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ake a Liv Bea Putchasing Agent, Mend for Bachelors. Make Neckties. Mend Gloves. a « fhstalment, which tells how to to * nd what money may be made in knowledge nécessary to one HH field of the purohneing agent fa practically walmited, For the woman ‘with sound business like five hundred thousand | Mollars besides a large annie income start as @ professional shopper ago, Needless to say she eptadlishment with @ large assistants, jority of the purchasing agents, there are hundreds of them,.do 9 petvonal, more restricted business, though it brings lees returns, is watlafactory because they attend to ‘very detail themselves and yet look \gfter thetr home interests, ‘Whey manage this by system; going (shout the shops for a few hours in Pahe early momings before the crowds (et ahoppers are down and resurving one Way for shipping, ig entirely 4 mail-order bueiness. The purobasing agent proper does not for people within the city. will not pay a percent- for purehased for town- if they find thet articles eel Hh Hat a things simpler for her beginning than does the fomner Galeswoman who has grown tired of her fmployment and fs trying to start up or herself; or the out-of-town woman i haa recently come to the city and foes & Chance to enlarge her income (by shopping for her friends in the "went. ‘The fiewt woman, through her larwe of well-tovfo friends, finds ‘a rightiathand. Her experience for herself in former daye fn good stead. and influen- are willing and glad to go i ‘Wome By Rita A. Kelley. Do Catering. “This serles of articles will be of speclal interest and value: | women who from choice or riecessity wish to earn their livings at home. (The suggestions are entirely practical, as will be seen from the first who intends to ‘take it up, No. 1—The Purchasing Agent. ay } ing at Home. Do House-to»House . | Mending. Prepare Delicacies. for the Sick.) to about becoming a purchasing agent this line, as well as the training or her seourity, thus enabling her to get Gredit at all shops, ‘The saleswoman finds it easy to get letters of recommendation from her former employers and these eptablish her reputation for integrity with the shopmen. If she bas frends who own property who are willing to go her security all she has to do ts to work up @ clientage. She does this by adver- fising in good papers throughut the bountry, giving veferences and soliciting custom. ' / ‘The out-of-town woman has,. with @ little activity on the part of her friends who are anxious to have their shopping done in the east, @ clientage ready to net her @ tidy income. What remains for her to do is to get acceptable refer- ences and a letter of credit. Any one owning property within the olty will be chnatdered ‘ag ample security by the credit department at the shops, Tt t# of great importance to the pur- chasing agent to get oredit, and after Tt {9 well-migh impossible to do buel: ness on & cash basis unless ahe has a large amount of ready, money, for even the lesser agents doa thirty to forty thousand dollar business yearly, ‘This means a not income of from $3,000 to 4,00 from her percentage from the stores alone, Many agente who oater to the wealth- Wer class recpive a percentage from thelr customers as well, which brings thelr incomes up to double this amount, ‘The peroentage, for commission, var- fea in the different, shops, five and aix, or ten per leah bagel Once & month, dills are yent to the ie agent and she is expected to nett! oboe, . As her trusinees ie strictly , . this is easy enough for her As for suiting her patr t learns what od tt tt rea and what thelr tastes. Yi i Fam moet rhetr fevers of | bats Amount to be net uotion and the Je an institution apprecl~ ated by Outol-town ‘geopte: wie mith tiv te UeaSia ptttn Pate it To-Morrow Miss Kelle: will show how any asiter prising woman may make Slove-mending a lucrative employment, | he has once secured It, to keep it good. | fav ‘Broomsti eo 00000000000 / R the girl who does not want to Botivee any money in more or less expensive apparatue-and {t tr va@aily more than lese—and who has not the apace to devote to sich belong- Inge anyhow, the floor exercises Which 6 appeared in The Bvening World from time to mo will especially appeal, Clad jn her gymnasium pult, or, lack- fig thet, last year's bathing eult will do, of even a union mutt of underwear, with her bathrobe or dressing gown ‘over Mt, will answer the purpose, tho ex- @rolieed iNustrated and defined on this page will work wonders with a figure that has become slouchy or run to seed, Mo attain & elonder waist line, the up- to-fiate girl dons the loove clothing al- ready referred to and lifting her hands ‘high above her head, with the body cor- rectly poised, and taking @ deep in- breath completely filling the lungs, she holds the hip and knee muscles rigid, and slowly and gracefully bends the back until the finger tips touch the toes, Under no ciroumetances must the knees be flexed or the feet shuffled, The only motion must be in the upper part of the body or trunk, Possibly the girl may’ not be able ta accomplish {It at the first: or even the seventh trial, ht in persistence Ila success, ‘When this exercise can be accom: stic A Few Rules for the Reduction of the Waist Line and the Cure of that Tired Feeling. rapidly, tor if 90 surely digziness” will ensue, | taken slowly and cautiously, nothing to be gained by haste. Ifttle ‘oll of flesh ‘The first thing ebe must do is to learn how to stand straight, She-fust realize that the shoulders must be Hiéld back, the chest thrust out, the abdomen held fn, end she must walk broadly and heavily upon the @oles of her feet and must keep her knees stiff, t ing. ed this, the hext thing le fat on the floor, face down- , ‘the body outetretched to ite full lengtb, and first lift the feet In the air just as far as she can, each one sepa- rately, being eure to keep the ankle and, above all, the knee muscles rigid, Bhe simply must not bend the knee, hen turn on the back and repeat the exetcise, After a little, when the mus- oles limber up, she can whirl eaph foot in as wide a circle as she can, accom- plivh, amd perform this exercise as of- ten as she can do eo without undue fa- tigue, Everything possible must be done ‘to make the muscles draw upon that roll of fat for nourishment and to urn it up. § Now stand erect and with the body balanced firmly upon the feet, the plished gracefully and comfortably, the next thing {8 td maintain the:mme:posi- ‘Yon and turn the body nthe “waist and hips as far to either alde, first ar comfortable and after that as far as possible, Let the head turn with the body, and do not attempt to do 1 weight falling equaily ‘tipon the heel and ball of the foot, and placing the |. hands upon the hips, twist the body around, turning the head a& the trunk revolves, using the waist line as an axle to turn the body upon, Then slowly from side to side, taking a deep in- Moonshine and Marguerite * By George Munro's Sons. George Munro's Permission of Boren 1603, by GYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS. ‘Alye Disney; n_ seventeen-yoar-old girl, In ete Frank , oneonby, Wha te Loved Ine Nuxent, lr George jute. young mobleman, fi Ber, with uo engourages him, to ys promwace ‘Ponsonby that If ever: she eaves to care for him sho will fend. him, & MTA Ee Mtherine Nurent Ao eftectially. pole mind against rank that she violunt frtation with Bir Georke fal Al: arte e. iti CHAPTER IV. The Broken Troth- ONSONBY stares wildly at the moonilt grove. Sir George fs lean- ing over Alys, who stands, pate but laughing, picking the marguorito to pieces, Bhe is plucking the flower petal by petal, and once again the old-world re- train comes to Ponsonby across the fragrant sward, borne upon the wings ‘of the Night-wind, “She loves you a laitie- «indifferently —pashywely'— "An! oruel flower! why will it not stop there?” saya Sir George, sentimentally, At this moment the hand that holds the flower droops, and the girl, raising ‘her’ head,’ looks calmly and feflantly into, Ponsonby's eyes, There fe np sur- prine in her glance, no shrinking, It Is as if she had known he was there even before she looked. Thus for ‘an tndefinite perlod they gai &t each other, and then he lowers his eyes, and, turning, walke slowly away, i That “Taves was Ponsonby,” says Sir George, screwing his glass Into his best jeye the better to discern the retreating figure. “I know it.” . “Oh! you saw him before I did?" 1 saw him as he came.” *Yog?''—alrlly—"'you would, you know; oe 1 nee UNpNreReeena nr eemane te Bee Notice to Bronx Advertisers. ‘Tho following branch offices have beu established In tho Bronx, ‘Want’? ad Vertisements will be accepted at any of them at the same ratew av at ‘the World’ NER, TOS Weatel 10 Morris a 1034 Fr heater av, | at. rdok ay NO. WERNER, TRONK ATEASS WI ay J ay nd St, Ann Melrose ay. tebe LER, 1001" Cra fone ay. F we Tae we eee BT fren there's mich a lot of him, Modern Her-|entree has gone round (wh! cules, and all that port of thing. Good fellow, Ponsonby, though. Capital fel- dreary, Looks as if he had the tooth ache just now, don't he?!’ “No, he ‘don't!""’ says Miss Disney, answering him {n his faulty English, but with a sudden and unexpected change of tone—from lively to severe, “Very good, then, he don’t,” replies Gir George, totally unabashed, “Let's forget him. I've set my heart on hear- ing my fortune told me to-night by you, and beneath these mystic moonbeams, and as yet you have only got half way, ‘Try again,” “No—never again!" cries she, passton-| slonately, crushing the poor’ flower in her slender grasp and filnging it far from her, There is such a startling Vehemence in both her tona and gesture that Bir George loves bis glass and his self-possession simultaneously, Before ‘he can recover either she has run away from him and {lost among the shad- ows that He lurking in the secret places of the Jaurels. ““By Jove! What a small tornado!” ways the baronet, staring after her with uplifted brows, ''A good deal of tem- per, no doubt, but all ‘round—cherm- ing!" Panting—hopelessly out of breath— Mies Disney gains her chamber and Jocks her door. While running tn she has made up her mind she will not ap- pear below again to-night, She fs tired =yos, yes; sho will go to bed. With hurried fingers (as though action is nec- essary to her in her frame of mind) she undresses herself, says her prayers, looks Into her Bible (a very ttle look | to-night, I am afraid), and finally, find- ing herself standing In her dainty nightgown, goes up to a tall cheval | gings In the corner of the room and} gazes at her own lovely Image therein, | Her cheeks ure still flushed by her | rua; her Ips are red and parted, her soft eyes full of a detlance that ls most forolgn to them, | “At last have shown him I am not a mere baby, to be moulded as he wills, and that a rival is not an actual impos- sibility,” says this silly child go her- self; gll the while her heart is break- ing with suppressed pain, and a wild) desire to run to “him’ and throw her-| self into hid arms and confess to him] how cagerly sha longa to be friends with him agali. Yot bravely s%¢ keops back the emo- | tlon that threatens to overpower | het, and, still encouraging vengeful thoughts, slips into her lavender-scent- fod shoets,-a thing as white as they. Phd itah abe eet DOMAIN node Yecsoe) { Bu: calm sleep and morning bring a more heavenly frame of mind, The ex- treme nervousness sho feels at the thought of beng obl to meet him } soon again face to fa and the pain=} int greens rded to he him n at breakfast me, bow eon 1, reduce Muss Dis-| Bey, dering on tears and eon and dinnershoyrs arrive wethout action of any sort having been takon; and dt le only when the frat low, don’t you think—eh? but a trine |e “Th ch, though excellent, has been discovered by her to be utterly tasteless) that s way ol ef the question; but there !s' another re if gracoful little vlan that ets if to her, and passes from a thought Into a Yesolution, 1 That little, episode last night he will) Surely forgive her, He must have felt! she only did it through childish spleen, | She wit wtnd him @ oaretilly sel marguerite that will finish. with loves you," Go! to her room directly sho gets) Vy the CA utcantt Be ween, ‘om Among a large bunc wer's ‘upon her lable a Hat daisy, and counts !t eagerly, Phicking off those that mar her desigh, she leaves it with! the dealred reading for the Iast petal,| pe then goes slowly downstairs again, wit at the last step her courage falls her, Ho has looked #o cold, ko unloy- Ing all day, that she dares not give it to him herself. Even as she heal with these new troubles at her heart, Katherine Nugent crosses the hall bo-| low her, Tn a flash tt ocours to her that here is & way out of her diMoulty, ‘'Kather- Inet be calls RORY) atten nat ' says iss ugent, pausing, “T want” — hurriedly — ‘to fell you something—to ask you to do the a fa- vor, You are his cousin and my friend, are you not? And—and I must speak to somebody: and auntie ts 80 impossible,” Well? says Miss Nugent. The girl tells her the whole story, “He once colled this flower sacred to us—for—for a certain reason,” goes on Alys tremulously, her eyes bent sadly upon the marguenite in her hand, "And 1 thought if I sent him, ono with ‘sho loves you’ coming on the laal petal it would ‘tell him everything, Would it not?”—wiptfully, “You Know him so much better than I do that you can answer that question | more satisfactorily yourself, He is in the billlard-room. Are you golng thera now to alive it to him?" “Tf can't,’ gays the girl, with a sudden accession ot shyness, coloring violently, ‘'Kntherine,"—<lesperayely = ‘will you give It to him for me?” “Me! You ask me!” says Katherine, rowing deadiy pale and recoiling from her, “if you will, dearest,” sald the girl timidly, ‘she “Ask any one but me," saya Miss) Nugent ina low but vehement tone, throwing out her hands with a pas-| sionate gesture, Then, te necessity for | composure recurring to her, she makes a supreme effort. and jn.'some mea- sure regains calmness, "Take {t yours! self,"’ she save slow! but her tone Is harsh and strained, ‘As vet she can- not altogether command herself, “TT should be ashamed to ao to him now," says the young girl, with a bhiah and an abaahed laugh, "Katherine, do help me. He Is In the biiliard-room: take him this flower and tell him I shall be Indbe library tn five minutes, Tam going there now.” “You persist In asking me to do this?! ays Mins Nugent tn a atrange tone” “T don't Ingist'’ ny" only en- treat you, There, go, ike a doar girl, and—and be sure you lake the flower with great are, a& the loss of @ pe would be fatal. You think me foolish, don't you?" she says, blushing a 1 as she misconstrues the fixed ex; sion on h npanion's features, “TD othink ‘ mad.” says Kather. Ine slowly, “Give me the flower, then. JT will take it-lf T can." The last words, uttered In a failing tone, are une heard by Alys as she moves away to the Ilbrary, there to wait with beating heart the coming and the pamion of her e Duchess.” stands motionless, staring vrcant; bo, 2 Re le, short, but sharp, goes on within her. 80 powerful ds Ni far her whole frame trembles beneath it, face, childish, trust before’ her, and uri footsteps th the direction of the billlard- room, atill with the flower hidden from her view. But, almost as she turns the handle of the door, a voice from within, roaching het, kills the good so lately born, Tt brings before her another face =the face of the man she loves passion- ately, though hopelessly—and, with a roan, she falls back from the door, and, er nerves ceasing to be under her con+ trol, the arm Ciba tls ‘heretofore Halo os oe ne eee into tte usual ion, so bringing her eyes onc his He fatal omer bia she to be the one to give this oth girl to his arms?—she, whose yanwent thought of him containg more love than the, warmest this petulant child has ever Known? Again the half-ahy, half- tender, girlish faco comes before hea; S/but this time she shakes the apparition kapaib dh? tlie a awae ‘ would forgot in a month this mawkish Jove of hers, and froutd be ready to love agalnyin her poor fashion, And yet— thers ren. something in those large blue oves that-——— bd She ‘hesitates for one heaven-b moment, and. then js lost, seh Deliberately plucking one, white petal fom marguerite, she opens the door of the billlard-room and, with a smile and a calm wor or two to some man who addresses her, moves with languid grace to where Ponsonby ig standing somewhat apart from the others, She turns as to leave the room, then ‘turns back again, as beet In sudden remembrance of some trivial thing, “I ‘had nearly forgotten,” she saya care- lessly, ‘for your little flancee asked me to give you this as I met her on my way here just now,” She holds out to him, as she says this, the frail blossom in her hand, now drooping as though sad at heart because of the treachery of which it 19 the unwilling agent, “‘Mrom Ave?” eave Pongonhe, a’ flush horn of emotion darkening his face in apite of hig desperate resolve to show no} Pahaw! sho She desired me als she would be In the Mba: from this, “A lover's try lieht laugh. ‘There 1s. an exultant ring In her volce as ahe iakes Up @ billiard cue with a to tel you ny the —with a hand steady as marble, and as cold, Tt ig tlie hand that a moment since held the mutilated marguerite, ‘y Be Continued.) The Fly Catchers, In the spider's web it is the glutinous loyer. Laft alone in the large ball, Katherine peada, ere shown as agen under the talordedope, that catch the victims, PB Reducearear/WeistLine Like all other exercise {t must first be | ach time that the breath is emitted, There {s| Breathe deeply and trom the diaphragm Now for this girl who hag acquired a | the diaphragm ia filled the lunge then batow the walet lue, |natunilly ‘All themaelves; ‘breath with every movement and. béing eure to exhaust the lungs, thoroughly rather ‘than from the lungs, for when Having assumed the aitting posture, helng careful to observe thatthe body is held just'ns correctly In ettttrig’ as fh a 01 2d oe ofthe "vlached boomin will do just as well, lift thia as high above the ‘head as you can, taling a deep breath as you raise Ht and emitting as you lower the bar, ‘Then lying face downward, pans the dar benéath tho feet, malsiig the feet only until the heels touch tne hipw, and| The Fist How Txereis@ « using the bar as a lever. stretch the arms aa far backward as| pose ever they ‘will go, and in this way broaden| course of a the thoracto walls #o that the lungs! form you os have more room for play, wy ‘eral The breathing is Important in this} iy, you" ehind hand in\ time @o and be careful to empty the lunes after | Buch ‘before you got through that you'd eaah. breath. Further developments in| find youroelf in the middle of wook be- this exercise will readily sugmest them. | fore last.” selves to the Interested student, but) « care must be takén never to go to the point of fatigue, for then alt the ‘good' @ained 1s lost. It js a well-known fact that any ex- érolse ‘that is practised’ on ‘the floor Will give an equal amount of benefit to tem as the use of any of the or- dinaty exercise in which dumbbells or Indian olubs play a part. A Tea Gown with Braid the in its fulness, most shops for ten cents @ yard, north of France, each pot shown, Intervats of rest allowed when palates are cloyed, Prizes, not in money but in sugar, will be awarded, the first consisting of 10) pounds,’ en This wi this graceful tea gown. It, ‘most becoming to any one, espe- clally to a lender figure, and a dwhlyd | = improvement over styles ant, tho long trains, flannel, pongee, foulard amd any wush- @ble material may ‘be ised; The ma- terial selected for this dainty gown |e Pink, cotton crepe cloth, ten or twelve yards, as its bealty is It may be bought at | fa; the tight-Httin Trimmings. ABE and elegance are combined In Bronoh It requires ! HATS the matter?) “Ow Amateur Philgbophe "Matter @ M the Pessimist, "Missed the last express this morning, and.of courae was late to ‘an appointment with a milllongire who was good for a big lunch of filthy juere,” “Wall, you ought ¢o he on time,’ sald the Philoyopher, reprovingly, ., “Ought to be? I @uess I know th ‘but what are you going lo de when you fat In the clutches of @ wailing jan ‘treas?" . “A walling janitress? 1 thought from the aweuring, thppling Ikind to the real lady who had become. reduced 10 olroumstances—the kind that has seen detter dayy,”’ « "Well, {f there ja one form of torture that beats all the rest of the flat moth. ‘ods of anguish, the walllitg Janitress ty ‘the hin sald the Pousimist, ‘It's al an What doe ehe do? Tell you her troubles?” armed the Philosopher, “Tf It was just a plain case of telling troubles," eald Noll dnerute "T could stand }t, but it's than that, sho Always talcos the most inopportune times imaginable to pour her heart'a secret and her physieal woes into your ears, “Wihen you dash out of your flat in the morning, with just time enough to oatch your express by breaking your neck to get there, and cadually say, ‘Well, how are you?’ to your queen of the apartment, It's fine and dandy, ien't it, to have her launch forth on a recitay tion of her ailments {hat keepa you atanding there while every express train on the schedule itthely eats away,” “Well, what do you ask her for?” sald the Philowopher, d “What do 1 ask her for?! returned the Ponstmniat, “Why, it's merely a form of epeeoh, When you say ‘How are ‘you? to people you meet you don’t IN] expect them to tell you, do you? Bup- you aald that to in the were to presume to In+ ‘the exact state of thelr ial and mental welfare, physical, finan Amuse! MENT: NAMM RAOTRINS Geode hye Rta { a re Uh, 2 int rma very sry his Irion, Mie rea, Oba! Bi, eta bf \ wi on A It ahould be ghirred weyeral timer] &vshby, Che fee nd her Bist D round the top, a0 as to He flat on tho neck, .No lining ds required, A belt 1o tacked underneath bo seoure the ‘nepe at the walst lino and ta draw the gown In at the back, ‘The front hangs freely, with the girdle racked at each side. bows of brafd and froga down the front end a eirdle of wide braid with tassels at the ends and braid trimming for ‘the sleeve and neck, Braid ‘a to take a prominent, part my ‘lady's wainirobe ‘this winter, and may be had in any number of styles or patterns and with the tassels ts con- Exposition of Jarne. ‘A jam show is the latest idea in the way of expositions at Laon, in the The exhibition ‘open to all comers, and manufacturers who concoct marmalade out of vese- table mannow and plum jam out of car- rote and suger it with saccharine will be able to compete with the thrifty housewife who turns up her nose ai anything but the real home-made artt- A Donkey Example. ‘The accompanying pleture represents an Byt any ¢ olght years old can solve St. Th example, written out in full, with due re tot rematical signs, reads as follows: Donkey rilnus Key plus G mi \t. Solve the prabiaty ere a you) Wax § Gi Ai e the 2 of in aninial Whose appearat familiar to everybody, Ag Atte will have the Hame of an animal wh appeari HAO UA A Bt HURRICANE SECTION. “Phere goes & man who never fd on a ‘oad train” yw's that?” es In the hurrleane section," “The hurricane section?!” “Yes; you kin always skeer up a hur- | rleano in his settlement; and when he 8 a change of scene one always es wiong, Jest in the nick o' time, biows hint clean out of the settle He fost straddles a piank, hollors ne Hurcicane dows the tutution, nt, uM me ‘Go rast atlanta CASTORIA For Infants and Children, Tho Kind You Have Always Bough Bears the Bignature of 4 Tt hag eighteen mple that looks like algebra, CLE MR. ALB HEVALIE Roy f WEBER Joe Weber’s 4 All-Star Stock Co, “PROCTOR'S “BIS FOUR.” CIR THEATRE CC fx dally ton pldered very Kale fond don ‘k velvet for trimming, ean Ploy. PMuivet gma down the front of | COLONIAL = at Pas the gown and & girdle of black velvet music HALL fe, 0, Fie i sobon, , ' Bnet but Viviane fits New ‘Tis gown (a eusily made and the| 4nd Or ing Bale Irving Pi, braid may be removed and the gown ACADEMY OF MUSIC, 14th Bt. & . laundered. SIBERIA a DAS’ Scr ous. Walsh a}rose, Bree jog an, cdi Way, Nor yale AGED JORK VILLE (PERMANENT stOCK co, WHEN KNIGHTHOOD 00 Star Lex.dv| WARN FLOWEN | TINDM ; 25, TO-DAY, S90, |Nxt Whe- PAUL Revatia Fu iadesbnh Bs nuabiad da Rinse ia mga) WM AERSHAN «LTE N'xt W'k—Rogers Bros. ole pelted de tabi : ‘A jury of experts—all grown up, how. it trarttaatt Bway @ 834 8 ne wr mish ane mike tt] MURS, FISKE | Leah Kleschina Bva,8,80. Mate, ADIGON Wed eat, 2,80 A isypigo SQUARE MRS, TEMPLE’S ’ BHOU By, a Mae ate, I orep tl a WARFIELD ceil tbr BELASCO "sting Dayid Mi LESLIE CARTER ™ $53 LEW FIRLDS!tor" 160-88, Ev, 8.16. past Aen I NG B'wey & 8th av, With |N'xt W'k, Dan METROPOLIS. Bickel, \Weavoy Ta His. Fy, 8.15. M't, Wed. Sat. Watsoné Honor the May: ME, HIM AND I, | Wrotne, or of theBowery AMERICAN seicen i Night, DED MARKS’ BIG CONGER’ uulian Rove," Fat Lite in New York!” r GARDEN, Bowery, ATLANTIC °Sstore' Doge Alvaro toto, at ton & ‘Cnelma, Allen & Delmain, Moving Plo- tures, Chas, Hachert's Bilte Lady Oroh, near Canal at, KMLEY SHOVE Tal of Now York, Py and Soe, Lele AY, M THE LOST BOY, Neat Week—THE RAY: STAR Laxton av, & \oTth at, | Mate te TAR ALONE IN THE WORLD. Nat Wk, Queen of the Whi Rlays WINDSORS&uW- sas MURRAY) #4 HIM, t knew about every brand of janitress, | 6° any hi ‘mere form of apcech:” “You'll have to te the one ti then,” .emiled the, Philosopher, Tac Secale “the | Bitia would be worth while fe re busy ‘bored who are lying io W your qulbsters remark to ale of ¢ polntment, and that would: help nt “10S, & H, Green Tri aiven free at any depot of Sperry & : for the label and wrapper (rom each 20¢, bottle of HOLBROOK’ WEST END stittveewscH ti Mat. Pay, So ay. Netw Oa _ BROOKLYN AMUS KEENEY’S” i isi Ve... 1 Iedith Melbna, | Francesca * & Warrington, i) ates Ee Ral ot Deen i ‘Sunday at LON spall, Jc sit Fst ae Sion MONTAUK | ig Charles Wyndharn=—Maty THE CASE OF etme AMPH CA] tn Clty Hall. Pi in hk, 4 the. torriea’ noun you! hear ti yy ile are 9 they ele purchased a il hayes