The evening world. Newspaper, July 3, 1907, Page 3

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THE EVENING” WORLD, WEDNESDAY, GIRL WOULD NOT BE SAVED UNTIL. SHE HAD DRESSED Miss Linn Found . Blanket} Enough, but Companion Waited for More. MISS NIMPHIUS.| Kept Fire Heroes at Bay} While ShéDonned Her Full Attire, “NYMPH Eighteen families were driven from their homes in the five-story flat-house, | Wo. 1296 Westchester avenue, the Bronx, |. to-day at dawn by fire which started in'a heap of boxes owned by Henry ~~ Klumper, a grocer, on the first floor. ‘A number of persons were reecued by he police and firemen. _Charles Briea, condiictor of. a pass- ing Union Rallway trolley car, discoy- | ed the fire. He saw the fames burst- | ing out of the cellar doorway and up a short flight of steps to the sidewalk. He turned in an alarm. ‘Three mounted policemen of the Mor- risania station, Trainor, O'Grady and Holt, who were five” blocks away, | hearing cries of ‘Fire!’ were at the house before the firemen. The police- men ran upstairs through the front stairways, which were then Ailing with sinoke, and ringing bells and beating “Goors. with thelr nigntsticks, aroused { the tenants. Most of peonle xot | out with aid of the firemen and police, by the rear fire-escape, the front } door being thick with smoke. On the top floor Patrolman Trainor | found J. H. Meyors, nis wife Annie and thetr two-year-old daughter Mattie. He carried the little girl down the fire-es- ape to the back yard and guided the mother and father to safety the same way. mt On the same floor Patrolmen O'Grady end Holt found two young girla—May | Utnn and Teasie Nimphius—and helped them down the fire-sscape, Miss Linn onty waited to Dlanket around her nightgown, but ‘Miss Nimphius wouldn't leave her room, fire or no fire. until she put on some clothes, The flames had afeached the fourth floor, ‘underneath her, when Hoit took her out to the De. The flames were controlled without iffioulty, but the lower pam of the @at house wae rendered uninhabitable, POSTAL BUILDING AS CHAUFFEUR’S BAIL President Clarence Mackay Put Telegraph Quarters Up | on Speeding Charge. i i throw a} with having speeded hi: wuto at the rate of thirty miles an hour ! along the Hoffman Boulevard to-day, | _James Hogan. chauffeur for Clarence H.| Mackay, waa arrested by Motorcycle Policeman Ennie, of the Jamaica Pre- éinct. Mr Mackay was tn the machine and. accompanied his chauffeur to the tation /house. Ennie made the charge agains the Chauffeur and the Meutenant at the desk said he would hold Hogan in sd ball. The chgufteur appeated to Mr. Mackay, who dug down In his trousers} pockets and consulted his wallet, but was atil! short of the 6200. The Ileuten- ant said he wanted cash ball when Mr, Mackay offered to write a check. Then | ‘an Idea struck the omcer and, turning | te Mn Mackay, he sald: “Haye you any_real estate which. you | could offer ax security?” “Oh, yes,” replied Mr. Mackay, “I guess the Postal Telegraph: Building in New York City 1s ample security, tan't | “ar ————— SCORNER STONE TO BE LAID. ying of the corner @fone of Bt. Pauick'e Chapel, ‘at Highland Mills, Orange County, by the Right Rev Joseph F. Mooney, V. G.,. will place to-anorrow., A special train wil veonvey the city friends of the pastor, Father MacAran, ‘to. the ~ peremony. Tho Jast boat will leave tho Weat Twenty-third. street ferry at ¥ g'otock for the Erle American Men Still Wear Headgear That Averages 7 to7 1-8 in Size, JULY 3. . 1907. While the Average Sige ao English Heads Has Diminished a Full Namber V:2ICr bere No Gause to Fear to AB. Parnker a that Bee Boxes of New Yorkers Are Suffering a Shrinkage | Like that Found Among Britons. Hatters Find No Shrinkage In. the Heads of New Yorkers. Hats worn by New York men average between 7 and 7 1-8 in size. : In-every—dozen_hats_sent_out by well-known manufacturers there is one 6 3-4, two 6 7-8, three 7, three 7 1-8, two 7 1-4, and one 7 3-8. This has been the rule for years, so the figures show that the American head is not growing smaller. size hat do you wear?” “W durin, {ts hatband and feeling its craniw doubt. come worrled and written letters to his hair cut twice 2 month. But there ts no caves for alarm. No, reatly, “there ian't Expert testimony from men who have been selling hats in this town for the past twenty-five years or more is to the effect ‘that the Now York head ts bokiing \ts own—and this ia no vulgar joke. Sizes run along juat about the same with 6%, 7 and 74 getting most of the money and no odigus comparteons. Some dealers, in fact, are strong for the 6% bead, deolaring It to be nobby and particularly sulted to the sungy brim now worn on the shady side of) the street, They point with pride to! | several of their 6% customers. | ‘There's George M Cohan, for exam- when he gow into a hat store and twiddles his bamboo stick along the boxes he always saya “Giin- me a six-and:seven-elghtns."" And it is | pretty generally admitted that George! M. has about Mfty-e-ven varieties of braind under that same 6%, “Bill Dev- ery has @ mansard of the same dinen- gions, and it ts etill in a state of good repair, There arg ple. Now, heads and heads, of course, and the big dnes very often earn & mighty good Ilving’ for thelr owners: Victor Herbert's music box measures 7% and it is Allied with the prettiest YUnés “heard-in- musical comedyon thix aide of the’ water that Doc Parr Is tiring wp with his asctentific stick. ‘Jim’! Jeffries weara a 7% lid, and has proved his superior knowledge knocking the block off various genta [whd bave been introduced to him trom |time to time, Alton B. Parker ts in the 7% class, with ‘Joe’ Gans, the eminent pustlist, and od Sloan, the ‘Verudite jockey, and yet Parker wasn't elect od. President Roosevelt's head calls tor — 16-16 hat, ‘or ms near to It as tho Celerk oan come, When Grover Cleve= |iand «oes fishing he keeps off the sun with an old straw bullt to order on plans that speciffed 7 916th. Size No Bigger Now. Refora Admiral’ Dewey covered him- self with glory he wore a 7% hat. and he js atill wearing the same aize, Strange {t may seem, Richard Strength upon the shakiest of foun World to “show up” i misleading ‘‘claims” Grasping at Straws! Asa drowning man. will clutei-a-feather, so ‘defeated’ news- papers will squirm about and base~their élaims of-advertising any advertising medium, but in view of-the that other papers are persistently making it feels called upon to PRINT: THE FACTS. LAST WEEK! (as compared with same period last year) The World, Gained 2, 573 pas ndations, It is distasteful to The , The Herald LOST, . The American LOST. The Tribune LOST... The-Sun LOST The Press LOST... The Times LOST... THE SAME, WEEK IN AND W THIS IS NOT AN EXCEPTIONAL, WEEK—IT'S ABOUT The WORLD Is: the FIRST New York Newspaper. EEK QUT, HERE did you get that hat?” is no longer the question. It's “What | the editor—who wears No, 7 and har Mansfeld also manages to get his head within a 7% hat band. Before he lost hia hair, John D. Rockefeller’ wore o No. 7, but it was impossible for the hat Teporter to reach him to-day and as- certain his present size. All of John Philip Sousa's marches are contained within a 7% hat band.. Oscar Hammer- atein’s famous hat Is a No. 71-8, all re- ports from Herr Conried to the con- trary. J. Plerpont Morgan does his thinking under a 7% hat, and before he got that awful headache Thomas C. Platt was comfortable in a 7% top-plece, “Big | Tim Sulltvan keeps political secrets under a No. 7, and Charles Murphy has been known to squceze Tammany Hall within even less space. | Harry Thaw wears a No. 7 when he etx a chance. John T. Brush, presi dent of the Giants, has a new 6% straw) | but maybe we wouldn't have won the pennant anyway, Records of Headgear. The hat that Mayor: McClellan takes oft to himself ts a No. 71-8, and ‘quite ‘ppropriately President McGowan, of the Board of Aldermen, who roe on the Job when the Mayor 1s out of town, can wear the same hat without stuffing anything inside the band. It was at Dunlap & Co.'s that the Mayor's size as well as that of many other prominent men was learned. W. E. Corey, still President of the Bteel Trust, wears a 71-4 hat. Here are some other records taken out of a book: Judge Gérry, 7; A. G. Vanderbilt, 71-4; G. W. Perkina, 71-4; H.C. Frick, 71-4: Senator Allison, 71-2; Senator 73-8; . Senator Eling, 71-2; Clark, 21-8; David B, HIM, 71-8; Police Inspector Byrnes, 73-8; Dr. J. Day, Chancollor of Syracuse Untversity, who has been lambasting the trusts, 714; B. Altman, the dry-goods mer- ohant. 634; Frank Munsey, 71-8; W. E. Ingalle, Preatdent of the Big Four, 73-8; Maurice Grau, 71-16; J, B, Duke, 71-4 Despite reports to the contrary, actors’ heads seem #% amall, according to the records at Banc? lap & Co.'s, William Collier, Sam, Ber- nard, Arnold Daly and David Warfeld— without his "Music Master” ha‘r—all wear 67-5 hats. Since Eddie Foy has begun to study Shakespeare he has worn a 71-4 hat. Joe Weber finds 66-5 a tight ft, while Lew is wears, 71-8 hat. ‘Henry Miller is also a Hale, Senator | 4 ex- 1-8 ctor. Charlies Frohman carries his mana- exe plans under a 71-4 hat, while Yavid Belasco trails along with’ a 71-8 | bulie upon ecclesiastical lines. if i Heads as Big as Ever, Everybody at Dunlap's Inalated that the size of the hat tad nothing to do with the brains of jie wearer, and | they jaiso declared that the American | head Is Just ag bly aa evor it was, Mr. | Lampton, of the wholesale department, {proved the statement. by saying». "In| Jevery. dozen we put out there ia one | |G3+4, two 67-8, three 7, three 718, two | |71-4 and one 73-8, 80 You ade the aver- jage Is between 7’ and 71-8, Manager Drinkwater, of ‘the Dunlap & Co,’s Fitth avenue store, sald: |““Amertcan heads are cértainiy not | growing sinalier, Sometimes a man may be decetved Into thinking that his TRAST | most delightful tasting food, but I Ji Sefpfty C5 “GeO. Fy. A Clusky TL WOOSU SF Osc Or td amemerste WOMAN SHOOTS. | “AIAN FOUR TIMES, THEN TERSEL Mary Belasi Fires Bullet Into Left Breast After Fatally Wounditig Harry Stern. Desperate over the delay of her breach of promise eult, Mary Belasi, a good-Icoking young woman, of Madison avenue and One Hundred and Tenth | street, souht to end the action tragi- jeally to-day by shooting Harry Stern land herself in the roome he oocupied » Since Sir James Barr, President of the Liverpool Medical | 8 No. 55 Bast One Hundred and Seven- Institute, has put the British head in the lightweight: class by declaring, | fees |on the authority of an English hatter, that {t has diminished a full size jiett breast, the injured couple were g the past fifty years, New York has been looking at the number on! } taken to the Harlem Hospital. The man m with a curiosity not unmixed with | will die, but the woman Is likely to live teenth atre: With four bullets in his wk and lungs afd one bullet tn her | Stern {s part owner of a cafo on} |the corner of Madison avenue and One| The fact that Sir Jim or “Dr. “Barr, speaking from the front stoop of| Hundred and Seventeenth street. He is / the Liverpool Medical Institute, as it were, atiributed, the falling off to|trty-two years old \ shrinkage of the brain box has started many people thinking who have never been thought-to think before. Men in the Si class have even be-}paum on the ground floor of No. 6 Eaat | #0Ke cut off thelr esonpe by the stalr- With his brother | |and cousin he has occupled three rooms | |in the apartment of Mra Cella Apfe! One Hundred and Seventeenth street. Quickly Began Firing. “He .was asleep in his room to-day wien the girl went to the apartment. Mrs. Apfelbaum le her in when ashe said she had a very important mes- seeing him alone. Pushing by the older woman, the entered Stern's bedroom. For halt a: hour. the oouple quarrelled, the girl sometimes ceartul and sometimes threat- ening. Mrs. Apfelbaum could hear Mary Belasi upbriiding her faithless lover. my Stern ended the interview by walking into Mra. Apfelbaum's room. He scolded ther for admitting the young “hen be started back dawn the hall | to hia room, The gin barred his way. She had drewn her revolver. Beelng i for the finst thme, Stern turned to flee, As he ran down the Uttte followed nim, emptying her. pistol Imo} hia back, She shot four times and every bullet struck him. Dyin |dropped and on his hande and ‘Knece crawled, into @ emall room opening on the ‘Then the xitl hurried back into the bed- room. When ahe say Mrs. Apfelbaum tushing down toward her mhe turned the weapon on herself and sent a bullat | into her left breast. Policeman Ajax | Whitman was passing the house at the| time-and summoned an ambulanos from the Harlem Hospital. Both victima of | the shooting were placed in the same ven and the surgeon ontered tho driver not to spano the horse. He said that only an Immediate operation could raye their lves. Thraw the Girl Over. {ne-poiiceoan learn. Stern POLOPVOS SLOTSEVS OOP POPE tty 53 Can you use a Strong, 22 328-0-0-06-006-485 se Sturdy Set of BRAINS? g vs i= = f a = J mM a eS ee i” >< g A man sald: “I don't belfeye you can arrange food so that it will go to rebuild and nourish the brain. Grape-Nuts {5 a can’t understand how you expect any certain food to be appropriated by aby certain part of the body.” A good earnest skeptic and well worth attention, -Actual results are better than any theory pro and con. Grape-Nuts food lg being eaten by millions of people all over the world and any interested person can e@atisfy himself by -ques- tioning his nelghbor.as-to the result of the use of Grape-Nuty The test!- mony—ia given over and over that after 10 days’ use there comes a feel- ing of strength, sturdiness, clearness of intellect and power of the mind that ts unmistakable, “Tyere’s & Reason.” ‘suinking uses up each day parts jhead ts shrinking. ‘That's when he | comes In to buy a low-crowned straw | hat. If he-haw been wearing a high= crowned hat he will find that when he | puts on a low crown of the same{ | size It is a alze too large. This Is be-| | cause the top of the hot comes right | down on hin head, with the remult that | | the tat is too large about the temples, i But heads run just about the same in |'sixe year in and’ year out. At least, | that Is the cage In this country—L don’t know how {t ts In Engiand,'* Hat and the man should be considers parately, say the kindstirarted acter: eta, They. argue that the size er ul A t hattera) prociain Havoue ind dhorua’itet heed ot Now Yorkers aro. ‘ge Mio Aon't worry. Koon your hat pa. of the filling of the-cells in brain, land Nature uemands albumen and natural phosphate of potash (not from the drug store) to make new the soft jelly-like substance (gray matter) which ‘Is used as the filling lof these brain cells, Grape-Nuts contains these elements direct from Mother Nature and pre- pared in the form of a most delicious tand dainty food, practically pre-di- gested and quickly absorbed {nto the nt has nothing fod Son the Cray | aystera. The hard Haigh facts are that Grape-Nuts does rains. Read, “The Road to Westville,” in pies. bage to take to Stern, whe insisted On| HARRIMAN AGENT cu MISSING, ROOSEVELT 0. K'S PORT FORCING to marry earn AKO en, ‘Miss Helast He did not «irl was ‘wealthy he bought engaged himsel! more than two own a saloc t employed as a serv: | Harlem househol: tho saloon and prospered he threw gitl over. Time and again she | treated him to marry her, and once he ‘head her arrested for pestering him with appeals. Finally she dospaired and started ult } | ' for breach of promise. to j becun more than w year ago, It hung fire in the courts. The delay worried the young woman greatly. Stern's, friends told her that he had too my nt ge pull, for ber sult to ever ibe tried. gh said to have replied then that i they eres would do nothing for her she Id tak e her ow nite wou caksiusticeniniodherie {nto her own hands Dynamite ae on. Million: SAVED AT FIRE | See Man Lost a Week. | Compulsory Retirement of 16 Officers - Under the __Personnel Act. SOUTHFIELD, N. ¥., July $—J. w.| Keister, manag. the company's store | _ WASHINGTC July 3—The ‘Navy bf the Arden Farm Company, owned by | Department to-day ‘announced — that H. Harriman, ta strangely miaaing,| President Roosevelt_had approved the 1 notwithstanding a careful nearch,| Tepart of the Naval Personnel Toard which had se: 4 for compulsory re- Urement under the terms of the Naval | Personnel act the names of sixteen om- cers, Including five captains, four cc pander, Meutenant-commandens ne Het ts as fol- “ Two Women and-a Baby Res. ordered by Mr. Harriman, not a tra of the missing man, who disappear cued by Firemen Over an jon tune 2, tins boon found. Improvised Bridge. | Kolster’s Wisappeurance cannot be ac- | tied for, as hi had no family | troubies and his-accounts were tn Perey fy fect order: A note left for his wfe con- | nV, Wadhams; Rich- When the five-story brick tenement at | Mined the suggestion that perhaps his James P, Bull, Rog- wife did not ca for him. © Baw yer, | No, 185 West One Hundred and Second | “sire, Kelster she never had any | Winder, Joba atreetidpokii fires init thes baseanenta thi ue ima iran hi bad and ¢an-| F sited Hohn C. Colwelt and Willian Mine | POL Imagine why hq #tiould have left| G. Cutler afternoon firemen had to {tmprovise | yo, utenant - Commanders — Lewis J. sister was last een Jeaving the com- William means to rescue Mra. Lahey and her | Clark, Charles 8. Stanwo pany score) on the evening of June 27. of in én were up on the fourth floor, and the been discovered. Ul the direction Newton Maneteld, of Mr. Harriman “S rohing rties} The five captains retired to-day un- scoured the neighbortiood and ruce |der this order are engaged in the fol- | waye. Firemen got an troning board from the basement and placed itt across from one window! to another of the fourth Lake. on Mr. Harriman’s estate, was dynamited, In order to bring to the wirface Kelster’a body, in cage te had | drowned himeclf, | The New York lowing duties Wadham {s captain_of the Nor- iavy Yard, Davenport 1s captain lof the battleship Georgia, Bull ts com- mandant of the ‘alning Station lice have been asked floor, bridging an areaway, over which| to look for tim, Keister ts about forty. | yn Huena Galt Is both’ women and the baby wese carried Love ean old and has a wife and four! President of the Martial Norfolk, ar yer {s commandant to the other wing of the bullding. Mrs. | a hae jof the Naval Training Station, Ni Manion welghs nearly 300 pounds, ’ ect} i About twenty families live in the| ST Se iieee FLYER . ee eee house. The police reserves of the West | THE RAILS. lone Hundredth street atation helyed tho] : WIFE STRANGELY LOST. | Mremen get the people out. The fre) KANSAS CITY, Mo. July 3—The St], Dav artic | had started {n a wood bin in the celiar| Louis and San Hrancisco lmited pas |, 7ames Peranny, a wel O'Rourke's || and It was quickly put out, the loss) senxer train No. 406 which inft-Hanssr | total No, 38s West street ToUst being only $7 City last night for Memphis and Bormn- INGE StF NALIN TER LSTA atta lingham, ts Teported wrecked at Mans +4walling newa of his wife Marijana, field, Mo., twenty-five miles south of | w Appeared mysteriously at CAR KNOCKS DOWN GIRL. | &prinefield. itral Station on June 2% Tater: information received at the of. was having thelr trunks Marya Hoody awed sl sevenin ol Nord 3, fices Here of the fallroad” compan red to the Anchor lino pler, j Past Ninety-third atreq, was knocked | grated that the {rain was [prepa atory to taking a trip with his down and painfully injured bya north-/and that no one Was Ti, teinnd Mra,Devanny, who. ¢ | &ound Second avenue car last night, known, “although & . Hil health. sufidenly left The motorman, John Carr, who tives badly damagsd fhe derallment-ts said 4 side and nothing has at No. 1818 Second avenue, In front of to liave been at Tyronsen, Ark., 100) her since. Devanny be= which house the acehient occurred,.' miles nor of Men 13, and not at.Ueves that she became—deranged—tnd was arrested. Mansfield, Mo. wandered off, 4 CELEBRATES HS 102NO BIRTHONY: THANKS TO DUFFY'S PURE MALT WhioKEY: Mr, Josiah Zeitlin Celebrates His rates His 102nd Bi Birthday and Is Hale and Hearty, and Is Good for Several Years More. Mr. Jésiah Zeitlin was a prominent business man in his native land, Poland, many years. In} 1882 he retired and came! to this country and has} lived with his on! daugh- ‘ter, Mrs. Isaac Krinsky, att36Lexington Avenue, Brooklyn, N.Y. He says that Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey has prolonged his life, and is the medicine to restore health and vigor in old people, Speaking ‘through his daugh- ter as interpreter, Mr. Zeit- lin says: pOuER 1am 102 years old to-day | (July 3), 1 still feel that 1am good for | several dyarraieultiwasenecndats Lode ain) Poland, and alter a lengthy business life in the of land came to this country Inj 4882 to reside with my daughter, 1) have used Duffy's Pure’ Malt Whiskey | years and find it very bene invigorates and gives me for many ficial It strength. 1 feel that it has helped me to live the 102 years. It seems to be) the very medicine old people need to; restore their failing health and strength Mr, Zeitlin is one of the many thou-| sands of men and the United States who owe their vigor, | strength and long life to. the greal | Tonic Stimulant and Renewer of Youth, Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey, and Join} in extolling its merits. i n » stimulant and tonic, builds up the nerve ea rer pa at teat Nes ayd richness (0. the blood. It brings Into action all the vit forces, it makes digestion perfect and enables, you to get from the food you eat the nourishment it contains, It Is invaluabhe for overworked men, delicate women and sickly children, as it ts a food already digested. It strengthens the system, is a promoter of good health and longevity, makes the old young and keeps the young strong. Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey is the only whiskey that ts recognized | as a medicine, wor MR. JOSIAH ZEITLIN. Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey is an absolutely pure, g tissues, tones up the heart, gives power to the brain, strength and elasticity to the mus¢! ‘TWO CHILDREN i ONE HOME KILLED “WA FORTMIGHT Little hi ee Farber Climbed to Roof with Toys and _Plunged to Ground. Twice within ‘two weeks a knot of white ribbon on the door of the @part+ ment occupied by Mr, and Mrg, Martia Fa No. $8 Union street, the Bronx, has>told, of the death of one of tie. Farber children, Little Marti, four years old, was the first to meet death— by a fail off the roof—-and then Lillie; two years old, followed her protier, Sister and brother died from unusual accldénis, which have prostrated Mrs, Farber, leaving her so broken in healta that the phyaclane [sar she may -foe low ner two littie children. Laat Sunday eyon father wore seated Ing the strange ath of thelr son Marun. The heart-broken-mother was weeping and the father Uoing his best to console her. mother crying trer lap. In rea little ‘child grabbed vhe table cloth, At’ thie instant, the child lost her balance and fell backward. clutch on the table left hand. ‘Me +5 Upset a tea-pot ¢ ed near the m ing Waa enough te hot tea, whieh rest. «c's place, The hot Uquid fell in the face of the child, soaiding it friebtfully Physicians were on had burned the cend infant severely ang all the efforts of the doctors only went torture which the child the victim died a few second accidental de: weeks threatens collapse. cof the mother. Little Martin was!killed by a fall from: the toot of the flat duting ,the night of June 19, ‘Phe parents left the | youngster ameep in his bed and: went © to the “front parior, Bome time: before the pate hind climbe out t playthings « stairway i to relleve the suffered until mors Jater, The in the two the way whern he was ough the rafl- 4, a distance TEA isa most soothing refresh | ing beverage if it is good. Steaming hot on cold days, ice- cold on the warm day, The choicest Tea always has that clean, inviting smell that really is “a refreshing bouquet.” Good Tea also has‘a flowery, rather rich flavor—heavy or delicate according to selection, Every | grade of Tea sold you by Park & Tilford has these full charac- teristics of perfect selection. More than one cup of such a | delicious Tea must be had to satisfy you. Mail or "phone order of request tor Catalogive all will receive prompt, careful attedtion. Lillie: suse-able to: get about, saw hee * nd d retaining & - pread with her tiny * en throughout | f Five Physicians Five Locations Two Factories From: the. simplest repair_work ti the niost difficult eye treatment our range of service is complete. Glasses Oxty Always at Moderate If Needed. Price are 223 Sixth Ave. below 18th St 350 Sixth Ave,, Below 22d St. 1274 Broad way, Betow 33¢-St.— 217 Biway, Astor House Block. New Ftore, 101 Nassau St,, near Ang St FURNITURE, CARPETS, STOVES, Ete. THIS TABLE, 28 inches high, top 16x16 Inches,siieif (0x10 inches; nicely finished; good value at $1; our price, A Special Revere A ORDAM i Unarantecd to remove Freckles, Pimples, , Tas, Sallownes ia 10 Mame teem bon oad 5180 errors! Si enn

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