The evening world. Newspaper, February 5, 1907, Page 2

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Or insanity? — $ a! ‘act." parried Wiley, “JEROME STILL AT HIM. fA Census enumerator at a citizen's front door. a him. mental state?’ don't recall reading anything about the Renbere! test," Gey Mr: ne Iaughed aloud, derisively. 6 you professionally examined in your 1ife?" we at $00 -¥ should say,” a Thaw's words, ‘I kittea him pecense he ruined my) wife,’ as a sin of ppeeches 1 “and: Incidents may enter into ‘the commission of But J Jerome kept rigs after-him, nate at the witness peralatenty “His delusion as.expressed in his words to his wife, ‘I have promebly. was eerenialy? one evidence, besides the other and con- "How often have I warned you to confine your answers to the uae ‘whieh I ask you?" inquired Jerome, in the casuaily Inquisitive tone "T°don't hipw how otten you’ ve warned me," peaia Wiley, with a ges- pest of the ron are jamie Mogathier ‘right tinder Aia_elbown.| witness - was now making He grinned oppreciatively as Jerome's suave, d: ingly when a reporter showed him -how many pages! questions washed away Dr, Wiley's front. he aa written, Ibven the spur of his wife's mame. ‘so often. Te-| eritertained | CEN) hot the attitude of coal man who bad most at ae “fefonger rolled Rim. At first He had pricked up-his head sed} stake hisnostrite whex-Jerome would mention ver, but now he -tried= tneage his amind with the minor ‘by-plays of the main drama revolving) function?” asked Jerome. you think hat a man WHO wae port with the taint of insanity in} “who had the poison of Insanity growing and developing in him! could lvé-for thirty-six years without having plainly ytath] THE EVENING WORLD, TU “What nerve controls the spleen? “I can't say.” ; “What nerve controls the kidneysT” 7 “l_won't-say-posltively,” Dr. Wiley was beginning to suffer heavily ander Jerome's grilling. He hesitated long in hfs replies and -wriggled in his chair unhappily. “Do you know of any nerve that doesn't nove {ta direct connection j with” tic apmer” = Dr. Wiley wasn't certain enero maybe the auditory nerve didn’t connect. ~ “Do you know. the name of a single yitaJ-that does connect with the spinal -colurmn?*. “any not prepared to say.~ NOT FAMILIAR WITH THE NERVES. “Will\you namie a single Imgortant rerve that cornnecta with the spinal column?" “I think of none now, “Is pot the, pheumogastric. neryo: the malin nerve of the vodyt at ¢ wonit be positive.” - Thaw" apparently, had. no regard for. the poor showing which als: first! He couldn't recall. He thought His attitude was that of thé “Can -you-name a single nerve that porfornis an se etietanstss or yitat’ _"Oh. yes. a. i ; Wega “What nerve do you know best? : “The optic nerve, | shduld pay.” i G “Do- you know —what— -a@Hepiets incam br -the Arse Hodertscn. -symp-| toms?"" , The. dAlwcomforted ialieman from, Pitteburg wriggle. about an if he Af Mr. Gleason said he wanted time to quote authority. ESDAY, FEBRUARY-5,_ larry’ Thaw’ s ’s Attorneys Begin Work of Establishing Their Main ‘Line ot Detense by Calling Expert on Insa no connection had heen shown between the conversation in eres and the death of White. He ‘also pottited out the remoteress of the dato “ot the. canevereallon which ‘Bouman was about to detall, Justice Fitz-} gerald sustained the objection, but sald he would hear Mr. Gleason further on the subject to-morrow. =—=Sthes —-Bouliah—conht—only—testity-about—the—conreraation Thaw, in whith Thaw was siid to have repeated threats made by White against his Ife, he had to ‘leave the stand. Mr, Gleason urged that court should now adjourn, but Mr, Jerome sald there stili remained an hour of time, and there was no reason Why another witness: should-got bercatied: . THAW’S COUSIN ON THE STAND. Accordingly, the defense brought forwant Alfred Loe Thaw, twenty-four | years old,-of Pittsburg. Mr. Thaw satd he was a cousin of Harry Thaw. He was a good-looking, Square-Jawed ,xggresst¥e-looking man, bearing no | résemblance’ in face, form or manner to the prisoner.nt the bar. “My father and Harry, Thaw’s father .were first cousitis,” witness in answer to Mr. Gleason's first question. began the} ‘The’ Thaw on the stand opened his mouth to answer, but she got no farther. Mr. Jerome had another. objectian on the ground that \he condi- tion ofthe mind, of any member of w collateral branch of the deféndant'’ family. had no-bearlig here, SEP REIAUY, so remote a branch as frst or so qnd_or-third cousins, ; ira My. Gleason ‘argued the question at length. He insisted that, he had a‘right to show insanity in any man who had a common ancestry with| Harry Thaw. ; Mir, Forome “answered “He argued thatthe defense -haii_no rein to allow Alfred, Lee Thaw to tell, ofthe insanity yof Is father. He sald that fwhon insanity existed in-the mind of a iret ccusin the connection was. were sitting on a hot skillet. He finally admitted he couldn't exhotly re- {member what the Argile Robertson symptoms might be. raid the) 57 DOCTOR GOING HARD, eal "How many supposed Sa ; Jerome now forzed the unhappy Wiley to admit that he cottldn’t ‘recall here {t was he read about the Arpile-Robentson test; that he couldn't] even remember reading about ft at all and that he didn't know whether! i ‘Argile-Robertson was one name or two. | Finally the District- Attorney out- tila. squsictiors = = | ¢E-SIDED. PUZZLE. Mbgtantl, able to diagnose the case directly. [am tinder the tmpréssion”—— he began. q r mind; never mind,” sneered Mr. Jerome. ur impressions. Jerome-tt-he-were nearly through with Dr. Wil BR FOR THE DOCTOR. ftunch hour. y_of tlie alfeniats for the defense present?” <1 think not," = =f ve you ¢ ever’ heard of the coccyx?” ia n't reall.” the Aa PAre: test_or the con- {éd_to know if a man fell ina fit fn the street and} Pr, were “ealled To attend | Rim, how the physician would know whether, jerer shad epilepsy, alcoholic convulsions or a fracture at the base’ The-witness thoubht-he would have to-look-at the ‘posttion~ ‘é-thumbs and smell his breath. He wasn't certain whether he ‘g used?” = “I am-not interested Da you know the symptoms of hemorrhago of the} pene—was_ctill_pouceriig_ovor. his—arewer—when “Justice el doctor went back on the stand after the noon recess. Mr. Jerome know ff-he-had eiCant the Romberg test for epilepsy during @ FOU NOT-KHOW that te at “the extremity of 1 the spitial column?” 3 you-prepared to eay there ts no such thing as the coccyx In the Argite-1 obertson “was Now, Doctor,” ar gay whether a renl person or whether ho in merely a creation of Dr. Wiley inerely. shook his head helplessly and gazed at the celiing as Sf for inspiration. { “T have seen the name In a text-book," he gence’ ‘after_a long walt. "What taxt-pook?™* = Ee = at “T can’t aay.” <e “Can yor name any text-book In God's green earth’ where such a“nam~ “I guess I can't.” z DOCTOR GROWS DESPERATE. Once in sheer desperation the tortured Dr. Wiley blurted out: “T only came here to testify to facts. You have tried to convert me Into expert." “Do you think the conversion will” jst?" Jnguired his tormentor with fine sarcasm, ‘Wiley made no reply, eels wee ‘This-dire—spectacte—contintred —as— the-atternoon- opassel. Neves for a {moment did Jerome ease up hid onslaught; never omm did He spare his auffering prey, cyen whien_ the. hapless Dr, Wiley was Iiterally sbrinking “away_inaide_of-his-clothes.—The-District~Atiorney-meemed-to_have-tn—him none of the bowels of compassion. ‘ MIGHT BE EPOCHAL INSANITY. “If a man is born with hereditary iusanity and psychopathle tempera- ‘ment from childhood, and if he has a homicidal mania at thirty-six years will he ever again bo sane? - Will he ever again be free of such impulses ?™ “Such impulses might be revived under certain conditions—under the samé stresz, that actuated the first outburst.” ‘What was unusual about the killing of Stanford White by Harry Thaw 3 “Well, the whole thing waa full of suspicious and insane circum stances. ‘Hie way of holding his revolver aloft, for exemple, was another tnstance =of- Insanity. it. was pecullar and unusual,” “Did you eyer hear | of anybodyy. being killed on top of Madison Squar.| Garden?” - “No, “Well, that wns peculiar and unusual, wasn’t {t?"* “Yes, 1 guess it was.” “How does. a murderer killing his victim?” “JT dont“ know.” tho {a rane usually carry hie weapon after my fancy?” [3 too remote for the uses of thin case. Mr. Gleason got ready to fepiy again, but became mixed in his quota- tlons and said he'd have to consult his law books. (COURT RULES OUT TESTIMONY: Justice Fitzgerald eald he would admit proofs of direct Insanity, but that in the matter of a firet cousin beivg insane ho shared Mr. Jorome’: 8} view, and would continue to share it until the full law on the subject had, Piven offered to connate me Siientad cwainens=of with the menial weaknss In (he If “For the present, I w!ll_sust sald his Honor. ‘'The line of proof which the defense faasrinkes to Intro- duce at this time is clearly incompetent. You may--reintroduce this wit- nesn-at—any—time-when—h!s testimony becomes. relevant.” eons “We except tothe ruling," said-Gieason.—“F-want to ask the withes one more question.” Turning to Mr:-A>Lee-Thaw he sald: “Did. you sge -your father in 1895 in an asylum for the insane in Rieh- mond, Virginia?” The court would not allow the question to be answered. é ANOTHER DOCTOR CAI,LED. Therefore, Mr. Gleason had to call his next witness, who proved to be also a physician, Dr. John T. Deemar, of Kittaning, Pa., who sald he had known Harry Thaw twenty-five years. £ “When Thaw was nine years old,” went on the physiqjan, “I treated him_for-an-eruptive disease, J noticed that | ‘and excitable child.” a = “Did you ever attend Henry” Cc _Copley, tho brother of Harry aatetae mother? ~ “Yes.” “What was his mental condition?” “Tt was weak. “Did you ever attend John Ross, a son of ‘Margaret Copley: Ross, who fwas a sister of Mrs. William Thaw?" “Yes.” “John Ross was a cousin of this defendant, was he not?” “He was.” “What was Johi Ross's mental condition?” "It was weak,’ Mr, Jerome again objected’ to lugging in the mentality of sny more) cousing-at this time. He was mustained in the objection, “tere the court adjourned: for. the day, not pleased with the day's work, as Mr. Gleason had done tt with | 'Dr. Wylie, of Pittsburg, Decaree ‘White’s Slayer “Where was your tather at the time of his.death?"” asked Mr.Gleason,{é >} and Marry Thaw’s lawyers were a |] downeast md_bothered group of-men-aa they: filed out. Plainly they were | |! sae Cases as First Witness THAW INSANE SAYS FIRST EXPERT CALLED BY DEFENSE Had Delusions—Tells of Peculiar Actions in Street Car Year Before Tragedy. called na .the ably raved. your lit Tnek? you, a Dr Charles J. Wiley, raed ates firwtwitneas ons hebait other défense | eengt oun ours as Ih the Thaw case, gave hia address a4 / jon touching Upon t of Pittsburg, Pa: He Is a’ graduat the Callexe gfPhysjcians and Surgeons, Q: Slate what experience. you have) had with reference tp’ Insanity, canes. | A. My. firet experience/ was in the ‘York | Pennsylvania, Almshouse _ fo Mz, Jerome ain ish tw, 8 the qupstion, bur “ mes theslueatoe the witnbes to jneeeetie be peniok asked ns pba n but Ss ask: other on such date hen asa Man, oan form an ovini n expert Nt aitestlon juag he, Court= Anew 4; the Tnita ne, where, ‘ns assistant. super Ni he simple fact erik pare | wether) You,can etve ancopinin Intcudent;..T tind to-lobk after the An- | Tavcimed-tnctp aa. to his -mmeriat meste ot anc, prescribe for them and sce toltnn time, heir care, ete. AY Gs eae Ge Q.llave you madea study of insanity? | eet eee oie er reee That: 4. Chave made @ specialty of Snsantry for the best Of my life excepting a per-+ fod of three years, in which I was eh- aged in general practice Just after my Kraduat ry 2 Q. Hate you nerved nn an expert in camop—in spe with referetice to Insane Ity? A, Q. Haye you had expertence with ret- 6 erence to’ the commitment of insane people to hospitals by reason of thelr insanity? A. Yes, str, in the case of a great Many persons, , Q. And where are you now practising? | Aj Pittsburg:-Pa: Q. And your specialty is Insanity and nervous diseases? A Yes sir, _| .Q. Do you recognize the /defendant, ‘Harry Thaw, a8 u person you\saw jin A-Ldo.-, = Qwhere eae ycur—ateention parc ———(Gontinued-on Third Page) tloutarly directed to Harry K. ‘Thaw, then t——A:-During—the-summe>= of 166} Iwas on a street car. About 9 g'clock in the evening Mr Thaw came th_In- the. frant_of our cars_we have one largo door with a window in {t. and ‘on-either-side we-have-smailer- windows. ne-centre— windew—bas—bilade—s ihoh are drawh In the evening-to prevent the Hght of the car from Interfering with the observation: of the motorman, Mr, Thaw came into the car, without any purpose put vp this did. ~'The conductor samei torr forward and pulled {t RAYS Nevis ROINE. to Rive his” pinto ; ily opinion in. of m0, importance, ts ‘an opinion ax a sclentif man, It ta-mhother br can. asa salent!Ae-man, on the faci stated, £lve an opinion of, the -mental-atate of the man, The Court-That js how he {gs to’ give pl opinion, as |hn expert. | M Yes mir: thnt ta th: EST the doctor has not d whether or not ho is abl an opinion on ie Assumed .,Amawer that first, yes or no, AL sir, wart Give your opinion bared on facts only and from what - w in Pittsburg? A, I can. give inion that that manis insane.‘ G.°r"that your opinion? A, Yes, str, “Now, doctor, upon= the question of naaslty i dealre'to ask you as an exe ther the question of heredity ta ie important factor: ‘Q--Will_you-defino_w! hatin meant by thd question of noreditary insanity and In fabrics, down, | Thaw 4 jumped up end threw up ee ins alin, a ie} tin. A i the agi cr ry got ind a workmanship, fit Q. State whether, In your judgment, the action you have described was rational or irrational? Mr. Jerome objected to the questi but the Court held the question not ut the witness as an expert and Dr. Wylie was allowed to answer. “Irrational,” repHed the doctor, Q. Doctor, were you {n court when the evidence wan given yesterday? A; eof Tis ANNE : Insane, Bays Expert Q. Assuming. sir, that the man: you Sawin that streetcar was -proven™to YOU ae A expert,_te Wave attend ote T- Toot garden on thé 3th dey of June. 1906._ori_the occasion of the opening of | © theatrical entertainment—whioh was largely attended, and that on’ walking out from the theatre, with his wife near dim, and apparently In a quiet and orderly qnanner, that_ man should turn aside and fire three shota fro: es revolver into & man wae sit At the table; and to whom he did not sooak; that this man then held the {stol above his head and walked quiet- ly toward the elevator: that he gave up the platol without resistance and did: not make any” attempt to excape; that he sald: “He ruined my wife!” and. that immediately there- atter he anid to his wife “hove prob- and comfort. and numberless ex- clusive designs in fancy fabrics. Ash for Cluett Shirts. Look for Cinett label. GLUETT, PEABODY 4 Co. mange oF annow cocians,-— ‘Atterbury Systent| Overcoats —_IN BIG SNOWDRIFT That Was—All-the-Home—He-Had; “Then if you don't know what 1s usual in such cases, how do you know 3tarry—Thaw's-action- was unusual?” “Well, they were Insane actions.” érb—and--the expert ther party gained or tost ground, S THE DOCTOR W ORRIED. nat is the principal nerve in the body?" {& ‘The witness hesitated a long minute. Then he sald, haltingly: ere should-say the-cardiac nerve.” “nerve are not synonymous?” 2 I-am not prepared to say.” 25 examination went along like \this for half an hour. Jerome kept] -grew—more-and- more: restiess.— Itt—was- aa Jaymente- ‘tell whither the Inquisition tended—anleas Mr Jez; te shew his-knowledge-of medical terms or the witness's. Rederance of them. It appeured to be a futile, pointless _business in which OUUNderAKG treat Nervous diseases without knowledge of the _ “Do you know whether the cardiac nerve enters the brain or the spinal at&t I “Ate you prepared to ray that the cardiac nerve and the pneumogastric A PARALLEL FOR, THAW’S CASE, Dr. Wiley sald he had once known the casd af a crazy man who killed in-wite-andthon quietly walked {nto a_stadle and waited for the police to come and «et. him He sald this: man'a-conduct.offered .a. reasonable parallel to Thew’s movements Immediately after he had shot white, Dr, Carlos McDonald, one of tho allenista for/the Stato, sat in Mr Garvan's seat prompting Mr. Jerome in his questions. At 3.40 o'clock tie Wwilted/Pittsburger Wwas_permitted to leave the stand, “He had been on the grill just four hours, and two of them had been yeery, hard wearing hoours Indeed. The defense lad not ons objected to Mr, Jorome's tagtics in crose- examination, nor did it offer any questions to ask him when Mr. Jerome got-throush. THAW HAD ST. “VITUS'S DANCE.: Dr. Wiley’s-late seat. of torment was taken by Dr. Charles Francis Bingnman, who eal’ he had known Harry Thaw since Thaw was four years old, and that he had deen Mrs, William Thaw’s family physician more than thirty years. “I attended Harry Thaw through mumps, measles and the ordinary ailments of childhocd,” sald the old-physiclan. “He was always of a very Morning World Readers by securing the set may beautify their bomes of Charles Dana Gibson Pictures now being-given| with the Sunday World. New picture each week, : nervous temperament sand slept so badly that he had to have two nurses at night. He euffered for four weeks from a bad attack of St. Vitus’s dance, characterized by crossing of the eyes and twitching of the limbs, I would say that Harry Thaw was always of a neuratic temperament.” ‘This concluded the direct examination, and Dr, Bingman was turned over to the prosecution, Mr. Jerome whispered to Garvan and then an- nounced that he had only one quostion to ask. He wanted to know how _|old Harry Thaw was when he had St. Vitus ddance, “About six or seven years, I should-say," said the-witness, who was; an old gentleman with gold glasses and a heavy white mustache. NEW WITNESS LEAVES STAND. Benjamin bouman mounted the stand. He was a steutly dullt man, with a big mustache, Iie appeared to be about tei aye years old, and looked like a prosperous workingman or clerk. “LT live at No. 1035 Manhattan avenue, Brooklyn,” he told Mr, jGleason, i“t know Harry Thaw. On or about dan. 2, 190d, ot Eighth avenue and | rwenty-eighth street, I met Thaw and had a tall with him,” ‘At this Mr. Jerome arose with a protest. He objected, he sald, because! ALES CURED IN G TO 14 DAY8. je lidranteed to core any. ind, Bleeding or Protrudl Tefunded.60c,' Fake LAXATIVE BROMO) Quinine Tab ‘Drugglets refund ig to cure, Be TO CURE A COLD IN Onn aah OVErw vignaturels on | FOR BOARD BILL) os. sie oe “Sserted Him, = Joseph Goodwin, fourteen and bright. was found asleep inf the Broadway en- france. tothe Flatiron Bullding during. the ‘storm last night, covered with snow which swirled down. around him. He. wus--taken.-to— the Children‘a Society. Judge Dickey Orders Land: lady to Give Mother In- fant-on- Demand. = rooms,., and~to-day- in ALYY Court told Justice Wyatt that his father, Se-thirty: | porter In m-cheap lodging-houso,, had Mra. ay UN Asi ‘ aaa ee mos him to SF INIKGaTpTN aia deserted ree Soe {ppearod—Detore-Jua- | iim. —He_had_made hin way back to tice Dickey In tha. Bupreme Courts) My OR ica ordorad Oat the atary: be Brooklyn, this atternoon to answer 4) Vorined.” The boy war remanded to the writ of habeas corpus obtained by Mra. care ‘ofthe Children’s Soclety Feb, ‘Clarke, tyenty-Lwo-years old. of } ery Dirteld stroct.-atrs.- Clarke's | <= wye: Frank had deen board- Oa OM eeWatagn, and. when the ‘A BRAINY CHILD inuther ask d for her child Mra Wat~) Wie grother Provex the Value of Gr Nuts in Rearing Children. until on refused to return him because, she roy a DHL of -k2 was still unpald. When Justice Dickey th facts he turned to Mrs, Watson and eae wuthority-do-you-keop the child from {ts mother? You give her the baby at once, Do you understand?’ ‘Mrs, Watson tried to say, something more about the board bill, and ex- plained that the ohild was at her home Justice Dickey told her she must re- turn the ehtd) on-demand. and oMra.; Clarke burried to the wilow’s bon, Where ahe got hor Httle Frank. Page S SINGER GETS $10,000 FOR LOSS. OF- VOICE a twelve-day trial In which twenty witnesses, including a dozen qiedical—experta and —ainging exports, gave testimony for and axainst her, Miss Emma A, Dambmann, who sued the Metropolitan Street Rahway Com 7,00 for injuries which cos Reva Neel pete’ voice and &n engage- Xear as wololat yin the There is no surer test af real knowledge than. the personal _test— observation with: our own eyes and other sensed. “Having been raised to belleve tht! one colild not exist without meat, hot! biscuit and ceftee for breakfast, [ was sceptical at first about the value of Grape-Nuts. “But our little girl, as well as my- self, had indigestion all the time, and T could not understand why, tho advertisements concerning Grape- Nuts, I decided to try some to see whether it would afford) nourfshment like meat, etc. T was. worrled abont our-jittle gitl. Tis “In a short. time after changing from ‘heavy food at~breakfast. and supper to Grape-Nuts,she had fo more headache, put on flesh, and} After ment at $240) f tht Baptist Church, now, after five years o1 ls way of: Sean Higeo daanasres bythe Jury |tiving, at the age of ten. she 1s 4 foet betore: Justice the Supreme |i igh, weighs 81 Ibs, fs in the fth ou grade and in every way js n fine, pralny child. “Our boy is 5 years old, has been raised on Grape-Nutes, eats It for two meals each diy, 1s very large for his ‘age and fine looking."—~Namegiven by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read the little book, The Road tc ee in pkgs. eon.’ This was the second trial of the ac- tion, On the frst a verdict for $13.9 Was brought in by the Jury. An appeal was taken and the verdict set aside ang a new trial orncrod, Ae 3 jaa Diunbmann wae olighting from on at-the-Grand Cenirat. Btation on Noy. 24, 1899, when the car gave & sud- den jerk. throwing her Into, the atreot on her shoulder, ines is of eta yeeaus ruions, und the shock and jar 0: PevPer sens her o'm sick bed for bevs era] month® the Children’s | || “About five years ago, attracted by} - American Market are se- tected [by direct representa t +—tives—in—the-most—famous— Oriental-Tea Gardens and ~~} | are sold in America in Park « i & Tilford's Stores at low- 4 ~Marked- Down =| i All Our Regular = $30.00 -and= $35.00 | Overcoats __ Rett $18.75 39-41: CORTLANDT ST. ecw LA sew tf tat vhies arc} are. the services of my eye. specialists who: are at my stores. They. will examine: aa you, don’t re wo poral prove ete eo : arava "POR “tls jTUBSDAY. i BLACK WALNUE pouxp 10c}/yOur eyes and provide the CHOCOLATE COFFEE" O 18¢ Hight piasses which you need. SrBCIAL FOR THiS “WEDNESDAY, || The charge for eyeglasses is ASORTED GEXESEE as low as $4. “<..rounp 10C co Sees 24 B, 125th St, Bet, Mad. & Pith Aves, MOCOERMINTS s...PounD 1 5c || 1820 Third Av BSth=k Both Sts, 542 Columbus Ayc,, Bet. 86th & 87thSts. pf Sousa 1007, MARTIN, GILLEN,—On 7 : son of the late Bri and John Gillen, , and brother of the Jonn and Terence, aa ‘i ; fy. Sligo, Ireland, ’ wieral from the residence of “Atta. fbare West 40th at . Mi: thence to Bt Ma Interment in — ave a tone that maker a Iaating impros- ah lghC : : ‘alon, becaure It l@ pure and «ympathetic, | OBNIEN,—On Feb, 4, 1907, THOMAS Once paving heard |@ "Christman" you | O'BRIEN, beloved husband of Annie nover ferget It. Arebdeacon, In constriction—they- represent the highest Vuneral Wednesdar, Feb. 6, at 2.30 —|. p.oML, from hia late residence, 347. atandand-pf-workmanatiip.——————_—— ~Rend-postal for tlustrated eatalogui ~ CHRISTMAN SONS Hak 65th ot. Interment Calvary, Gunday’ World Wante Work |” Monday Morning Wondere ( pine eae

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