The evening world. Newspaper, February 2, 1904, Page 5

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THE WORLD: TUESDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 2, -+. SENT HER NAME TO RIGHT MAN éretty Tobacco Factory Girl! George D. Morgan Takes for, Placed It in a Box of Gigars That Brooklyn Business Man Bought. Her Former Fellow-Workers | \ Now She Is a Happy Wife and! tv ' 4 Will Follow Her Plan for Win-|amorea with the rey i ning a Husband. LANCASTER, Pa., Feb. 2—John Mundy, of Brooklyn, to-day wedded to Miss Emma Edinger, of this city. Nothing startling in this fact, to be sure, yet interesting because of ployed in a tobacco factory. @en impulse one day impelled her Write her name and address on a ¢f paper and pl inside one of boxes of cigars e was packin aivenat are you doing?” asked one of isdingers companions. ba “Bondi: husband, ‘adar’ responded Miss Edinger, y: Fenhe girls laughed, and nothing more as thought of the Incident. ag nailed and passed ‘The ee of John - a box of cigars. A slip of Hucated fo his feet and he picked It bore the name of Mi gon into whose hands it fell. ¢ ‘Mr. Mundy lit a cigar und in the blue (i wings of smoke that circled about ed fanciful pictu: | Fhose hands haa packed the clears added her name and address. My, Mundy had had no thoug fat patrimony: Up. to this me ota Il'write to the girl. It won't do i m and may interest her to kn LETTERS WERE EXCHANGED, { THEN CAME ENGAGEMENT. | known facts that led to the marriage: A year ago Miss Edinger was em- A sud- ess to my future out of the fac- ‘The next chapter opens in the business fay Mundy. He was open- aper dinger with @ request for an answer from the per- WEDS LHPANESE of Kyoto, the Ceremony Being Performed at Yokohama. George D. Morgan, nephew of J. Pler- pont Mor fs taken as the partner | of his Joys and sorrows Miss Yuki Kato, of Kyoto, Japan, at Yokohama. nony was performed on Jan. E. 8. Booth in the p S| Gen, Bellows. of Ed- Leen in ins become en- and tranquility liteness of its \the a George D. ard Hale | shpan si Morgan. 1900 and of Japan and soft people. His friends say that his taking a dainty Japanese bride for his very own is not unexpected. For a tong time g,| Mr. Morgan's friends have known that was | he was infatuated with Japan, and it is doubtful if he will return to this coun- try unless it 1s for a snort visit. Mr. Morgan was in the class of ‘94 Yale, but was not graduated. He hi travelled extensively since leaving col lege, making his headquarters in Yoko- hania, During the time he has been | there he has collected many” Japanese to /art curios. He has also been deeply in- slip [terested in the work of the knglish the {Church in Japan, George H. Morgan sald yesterday, that he had pot heard any of the details of the inarflage, but thet {twas not uncx- pected. An intimate friend sald he had from young Morgan and that he knew the marriage was to take. place. He said the young woman came from a very estimable family and that she and Morgan werg devotedly attached to each other. Mr. Morgan is wealthy his own nae ney and probably will live ia Japan. - RABBI AND MINISTER "acl PRAY IN THE SENATE the ee box up. mo- any Nameking the cigars she packed,” he Rev. David Philipson, of Cincin- ‘ the ‘letter was answered by Miss 0 prettily that Mr. Mundy felt ed poh of ‘Thereafter Cupid ae led upon $0) reply. busy between Brooklyn. carrying ‘at first platonic and later fervid. Fi Lancaster lly photos were exchanged. Then messages that were Ed- nati, and Dr. Hale Conduct Brief Service at Opening of the Day’s Session. and veth thought. they would like to meet each other, and a few months ago Munay Journeyed to Lancaster, ‘That. settled it, 4 dnd the prophetic words of Miss inger Were fulfilled to-day. Now all other girls in the factory are busy send- Engagement followed, Mr. WASHINGTON, Feb. 2—At its open- Hd: | ing to-day the Senate witnessed the un- the | usual spectacle of a religious service ing thelr names out in cigar boxes, in | conducted by a Protestant minister ana the hope that the same happy fate may | Jewish rabbi. befall them. PUBLIC SUBWAY HEARINGS. introduces Reso- lution for It. Alderman James Owens to-day suc- reeded in having referred to the Com- mittee on Railroads a resolution calling | ip: ublic hearings on the project o' furnishing rapid transit for the east ing Harlem and the Bronx. sald Yor ide, incly "The holding of public hearings,” Alderman, “will be of ald. to pid-Transit’ Com its conclusion: + WILL CLOSE ALL UNSAFE THEATRES . pecan ern ! Mayor Will Exercise His Right at Midnight Unless Houses ( Have Been Altered as Grdered. ° ‘ Unless the managers begin to- the alterations required by the M and his subordinates for the pro ates In Manhattan Borough will closed on Thursday, the alterations are begun. begin the alterations required by He sald that the theatres closed promptly unless the work begun before that day. Several managers were present the hearing given by Committee on Buildings on the tain theatre at each act. in each being signed by the Mayor, and vides penalties fur violations, ee PLACE FOR DENNIS O'LEARY. Distriet= Attorney of Queens County, was to-day Dennis O'Leary, Assistant appointed Assistant Corporation © acl of Queens County by Corporation Counsel John J. Delany. His app mént came as a surprise and is the of along polltical fant, in. which: men haye been possible to get the pl A Remarkable Statement, The abstract from the Afhnual State- Insurance ment of The Mutual Life Company of New York published day merits more than the passing at- The tigures ot tention of the reader. the operations of this great Company thar | er for the year 13 are #0 enormous it becomes difficult to appreciate 1 ‘true magnitude, Out of an inco all sources of more than ission in arriving of audiences against tire, nineteon the- to remain so until Mayor McClellan said he had received letter he gaye them until Thursday to Fire, Health and Building Departments. would be the Aldermanic Cail redolution requirmg the fireproof- ing of all scenery used on local stages snd the lowering of the asbestos cur- the end of ‘The resolution is ao framed G8 to become operative immediately, ow in the shape of fines using every Influence | j The daily prayer w: delivered by Rabb! David Philipson, 3 professor in the Hebrew College at Cin- cinnatl, who was accompanied to the dais usually occupied by the President pro tempcre by Chaplain Hale, Dr. Hale was clad in the usual cler- teal robes worn by him, the service with a brief Scriptural quota- tlon, which was followed by Rabb! Phi son's prayer. Pihe rabbi spoke of. this country “the promised Jand, the new. Cana: the exemplar of justice, the protector of the weak, the foe of ‘unrighteousness, the sanctuary of liberty, the haven oF peace.” ‘The service waa concluded with the Lord's Friyer by Dr. Hale CZAR'S MEN DRIVE JEWS FROM RUSSIA Domiciliary Law the Police Pre- text Now for Forcing Rich the He} and Poor to Give Their Homes. day, ST. PETERSBURG, Feb, 2.—A des- yor iu | Patch from Comel, government of Mog- hiley, says Jewish emigration to Amor- ica Is steadily increasing. Artisans as well as wealthy. Hebrew householders are leaving, ‘Three hundred families have just de- be no word as yet from the managers | Parted. of these houses in response to the let- + The exo vi! y ter he wrote them Saturday, In, this | are ;caodus of the Jews is forced by a new form of persecution instituted by the Russian Government. Moscow is made the centre of operations, where the police are exceptionally active ‘in questioning the domiciliary rights of the Hebrew residents and numbers are forced to emigrate who should enjoy all the privileges the Czar professes to grant them. ‘After the expulsion in 1891 30,000 Jewish workingmen and artisans, with Jews who were members of the First Gulld of Merchants, and those academically edu- cated, were allowed to remali, Recently the Governor of the city or- dered strict inquiries in regard to the the was: at Me- pro: domiciliary rights of these persons, and on the discovery of the slightest flaw. A number of families fifties expulsion follows, whose obtaiie ndfathers during the the hered suddenly ight that freedom was 2 as members of First Guild for eight years only, According ta a recent law ihe freedom, of the city Is not granted x such exes have been pald for ten ‘oun- je of the homes of the 's of the day and night lation of the Inw, and tye | made out ‘Those m cases are leave immediately, having 18 tre hurried ta the rail- ways 2 nt away at their own ex- pense, while the poor are shipped off to the frontier, very often in the company of criminals. tos —=_.—- DELANY.NAMES LUCKY ONES. Corporation | icsunsel Anuonanes Three Appointmen Corporation Counsel Delany to-day an- “| nounced the following appointments: Dennis O'Leary, of Flushing, to be Commissioner -of Immigration Marriage Made-Her an Alien. Commissioner of Immigration Will- ‘jams says he has not heard anything to ednfirm the report that Mrs, Maybrick {|e on her way to America y| “If she does come here she may be classed under the head of undesirable Immigrants and be deported. The law is Undesirable and must be deported. "The question will hinge on whether Mrs, Maybrick {s an allen. She was born in America. but I think her mar- riage to an Englishman makes her sur- Fender her rights to American citizen- ship. Whereabouts Unknowa, LONDON, Feb. 2.—The newspapers {here have as yet not located Mrs. May brick. The Dally Mail says that Mra, May- brick is now on: her way to America, ving taken passage on the steamshtp eeante, It quotes Immigration Com- missioner Williams as authority, but that gentleman denies that he has been |informed of Mrs. Maybrick’s departure, | The Daily Telegraph this morning says that Mrs, Maybrick will be re- leased in a few months’ time and that meantime she has been removed to a retreat, *The Daily Chronicle says that Mrs. Maybrick has not sailed for America but is still in England. J, A. SCHAPPERT OPPOSED SITE Alderman Is Not Owner of Any’ Property on East Eighty- ninth Street Se’ected by the Board of Education. ‘To the Editor of the Evening World NEW YORK, Feb. 1, 14 Kererring to your article of Saturday, Jan, 30, I beg to inform you tha I am not the owner of any property on Kast Kighty-ninth street selected by the Board of Mducation for school pur- poses, ard that 1 never offered roy erty to or sought to secure its jection as @ site by sald Hoard of kau- cation. I knew nothing of any official action, until Mr. Mulloney, of the Comptroller's | f office, called upon me and informed me of the selection of the site: as I lived on the block I Informed Mr. Mulloney that I was opposed to the location of the site and um still opposed to it. As the implication in your article does me great injustice, I must request that you give this letter equal prominence with the publication referred to. Very truly eure RIOHNUA Suse JOHN A. SCHAPY! ant WON'T LET HER SEE HER DYING HUSBAND For Three Months Mrs. John Hamilton Has Made Daily but Futile Visits to the Home of Her Brother-in-Law. Mrs, John Hamilton, of West New York, has for three months made daily efforts to see her dying husband, who {s at the home of her brother-in-law, ‘Thomas Hamilton, of Dantefson street, East New Durham. The dying man and his wife separated several months before he became Il. ‘The wife kept the two children and the husband gave her a liberal allowanc Hamilton learned that he wa suffering from pulmonary trouble and repeatedly called at the house begging to be allowed to see him. Her brother- in-law refused and she never was per- mitted to get further than the doorstep. he two children of John Hamilton are permitted to see him as often us they call. Mrs. Hamilton declares that she does not belleve it {s the desire of her husband not to see her. WELL POSTED, A California Doctor with 40 Years’ Bspesiecres “In my 40 years’ experience as a teacher and practitioner along hy- gienic lines,” says a Los Angeles physician, “I have never found a food to compare with Grape-Nuts for the benefit of the general health of all classes of the people. I have recom- ‘| mended Grape-Nuts for a number of years to patients, with the greatest success, and every year’s experience makes me’ more enthusiastic regard- ing its user “T make it a rule to always recom- mend Grape-Nuts and Postum Food Coffee in place of coffee when giving my patients instructions as to diet, for I know both Grape-Nuts and Pos- tum can be digested by any one. “as for myself, when engaged in niuch mental work my diet twice a day consists of Grape-Nuts and rich cream. 1 find it just the thing to build up gray matter and keep the brain in good working order. “In addition to its wonderful ef- fects as a brain and nerve food Grape-Nuts always keeps the diges- tive organs in perfect, healty tone. 1 carry it with me when I travel; oth- FE ee te pence uae vuuts $161 Assistant Corporation Counsel for) erwise I am almost certain to have ments for ail purposes nearly $400.00, | Queens at $6,000 a year." O'Leary Is altrouble with my stomach.” Name serve fox all, its policies nearly and maintains *uaraniced fund of more than can offer im Iie not ena tution whic! Ore dtantiat over and aboy: his last mentioned unmount @ contingent 000. to conceive of any’ in- evidences of absolute sevurity emplate, a Cassidy man, Patrick E.+ Callahan, First Assistant Corporation Counsel to vol. Bell, in Brophy ay at Bo. P.' J. Walsh, poration Counsel, in ch: ment-House Departmen c ‘sus. |3i00 a veor, Hete ine Champion, short distance sprinter of snes ta He takes, piace fori ven by Postum Co,, Battle Creek, ich, Strong indorsements like the above ‘ from physicians all over the country ‘Nuts the most eck Life Partner Miss Yuki Kato, Williams Says Her Admission | | Depends Upon Whether Her| says that any allen convicted of felony | MORGAN'S NEPHEW MRS, MAYBRICK ARE YOUR KIDNEYS WEAK? MAY BE BARRED 'To Prove What the Great Kidney Remedy, Swamp-Root, Thousands of Men and Women Have Kidney Trouble and Never Suspect it. | Will Do for YOU, Every Reader of the New York Evening World May Have a Sample Bottle Sent Ab- | solutely Free by: Mail. It used to be considered that only urinary. and bladder troubles were to be traced to the kidneys, but now modern sctence proves that nearly all diseases have their begin- ning in the disorder of these most impor- tant organs. The kidneys filter and purify the blood— | that is their work, Therefore, when your kidneys are weak or out of order, you can understand how quickly your entire body is affected. and how every organ seems to fail to do its duty | If you aye sick or “feel badly,” bexin tak- ing the great kidney remedy, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, because as soon as your kid- neys begin to get better they will help all the other organs to health, A trial will jf |convince any one. : i} 1 cheerfully recommend and indorse the Great Remedy, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp: Root, for kidney trouble and bad liver, | have used’it and ce rived great benefit from .t 1 believe it has cured me entirely of kidney and liver trouble, from which | suffered terribly. Most gratefully yours, ALR. Reynolds, Chief of Police, Coiumbus, G: Weak and unhealthy kidneys are respon- sible for many kinds of diseases, and if per- mitted to continue much suffering and fatal results are sure to follow, Kidney troyble irritates the nerves, makes you dizzy, rest- less, sleepless and irritable. Makes you pass water often during the day and obliges you to get up many times during the night. Unhealthy kidneys cause rheumatism. gravel, catarrh of the bladder, pain or dull ache in the back, joints and muscles; make your head ache and back ache, cause, indi- gestion, stomach and liver trouble, you get a eallow, yellow complexion, make you feel as though you had heart trouble; you may have plenty of ambition, but no strength; get weak and waste away. The cure for these troubles is Dr. Kil- mer’s Swamp-Root, the world-famous new kidney remedy. In taking Swamp-Root you afford natural help to Nature, for Swamp- Root is the most perfect healer and gentle ald to the kidneys that is known to medical sclence. How to Find Out. If there is any doubt in your mind as to your condition, take from your urine on ris- ing about four ounces, place {t {n a glass or bottle and let it stand twenty-four hours. Pm. KiLuE's SWAMP-ROOT Kidney, Liver and Bladder (Swanip-Root is pleasant to take.) If you are already convinced that Swamp-Root is what you need, you can purchase the regular fifty-cent and orte- dollar size bottles at the drug If on examination it is milky or cloudy, if |stores everywhere. Don't there /is a brick-dust settling, or if small particles float about in {t, your kidneys are /make any mistake, but re- in need of immediate attention. Swamp-Root is pleasant to take and is used in the leading hospitals, recommended by physicians in their private practice and is taken by doctors themselves who have kidney ailments, because they recognize in it the greatest and most successful remedy for kidney, liver and bladder troubles. bamton, N. Y,, on every bottle. SPECIAL NOTE.—So successful 1s Swamp-Root in promptly curing even the most distressing cases of kidney, liver or bladder troubles, thai to prove its wonderful merits you may have a sample bottle and a book of val- uable information, both sent absolutely free by mall. The book contains many of the thousands upon thousands of testimonial letters received from men and women cured. The value and suceess of Swamp-Root is so well known that our readers are advised to send for a sample bottle. In sending your address to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., be sure to say you read this generous offer in the New York Evening World. Tae genuineness of ebis offer is ISUATAD {Ged member the name, Dr. Swamp- Root, Kilmer's Swamp- Root, and the address, Bing- There’s nothing that will give such speedy relief and cure and at the same timestrengthen the side and restore energy as an Allcoch’s Porous Plaster. A pain in the right side, however, is often caused by thickening of the bile which may lead to gall stones. The best treate ment is to wear an Allcock’s Plaster as shown in the illustration, until cured, You'll be surprised to find how soon you are relieved. REMEMBER—Allcock's Plasters are without question the most successful ex- ternal remedy in the world to-li apa the safest, for they contain no donna, opium or any: polson whatever. POROUS PLASTER 1904. eu 5 and lustrous, Oriental Rugs. Slightly imperfect—Greatly Reduced } Some at, half the prices they would be if perfect, and some at two-thirds, and some at three-fourths. Among the lots there are many Rugs of great beauty. Choice pickings of rare values.—On 4th Floor. Lot I—Average size 3x5 tt. @:% ts TAs” F Lot 2—Averase size 447.6 tt. 14,° to’ palate Lot 3 Average size sx10 tt 25. to 502 Comprising Kazaks, Shirvans, Carabaghs, Anatolia, Iran, Mosul, and other weaves, Worth from 15,00 to 100,00 each, A. A. Vantine © Co Antique The SukOccasionenc You! A Purchase of Over Three Thousand Pieces— Move Than 150,000Yards—From Twenty-two Different Manufacturers We prov ed what could be accomplished by an early-season silk sale, a year ago, when we made selling records that were unprecedented. Months ago we started out to prepare for this annual event; and many weeks of hard expert work enabled us to assemble the splendid quanti- ties of fine silks toldsof in the head-lines. ‘True, we could have made the quantities very much greater; but we were choosing these silks with the same judicious care, as though we were stocking an etirely new store. In the first Place we didn’t take a second look at any but good and desirable silks, no mat- ter at what pri they were offered. We secured the choice of al] the staple silks that were to be had under-price We accepted only patterns and colorings that won our admiration We sought out silks that would complete a comprehensive stock. q So that whether you want to secure a, waist, an evening gown, a street snit, a shirt. wnist suit, the lining for a coat, the lining for a dress, trimming for miilinery, or what you will, you may depend on finding just what you want in the collection, and A Half, a Third, a Quarter Under-Price Though a few of the more staple Silks are not quite so much reduced, In the or- dinary Silk Sale, you have to confine your purchase to certuin limited lots; in this offer ing you select from as great variety as will be found in the best regular stocks; and thus you sacrifice nothing in ‘the matter of choice, to secure the large saving in cost. The detailed information follows: Black Taffetas at 40c, worth 55c Colored Satin Luxor at 65c, Filteen hundred yards of good, de worth 85¢ pendable Black Taffeta; 19 In. wide. | ‘Twenty-two eacellent light and A quality we have sold with satiatac- | dark colors, including white, and all tion for several neasone. ‘best shades: rich, mellow finish: auit- Black Taffetas at 50c, worth 65c | able for all dress purpores. ‘Three thousand yards of abetter| Plain Black Luml at 65c. quality with excellent tinish; bright bey ia Ce ‘Fancy Colored Suiting Silks at 73c, |4 worth $1 dfany styles aud colorings: of very at check. barre and arniure effects; |Tong-weuring ailkx. Black Peau de Cygne at 75c, wor! Rich black, soft tinish and very an strong, oO ft th ie 1 Iain Black durable, ne of the very popular plain Black | Polka-dot Liberty Satins, 50c, | siiks acldom found undereprice. an) Sth vere ee worth 65¢ all-year-rouud dependable dress wil. | re Three thousanil yards of an extra good quality taffeta, made by a most ae mano‘acturer. 23 inches e. Fifteen styles of small and neat polka dots on these cholee grounds only. In brown, black and navy blue with white dots. A very desir- able offering. Nine thousand yards, Colored Taffetas Superior, 55c, worth 75c 4 Over eighteen thousand thirty-odd shades; every one spic-and- spannen.and juat off the looms— the best 75c taffeta ever made. Every new shade from white to evening und street colors; Messaline finish; bright and dural Gun-Metal Fancy Silks at 55c, worth Lait) Broche Liberty Satins at 5c, worth $1.25 j A wuperior quality silk In various rt saneres js, ina great variety of | “Grebe de Chine at 75c, worth $1 designs and colors: from Amerlen's| Eighteen hundred xardeot n dollar b a maker; 24 in. wide. Many of the | quality. Very desirable; white, eol- quality invother natterns have | ors and black. sold tor $1.50 and $1.75, Black Satin a) ‘at 75c, worth Imported Black Guaranteed Taf- 1.50 fetas at €5c, worth 75c From a world-<elebrated maker we secured two hundred pleces of a fine and desirable quality. Dresamakern Will buy largely of this by the p as it has the correct weight. | and brilllancy. ‘ards; Fifteen choice Bai rich designs of elegant quality imported Black Natin aus. at halt price. Excellent for dress purposes or rich linings, Fancy Glace (‘ros de Londres at 75c, worth SI reat viruny uf neat designs, aulebie tor walst oF, suit purposes, incholce combinations of brown-and- black, — cardina@l-ant-biack, nary blte-dnd-biack nnd {asper or gan- metal effects. Gilt-Edge Black Tafezas at 8c, w a lees, Aalsh Nineteen different sty les 1 choice | neat Jasper or Gun-metal Silke. | Plain Colored Broche Liberty Sat- about seven thousand yards in ali— ins, 65c, worth $1.25 Chotce silks with self-colored broche dots; 24 in. wide. An excellent as- sortment of ght and dark colors, in- cluding white and bi Imported White Taffetas at de, worth $! Plain Black Foulard at 55c, worth 85c Over three thousand yards of fine lor quality of fine 28-inch Plain Black Foular’ from n. mace of finest one of the best manufactuters in| 20-inch White Taffetas; good body; | silk obtainable, and never before so! America. Very servicable for trarel-| firm and bright. undeprice. ling dresses or walats, — « |Fancy Jasper Louisines a: 75c, / Fancy Louisine siikb at 85c, worth Printed Liberty Satins at 55c, worth $1 A dozen fine colin and coloriigs -printed and woven fanev rena worth 85¢ Eighteén styles of fancy Louisines Imported: all in black-and-white | with neat satin dots, checks. a or navy blue-and-white polka dots | small designs In the Jasper or gra of many sizes. and-white glace effect, and « few in| Black-and-white Checked Silks at | other datk colors. 55c, worth 85c. | 22-1 in. Black Taffeta at 75c, worth $1) me f ' Je Re a Four of the popularized She These Taffetas have a peculiar and Pres BEA va am esigns herd'a checks Iu every CALE Petar weave and finish, whieb |! elegant French Satin Damas. 24-inch silk for walste and sbirt-| | Bakes. them very durable. They | White Duchesse at 85c.worth $1 15 w {ii walst suits. eM a econ, Hey and pre ate not rata py Duchesse of fine Guaranteed Black Taffetas, 55c, | Heavy, and do not crease easily |quatity and fnteh. worth 75c fancy Checked Mousseline Silks | ¥d.-wide Black Taffeta at 95¢, worth inch fine, bright and durable at 5c, worth $1.25 $1.25 A quality that we have sold hun- dreds of pieces, “Wear guarantee” woven in Keivage, Black Satin bh at S5c, worth Black Taffetas, with the word “war-| These silks are splendid quality, ranted” woven in the selvage. | being of pure dye anil soft finish, ina score or more of choice, neat hair- Imported White Taffetas, S8c> tine cheeks with dots, and a grent variety of-desirable color grounds, pA excellent, Meswaline Anish White hbriah at ‘ both light and dark. ta, with bright and lustrous fin- ae : wtrong and recommended for | White Louisines at 75c, worth $1 wear, Fine, bright imported White Louls- es. ines; only 1400 yards. atch Black, Tattess at $32) 0 1| niacki Feaul ae Sole at 75c, worth | Good, reliable Black Tatfetas, 27 in. | wide; with “guarantee” stamped | Good, wallabie, Dearie “Wear ‘on the edge. Guarantee” woven In the selvage. Chiffon Crepes at 65c. worth 85c | Jasper Epingle Silks at 75c, worth | 23 in, wide; newly made in such $1 good colors white, b cream, | [leven styles of rich Quéen’s gray two shades each of pink, light blue silks, woven with the black and) The weil Pore tiers brand of Black Duchesse, at alow price. 36-in, Black Peau de Soic at $1, worth $1.5) splendid quality for dress uses: belnie Pan ti ide, It curs to b_tter advantage, Natural-Colored Fonseas at Sl, worth $2 One yard wide, in thé natural bam- hoo color; a very fing qual.ty. 33-in. White Tareiae a Si, worth 35 and gray, besides lac, corn, cardinal, | white threads raised here and there navy blue, brown and black; bright | te fare Bey neat dots, dashes and | aigaag lines An unusual width and price for fue White Tattetas, Rotunda, Main, JOHN WANAMAKE th and 10th st. Alstes. Broadway, 4th ave., 9th and 10th sts. Formerly A, T. Stewart & Co,, Sea business men, statesmen, farmers, lawyers, min- Ietore, doctors, book eopers, benk- ere, enllray aoe Gerri traveling salesmen, laboring fon, meu tn every walk of io, in every. line of vity. on thelr § wels reguiar with JAR~ Bre Candy Cathartic. one tell other men about the wonderful merit of this wonderful little tab- let. They take OCASCARETS home to their wives and families. The consequence isa sale of OVER A MILLION BOXES A+ MONTH made by merit and appreciation. YOU NEED THE 1904 World Almanac and Encyclopedia A man who keops his bowels regular with CASCARSTS, can keep strong and § Because healthy even without much exercise, for when It tells all about a thousand the bowelsare and the digestion strong the system is safe and the muscies, brain and subjects; enptar will money te Newer 1 eae? and life. B lever sold ‘The gon- ecause ding fablee stax Cg. sample | bas Cy a foe Sore It decides all arguments in a moment; Because It is the only perfect cesk companion ; CANDY CATHARTIC Because It is a complete GUIDE TO THE LOUISIANA PUR- CHASE EXPOSITION. ‘The 1004 WORLD, ALMANAC and ES cLopEDIA. praca and siantially Round “in cal Sontaing’ 600, Dax ee THEY WORK WHILEVOU SLEEE ANNUAL SALE—TEN MILLION BOXES Greatest in the World wo The Business Man’s Elbow Monitor. -|1904 World Almanac @ h Encyclopedia. 25 Cents. By Mail % Cents.

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