The evening world. Newspaper, July 12, 1905, Page 12

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Theo Evort is) & World's tlome Magazine, Wednesday Evening; Ju id Published by the Press Publishing Cormpany, » Mwtered at the Post-omce at New ¥ No. VOLUME 46 MISSING MILLIONS. 43 Every insurance policy holder has a right to knov expenditures. The Equitable directors ave only trus.ees tot holders, and they should render a detailed accov of trust funds, In this particular Superintendent Hendric fally lacking. What were the items which last year m of the Equitable’s disbursements under the headings, “c Vertising, postage and exchange, $7,900,285,73,” and bursements $7,179,318.42.” Who got all this money and how do the vouchers explain or account for its disbursement? Under what heading does it appear how many frillion dollars were lost in stock speculation? And how much money was paid out to politicians for protection and to whom? It is here the money went instead of in dividends to the policy . holders. So far Superintendent Hendricks has accounted for only a small fraction of it. i of their e ion is woe- up the total missions, ad- other dis- s's investig: ‘oF 7 aa A REMARKABLE LUNCH. It must have been a remarkable scene when District-Attorney Yerome sat down to lunch at Delmonico’s with Ed Lauterbach and Sam Untermyer. A number of insignificant persons believe that Ed’s and Sam’s clients have stolen several million dollars of the Equitable policy | holders’ money. ,_ It is not likely that men accused of smaller thefts can afford to hire ‘such expensive counsel and to give Delmonico lunches, but if the custom | of the District-Attorney lunching with the counsel of thieves is to be ob- served, there are few humble east side pickpockets or west side flat men who could not provide some lunch at a dairy restaurant, or if that were beyond their means a St. Andrew's coffee stand might do. The public officials whose duty it is to prosecute criminals, not to} coddle them, should make no discrimination. + ——- — WATER TO BURN. Another inventor claims to have discovered a way to resolve water hydrogen and oxygen, which are water's components. It is doubtful! whether he has succeeded in doing commercially what he claims, but the} possibility of turning water into fuel is undeniable. of years it will be before the coal supply of the United States is exhausted. | Like calculations are published from time to time as to the end of the| 3 workable deposits of iron and copper. These calculations and predictions | will cause no alarm. Coal was discovered before the wood for fuel was all gone. Something will be ready before the coal is all gone. A method may be found of extracting aluminum cheaply before copper deposits are exhausted, and there may be some way to extract the minerals from the ocean which would give an ample supply of metals for all time to come. The harnessing of only a fraction of the water powers of the United States would furnish all the heat, light and power the United States re- quire. Even if the time has not yet come when a cup of water will run q an engine or light a house, there will be no lack of the intermediate steps. Railroads have banished train robbing and wrecking fiction from their news stands and hencerorth Dead-Eyed Dick will have to confine himself to scalping Indians. Pennsylvania’s Commissioner of Agriculture favors total abstinence | on the ground that there is not enough good whiskey to go around, If it keeps on the Subway smell will be as well recognized as the steerage odor. | ( thermometer is a deceptive instrument in recording the public’s humid misery. : Letters from the People. | “The Most Uncertain Month” ‘To the Editor of The Evening World: Let the weather of the past month | J ask all of you to give me advice on this delicate subject. TERESA. The Pugnactons Commuter: inexpensively into its component gases, and to use the great power of the|” Every little while some statistician presents figures about the number | 5 ‘The Mystery of Union Square hat Do Not Grow Old ws wt By Nixola Greeley-Smith, ‘Hearts T f in Los Angoles a, L'Rnelos as on evidence that every wrinkle pleases sel’. fed little prigs, in whom the childish sprichtiy old 1 of and only youth is v instinct for facile amusement was altogether lack- elghty-six died the other) But in our own degenerate aa of ing lay from—no, not heary failur to her doom is cer nue But in the he; of the elghty-six-year-old lady ‘ y of the other ouphemistic so much for the remuar) who dled he rope it must have bubbled cuises in which death comes t- 1 sparkl always like a fountain p n I have known perhaps half a dozen women who this childlike quality of soul that is quite independent of intellect or onvironment, but only one man, And he had the poet's sou), and would devote one moment to the evolution of brilliant philosophy and the next to equaliy brill- fant foolishness, to the amazement of his more | seriously minded friends, and count one as well) th from kipping the rope worn mor { cever believed the men an t they hay for the irrecoverable lost joys of chil spiration to mon who n say sessed cirenmstane: well a under Ives For a woman, life is really one long be eighteen, first prospectively as a little girl} ach as these we may with the ‘Oh, grave, whore ts thy vic tory; oh, death, where is thy sting?’ ‘Yo be sure, we have been told when Mirlam originated the cake-walk on shores of the Red Sea she was a sprightly | maiden of ninety, And elderly ladies beginning up in erudition what they Jack in charm ly cite the ninety-year-old Ninon de! tt. Not to Keep Cool SEE,” said The Cigar-Store Man, “that the papers aro full of advice from doctors about how to keep cool.” “It's funny stuff," replied The Man Higher Up. “The doctors seem to think that everybody 1s eligible to the foolish house. The burden of their advice Is not to eat too much, drink plenty of water and keep your clothes loose. “Maybe they think that the readers of the news- papers dine on hot tamales, drink hot soup and coffee and get their overcoats out of hock when the ther- mometer runs up to 80 degrees. They advise us to bathe frequently, as though it is not natural for the normal man or woman to get into the water as often as possitle when the weather feels ag though it had escaped from the vestibule of & rolling mill. “People don’t care for advice about how to keep cool. They are indi- yfdual performers and write their own stuff along that line. I knew a fish- erman in my youth who took a bottle of whiskey out with him in summer Little Willie’s Guide to New York. Gotham’s Answerless Questions. sighing for a long dress, then retrospectively as a! stout matron tired of tying on a switch every ring. pp | spent as the other. Lut I do believe that we lose with childhood the!” yfany people would think an old lady skipping sreatest possession of the human soul-*the gift of; the rope a silly spectacle. But I hope that if I play. live to be eighty-six, which, by the way, Heaven f d! I will feel like it. And it's certain that Of course, not all children are endowed with | Gay Tree cident ab Od Are Hee oun Some of us remember ourselves as demure, | cnough, however much we would Ike to be. et By Martin Green. and a bottle of milk in winter. The last I heard of him he had attained the ripe old age of eighty-two and was still performing his specialty. “Look at women! How do they keep cool? Don't ask me. Maybe they're not cool, but they look {t. The sverage woman can encase herself in a straight front corset, hang herself with other invisible harness, pile two or three pounds of hair on top of her head, surmount it with a two- pound hat, insert her feet into a pair of high-heeled shoes, drape herself with a peek-a-boo shirt-waist and a skirt with enough padding in it to make a front for Joe Weber and still look as though she had a season pass to an ice-house. It must be mental concentration. A woman knows that If her face gets red and wet and her nose gets shiny she looke like a por- tion of frogs’ legs. So she puts what mind she has into the idea of thinking that she fs cool and gets away with 1.” < “Still,” remarked The Cigar-Store Man, “I’ve seen many a woman who was hot and looked the part.” “Sure,” agreed The Man Higher Up, “but that was just after she had seen another woman who looked cooler than herself.” | weds that th perenr How Athletes Best Gunners. ANY army and navy officers hold Butterfly-Shooting. N the British Museum 1s @ raro dut- terfly, which was obtained In a most very valuable training for future | unustal . Probably no ae U YOARK fokes have a buntch of kweschuns thay ask} wiqiers and sailors. On the United itterfly in any collection in the worl that havent got anny answer and fokes in other sittles {states warship Wisconsin, flagship of the Asiatic Squadron, ts published a monthly publication called the Badger, which says: “In looking at the work done with our battery we find that Friel, one of our best baseball players, was taken in the same manner. On the steamship bound to Sydn Wales, several mon W ves by shooting at a Just as one man doant ask sutch kweschuns and { supose the reezen nu yoarkers ask them is because thay want to maike con- versayshun and thare is nothing else to tauk atowt in a quiet plaice like manhaten. one of these kweschuns Is thare is no anser to that kwes- New South put to shoot he noticed a re- What's the good werd. is the captain of the sfx-Inch gun markably large butterfly fluttering chun, annother kweschun is Is it hot ennuff for you.{ nich made the best record on the toward the ship. When it hovered SY thare is an anser to THAT kweschun but a fam-}ronge: McAndrews, our standby on the mily paiper like the eevning werld woodent print it eeven if 1 was to dee- graide my pen by riting sutch blasfemmy. then thare are 2 moare kwes- chuns and one of them is How's the boy and the other is How are thay comming. mo one knows the rite ansef to thoase 2 kweschuns so fokes that are asked thoase kwescuns ask them to the next person thay meet in hoapes he may know the answer and that is why all thoase fool kweschuns are asked in evvery streat in nu yoark. also fokes ask How's things but that is a simple kwescun compaired to the others and the anser is Yes. if amny other sitty asked sutch a line of kweschuns we nu yoarkers wood guy them to beat the band but as long as we ask them it is aul rite for nu yoark cant go far rong. good oald nu yoark. A. P. TERHUNE. banner gun of the ship.” Said A on A&A the A Side Be 4 Need for a State censor of mosquito offering it to some eligible American|Peary boat the Roosevelt. Discovery news would seem to be urgent milllonaire. Tried a dlacksmith's son|of the pole would be a "big stick" per- se e once with satisfaction, and believed now | formance of the real sort. that a steel king would make an ac- Q | he'd up r violation of tne Speed in_ nis | ‘automobile was “only going eigit mi es an hour.” Same with Governor as with jordinary chauffeur football team, was one of the pointers at the same gun. At another gun Smith, the captain of the team, fired @ string which tled with McAndrews, “Bringolf, Christensen and Lame, who defend the ball on the gridiron, fired three strings of record shots each from the thirteen-inch guna without a miss. With the eix-pounders it took Ridge, our well-known pitcher, to fire the above the deck he fireé and actually managed to hit It. ‘The insect fell to the deck, consid erably mangled. The creature was 8: beautiful, even in its mutillated cond! tion, that the pleces were carefully collected and finally they reached a British entomologist, who found that ft was a specimen of an entirely new, species, never before seen by the scien- ttle world. ez Se IGHT of 8,100 boys and girls swarm-) S ing into the vacation schools and playgrounds on the opening day 1s| reported to have astonished the visiting teachers of the National Egucational Convention. Btill causes some astonisn- ment, after several years of successful experiment, in native citizens brought up to believe that the long vacation should be a loafing time, to see small chiliren asking fo: more’ like little Oliver Twist, Popularity of the scheme seems well attested by last vear's at- tendance of more than 30,00 children and prospect of @ larger attendance this season. in naming the ” eee Repor in April that mosquitoes had been nearly exterminated in New Jersey, but now a story of a man near- killed by the pest near Newark. Throne of Norway offered to another accept.” Mighi solve the problem by May be something aiaae 5 . The Puzzle of ‘‘Elia Picture dealer who exchangy $22,00 woe 1 now wan LJ 2ame. Some ingenious person started a theory that it should be pronounced with feacred’ thar aneratieee ot thts icing | | J the accent on the second syllable, as being a shortened form of Elias, It 1s and in this he must be followed. It seems that in an authoritative German cata-| win Meo ee: Bee Th failea logue of theological books, published in 191, a new edition of “The Essays of | of $2,600 would appear to have quallficd for a position higher up. was then expressed with the Germbn scholars who ordered the book in the hope| aontetairenG enaeeniee Poe 4 ae rere ae P verage consumption of tron ts now latest views of English criticism as to the life and times of the | oghveiet a 40 wept ae a rene to ey of “King Solomon's Mines” is duly entered as a serious contribution to the study| A‘ figures cannot He, it Is thought that of Old Tealamment tate: some families must’ use @ great deal Prince, but “not known whether he will |FePtavle monarch. OKES about the bibliography of Lamb are sttll In season. “Elia” ts a puzzling | NOP) of o!l paintings for railway bonds |Huctuate a great deal In value. known, however, that Lamb pronounced it with the accent on the first syllable; Z with Habilvties of | $397,000 and assets | Bila" was entered under tho sub-cad "History of Israel." Much condelence onic Prophet Elijah. In another German bibliography, Mr. Rider Haggard’s narrative| man, woman and chid in. the ‘land. more than others ly eee ww warn people of the folly of taking the vacations in June. It ts at once the loveliest and most uncertain month of the year. The June vacationiat 1s more apt to be kept indoors from inclement weather than is the man who iakes his hholiday at any other season. It Js, of q course, too late for that warning to 4 @o any good this year, but it may nerve for next season Jf readers will stow it To th | Editor Evening World: 4 whole year in New York (Man- nattan) in riding on crowded Streets, &e., 1 saw but one fight between men. | In travelling two weeks a a commuter | Jersey village and in three R. T. travelling to Bath ch I have observed no less than five h fights and nine wordy wrangles | n commuters who were strangers | way in their memorie, L, G. P. softer t for He Cannot He Is Loved. d how’ Is the commuter a more To the Editor of The Evening Wi quarrelaome, cranky and foolish person | There is a@ gentleman than his clty brother, or does life in the q calling on me for two years, tbs and travel on trains, ferries, } told friends of mine that he int , conduce to pugnacity? It cannot some day to marry me if I would « reause tho f and trains are sent. But he has never done s0, villatnously overcrowded, for so are the trolle to @ polnt where he could find a good| Manhattan, Get to work, ps trains and Subway in ologists, Tn any case tt cured me of though I often lead the conversation up I am very ,and explain, commuting, REFORMED COMMUTER. opportunity of proposing. fond of him. Now he has stopped cal!- ing and he tells a friend of mine ie! loves me as much as ever, but that he} a fas stopped calling tbecaure he sees 1| piiva PEA ar nt at the fen never care forjhim. How can | street and Slaiy args Fitty-nen make him understand how mistaken ne 4a without seeming unmaidenly? Readers | C.—Birth ri are kent at the Ellot.--Carlyle Harris and Dr. Buchan. an Were both executed for wife murder, a Can You Read This? ri 7 | When the names of theae plotures are #aitial letters reading downward will the Anais, reading upward, Uy uersed onl paced in order spell the name of a distinguished man, the officia) position he holds, ao y 4 SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS. Seorge Alianby, going for {inancial aid to, tne Unloa George Auer nutd welten, Whose cousin and heir he is, ing dead’ with a piatol. beside him. Al fsomne one “has locked of Jim ‘Dawkins snonus detective, ao oD By Ernest De Lancey Pierson | 4 thin hand wearily across her forehead with a do- | Spalring gesture. “And 1," he echoed with a long-drawn sigh, They were 60 much absorbed !n thelr worries tnat the sound of a step on the marble of the hall caused She stopped in the midst of her story and leaned her head weakly on one hand. “Don't tell me any more now," he said gently. “I dont think you are equal to it You oan tell me the rest at another time,”” 6 ti is the latter ene ity une: pistol ani help @ Ta: ‘Alanby's tinancee, Featherstone, shows strange them both to start gulltily, | “No, I have started and I must go on, Well, the es Union ‘Square gts riaat ‘Wait a moment," exclaimed Stella, “I don’t want| result of the excitement was that she had a nervous QSeikS who called on Selten the night of the murder. | others to hear what I am going to say to you,” and ok, and then a fever, and had to go to bed, which r Beveral ciues polnt to Stella's connection with the mur- der of Selte Gf silk which had ZAM tons ls found made it impossible for her to fill the engagement. I was in doubt whether to be glad or sorry that she could not go. I had heard enough of this person to she hurried over to the door and pushing aside @ cor- ser of the portiere, peered out. “Did you not think that you heard the sound of ered to. one of the murdered y Pendrick to be @ part of |The Love of relja'a dresnes that Allanby ta suspe eg of the murder, Btell®) steps?’ she asked Allanby as she returned to her seat, | “I certainly thought » “Well, there 1s no one there.” CHAPTER IX. | They both Ustened for the sound to be repeated, , 7 | but heard nothing, Ho drew up his hair closer to The Confession. | hers, so that she could tell her story with less effort, SET et Richard Selten,” she repeated. ‘Tt 1s @) ‘To understand the circumstances that brought this | I rellef to me to have told you.” | "Tt Js ttle more, than I knew before or about," she began, her voice gaining strength as she | proveeded, “I must introduce another person, suspected. I hoped against hope that there was some terrible mistake.” will not ask me to name her, and af you guess who It ‘There is no mistake, I suppose I should have told {8 you must keep {t a secret.” you in the first place, but 1 did not want you to hate He bowed his head gravely. ‘Ths person 18 a married woman, she continued |me. I knew by your manner and conversation that you believed J had something to do with that--that! , at the same time casting a troubled loux in rection of the door. ‘Her husband 4s a man of ftatr."' nt temper and insanely jealous, Her life with | “Tell me everything, ‘The time has gone by for him therefore not been pleasant. Some time ago, Ncealment. We must row take measures to save it matters not juat when, but she was not with her i at was of course an accident, or at least done| husband, another map appeared on the scene, f nger, I wouldn't believe that it a iated, even If you said so." He paused on ned to be trying to swallow something hard. | was this Selten to you,"’| con iv had been engagel to Belten before she mar nd he jad lettera she wrote him, but they were now fre i and he braced } ¢ to withstand a blow. | 4. She had some differences with her husband ning? when they parted, and it waa a period of danger for | strow nothine?” looking at her autickly, as if M°) her,” her face, * waa the Seiien threatened to show them to her hus- y were written since we ething different tn before that night cled to reed 1 never saw the 6 riling marri ed Lor again doubtfully, Was she telling tha| ‘Just #0, And since she refused to lave anything It wus hard not to delleve the fronk. #34 further to do with him he became threatening. He | eyes she turned on him, Be to know her husbund’s violent nature, and | Phat is hard for you to believe, but it 1s 60 7 n her fears, If she continued to ayold knew the man befere that night, por did any! otter said, should be placed dn ter hus- 's hand) nus.” \ hover | tts the statement you nave 6 Infornal scoundrel!” muttered Allanby. made t he ally, since even this did not seem to frighten | Hew t en though tt soundy * adopted a more conciilutory tone. He wrote ie bin Me Was prepared to learn that thors /'2 fay tat on a cemain uignt-dt she would come to | poppers {talk between them nnd now #ag| il room he would place all the letters whe hud aipal that fl ‘al stag a AMF written Kim in her hands, He only wanted to say ‘You had better tell me the whole story," he ss wewoll for the last Ume, A deal of cheap aentiment ently, “Don't keop anything. bi for J might bs) fumed that 1 have forgotten, She was in a diy. nything ‘ae sed state of inind because she was afrald of tho 4 $ , % jan--and what he might do, She consulted me. She she replied firmly. "E could not have | thought slie must,go to him, It seemed worth rlake Kept the fecret much longer, even if you nad not|ing | 40) rn her liberty from his pur- i o eputatl ss ; Y 6 her reputation to earn hi y P his believe that he was capable of anything, I made up my mind as evening drew on that I would try and ge: hold of those letters myself. I had no ‘dea how I should manage it, didn’t consider that part of it, but go I would,” She paused a moment to catch her breath, “This man had never seen me,” ehe continued faintly, “I bore a striking resemblgnce to my—to this woman. I wrote to him that I would come at the Ume appointed."* Allanhy raised his eyes to the full-length portratt of her sister on the wall. He understood, “TI put on @ pecullar dress that belonged to her and which he had remarked and admired," she hur- on, as if anxious to get through with her story. ‘ou know we greatly resemble each other, and to 1p the illusion a veil covered my face, I went to rooms, He was deceived, II won't tell you what he sald to me when we were face to face, or how I aged 40 keep him at a distance until those letier » i) my possession, I dropped them in the qrate und waiced until they were consumed, Then—the She paused whth a choking sob and covered her face with her hands, It was some time before sho could summon strength to proceed. He watched her with sympathetle eyes and feeling instinctively that tue worst had not been told, “Must 1 tell you more?” she asked pathetically, as she rajad® her tear-stained face, "I had taken Nitle pistol with me, A. gilver-mounted, ivory-han dled revolver, I didn't suppose I should have any use for it, But knowing the man's reputation, T thought I might need it to frighten him with, What happened I baye no clear idea of. I shail never know. I was so bewildered. He had discovered the deception, It was too late to recover the letters, though. He made an Insulting remark, He-h reached out to take me in his arms." © paused, gasping for breath. “Somehow, tha Uttle pistol was in my hand, It al! happened in such a short titpe. 1 can only remember raising it toward him, I heard the discharge, and as he reeled away from me~I—ran headlong out of the place." “Poor child. Poor child!" murmured Allanby. But his words fell on empty ears. She had fall: back in the chair, her eyes closed, She had fainte:! (To be Continued.) y Isn’t Root of All Evil oe the Elihu An Impressive Vitascopic-Stenographic Interview with President Roosevelt's New Secretary of State, Who Doesn't Care for Money So Long as He Can Serve the State, By Roy L. McCardell. YOUR name? A. Root, christened Elihw, Q. Who A. Elihu, Q. Is it true that your accepting the pest ef Becres tary of State is at great pecuniary loss to you? A, I¢ is a mere matter of two or threo hundred thousand dollars a year, ¥ ‘ Q. Is it hard work being Secretary of State? Ay No, it's a pudding; a Cabinet pudding. Q. President Roosevelt says that neither he nor you considered the pecuniary sacrifice? A, We didn’t, but thero should be Secretary-of Salary, Raising in the Cabinet, ‘ Q. Who do you think should have that place? A. There is only one man, Chauncey Mitchell Depew, the old reliable salary raiser, who neves gets angry no matter how much more money you want. Q. Why does President Roosevelt consider you such a valuable mant A. Because with a good Root the Government need not be afrald te branch out. Chauncey Depew. the old reliable ealary-raiser, Q You will not be a candidate for any local office, such as Governor or Mayor? A. No; I regard such things as small potatoes now. Q. Speaking of potatoes, what do you think of Murphy? A. Murphies thrive in Good Ground. Q. As Secretary of State what will you do about Loomis? A. I do not know yet, but there will be no grafting with this Root. Q. Will you represent the Ryan interests in the Cabinet? A. No, I do not care for his assurance. j Q. What do you think of the Equitable? A. I think that honesty ts the best policy. Q. Thinking and doing are two different things, are they not? A. Yes, and saying and doing are two different things. Q. Cite some instanges. A. Well, all public speakers, Jerome, President Hadley, of Yale; Roosevelt, Mayor McClellan, Thomas Lawson, James B. Dill and the rest of us do a great deal of talking about High Ideals and are always instilling a hatred of “Tainted Money.” But—— Q. But what? A. Ob, well; never mind! To Check Work’s Ravages | By RP_obert Modler. ERHAPS halt the occupations of men are harmful to the body, productive P of lung, brain, eye, heart, or other troubles. Practically every clerical poe sition 1s harmful to physical health, great physical harm, which, unless offset by some systematic exercise or recreation. will result in severe physical penalties. ‘An all around development may best be attained without apparatus by throws Ing the bedy into such attitudes as require great general effort of the muscles of the trunk and ilmbs to wet into, get out of, or sustain. With the human body, fas with any material body, the nearer {t gete to @ horizontal position the moro Aimicult 1t ts to get {t into a vertical position again, saya Robert Modler in the Ohlcago ‘Tribune. It 1s much more hyglente, 3 well as much more economical, to try to keep the body warm through un increase of clothing rather than an Incresse of exe ternal heat. To the young and vigorous, continued heat 1s more injurious thea continued cold. Cultivate the habit of breathing through the nose at all umes Do not talk in the cold air {mmediately after being tn a warm room. On the othe hand, it 1s better not to go ‘immediately into « warm room after running or riding in the cold alr, Either practice may give you all the symptoms of a bad cold in the heag It possibie secure a sleeping-room in which the direct rays of the sun enter oo time during the day. Do not use the eleeping-room as a study, work or livin, room, if any other room {s available for these purposes. If compelled hy olmngee stances to use the same room for working und sleeping, see that it 1s ts sey aired every night before retiring. horoughly Do not seek sleep as a relief for pain, trouble or distress o: Hef, If possible, before resorting to sleep. “Put off thy pe eeay ene Pd ioe Have clothes enough on the bed to make the body comfortable, but Ase Aa a er May Manton's Daily Fashions, The surplice styles that make 90 prominent @ feature of the scason are to be noted tn the finer lingerie as well aj in the gowns, In the fle lustration ts shown @ attractive yer cover, which 1s dainty in the extreme, at timo shat it quite simple. Nainsook, Paris muslin, long cloth, came bric and ali similar mae terials are appropriate, but in this instance Bng- dish nainsook is combined with Valenciennes lace, The quantity of ma- required for the medium size 1g 11-4 Yara 8% Inches wide with @ yards of lace and 8 yards of insertion to trim ow Austrated, Pattern 6018 is cut in sizes for a 82, 34, 36, 88 and 40-Inch bust measure, most simple corset the same ja terial Pattern No, 6013, Surplics Corset Cov How to Obtain These Patterns, Call or Send by Mail to the fl Evening World May Manton Fashion 4 Bureau, 2) West 23d St., New York. | Bend 10 Conts tn Coin or S:amps for Each Pattern Ordered, IMPORTANT—Write your name and address plainly, and always spectty size wanted.

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