The evening world. Newspaper, March 6, 1907, Page 13

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A Wall Street Romance By the Author. of “Frenzied Finance.” him withouta¢—least making them. swallow some of the dust they kick up. Please don't object to my helping outs Misa Sands. Ordinarily I would deter to your wishes, but I luve Bob Brown- ley only second to-my ‘wife, and I have money enough to warrant a nlunge In stock: It they should turn Bob over tn this deal he—well, they're not going to, if 1 can prevent it.” and I started for Exchange on the run “When I got there the sceno besmaret description. ‘That of the “morning wae tamo' in comparison. A bull Market, however terrific, always is tame bedde a beur crasi-In tne few moments It took me to get to the floor the battle Tho xreater part of the I <i Coyris! tela. Drowsley that her father, Judge haa beer cheated by "System" nut of his fortung and trust funds, order to honor and recoup the oat funds, Sanda and Beulah have scraped tozett “300,000, “which U tor ebals bring to. wepeculatlons, try to Win the necensary $1,500, bo Thie Tees TAWA Ga NRT ik ate Abariths —"_Trawnley.— greatly attracted by. Loulah, promises to ald her in the scheme. She afd Hoo fall Jn love with each of Bhe becomes a stonterapher at Randolph's Noa, whore aha can wa ¢ Fund’ choosy the” proper ment. By clever manipuintion » taker ad yeHtaRe of a furry in Sugar t9 bring Weulays | had started, 4 fortune (which abe has meantime sucuented | Exchange mgmbersi!p was in a dense r by other ney Up to wore than the! mol, wedged agninat the rall behind ¢ ings the Sugar pole. I could not have got within yards of the centre of «that crowd of men, fast becoming pante- stricken, if the fate of nations had de- pended on my errand. I had witnessed Buch @ scere before. It represented a CHAPTER ITI. ~ A Duel in Sugar. listened —a—-moment, “than, -an| certain phase of Stock Exchangs-gam- | swered: “Stand on’ it at $0 for| bung procedure, where one man ap- shares, I will be there in| parently has every other man on the accond." He pped the recelver.| floor againat him. I understood: “Bod lin, we have E Arthur | against them all—he trying to stay the prices, Perk! st at the} onru: current, of dropping rere ; has Just| they bent on keeping the sluice-gates Jumped in and supplied bids} oper. He wae backed up against the rajl—not the Bob of the morning; not a vesUgo of that cold, braln-nerve-and- body-in-hand” gambler remained.) Hus hat Was gone, his collar torn and hang- ing over Gs shoulder. ' Hig coat and fo has it down to #1 and 1s, offering .{t in 6,000 blocks and Is aggressive. I Smut Ker there pulex,” and hes) ‘Of the office, I sprang for Wob's telephone. | e,; Wednesday, March 6, 1907. Ba oy ot hy ah st the Evening World’s Daily “Magazin gis emo, battle. AN knew. that {¢ Bob. should i) ten down by this concentrated modern Gnance devil a panic would ensue and Sugar would go nono could say how low. But {f Bob should play Whicht..when he was stall looked Mke those of a wolf. While every other man in the Was at a high tension of excitement Rarry ant was as calm as though | ‘ standing {n the centre of a ten-acre Ba to a standstill by ecasallis aD dainy-fleld cutting off the helpless fow- Ing power Sugar would quickly Cones to even hicher figures than before. was known that Barry Conant’, usual order from hiy cllents, the ‘“Syatem” masters, for auch an occasion as the hoads with every swing of his j hing stock-gamblers Into eternity had grown to bo.a pastime to Barry Conant. Mera_was Rob thundering | Aste 420 with terrific emphasts for 5,000,"* {nae iss wits” "Brea the’ prise bd ny; tor 6,000," for 6,000, for_6,000,"" | SO? OR aimee ia {18 for ¥,000,"" *%72 for 5,000, emingly|) As Bok mnde tts. bid ‘72 for .6,000,' jand wot it I saw a gulek flash of ‘pain shopt across his face, and réalized that it probably-meant te was nearing the end of my Inst order, I then and there decided that whatever happened I would co no further, Just then Bodta wild eye caught mine, and there waa in it a piteoua appeal, auch an appeal Aa one sees in the eye of the wounded doo when she «ives up her attempt-to awim to shore 6nd waits the coming of expecting through sheer power of volve to orivh Nis opponent Into allence, Bur with the regularity of a Barry Conant’s | reht han: hurried gesture, and his “gold'’ met Bob's every retreat i It was a battle royal—a king -on one atde, a Richelieu'on the other. Though there wna frantic buying and. solling all nround these two generale the trad- ing Was gauged by tho trend of thelr trip-hammer rained In ele: | burst I_aadly. As Bob the purming. hunter's canoe. signalled that ‘I was thr. cnugit the sign, he threw’ his head back and bellowed a deep hoarse ‘70 for 10, 1 knew then that he had @lready bought forty thousand, and that this was the last-citch stand. Barry Conant must have caught the Meaning too. Instantly, like a revolver repart, ome his ‘Sold!’ ‘Then tho! Compact, miniature mass of human eprings and wires, which had until now been held tn perfect control, -euddenly fromevity., clamps, and Barry Conant wax the flond his Wall streot reputation pictured Mm, Hla 6 feet & inches xcemed to loom to the height of a giant. « arms, with thelr fato- 1 pointing fingers, rose and fell with be- sroing voles 110,000 at Pandemonium wildering rapidity as his’ pt Tang out—'%,000 at 69, 63, 63,"" 0, at 60." relgned.. Every man {nthe crowd Score_seemed to ba bent on_aclling a! A8-pousihle tnstead-of forasm they could get. There ‘shorts who had been punished tt wore before by Uob's uplift I saw a look of deep, terrible agon, apread over Bob's face, and then In a wnley who 1 flash he was the Bob Dr the brain to do the right thing In all clrepmstances. To the astonishment of every man In the crowd he lat Joose ane wild yell, m cross between the war-whoop of an Indian and the bay a doep-lungel hound regaining « scent. Then he Began gar Btock, right and left, Mttlo amounts. — [le slaughter price, under-cutting Barry “Conagt's avery offer and fled every bid. twenty minutes he was q madman, then he stopped. Sugar was falling rapidly to the price {t Mnally reached, ®, and seemed to haye the capital stock of the Sugar Trust to sell and atvany price, A e] The New Chauffeur. MA CHERE BLANCHE SNE PROMISE TQ Go YO ZEDINNAIRE wiz ME, OUT WHERE SHALL ABTA ZELMOREY > ee & oe the panic waa in full swing, but panics secmod now to have no Interest for By RK. W. Taylor VOILA I HAVE 2E <REATAIDEA! ; “Buy ©,000 shares, 6.0% cach point} watstcoit were ripped open, showing j When he kets (here. Jig fs on the|and his eyes were fatrly way.”* ‘| was no longer a human being, but. « Tahut off. and turnéy to Mies Sands: “This {a no time to ytand, on cere- mony, Miss Sands. Barry Conant {s Cammeyer's and Standard Oil's head broker. His being on the floor means mischief. He never gocs into a big =awhdri--personalty -untray—they~aTe—out for dlood, Bob has exhausted his buy- —ine_pewer,-and-though-F teil you trank= Sy that t never Spears, dont Beeve | in speculation and am in this deal only| by a pair of bparkling black for Bob—and for you--I swear I don't| framed in jet-black hatr; a black mu- fntend to let them wipe the floor with|tache was parted over white toeth monarch of the forest at bay, with the] unter in front of him, and closing In upon him, in a great half-circle, the pack of harriers, all gnaghing their teeth, baring thelr fangs and howling for blood The hunter directly facing Boy war Barry Conant—very—aKnT f very short, tundsome, “miniature cinaUng face, dark olive Ti & marvellously compact, “The Shoemaker’ , Pegs Ina Moral — Of Hts Trade. 667 TS never too late to mend." * - I This was the moral pegged In by "The Shocmaker at the Fourteenth fs Street Theatre last night, when the house wasn't big enough to hold all the peopie who wanted to see “the natural comedian," Joe Welch, in his new Play. 5 83—Hal_.Reld's-piot was getting on Haoteet Murtel =the misfit wit 4 Maggered down the steps of the underground shoe whop with an awful load | { Bhe was all in black rags and her face looked as though sho had washed it tn An esh barrel. The poor woman would have fallen had not the g00d Goldberg er take water she proceeded to lay the dust and then asked, “What Is it ‘The shoemaker gently explained that it waa water, ‘The poor soak had forgotten, the ¢ame—think of that! What \brought you to thisT’ asked the shoemaker, who was too busy to answered mussy Muriel. in, or the want of {t—love, or the want of It," ‘The shoemaker urged her to take a brace. 2 he moaned, ried the shoemaker, “It's only half-past eight." _ Muriel“oouldn't seo the joke, but ehe could sce the sign when the shoe- Shaker pointed out and sald: 3. "Read that sign: ‘It's Never Too Late to Mend.’ *% “Bhe proved that she could eco It by repeating the worda with great fervor St least halt-«—dosen times -Her_soul- was: gone when-she same in. buto#he Went out half-soled. The shoemaker had fone a good job, He helped along “the good work of the elen by advising ber to go West. Murlol went, first “Garrying the glad udinga to the Bowery: “It's never too late to mend!" Thero "4t waa and no mistake—a hand-sewed, custom-made moral! ‘S Murlol wry the second heavy drinker to strike the shoe shop. ‘The frst was Helen, t'e wedge. Just why Helen was down on the programme aa “the Swedyo" wasn't explained In one of those chatty aymbolle notes which now —_*ffer_first ald to the amateurthighbrow along Broadway, The we. sin had ptHkblest her to dress the part right up to the chin and to accumulate a tide that-rove-to-#- similar height... She eame ty to-have her shoe stretched Her pC Sor | dinded 4hAt Ghere ba no delay, “When Guldberg had fixea the MBhde, Helen whowed Fourteanth Street the Intest thing In itiose and sald, “Put Jie Phe mhoemaker looked the other way and stammered: "I couldn't. Meafckness in the heart.'’ | But he nerved himself to the task when Helen wiggled her tons Impatlontly. @nd after paying bim with a goo-goo glance she went out to lap up a Mite Biore tangle-foo! : g I got a nis giving two or three coon songs the Koaher treatment. It la worth a trip is Fourteenth street Just to hear Mr, Welch burst into son eshroughout the first act bears the miamp of the true artist. He makes the Bowery Jew a —renlcharacter——-He-keepa_on-the tafe side. of exaggération, and Valves Goldberg a human touch that haa not been equalled ance Warfield took The Auctioneer.” His humor ty true, but his pathos, be- pdency to snivel, gelshim Into deop water at tim e You laugh with toe play, and not. at tt, until the shoemaker loaves him-Inst %© go to Wyoming in nearch of lila daughter, who has been abducted by the villain. -At- thie point: the play “becomes, quits unintentionally, a. tray the Western drama that took” Broadway into camp with “Dhe Squaw Man. #2In other words, {t becomes absurd, 5 2 | ox Goldberg, rigged up in true bad man style, rideq tn On an old white horse =sthat—tn_one-of-the-beat actors. {nthe company, The shoemaker's dutightor 1s ated into Dead Man's Gulch by. Helen, Whose conectence ts..pinching her,..and who {s constantly reminding tho villain that he !s no gentleman. Tho shoe- sonkor's daughter bas _loxt wer mind, but found some wiki Mowers, and_acts~ ike Ophelia with a_stomach ache. The cowboys take off their hats to her, one— of thom uttering the feeling remark; “fven the Indians keep sacred such as| Muriel { there, too, but you'd never know her, She wears cow-giri toms mind a healthy look, and at the very first opening she screams, "Thank God I aBlved to find out it.Ja never too Inte to mend!" She can't forget that, Goldberg announcea that ho ts a ‘acoutch," and after loading up on the Ssworat that the house affords, shoota up the saloon, scaring of everybody but Bia daughter, who goes Hght on praying for deliverance In an upper room,. Ate fer a long bunt through the Jast act he finds her and gold, * i The play would be better if the ehoemake: stuck to his last, but at the ‘Game time most of the melodramas neen at the cheaper theatres aren't a patch! +o ‘Phe Shoemaker." CHARLES DARNTON: HINTS FOR THE HOME. . cups should be set tn saucepans of boll- Show Eggs. ing water, letting the watercome nbour | HIS is an entirely new sort of} half way up the cup, and cook thus breakfast dish that Is greatly + that can be recommended ta invalids Until the white ia sot! firm. ‘The heat appreciated by. most peoplo, una | WiJ,make tho froth rise so ax nearly or those whose digestion ly not strong, Butter thoroughly the inaide of as many jo All the cup. Invert a warm plato over-each oup and turn out each exg. Sprinkle chopped parsley on top ani custird cups as the eggs you with to ‘use, which are best prepared neparately. {Separate the: white from the yolk of tho | aerve at once, ) 5 OBB and beat the white fo stiff froth, ~_In_ fact his work _ —.. propped har _up against the centre of the stage——Wihen he atiempied—to -Hisho—— soda, The proportion Is two and one- half Arama of xoda 16 threo pounda of the soda Sovaing. 2 dinagreeable tasto may YOK, which te not beaten, but lett be rendered perfeotly:aweet by unbroken it comes from ‘the gn: the addition of a little curbonate of ueeze-on top of this about three drops To Sweeten Butter. ITHER fresh. or salt bulter pos- » {Put thin into the buttered-cup, making 4 ithe'y3 In the middie, in) witch to put ' Jemon, Juice. Thtea or four othor | te'ito be added after all) thoy milk ts jam SR Somatic amet Sad ati eee FET DOLLARS. COMMISSION. COUNT AND $10. @xE LAMP, * TEN CALLON 2 @ASOLINE.' CHARGE NO ZB BOSS! TO HE ZE CASK Commission t 40 SO FAR AS VOU Like T ZiSis ON 20 GOSS! E LENGTH OF ENGAGEMENTS. WO letters ie vefore me out of the mass of my morn- T {ng mail. Ono ts from a girl who saya ahe has been x ongaged for lx weeks, and whose mother objects to jer Immediaie-marrlage. The -other-is_ trom a_ girl who says she has been proposed to by a man whose finances (or jack of them) will necessitate a three years’ engagement. Each asks my advice. And to each I give the #ame coun’ tho first-xirt'scare-may be quickly alspased. of. n= agement. is -a..period chiefly dealgned for allowing two people to study eaci other's disposition, to find out if they are really enough in love'to marry, and to become accus- tomed to one another's ways. Ifthe teata are unaatiafactory the engagement ia broken, SIX weeks la f&r too abort a time for auch @ trial. “aurry Ti hustey repent nt leisure’’ 1s-an-old-but-true:proverb: nae Now, ax to long engagements, Up to a certain point of time, the longer an engagement we better, But past that point (C1s-a-mistake-to- prolong {t.-When —two-peophy-have-been-enthiied-fortwo-O0_thrae yorre-the-firet—luah-of-seniiient ts apt to Wear away. ‘They haye'boen so long In each other s company that thelr first ardent adoration often Wegencrates Into mere friendship, or at best Into a ort of mild, matter-of-fact sister-and-lirower. affec.ion.’ Tien good-by to the trod wentiMent tat MeN cis betrotany able. The over-long engagement 19 as ment. Avold both. | pertod-w delight and wiarricd Tks” bear much a mistake as the too-short engage- Would Write His Love. Dear Betty: AM « young man ebout twenty, and Geeply in love wit a young grt ‘mbout eighteen: She realdes- ebout ‘a thousand: miles from me.I-have at different times-sent-her_itthe presents;: such as on Christmas, &c.; and eho has always answered, expressing her thanks for_same, and she sonds quite a few postals. And I heard from a boy friend Of Miia“ Fealding about” two“ Diocks away from her that since J lem that place about ten months ago” ne ny other Yellow at her) ‘Tina never se: house, and also that she speaks well of me at all times. I feel as If T could not Hye aad see her the wife of another, [the girl What I want'to know ts how can I find out If Bhe loves. mé or not. Should T write and ask he’ A. B.C. Write -and “tell her-you love-her, and -Pak-1f-your-love—ts returned. She Won't Go to Balts. [Dear Hetty: HAT ts your opinion of “a ‘young lady whom I love very much? I am @ young man eighteen years af-axe, and when I aaked this young Jady.to take in a congert and ball and! enjoy herself she came to mo.saying that her mother says she ts too young to-attend such affairs, ANXIOUS, As-you-ara only eighteen, I suppose. younger, and her mother has every right fo determine her conduct. There tn nothing for you to do but ac- cept her deciston, A Few More Lemons at a Cent Apiece. G2 GI By RG Long LY FOR DINNER! G4853 “0 WE SAY, ONL TOMI To-par’= THE ConoucTor! HEEL HAWS HIMSEL =A PIANOLA PLAYS A WLLIONAIRES A Minute CAIRS = S667) READS A ABour THIS ADOLESCENT FRIDAY, the 13th always boasted had the courage and | | wil make an excel- | ure, “unless he ntid “1s—concantrated—on- the work. ob”. And at that Bob's salf. teand, jolning me, safd> “Jim; for} fontral- slinped the leash With a T have dragged you jnto an loss; haye ruined Beulah her father and myself. I think the laat moment I did the only thing ple, I throw over the 150,000 shares po 4nd #2 cut off some of our floss. US Go to the office and stand, Jim. but for the loading Mice, T_should now have been—taking + Deuiah Sands to her father vith @Y Lal the halligh“Syetenr— 9, from him, Later I should have taken her U5 the altar. Sut now, Jim. 1 sea @ {bINckK, awful. ploture, No, I Oh morbid. I'm golng to make ‘a erole effort to put the ploture out of «ight but I'm afratd, Jim; I'm afraid.” He stopped as we pulled up on the sidewalk In front of Randolph & Ran- 4 “pA'w OMee, “Here it ig on th in { See what did the trick, Jim, The: id the Sugar meeting jast night in- aed Ut wae inge-unt ‘toemorraw, and the dividead instead of Increasing © world won't know it until lo- jnorrow. They will read it la_lie heads T5—& few suicides, a few more convicts, an wiined orpse or two al the morgue, ew new palaces on Fifth avenue, nd a few new librares given to com: unitiea that formerly took. pride in ing th from thetr onestly thed sayin They were not quite re that the dividend cut alone would e tric. nd Cbey were taking no there mighty warriors of the ‘Systemn.' 90 their hireling Senate, come mitteg held 4 xcowlon last night—and+ imouady reported to, put sugar On Ge “treo dst. “The peopld will read that in the morning, and probably the day after they'll bo ‘told that the coms Milteo. Held another sossdon he bepeeetert te freo lwt. Hy th statesmen will Stock that you and I and Beulah Sands sold, and ‘that other poor devils: will elliztiter to-morrow after reading. their morning papers Beulah Sands,” he on hoarse “cry he threw hia arma around her and crushed her to his breast. ‘The eacrod of the scene mide me feel! | like an Intruder, and I started to. leave! | the room. But in a moment Benlah | Qs hor usual eelf, and turnin 4 6 she nald: Randolph, pea what you, have scen. For an aa Tau Mr, Brownloy'e, anfal | . T chonght of nothing but what | 1d done for me, what he ha@ tried > {or my father, what a penalty’ h oor ¥ Jenga ishing to spare Bob, I interrupted | jond gave the glfl_ brieNy the defally of {what had, z | “Phe total lots waa nearly three mill. | (fons, As Beulah Sanda‘s 20.000 sharea. had costJees than ours and Hob fqured ‘to leave ther capital of $400,000 Intact, we) \folt xome comfort. “Beulah Sanda had witched the figuring with the keenness / jof an export, and when Tob anolnced | [Bic finnt Ngures, which plowed.that ~ jee atill had what sho started with, Rhe | drew the sheet containing the totais to “Towns willing to accept your as- xistance," she sald, “when the deat promised a profit to all of vs, beonyee T appreciated your goodne knew, how much It would hurt your feelings {f I. were churiish about the division; the possibility of! arrument. ; owned together 150,000 shares. I ras to | have had: the’ profits on 2,00¢ shares. Oar Sty loss $2,776,000, of swhich 1) must bear: my just, rE Brownley,- you will née! thar Sofkon ie charged to my acoount. I) shall hava, | 390,000 left. Tf our cause {s'as fust. as mee this-amnple: for our perposaet ee make this ample for our: Stare [begged Bob to go home with, me to: dirtneg, Dut he Inmlsted that he cotld mot face “iy wife with his last night's break + suUIl fresh in her mind. Next Gay he. noon T recetyed a telegram from him, snying that, he was on him way. to: ginta, that he needed a rest and | a be tack In a week. I stan srorred. nor | yous It takes until_the next_dey- to'eet downto. tho @ ‘0 get down ‘to it tore ithe) leepest misery I did not feel easy with Bob... “Look me over, said, “Beulah, Heulah, we are ruin you, your father and’ I, ruined, an sight while he was sounding for’ inthe fool who did it! Suddenly she took the of ‘his | footing. torn coat in elther hand Ww’ bey oyee looking stralght into parent nll, but the worl seemed | | tS chatuce the very atmosphere In the room, Tho look of desperation faded from Bob'a face, and as though the words had sprung the hidden catch to the doors of his storehoune of pent-uj nilsery, hia-oyes filled with hot, blind- Ing tears. in great chest was con- Again—olear, calm, fonrless and tender, came ti ay. id, up-to-date New York re- mance, by George Barr Mo- Cutcheon, will begin serial pub- HMeation in next Saturday's Eve- ming World, March 9, { x A PHYSICAL CULTURE SECRET. 7 Dis the last two weeks over two hundred amd fitty readers have asked for @ lst of physical culture exercises for the development of the body. Now that the letters are all answered and the directions for exercises sent out I want to say = f= words to those two hundred and Afty people, _ as : — The exercises printed on the slips of paper are splendid end will do the work— It properly performed. But no results can be accomplished in phyalcal culture You can do the exercises until you Grop from fatigue, and !f your mind te off i sool-gathering somewhere else the over-exertion-ef-the dody-ts -far-more-harm=————— ful than berfoficinl. Nothing will make @ woman or a man strong and healthy j save his or her own concentration of thought If you put your-mind-on a alngle ; muscle or set of muscles for two or three minutes each day, and say to those muncles "Do thus and £0,"* and make’ them respond, you will soon notice aalte- factory results, i —— = = But if you are golng through certain movements with the intention, aay, of strengthening the arma and chest, and {f, while you are doing this, your mind {a off somewhere in Patagonia or busy with your latest pet worry, your exorcise, You're Just wasting time, : Tt State IH to ead ils—vather «eh price—and Tain gied to pass f you. I attended a class of psycho-physical culture, where a perfect concentra-* ton of the mind on the inovyement of the body was the essence of the oat lev Oy After five lessons, and indoed before that time, the whole class was abl i contrating the-mind on any given part of ‘the body, to tnorease the cirovlatien of the blood to that particular part, until we all began to think it waa magtas Bat tt ds not magical at all. Every musol made up of fibres, The fired i mndo of minute living cella, And these ative, I!ve cells ere controlled by end respond to the nerve centres. Your thoughts are messengers that go to the nervy, centres and travel from there to the cells in any given part of the body, © * i ‘Any-movement-ot x nuuscie-fs* the concentrated movertent or maty od AD muscle cell ts cord-like in shape and has tndividual power to change its form. When (he mind directs the musslo to contract each ell draws Iteelt tosether, coming shorter but thicker, Now itis the growth amd education of theese mruidis cella that give wtrength to @ muscle, As the mind ts very intimatetey, related and connected néth cach of thesn wonderful Htte oslis, it is tha mind that does ! thé work; -It-you "want to develop and-strengthen your hn ‘deep’ x ing centre the mind upon the muscles of the chest} Give the cells of the hing nm mind tonic aa well.es-the beneiit.of good alr, You-will-need desire first-ot- eR rs and then enthusiasm, persistency ami concentration. With these you can anything in physical oulture, ‘ May Man # ton’s Daily Fashions ~ coming season and new ones are con- atantly appearing. Hore 1s ax eminently ‘graceful “and” alto- gether attraotive model that can be made elther ti rourd or walking length, and that consequent- ly nulls the entire range of seasonablo materl In the t- lustration it 1s mado of chiffon Panama cloth trimmed with braid and atitohed with milk, but if de- signed for house wear tt would be appropri. ate for yolle, for pongee, foulard and all materials of sim{- lar welght. Later It lent model for the linen aults that will ba In demand.” ‘Phe quantity of ma- Seven-Gored Plalted Skirt—Pattern No. 5,611. torlal required for the medium stzo is § 1-3 yards 17, 7 yards or St Inches wide when material has figure or nap; 6 1-3 yards 44 or 6 yards 62 tnches wide when & ius not, with 1 yants of braid to trim, as Ilustrated. Pattern No, 5,611 1s cut in sizes for @ 22, M, 34, 28, 80 and 82 inch waist meas Call or vend by mail to THE EVENING WORLD MAY MAN. TON FASHION BUREAU, No. 21 West Tvrenty-third street, New, York. Send ten centa in coln or stampa for each pattern ordered, IMPORTANT—Wiite your name apd address pialnly, and al- wayn specity alse wanted. Patterus

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