The evening world. Newspaper, March 24, 1906, Page 12

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

DENTIST STILL AT WAR WITH THE KIMONO GIRLS ' Boarding-House Mistress Yanks Out the Tooth- Puller’s Furniture Without an Anaesthetic and He Vows Vengeance. Carking care and the spirit of discon- doctor. I lot him use them once and rumors|he has tent, not to mention wai of war still hover over the bie five- story brownstone boarding-house at No (4 Lexington avenue, it ts there tiat| Mrs, Alvina Haagen, the Inndiady, ts carrying on her campaign against Dr. Jacques Sohnaler, the dentist, who rents her partors, front and rear, and ob- fects because sixteen girl boarders in kimonos make his rooms their meeting- Diace, The case’ has already been twico in the courts, but the tooth doctor has a Jeane for five years. In law the dentist may stay that leveth of time, but in fact he will pmbably stay only as fone as he can stand the present in, To- day Mrs. Haacen in deadly earnest and a strong German accent announced * that she head been (woodwinked into gigning the tease and that she will now to have the dentist dispossessed. To date the fight stands as follows: Round 1. (Yesterday morn[ng)—Den- tist has landlady in Yorkville Court charged with disorderly De- cision 4 draw, Magistrate telling them to m> Home and be good. Round 2 (Yesterday afternoon)— Landiady takes some of tMe furniture * out of dentist's par! Round 3 (Hour late)—Dentist goes to court. Uniier protest agrees to al- indlady to take all the mniture at 7 o'clock, Round 4 (7 M.)—Landlady gets furniture, amd dontist hires a fresh batch, which he says he will charge to her. All Eager to Talk. To-day the contending forces are under arms, laying out further opera- tions. But silence is not a part of thelr code and both talked willingly. Also thelr partisans talked. Mrs, Haagen met an © reporter at the door and told him a length of her trowoles. With her were her aldes de camp, Miss Hansen, the vocal and elocution teaoter. ony vie gecond floor front, and the little dress- maker, who has her place on the same flcor. Lined up behind them were half @ dozen of the sixteen pretty girls, some of them in the very kimonos to} whioh the dentist has objected. Mrs. Haagen is a stout. well-vre- served matron with sparkling steel blue eyes and a rosy complexion, well set off | by her silvery gray hair. She ushered the reporter {n among the kimono girls, | who were seated on plush~<covered arm- | chairs and sofas in the pig hall. In ono corner under the stairs was an wak| piano. It looked as if somebody was fust moving in. “Look,” said Mrs agen, waving her hands at the furniture ‘These are the things of use and ornament that I take from that man—that Itle teeth | vening World | Now been unthankful Iteke them away.’ Told Patron to Beat It. The little dresemaker spoke up. | {He 1s no gentleman." whe said. “Why 3 vy there was a lady came for |me to make her a gown. She js al | miifonadress—fnost. And what does |he do? I did not know then, but now I do, Why, he went to the door in his shirt sleeves and told her he never heard of me. Than he sald f ts bent {t, and slammed the door, She | and I see how ceariy I lost si “and hts way. tt cane an echo from the her. “He tells my pupils to He does not like their high notes. what a man." The kimono girls assented to all of t Mrs, Haagen went on to tell what she | had endured. She said that six montha ago the dentist came there and that sh | thought he was a nice man. ‘I_haq @ tooth doctor before for a “There {s his picture, leave it now with this | go awa tenant, ‘ahe sald would nailer.” pointed to a crayon portr: pleasant-faced young man. It ing against the wal) beside a # Hums a Sarcastic Hum. “Yes,” she said. “I often have told this Schnaier that there was a dentist that was a dentist—so kind and pleas- not it of a $ lean- Jant and nice. But Sohnate c s r asks me | what became of him and when I say he died, Schnaier hums a little tune | and grins. [dor | Mrs. Haagen said that she agreed to give Bchnaier a lease for five with cestain privileges. These included her rigi sleep in the folding bed Jin the’ front parlor and the right of her and her boarders to uss the front parlor as a reception room and a ait- | ting room. His patients were to wait there for him and he was to treat [them in his ofMfce in the rear parlor. None of there conditions ap in the ritten copy of the lease hearing Haagen’s name and presented by Sohnater to Magistrate Moss yes- . Mrs. Haagen sald that ‘sha |Tead a copy of the lease written In tong hand by the doctor and that {t wes satisfactory. Then, she said, he mroduced the typewritten copy and’ she ened tt without reading It se hoodie-dendled,” v lawyer tells new try to put him ute me eal She sald that for five months Dr. Schnalar was all that could be dealred .2,, tenant. He made no_ protes: against her sleeping in the folding-bed, for he used the parlors simmly during Dusiness hours and Indeed elsewhere, Didn't Like His Methods. “I liked him so mush," said Mrs, 8, Haagen, “and he was so attentive, al- Ways tryimg to please me. But he had twenty Women patients a day. And to hear them daughing in his back parlor it Was as if he had ten minutes’ work on their teeth and half an hour to play. Oh, I did not Hke it. and then when he came and asked me to go to the theatre with him I told him he had enough women friends and I could buy my own tickets to the play I wished to see. After that he made lite mara for all of us. Now the end is here.” Arie arent girls and the dressmaker nil the vocal teach: S Sains er voted aye unani. “And think of the gas!’ them to Mrs. Haagen. fresh outbreak. “Oh, the gas, Is that the nice thing to she sald sald one of This startea a ahe moaned. “Ten FIFTH W AYE, How the Successive Increase in the Price of Diamonds Affects a Fortune Greater than Rockefeller’s. The price of diamonds has gone up} fgain—the fifth advance within a year. This means that if a certain Englishman | was not a year ago.the richest man in| the world he is tc diamonds go up this man's fortune in- For every time ay. creases proportionately. The reason for this is that he owns He is the the producing diamond mines, power behind the gigantic De Beers compsny, which controls the famous Kimberley diamond fields—the source | of all the world’s diamond supply. At) his orders diamonds are Or are not mined. he output is kept at ex- actly the proper level, thereby making It | possible for him to regulate the market price of the precious stones, The wealth of this man is variously) estimated at from $500,000,000 to $2,- 000,000,000. Probably it is about $1,- 000,000,000, certainly little less. In speaking of the comparative for- tunes of this man and Rockefeller, re- cently, a man who knew said: “A man's wealth should be estimated Jets thers are, the daytime. up, and whe! and says he for me’ to tell else Dr length, gir! f ond he -burns them in All of them are flaring I speek to him he grins loes not have to pay and my troubles to somebody Schnater has told his story His especial bane is the kimono i—multipiied by sixteen. This bevy young women, he says, gathered / they drank tea | Also, he sald, th: gig- | at his patients and pla the so loudly that nervous patlen ed while in his operating oha ne Court desided that under the he has exclusive use of the roams has them, but Mra will not be for long. PINK PANS FLL BROADWAY One Girl, Attired in Smile, Flees from Blaze in Audubon Hotel. his front parlor, ‘where nd gassiped. glea T Haagen deciares yt Pink pajamas, above little pink fest hysterical women with flying halr all shades and length, appeare Jan lo | Broadway early to-day, when P. [man Murray, of the West Thirti Street Station, saw flames and smoke belching from a window on the top |foor of the Hotel Audubon, No. 1416 Broadway, Mostly actresses, the real live article who have jobs on Broadway, live in the Audubon, There ere a few men, | But they don’t count. end when Murr | discovered the fire he—wise man—kne THE DENTIST, THE BOARDING HOUSE AND THE FURNITURE | Me LL0// LA772 WALL STREET. SATURDAY, March 24. Railroad managers throughout the country are taking note of their avail- able supplies of coal in the event of a strike. Should the soft coal miners strike and stay out for a protracted period nearly every raflroad and ev! large industrial plant in this country would be affected. Few ratlroads have more than two months’ suppl: fuel on hand, ‘and the percentage of margin between the production and consump- tion of pituminous coal 1s comparative- ly small. Big manufacturing concerns Including the United Btates Steel Cor- poration, have been stocking up with coal for past few weeks, and the railroads in the bituminous As possible | been storing as much co: along thelr Unes The Pennsylvania system, {!t 1s said, has ab two months’ supply of fuel on hand, but 1 case of actual necessity the manage- ment would appropriate to Its own us' all of the coal moving on {ts lines. There ts Uttle fear that elther the Pennsylvania Railroad or its allied line: wilt! suffer for want of fuel, however, for the Chesapeake and Onto and the ‘orfolk and Western handle the soft oval product of the West Virginia re- gion, which is net yet unionized, The Vanderbilts, besides ownlng one-half the control of Chesapeake and Ohio, own several coal roads which could be depended on to furnish needed supplies if a strike urs. Tn the extrem West the railroads are comparatly Independent, for they powerf i have A Wall Street man telegraphed to aj business connection in ago this morning that the Reading Company haa 10,000,000 tons of coal above ground, on| whieh it can realize an adv: of $1.59 per ton above the present market price in the event of a stril It Js sald on aathority that there 1 hard is coal above ground to carry through the summer. With apprehensions strike In the specul ket to-day became deadly ing displayed a Uttle spirit at first, but succumbed to the general feeling of de- pression. In thewordsof Jacob Field, © market “took a nap." active brokers tn the Exchange ald at the end of the first hour that he had not handled 100 shares of stock Most of the business, he declared, waa “gwitohing between the room traders. coal mar- Read- mo: rict have | freight locomotives equipped to burn vil, | 6 South, One of the|¥ THE CLOSING QUOTATIONS To-day’s highest, pet changes of siocks quotations are as foll: west, closing prices and yesterday's final eS Balt. € On: Brooklya R Brooklyn U Central, Leath &N, Fuel & Tron Southern So, 24 pt.. Gas te Wertern. is Mail hefiteld Pacific 1th Bag & P. pf. 8. R.In Go. of. S. Rubber.... z mash wae Wabash pf..": Wis. Central Wis. Cent. pf. + Advazios a i The total wales of stocks to-day were 207,000 shares, and of bonds $922,000. a PRICES EASE OFF IN RFF FREES. * Decleiive Angleman. Chicago in Postal Fight. CHICAGO. MARCH 4.—The fieht for metropolitan Post-Ofice for Chicago, with tern } gompare | favorabj Pore “Sha ‘other begun in earnest For “‘Home-Coming Week.” | LOUTSVILI KY., MARCH %4.—Sev- | eral th and visitors will be in Loul. ! ring ‘“Home-Coming Week, wera nearly completed to-day. A ate programme has been pre} cluding parades, barbecues, a ball he unvelllng of two statues. ed, and Flood of Gounterfeits. FORT WORTH, TEX., MARCH %4.— ¥ Pp has been floxjed with coun- bills. The are of the and closely resemble the as the stamp and en- the paper is #10 type, Aposi to: Jersey Tourist Killed, LOS ANGELES, CAL, MARCH 2 Edward Nichols, seventy-four years of arist, from Trenton, N. J. most Instantly killed lc car yesterday at hols became con- vold_ an inbound and hurled nearly |Defends College Men. CHICAGO, MARCH 24—Charles* F. Thwing, President of Western Reserve University, spoke at the annual me ing of the Northwestern Alumni Asso- clation of that institution last night in refutation of the statements credited to reformers that they find a large proportion of colicge-bred men among | the men n whom they work. It was seldom that college graduates went to the bad, he held. Strange Malady Kills. ALBANY, ORE. MARCH %4—At Munkers, in Linn County, a mother and child are dead as the result of a mysterious disease or poison that at- tacks the throat. A large number of chickens similarly affected have dled, ag have large numbers of wild bit which Mave visited the place. The victims pf the mysterious affilction are Mrs. ‘Thomas McClain and her little daughter. —_—__—_ BANK STATEMENT SHOWS SPECIE GAIN. SUCTION OF TRAIN MAY KILL FLAGMAN Watchman Drawn in by Whirl of Air. Charles Van Wart, cighty-five years old, and for thirty years a night-watch- man employed by the New York Central Railroad Company in the Melrose yards, misjudged his strength when a Boston express came whirling by, bound for the Grand Central Station. The old man, who lives in Catharine street, Wakefield, has heard a lot of how the suction of trains flying pas drew men and things ater them, but he didn’t believe all these tales. He didn't believe there was @ suction that would draw a@ man into the wiirlwind of a passing train. Van Ward miscalculated his strength, He never would admit that he wasn't about as good a man as was in employ of the company, and every one knew ‘that he had been awake at night s0 many years that he could no longer sleep after nightfall. n the Boston train came by the old night watchman erouched close to the wall, just as he had done for #0 many years, after swinging his lantern to warn those who were about to cross the tracks, The train went by ani then came the suction and old Yan Ward was caught in the whirl of alt, He was litted from his feet and for yards he foliowed the flying train. Then he was jammed against a wall, and he lay there until a track-walker found him unconsctous, with many bones broken and injured internally. At Lebanon Hospital they say he will not swing his lantern any more. They have notified his family that he will die. NURSE GIRL SHOT BY A BOY OF 15 Post Laughed as He Pointed Pistol and Fired at Miss Soucer. As @ result of the shooting of Miss Florence Soucer, a nuree girl employed at the home of Dr. Chalmers Sangree, of No, 142% Madison averme, Howard Post, a fifteen-year-old boy, was held without ball in the Harlem Police Court to-day. Miss Soucer {s in a gert- ous condition in Mount Sinai Hos- pital with a bullet wound in the abdo- men, Tother with the girl's brother, Harry Soucer, young Post called last night on the girl. The three were eky- larking when Post drew & pistol from his pocket. He laughingly potnted {t at the girl and pulled the trigger. Therg was an explosion and she sank to the flour. Sle was hurried to the hospital and both young men were locked up. In court to-day Soucer was discharged and Post waa held for hear- {ng on Monday, All the parties are negroes. —_—_—~___ COTTON CONTROLLED BY BULL ELEMENT, The bulls had control of the cotton market to-day and the list started firm at an advance of 5 to 9 potnta, and in the first ten minutes May sold up to 31.14 and July to 11.15. Houses with pri- vate wires and room shorts were dieavy buyers. The opening prices were: March, 10.90 bid; April, 10.93 to 10.9; May, 11.10 to 11.32; June, 11.11 offered; July, 11.12 to August, 11.02 to 1193; September, 5 10.46 'to 10.49; De* cember, 10.6 to 1 January, 10.52 to closiig prices were: March, 10.99 to 11.01; April, 10.01 to 1008; May, 11.15 to IL] June, 11.15 to 1: August, . 1 to 10.62; Ootober, 10. ovember, 1048 to 10.40; December, 10.51 to 10, January, 10.54 to 16.66, CATHEDRAL CLUB TO ACT. Big Cant tn “Princess Proud” to Ne Shown in Brooklyn, “Princess Proud," a comic opera in two acts, which won success when pre- sented by the Columbia College stu- dents, will be the attraction put forth by the Cathedral Club, of Brooklyn, at {ts annual theatrical entertainment after Lent. The oast includes twelve jeading parts and a chorus of sixty. Among those who will take part are: John J. Kuhn, Edward J, Connolly, Lewis E. A. Drummond, George V. Cooney, Dudley A. Kelley, jr., Edward J. Reilly, William J. Drew, John A. Ludy, Christopher A. Kassenbrock, Claude M. Becker, Dillon J. Cassidy, Joseph A. Corr, Joseph Fe Rorke, John R'Bookery, Lester f. Moran, Béward Conidin, John F. Casey, George J. 8. Dowling, George J. Patterson, George G, Baxter, David Leahy, R. A. Cor-: rea, Hugh F. Tormey. “Princess Proud’ will be put on at one of the Brooklyn The: tor two mghts and a matinee. ———.${7— LINER NEW YORK REPORTS. The American Line steamer New York, from Southampton, was in com- munication with the Marcon! wireless Central’s Eighty-five-Year-Old The $1,000 Champion "THE CTIANDION” A Character Study of Jim Jeffries. Drawn by Charles Dana Gibson. Printed on separate sheets of heavy paper. Four More to Follow. ORDER THE..... Sunday World To-Day from Your Newsdealer. DON’T FORGET THAT THE SUNDAY WORLD IS THE BEST SUNDAY PAPER IN THE WORLD. Look at the Magazine Section in colors. The work will com- pare with the high-priced monthlies. And the subject matter! It is a MYSTERY NUMBER, Here are some mysteries that may interest you: The Mystery of the Missing Miss Bradley; On Dec. 26 a young woman, well known, of prominent family, arrived at the Grand Central Station in New York, en route for her home in England. She has never been seen since, The Mystery of the Last Horse on Earth. A skilful man has figured out when the automobile will have entirely driven out the horse, He has investigated the gradual decrease in the number of horses, figured on the exact rate at which they are becoming extinct, and has reached a definite day and date for the disappearance of the very last horse, The Mystery of the Richest Man in theWorld Who is he? John D. Rockefeller? No, Then who? No one of whom you've heard very much, if at all. This mys- terious man is—— The Mystery of Some Wonderful Animals. : .: Another broker remarked, disconsolate- rea by the amount of money that he can| that there would be trouble. He rushed ‘cab iivaant 1 t Slasconset, Mass,, to-day, 1 1 |!nto the hotel and told Night Cl his market hasn't got enough an- E WHEAT MARKET. | An increane of $1,972,800 In specie waa! station a + p realize at a short notice, Under. such | so Fischel: ght Clerk fon to go either up or down.” TH the most satisfying feature of thts| When se Marana oe reir he Man thinks that man is the most intelligent of all animals. Classification there is no. comp: | vur place $s on fire. T saw tt from| The ba nk statement gave general sat- eat started a trifle eanler in the|Werk's bank statement, which as a Nantucket Lig! Dp. i Yet there are right in New York a group of dumb creatures : 7 ‘i isfaction i | Wh netted ier probably early to-morrow, Detween the wealth of this Ilttle man /the street. ‘Top flour. Flames out of | faction. An specie, not-| et to-day dn response to a good] Whole was very @od. The specie gain} pler DP performing more wonderful feats than any human being has i ay withstand, r heavy _ et t ‘eso a¢ et f es and John D, Rockefeller. Rockefeller | the window. ment of cash to the Weet, was actors | on map, weaker markets in the| Made, notwithstanding large shipments tt ed ld turn his vast holdings into| Puschel and tho policeman climbed to| ed as 4 gvnd sign. The Increases in the} Novy Bs vrai digpuattion to, of cash to Cincinnatl and San Fran- SHIPPING NEWS. ever attempted. a ek etthout great depreciation/|| cne£08| Boor ‘te. the) ‘room! of -Miae smatl, “while the roserus Trading was light and mainly pro. | Ci#99., resulted tn. a rise, of $439,650 a + Le pl 1 cash quickly without gr il ss ane ede, abe é | we Ne reserve| s rading and ma o-| Siiglust Dringing the amount above. the 5 . he Myst f the Real’? Gib: M In fact It is doubtful if he/could do ft |ana the:Gorr Was'toreed wich an cen, jus wa only 3.050 and | FeRstonale Foes uric etree esl Paerpoeer Cre ser hipineea ints e Wlystery 0 e ea, ibson Man. ; : ‘The curted bl 775 18 abo Corn was steady at the opening, but) | aot a a8 ck ‘ f ; at all, for at the moment he began to | ‘he Ssumen ted blown egainst « saa eat BGO TAN Cite liiaiar prices (eahed, aaie tonult of Woek-|C mae See, euros oe ieeued Bee Tea lak oe Water In all of Charles Dana Gibson’s pictures, especially those ap- sell extensively a frightful panic, ae | one ys ae sale o bankers Took tor a ong profit-taking. prices were:| ost, terenee 4.901.200 M. AM. PM. pearing with the Sunday World, there figures a certain young preciating everything in the country,| nose ready, but there were kinke in monetary situation. | qvneat—May, 81-6; July, 841-4 Guaiare [Em hie 138 3a man, very handsome, very austere, very Gibsonian. Who is would ensue. Not so with this diamond | and no water came. Then came How-| gives! shares have] “Chicago's opening prices v Wheat Hell Gate 943 10.10 825) Bai the original? Do you know? king, whose fortune is almost wholly | ard Close, the proprietor, with a chem|.|9f the Ineres Soprom per Sobteuben es ae Reson, increaae Pea Se aise ye ‘ ory ' k . | inguisher, He did not eee Coan |PO® Corpor omn—& CRED | Reserve’ require), . A ; in diamonds, which have a standard | OM ext an | about 8 pe 43-8 oy oa. | Sumpine, dnoreasa ) he Myst f Machine Th Writ market price. For him to sell his dia |i" {8 binding smoke and turned the | Gammon ‘stock ot” the in York's closing priess were: Wheat] fr. Ur” 8. Dene iltenie eee e Mystery of a e That es I rn s chemical upon him, he same 9 preferred stock wi = 6 0 i $8 ble nag] ; ‘ mond field properties would cause not] time the kinks came out of Coan's hose or share aid tne “ton Haase Secemiber, #0, °| LONDON & Campania V i ona Wire : y the slightest bit of a panic, and he could | end there was @ water and chemtca! tof Te of the tit |. Chicago's closing prices were: \ eat — AND PRICES MIXED. | Et. “Gils oices ig 7 uel, ors of the new Ice gecurt: | May, ; September, 771-8; July, 781-8, | ae eneea C { { j realize on them the most astounding | “oT 4, mean time the girls in the beng fed enous | cart omber, 45 t0.45 Soe Curtyoa BS The telephone is wondesful,: the ph,/s, Wo. Sut a sum (cash) that the world has ever con-! house had been called. They fed as|! tye nerensing business, Sa PTET LONDON, Maroh 31.—Money was in| hueces,, Deyeuce new machine that does the, work of*toth, and does ff-in an templated.” they wére. Some rushed to the street, | briny them. divklends sooner ee’ qin! CAR KILLS RICH WOMAN good ‘demand in the market to-day.| yucatan . . Havana. astounding way, is more wonderful still, Who is this man? What do you know | ferear mig snd ald vering 44 the wind | this ye "There some specu- 2 Disoounts were also easier, Trading on Pretoria, Gost ‘gunner = ork ‘ UY bit into their pajamas. On lo jlative call for th ry Pes a ck Exe " 4 - “ a of him? Prokably the American publie| down in a emile, REL See ting. Checpaat weak: tee shares| seg, ‘Terheyden,. of Pittsburyg, | {te Stock Exchange was quiet and tr, DUBE TO-DAY. pi Miss Violet Hall, who 4@ playing with | regular, operators being chiefly occu-| i oburg, Naples, Slavonia, Flame, Bul Ae as a whole has never heard even his|the “Earl and the Girl” company, did Mind Regt meres Nictien os mRelier: pied with closing-up engagements prior| New York, Southampton. These ‘are a few of the: interesting things In next Sunday's name. Yet, if he be the richest man In| hot hear the fire cry. She was rescued, | Wesley Chick Guilty of Marder, PITTSBURG, March 2%. to the settlement, Consols were fairly OUTGOING STEAMSHIPS. the world, he must be of great interest. Duchess's Re Ean ee emorting | goUTH PARTS, Me, March 24a |Terheyden, one of the wealthiest Derik Cie eeee cre ne etsrar net eet SAILED TO-DAY, World, There are others quite as |. The MYSTERY about Ki . pm next ¢ Suen rT. entry ‘Te ees fa came Y . . Columbia, Glasgow, ' " ° and soue | veraict o he fies in this city, @ sister of Henry ‘Tevhey-| parity, ‘became Inactive, reacted St. Poul, &'thazpton. ‘ in the New York Sunday World to-|'°nje'fira "was got under control atter| wus retuned lant night. by tre jcekFee | den, ihe diamond merchant, was in-| Closed’ dni. Grand ‘Trunk ‘relayed on | Joanie, Albert, Naples Umbria. Lverpoo it is that one Sunday newspaper can contain so many things worth morrow an intimate view of him is|MJs® Colon had lost all her personal| the « t by the Jury in| Stantiy Killed Jest evening reet the traf™le returns, being avout ono-| Zechnd. Antwerp, Masada, Lorin a. reading. i 8: LEW im 18} pelongings not in trunks. Then the tine | Soom ovina. hick, a young | car at Liberty f c et, [halt the mount estimated, Eretene, Beule, «Merson wavaie, 3 ’ hich will doubt h oF ate dine | farm hand, f shooting and| Miss Terhevden did not netics an ap:| Foreigners were idle. Japanese haer- ’ Solon. Alleghany, Savanills. given, which wi ubtless prove of jot pink figures, with teeth chattering | \ciiling his great uncle. David. 7 5 Bhing 6 She thr ith ene aaaelatin EEG. Rola Ti Allianca, Colon, vend great interest to one who reads it, (And, chilled, fo. the marrow, wended | at Porter. oh Deo. The penalty is im: | foree to, the navement and Was dead | age tmperial Sixes of 180 were quoted | San Faclitor Gaivesion Mogron, News's News eyery thelr way to bed, ariaonment for life nen picked “al at 14 City of Columbus, Savannah. li EA es Bit TontaewINESOR Meer eI SU ISOM een Re

Other pages from this issue: