with patent leather and| are good and I am happy and con- tented, so can afford to laugh with | them, | ‘lL first learned of Postum from a family in Indianapolis, where I saw | the mother of six children emerge from inyalidism to perfect health on Postum after leaving off coffee. Soon | after that another friend made a re-| moved here a neighbor shook off cof- until I from disease off the urug coffee and using Postum Food Coffee. of who have recover Burley was locked up, and extradition papers to take him to Orange County / name, eat ola © ~ have been applied toy “You are at liberty to use my Postum Co., ene v (CAMMEYER] 6th Ave.,Cor. 20th Ste Habe You Been to Our ~ rs 7 ' Tremendous Anniversary Sale ¥ tn the We opened the basement six years ago. : Now we celebrate that opening with this the most} wonderful sale during all those six years. ee Never before has nee known of such high-grade footwear being sold at such low prices !! 150,000 "sie For Men, Women & Childrens) and Ebery Pair Guaranteed. . 35,000 pairs of Women’s$2.50 Bat- ton and Lace Shoes, Black kid,heavy and light soles, with military heels, { } } 25,000 pairs of Women’s $6.00, $5.00, $4.00 and $3.00 Batton and Lace Shoes, in black Slik ts Bo ° ogly « 7,000 pairs of Women’s $5.00 and $4.00 Slippers, assorted styles, high and r low heels. AA, A andBavidthsonly, $1.50 Per Pair 5,000 pairs of Men’s $3.00 O fords, patent leather, Rassiaca and brown kid, assorted styles, patent leather sizes 814 to 11, $1,50 18,000 pairs of Men's $3.50) and $4.00 Oxfords, heavy’ Win- ter and mediam weight, invelour calf and box calf, Wwelted sole: 5). 00 Per Pair. 25,000 pairs of men’s $4.00, $3.50, and $3.00 Lace Shoes, patent leather, black kid, . box! calf, wax calf, velour calf and enamel leather; light and hea i soles; also wax calf Congress,§ + with tips and plain toes, at $1.90 Per Pair. 5,000 pairs of Women's $1.50 Black hid tips,alsopatent leather cane Coto S 1 OOne 4,000 pairs of Women's $1,50 One- Strap Sandals, ith French 7.6 heel: . . c 5,000 pairs of Women's $2.50 Black Kid and Box Calf, Spring Heel, Button and Lace, sises $1.50 q 246 to Tevsere 000 pairs of Misses’ $2.00 Shoes, in Black hid, vith patent. leather and k:d tips, sizes f 2 2,000 pairs of Children’s $1,50 Shoes, in black kid, patent leather 4 namel leather. sts aoe signe father eet $ 1.00 2,009 pairs of Children's $1.00 But- ton and Lace Shoes, black kid with patent leather tips. sizes 84% 75¢ 1011, cennteewereees Boys’ and Youths* 7,000 vairs of \ $1,255 ° Satin Calf Lace Shoes, Sises Hto 2 82% fos Basement ?\* Pairs of” + 3,000 pairs of Boys* i Lace Shoes, sises 2% to Sh, 4,000 pairs of Youths’ Satin Lace Shoes, sizes 1 90 to2, - Open Saturdays Until 7 P, My” i