The evening world. Newspaper, April 9, 1903, Page 15

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a THE we EVENING » WORLD'S « HOME . MAGAZINE Ten ellgras ashen! fase eet or tec /PRACTICAL LESSONS IN °% 128. egy Bir7 ze ES Lesson IV. Describes the Influ- rence a Girl May Exert on x the Mind and Actions of the ; Man Who Loves Her. YOUNG man is always influenced, 4 eansclously or unconsclously, by the ‘girl he ts secking to win. Moreover At'dg seldom diMcult to tnfluence him in the right direction. fen in love wish to be truly manly. They h to lead good Uves. ‘They want all the good they can get out of life, but they often, through lack of wisdom, cheat themselves in setting up a false standard and ignoring or underestimating the Pequisites that are really life's best. him—exert over him a wonderful influ- ence. His great wish is to please hi naturally defers to her opinion (n all mat- ters. A good young girl's influence will help her lover to develop rapidly the manly character which she will certainly desire in her husband, The influence of o thoughtless, trary, may spoil all his chances in Mfe. reformation from bad habits may be more | easily influenced by the girl when the to marry ® man to reform him. What) | the lover will not do or refrain from for the eake of winntng @ wite, steadily exercised from the earliest days! of acquaintance. She should met her} fdeal of manhood high and expect her sweetheart not to fail below it- She’ has a perfect right to turn away with! maidenty disdatn from any man who ig- nores here pure, sweet code of morals, or who offends egaingt mice social pro-| prieties. THE ART OF WINNING A WIFE. BY HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. win for his wife. When he fs {ll-man- nered or boorish she shouhl expect and demand an apology. A sincere apology will nearly always “make up" a Jover*s querel over mat- ters of light $mportanes. But in affairs of more moment an apology is not suf- fictent unless ét includes an earnest pur- Pose to give up the cause of offence. Distinctly wrong habits, such as drink- ing, gambling, horse-racing and the ike, The girl he loves can—if she also loves i he frivolous girl, on the oon- Hither development of good habits or an is her wooer than after he becomes 7 husband. ‘Therefore tt is never eafo The young girl's influence must be A man must show courtesy and full| Recreation, of Sonrae, they must have. respect to the woman he is trying to! WITH A SINGLE GESTURE “THIS LITTLE MAN LIFTS TONS W you are one of the interested ‘watchers who linger on Park Row 0 watch the work on the subway there is one sight which will attract your ateemtion and perhaps consume yous hme much longer than you realize, Me fe the iifting of the big planks or n@edies for supporting the street, which are carried from one place to another by ‘means of a cable and block, ‘Th ckowdsof watchers wiio loiter in tho vielnity of the Post-OMice are surprised afthe seemingly quiet and easy manner in whieh the work is carried on, and bus- ineap. men who are hurrying to thelr Work are even tempted to stop and watch the process of “needle” lifting, Opposite the south end of the Post- Office, on the aPrk Row elde, the huge pile of planks or logs, technically oall needles, are plaged when ithey are brought from plier 2 East River. From this spot they are carried to d ferent parts of the subway where they are needed. The workmen whose business it Is to Operate the work place a number of the Needles, bound together with ropes and bands, on the block, and apparently without any connection from ozher @ources the huge mass is swung into che alr and slowly makes its way on the cable up to the spot where it is needled and ie lowered into the subway ‘vork, Af you watch the progress of the work, IR | however, you will see that the hug: mass of wood, each needle of which weighs nearly 500 pounds, moves as the result of signals, About seventy-five or a hundred feet away from the pile of needles, near the place where the materiel ts to be used, stands a ttle man on a ladder. Further up the street, at a distance of seventy- live feet, ie the Mig engine which fur- nlshes power for the lifting, ‘The little man mounted on the ladder waves his hand to the workmen at the pile of needies; they are alert on his signals, He then waves his hand to the en- gineer and the work of lifting the huge needles for New York's subway vegins, As the immense freight moves over the cables the little man on the ladder watches {t with a keen eye. When tt Is time to be lowered he signais again and the meedies are brought down to earth after thelr slow progress above the heads of the hurrying crowds on Park Row. don't see anything wonderful about it,” said the signal man. “Of course all IT do is to wave my hand and the men @t the pile of needles have enough sense to know that means "Let her go.’ I's the engineer's work then to start the ball rolling, 1t's all a matter of keeping our eyes open for signals and the fact hat I'm so far away irom B thon doesn't make any particular dit Following are a few not Wedding by « brother.’ be eager and diligent, | was your ‘the public: "Deas Madam—Kindly oe ptares just before ‘was injured “ae A FEW ODD EXCUSES. that teachers in an east side school have re- @ently received, saye the Lewiston Journul: “Dear Mise H.—Pleas excus Minnie and Lena for being ase Weddings seem much in vogue among the families Other pupil walked pompously into the c. Presented her teacher with an eplstle that read as follows: ‘Miley S.~Please excuse my daughter Leahs absents, the last day before by her mother’s sister.” A tandy pupll brought in thia production: "Dear Miss ¥.~/Phe reason why our daughter combs late, Jaminess to leave the bed in the morning but we hope henceforward to make her ‘The heroes and higroines of tho following certainly deserve the sympathy of should never Ibe Ughtly condoned tn a to win. Graiw him to wholesomer pleasure and nearly always tt is powenful to do a trying to talk frankly with you young people and got you really rightly started in the wa of true love-making. than the wish to make prigs of manly young men or prudes of light-hearted young women. pose ax wise in deolding what is really special rather than generat advie I will hardly do or more often not do for , Atal! ry to answer your letters as help~ the sake of a wife already won. lover by the young woman he ts trying Her gentle influence should In this series of articles I have been Nothing is further from m thoughts I only want you to be honest in pur- “worth whl If any of you care to write to me for \ttully as it 1s in my power to doy To-morrow’s lesson will ex: plain what “Living on Love’ really moans; also how a man may keep a woman’s heart when he has won it. D* thing, Being extracts from “The Letters from a Sclf-Made Merchant to His Son,” by | George Horace Lorimer, published in book Boston, and reproduced here by special permission of the publishers. (Copyright, 1902, by Small, meannen spot where he hits he about. B! Itt It's only natv here’ that 2. fellow ever cultivated. orders. Mayuar AN PIPRREPONT: Don't ever write me another of the sufferer letters, firet hitche up to the break wago critter chat stands too quiet inter the whip. that I've got to fight. | The only animal which the Bible calle patient {x an ass, and that's both good octrine and good natural history. That's the way I feel about these young fellows who lazy turn in at every gate where there seems to fo a little shade and sutking and balking whenever you ray “git-ap" to them. howling that Bill Smith was promoted because he had a pull, and that they are being tield down because the manager is jealous of them, pulis in my time, but I never saw one strong enough to lift @ man any higher| than he could raise himself by his boot-straps, or Jong enough to reach through the cashier's window for more money than tts owner earned, When a fellow brags that he thas pull, he's a liar or his employer's a fool. And when @ fellow whines that he's belng held down, the truth {s, as a general) that his boss can't hold tim up, He just picks a nice, soft spot, stretches out flat on his back and yells that @ome heartless brute has knocked him down and Is sitting on his chest. A good man {a as full of bounce as a cat with a small boy and a bull terrier after him. When he's thrown to the dog from the second-story window ho fixes while he's ailing through the air to land right, and when the dox jumps for the ‘t there, but in the top of the tree across the street. When a fellow knows his business he doesn’t have to explain to people that he does. It isn't what a man knows, but what he thinks he knows that he brags talk means little knowledge, There's 2 vast diffetence between having a carioad of miscellaneous facts sloshing around Ioone in your head and getting all mixed up in transit and casi ing the same assortment properly boxed and crated for convenient handing and immediate delivery. ing too much, Hdueation will broaflen @ narrow mind, but there’ cure for a big head. Poverty never spolls a good man, but prosperity often does. It's easy to stand hard times, because that’s the only thing you can do, but In good thmes thé fool-Killer has to do night work. Tact Is the knack of keeping quiet at the right time: of being po agreeable yourself that no one can be disagreeable to you; of making Infertority fool like equality. A tactful man can pull the stinger from a bee without getting stung. Some men deal in facts, and call Bil! Jones a lar. Some men deal in subterfuges, and say that Bill Jones's father was a kettle-ren- Gered Har, and that his mother's maiden name was Sapphira, and that any one who believes in the Darwinian theory should pity rather than blame their eon. They, get disliked. , But your tactful man says that, since Baron Munchausen, no one has been @o chuck full of bully reminiscence Bill he ta helf tiokled to death, because he doesn't know that the higher oriticism has hurt the Baron's reputation. There are two kinds of information: one to which everybody's entitled, and that ts taught in school; and one which nobody ought to know and that Je what you think of @ill Jones. Of course, where you feel # man is not square oyu will be armed to mest him, but never on his own ground. Make him be honest with you if you can, but don't let him make you dishonest with him, When you make a mistake, don't make the second one—keeping it to yourself, Own up. The time to sort out rotten eggs is at the nest. ‘The deeper you hide them in the case the longer thoy stay in circulation, and the worse !mpression they make when they finally come to the breakfast table. A mistake @prouts a Ue when you cover it up, And one lle breeds enough distrust to choke out the prettiest crop of confidence and anything ‘That “When business te good, thal ts the time to force 4 and when it fs bad, that is the time to force it, Some salesmen think that selling is but a good salesman is like a good ten't hungry. I don’t care how good old methods are, new ones are Detter, cook—he can create an appetite when the buyer form by Small, Maynard & Co. 4 & Od Entered at Stationera Mall CHICAGO, April 15, 189 sad, swoel, gentio| hat a oolt should kick a trifle when he's nd I'm always a ite suspicious of a| L know {t's not meeknes#, but hand to tell which ds the worst. along trying to They are the men who are always Tye seen a good many worse than knowing too Ittle, it's know- no known They get knocked down, Bill Jones; and when that comes back to man gets the trade, ‘cept yourself, it, because it will come easy; like eating—to satisfy an existing appetite; GOTHAM too, because we will need the SOCIETY IN 1786 HAD ALL “MODERN” FOLLIES, = re the clly watch came, of 4 E ot sathing criticism that! Tous 1785 were the worthy ity j fatters accused of the same off }tant later, under the namos of @ oklyn and Ramapo water sean Y irred tho publte pulse. ‘The Veggar of 175%, iL will de Aden rome e following paragraph printed im that ar, Was very mush ke the peretitenit endicant of to-day: ‘ is infested by a crowd gum tinder the déenominath Even ———— in to-day, Many of Our Ancestors, Ac- cording to Newspapers of That Date, Flirted, Drank, Robbed the City and Proved Incompetent in Ofiice. 1 outline of “Fashions lerh wontan who res clan of her waye and manners. Witness the f wing extracts; ‘His the fashion among pollte on Sunday evening.” y mo HR Rey. Dr L.A, Banke, who; | es are quite the 100 and orange hawkera. Bome IT Uertared that New York sovioty is, fF ladles to stoop much when i hale and hearty a ple, with the crust steeped | © 4 tA re: elout young ro ous-looking feHows in the Dottom romey with | Nhonat te teats trease| Whom neture caicalated for holding tite doe 1 the mitdle meade of whiskey | bb thie tS ot sae LU ain preference to the’ em! cocktatie, in the Intest of many ft { women end invalids, tt is GaRayae aymen to take the modern | jowing {o the vast stioata of these Now sake little old it frail-vellera that the prige t ake whon Itle o! York w New sas itil in sine as 1 now is only In the endeai diminu. tive of its sons and daughters, the as ¥, moutaplooes through which public evils were aire), a ro ism ‘at Pabiie Faith,” ays were giving apace to denunciation | ot | ash! why hast thaw | the e phases of clty life which of cried th dard of berty and ‘ fond t rmor of the present day, ashe i Nearly years ago, as an ap- antec i ‘A foreigner observes that thete cl of the first New a ully pendix to a rapri York City of extracts Directary, from the compilation papers of few cities that he haa Seen ‘in there is less energy in the administra old Manhattan for ¢ in the tion of the pollca than in New Yi yoar 1786 was pubilst From those on twa are "good, but we gather that our great grandmothers Constant complaints in the | were not only villitied for their drink a kad The Gotham Beggar, pany with their wives. gar ang unfashionable.” “It 19 the fashion for gentlemen to patch and perfume themselves before they are secen among ladies. “It is the fashion for young ladtes to Invite young gentlemen to visit them." “It is the fashion for ladies to drink porter Jn the afternoon. Tea {s quite out of date among genteel people.” It is very vul- the evil.” ae ‘The public are cautioned against: adie sharper now ine, sity: bee! drab outside coat. a sles whito waistcoat, reaches, and a round hat, He the inteltigence office a tow days the dusk of the evening, By § dite oowaien man’ mine's pal T80 ikeofled, and said he \ ay ho ey, 00 on good security.’ The magistrates do not attend to tl duties. Beare ‘a day passes, but citizen receives some ineult or” from me Sharnelere carmen or 1786 The Kangaroo Walk, ing habits, but also for their extrava- Devotee to the cocktail, inured to the gance in their fine dressing, and even for that very same “kangaroo walk” Scotch and soda, as the modern socisty ‘woman is eald to be, she would find it diMeult to equal the porter-drinking festivals of her great-granthmother, On the 2d of the game month the city abuse. “"Mhe Clty Corporation invites praposals| 80 much ridiculed {n our own day. At that time, when the population of Pure water, persons or companies de-| government comes in for its share of for water works to supply the city with the entire city and county was less than) ting to obtain ‘the privilewe to Ipave 4,000 souls, and the Dog and Duck Tev-|Proposais at the office of the City Clerk ern, “at the Bowery Lane near the two-|!n Malden lane. It is to be hoped that] + leflance to the Inw. Une milestone,” was advertised as hay-| the corporation of the city in providing! c Jarod Astor, ae Seems H+ ing the best bed of asparagus on the! means for dntroducing a eaupply of waier Quaseeere St musical (netruments island, there was the me pisces for the inhabitants will prevent a few fre ‘will dispose of on very low terms against the city government that there Use Allen’s Foot-Base, | A powder to be shaken into the, @hoes. Your feet feel swoilen, ner- Amusements MADISON SQUARE GARD! Amusements. Whure ra To? hi TPROCTOR'S TODAY, 200. Be. TO NIGHT., Res.7h0. even ff they're only just as good. That's not so Irish as tt sounds, Doing the same thing in the same way year after year ts like eati toward the middle of the month ap fell slice of ook id dog. Your affectionate father, Ing & quall a day for thirty days. Along low beging to long for a broiled crow or a JOHN GRAHIAS. GHE WRONG CLVE.---By J. T. BISHOP. (Caprright, 1903, by Dally Story Publishing Co.) OWARD MARSH, euthor and jour- Pallst, acknowledged that he was! about to undertake a foolish| quest, and that most of his friends) “owl acouse him of having something! {n Ms mental machinery if they ~* happen to hear of it. He ac-| weiwed it to Trask, the olty editor, who’ was silent and phiegmatic: and Yather @ dull fellow on the whole, to his} way of thinkng, though he rather liked to talk to him at times ‘because he lis- tened 60 well. He acknowledged it aggin to Uttle Miss Barbara Scott, who had assed the hey-day of young girlhood, one would say, and whom Marsh found! to be @ nice little old maid enough, and quiet, as old maids ought to be. Dut it was to Mies Barbara that he said, without reserve: “You know, Miss Barbara~you won't mind my sitting here in the gallery, will you?—well, I am quite sure I would know her the very minute I saw her or heard her voice, Absurd, isn't it?—to have fatten in love with—with @ mind, one might say, But from the time 1 read ‘Dhe Cross of Fire’ I knew that I must find the author. And everything she has written since has appealed to me tu such 4 way--there is such tenderness, Such Insight—something so elusive, as though one had caught a giimpse of a Dryad in the woode—and I simply am going to find her, you «now. It was beustly mean in the pub- Usher not to give me tier name, but I did find out that she lived in this part of the world—strange that she writes under that naine-Orcad—isn't it? Well, | am going to stay out hero and look Inio every face-in the country until T find her, You may taugh—I fancy 1 saw you smiling—but 1 think 1 shail know her,"’ , they gota of that section, for an- Jase-room after a day's absence and She went toa wedding it conaist in her tchool time, at heh we Lougnis tatsonss Noes t we thoug! Internal insides but the dogtor asid it was ‘was much, However be narrowly senaped Catal death ‘ the brusing of the Sppydermys of the ‘The next day he came back with fiah- ing-rod and empty baeket, but with alert Step and jubilant eye. “I have caught a glimpse of the new Misa Bledsoe," he sald, “the one who haa keen away from home, Her name de Bye, twn't it? I have seen Miss Sarah and have half-way believed that she might have written "Lhe Cros of Pire'—she is a cultivated girl, you know, and the house is filled with books. It really must be one or the other of the Bledsoee—they are almost olner people I have fe are quite incapable of 1, But Barah (# so—well, she is @ very plain sir, you knowenot whet you would call @ beauty at all, And this other on ty bewutdtul—I have heard #0 from sev wently. and look at her. The only drawback to Mr, Marsh's happiness lay in the fact that he could not well go to the beautiful Miss Wlea- “I know that you are who wrote ‘The Cross of soe and say: the ‘Orea Piro, he waid once, what @ goft voice woodland spirit, “Te is am more aure of her every da: Have you ever noticed o hast—en awfully Sweet volce, Miss Barbara. And she ia of just that shy, reserved kind—a true Miss Sarah i quiet, pleasure merely to sit ri ms 7" eared Miss B: too—but I don't think it can be Mis: possibl “It Miss Garah were beautiful there would be two possibilities, Barbara with a little smi! would lead to a great deal of irresolu- e."" ,| Sarah, do you, Miss Barbara? It 4s al: most sure to be them—I am positive of that—and it doesn't seem to me that Migs Garah ia or the other of tion and complicate your decision." He fi “But, intance, IBy it was that ‘re you golng to toll me that you! dik! of ¥9) ¢ a ining fh herd Bhe asked, without Malo ts Aha wireatl toe, melt knew urning her head i ‘ * nN ive “rouna ber. ne gua I saw her, (Much obliged with « new quality in his voice. “That a bled the} {e—1 have found-—Bye. 1 suppose 1 muat | tas siting thers, have come here for that.” Ha s laugh "And aa isthe lady of your ju iin sin sibel 0 The name inoet conspicuously asso- clatod with the Macedonian movement js thut but i “Wher graphed from capitals grade, Salonica and back aga foff embodies the idea of Macedonia for the Macedonians, lie is a conspirator | and rebel of the classic type, absolutely Without scruply and fond of yelling hi Proceedings in lirtd tery. He ts, 4 short, an extremist, A Macedonian by | birth, he was sent at an carly age to Bulguria, and there received h!s educa tion, He Bulgarian pubii service, bu unced 1¢ in order to conspire for the rescue of his teilow- countrymen trom the yoke of th ceded from the Moderate Party and formed a new organization to carry on his propaganda 4 With work, He deiinnely # ushed uneasily. the other ohe beautiful,” he “And 1 um sure she ts the one.” of Boris Sara‘off. desporate nature happens in the Batkans onpe attribuied {a feverishly tele- jy at 6 is Sarafoft?’ halt a to Constantine this organization Not dosen opie. he Sofia, 1. Sara- to him, ropes Be Laced ona. ie now at and all the news received of an imponding rebellion are echoes of his operation He 1m resolved to defeat the scheme Gf reforms set.on foot by the powers, | ato: Turk, A Man Who Sought an Ideal and a Man Who Found One. : mot may be,” he sald. mnly thi rest I remember 1s that I in love with the most beautiful ae 4 a G mt “What more could one ask," id Misa Paty, el of ete: ot tutte a abet lipped | |, and Moteur suitor then up. “it Ia, nothing Rout the chitdrente exee: | clves,"” she aurmured, ‘fl have been | sitting cre great Sig’ 9o didn't know that T ever dreamed, did you?—and for- #t to put them aw! Tt was more than nthe atierward that Howard Marsh looked in one "day upon ‘re Trask sitting In his lithe den of wi | ce, over found the beautiful hand to entertain. 4 “Glad to ‘see you,"' said Trask, with a new Nght in his cold eyes that ’too alt thelr coldness aw. “Just back from We didn't take any— ppy just the same, you married?’ ard? ‘Oread,'’ vou you know her-Mhes to the house enew old ac- eure very | 7? You?’ Ar nme Syou and dre, Mara jarbare after a ‘e the papers were piled high| as was at times) asked | 24nd Bryn at 8 d'olock, Acieraeen of Kear cpning 86 8 view gt tae. (US eee vous and damp, and get tired easil If you have aching foet, try Allen's | Foot-Ease, It rests the feet and ‘makes new or tight shoes easy. Cures | HT Ave, {he aching, swollen, sweating feet, biis- | ters and callous spots. Rellevea chil-| blains, corns and unions of all pala, tH L and gives rest and comfort. Try to-day. Sold by all druggists od shoe dealers, aes Don't ist cee Trial package poncloe Wal 8 {8s Address Allen s Olmsted, ey ae, EMPIRE THEATRE “THE UNFORESEEN GARRICK THEATRE, OSty st, near oe Evens B15. Mats, Weéneaday & aoaurtey, 3-16, ANNIE RUSSELL in MICE AND MEN SRRRION SRBATeS z Mate, Wednesday CHARLES, HAWTREY. itaom mans NEW § SAVOY THEATRE, ‘34th at. & DB" 8.20, Mats, Wednepday & Saturd HENRY MILLER. TE amine! Qy | want OM) HELE: GARDEN THEATRE. gh s, & Mad Kvgs., 890, Mais, Wednesday & Sstuntay, 2.90. ‘Third Week of tho: Bhort Beton, BARNUM & BAILEY, GREATEST SHOW ON EARTH 3 rouse Kinetic: Deniga: te aT gh Slephanta, gy ge 3 A. Modern Mohern Orason, Bary! ups oe, | other mock favorites, IE anseriile WARD & VOKES. Mats, Moo. Wod., Thumm, A SOCIAL ROCTAL, MIGHWATMAN, Lille Kemble, Ned He Bowler, | Other tock 'Pavorites, rth and 60 cents, wei a Reserred seats, 76, tording to Jocativa, Pri boxes, THE MOST NUTRITIOUS, 'An admirable food, with all ita natural qualities intact, fitted to build up and maintain EPPS’S Gives Strength and Vigour. COCOA enna Apr. 20—Jotn ang 44th ot, Saturday. A MESSAGE Gnowntvoa. “WOLF TON, LILLIAN AND SHORTY #eN ae aS JAMES T. POWERS in ¢ ‘ robust health, and to resist ¥ act Bova vad nar in lade | winter's extreme cold, It is "MORALITY PLAY, EVERYIAN Nat Mon, Opte Head's quaint comedy Tatar a afar and was a litt! pale, for he had) @ valuable diet for children. GRATEFUL—COMFORTING. TADISONSQ.THEATRE, 21th at, usar Bowe Se tae tine’ todas Bard “ELSIE de WOLFE in CYNTHIA. April 14, Broadhurat's "'A Foo) Mia Money.” KNICKERBOCKER THEATRE yy & 38th THE vet MR BLUE BEARD DEWEY Colossal Produetton’ Weber & Mild’ ati [tase Silk et cS burlesque The Big Little Prince WIZARD? ‘FOZ, Sournis. with Montgomery & Stone,'n Wed. Mat Apt 1b, fb et & Urviog Pi York's productions, THE (SUBURBAN 999 POP THIS 18 THE BEST TIME TO PERMANENTLY CUR KIN AND SCALP DISEASES |B Tbe akin now being motat and Ri bie, BB kreatly aids the treatments and | perfect and lasting results, | MATINER TO-DAY, MARRY A Nights Browns | MORRis* B 1dth st, | gan, Night,Grund Concert, 2 WEST END, The a Fatal Wedding, Apetl Ty one one An erect te {KEITH'S ‘eet | itches i st} PRIcaS WORRAY ae haf JOHN H. WOODBURY D. 1} 22 West 23d Street, N.Y. iy NOTHING e@UCC stcomss. A. F. JAMMES’ | Delicious Exquisia Violet, re PERBUN Y |GASIND Srp 28h. ™s%e AChinase | usar, iN “idea” ea. Prices fe, ite alm Hurtig & Seamen's, W.1S5th wt may Kice, Wiltred Mat. Sat nigel at 8. 23 or tin BELASCO Mita! RE THEATRE, 4)at at, & D'way aH Maa. Wed.@ Sat at & i. MONTAOR, STUART ROB Howyy, Leg tes e Martiaes, hi ear Cana) St he Miller, Mamie ate NSE AND Gaston, Miia Wed, & Bat, rate Chance, HOLIAD Metropolis ® ye # sumiasuu “e | VICTORIA 3%, STAR Next Week: | Pad Mats. Se. to $1.00. er YOUR WRPKS “RESURRE “The busy man of whatever pation Hse not be without © dei. Kye. $15 SLANE ECHION.”

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