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isiaianiapen nen aici ibaa Ain chupada mee me BVENING WORLD,/FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, i907- Lanta GEA TCTI ’ WANTED BRIDE [Two Wroes Kept Vigil at Bedside | Fy | ~~ Hed az the TO SHAVE HIM, BUT SHE BAL *Could Stand for His Taking Her Money, but Wouldn’t ! Play Barber, — THEN HUBBY GOT A GUN After Two Days of Wedded Bliss He’s- Locked Up for Six Months. One of those hurry-sip courtships the highbrows are discussing in nowspaper sympostima came up li Jtarlom, Police Court to-day. Frank Proglin, of No. *:6 East: Eithteth street, a bridegroom of two days, was eent to the Leland f #ix montha, berause he was unable to ative a $1,000 bond that he woul retrain from“ troubling his bride during thut pettod Mrs. Droglin, » nisticated young Gorman woma she had stood for @ lat trom Frank {n the two days of their marriage. She did not mimt It Bo much when he took sal! her mone: She did not complain when he took } to Fort George and made her stand by while he enjoyed himself. But she ‘balked when he wanted her to shave him. Balked at Shaving Him “I never shaved a man in my life, whe declared to the Magistrate. “Be- sides, I do not believe St is right tn this country that a woman should be Darber to her husband It appears that the couple were mar- City Hallion Wednesday by an Alderman, after a courtship of three weeks. On the day of the wed- Ging the bride went to an immigrant Protective society near the Battery, drew. $200 and dispinyed it to her hus- * band. Up to that time he seems to have ‘Deen a rensonahbic, kind spouse ‘The wight of the money changed aim. At Ria request his wife bougit him a watch and chain and suit of clothes. ‘Then e#he gave him the rest of the money. He forma out that she had $700 ad- -@itional with the immigrant society @ad wanted her to get it at once, Hogged the Wienles, Too. “Yesterday,” said the bride, “he took me to Fort George. Before wo started he mtole $10 from my stocking. Ho Fode on all the swings and went into all the shows and made me.-wait for him. Ho drank his glass of beer, but he wouldn't get any for me. When he! @ot hungry ho haa his wienerwurat and sauer kraut ang amide me watch him ent it. “When he woke up this morning he Fet some soap and a brush and lather fa face in the bed. Then he propped Dimeelf up against the pillows, handed me a razor and told me to shave him. When I wouldn't do it he ran after me with a revolver,” Mrs. Proglin ran all the wa; Fast Bighty-elghth street station, Po- fceman Luatbader waa sent back to the jouse with her. He captured Proglin and the revolver. Mra. Proglin saya she will try to get a divorce while her hus- feand ts In Jal). NO BLACK HAND. “INO NO REWARD Father of Lost Girl Says He Has Not Been ‘Threatened, and Has No Money, to the Rocco Valarde, the frult peddier, whove five-year-old Ittle girl Donentea disap- peared from her home at No. 2% Mon- roe street on Wednesday, has had no word-—ofthe child He te greatiy wore ried over the unfounded reports that he has been threatened by/tbe Black Hand and that he has offered a reward eh for the recovery of the Ittle irl. fe When seen at his home by An Even- ‘ng World reporter to-day, Mb sald he bad. not offered a peuny reward. “why T-coukd not offer %," he wafd. “I am @ poor man and $80 would be —__@_ereat fortune to ma. I do not knows whethe’, ‘e'my child was kidnapped. Bhe | aply wandered away, I don't think she was stolen, for why should @ny ono wish to steal the child of a poor fruit peddler? I could give them nothing.” The police report that a general @larm has been sent out for the iittle girl. No request has been made to Jook out for kidnappers or Black Hand Brisands, as there is not the slightest ghis that the child was stolen, It was waid at Pollco Headquarters that it was simply one of scores of cases where chiltren of the tenements wan- der away and are lost, They are taken @are of by forsieners who are unable te read the papers and therefore do at Jearn the| children’s identity for y' And So It Is Every Week se FE 8 UE ME 8 OF OF 8 The World printed 1,166 ‘Busi- ness Opportunities and For Sale advertisements last week. The Herald, Press, Times, Tribune and Sun combined printed 841. The | Both- Were Unfaithful to Mike; McDonald, but Are Now ‘ rowfut and Repentant. | | CHICAGO, Aug, %—Michael C. Me- Donald, for many years a leading poll- ticlan and a prominent gambler tn Lats city, dled to-day In the hospital, Tay Ufe'bng fiends of MoDonald were astonished to learn after his dea that he at one time had become a mem- ber of the Jewish faith. This statement was mato by Hamilton Lewis, the attorney {n charge | of McDSonald’s affairs. Mr. Lewis sald | that after McDonald had secured a Atvorce from his firat wife, who left Mim for a priest. he could not marry the second Mrs. McDonald, who was a Jewess, until he had embraced the Jow- toh’ faith. Prior to his death, however, he re- turned to the Catholic Church and was confeeand by Father Maurice J. Dornoy, a popular Catholk® priest of this city. | At his bedside, in a silent truce made | necessary by the dying man’s condition, | James gil together, Both theses women taught the notorious gambler the zephyr quality of woman's vows. The first, Mary Mc- Donald, eloped te France with an ex- communicated priest, Father Joseph | Moysant, and, returning after a fow mionths, deserted and repentant, was forgiven by the millionaire gam} omy to disappear wKAIN with x trveliioe minstrel. With the second—Dora Me- | Donald—whom he married after divore- ing Mary for the lam clopement, he Mved happlly until the beginning of 1997, when.sbe. shot...and.killed. Webster Guerin In his oMce, revealing a clan- destine love affatr which mie had been carrying on for ten years—tin fact, ever | since young Guerin was fifteen years | old. i McDonald, being lucky at cards and ail games of chance aprarentiy, ac- cepted the proverbial fate of being un- lucky in love. Two days after receiving the dreadful shock of Dora McDonald's | duplicity he obtained her release from | prison by gtving a bond of $0,000 for her| appearance. For this reason rhe was able to x0 | to the dying man's beside only to find | | hid earlier and equally erring wife for) j whom “he~had=never-teased -to-proviag,- Kneeling beside him. Rival Wives Meet. Upon aceing her, Dora MoDonald re- treated. But her destre for a final word ot forgiveness from the man she too had wronged s0 deeply overcame her natural aversion. to meeting the wife |to had supplanted her In his alfec- | ions. Bottty—ehtering the room—she-kneit-at+ \the other side of the bed, and when the ‘gambler opened widely wondering eyes at seeing the two women kneeling to- other, threw herself sobbing on the bed, But the Instant of recogaltion—It it was such—passed,-the eyes that had seen #0 much of woman's treachey, so | little of her tenderness and loyalty | closed, and when they opened again | were glazed by the stupor of disease, | “Papa! papa! speak to me! Don't you know me any more?" she sobbed. But he gave no sign of recognition to elther woman. And to-day both wore fat the Chicago Hospital, waiting the end of the man who, despite their be- \trayal of him, was the best friend they had in the world. ‘Lucky at cards, unlucky in love Was ever proverb) better “exemplified than by the life of the man wiio for many yeare was practically bona) of Chicago and who, as he died to- day, was several’ times a millio aire? Money bought everything fo | Mike MoDonald except the love and loyalty of a beloved women which glone make happiness for pauper or million- aire, New Deal in Love. But he took the treachery of the two Bht he took the treachery of the two women he trusted with the imperturbability which his calling had taught “him to face misfor- tune, What the carda had taught him of coolness and nerve he eppiled to Of ‘ala married life. : And MoaDonald had left hima for life, ng. McDonald—then the beautiful wito of baseball player—asked the blind .wiz- ard that deals the cards of love for a fresh deck and @ new deal, But the new deal brought no better luck, He took, Dora MeDonald away from ler hnabind ag priest and minatvel pad taken his earlter love trom tim. Hur millions enabled him to do that, and for a time he thought they had purchased his first and second wife met and kept! x lull terrier seemed to TOOTH MARKS SHOW THAT DOG TURNED ON GAS Roosevelt's Pete-May Call This a Nature Fake, but Neigh- bors Think Otherwise. Fiction js stranger than truth, and when Pete, the President's bulldog, hears this he will denounce jt as an un- qualifed nnture-take, However, thore are aMdavits to. wit Duke is an English bull terrier owned by Henry B. Bartlett, of the Lawyers’ Title Tusurance and Trust Company, Hives in the Mott Haven apart No, 49 East One Hundred and Thirty-eighth ot, Bronx. Duke ls only elght months old, but the Ba:t- tetts think he ts the brightest bottle baby in town. Mrs. Bartlett brought him up on the bdettle and his dispost- ion 18 as sweet as milk. He became y fond of his mistress and romped about her. er dog signs to expresa his Grieved for Mistress. Two weeks ago Mrs. Bartlett went to Great Barrington, Mass, The day after she left, Duke began pining for her and refused the focd that Mr. Bartlett of- ed him, He stilkea in the jittle do«- house bullt In kitchen and grew thin as the days went by., At the end two weeks he was indeed a sad dog. Yesterday Mr, Bartlett received a package of photographs of his wife, ! taken at the gummer res He tox the dog up on the roof and after look- ing over the pnotographs laid them down to read the letter {rom his wife. He was Interrupted in the mid sentence. by loud excited how! Duke, who was discovered atari eyed at the picture of hi who n love. the photog-aphs and bobbed al! over the roof, raising such an awful nofse that Mr. ‘Bartlett chained him in the flat. After Duke had calmed « litue he was eined— and eft to guard. the flat, while Mr, Bartlett” went to City Island to dine with a friend. On re- turning he found a large number of tenants in the hall sniffing for a gas Jerk Phe trail led to the Bartlett fat, and when Mr, Bartlott opened the door he was almost overcome by the rush of gas from hla rooms, Did Rog Turn on the Qse? Fiureying \to the kktteten: he found Duke stretched apparently lfeless on the floor, while the three jets of the kitchen sas range—waereOpaned—and flowing gas. Mr. Bartlett found marke of the dog's teeth on the Wooden han- dies of the sas-cocks, proving beyond Peradventure of a doubt that the de- Voted caning had turned on the gas In hope of ending his Ife while sorrowing for his mistress, Only the fact that one window was open saved the dog from death. He dbMin't know enough to close the win- Gow and plug the cracks with paper, as Gosorihed In all such affairs, Mr, Bart- lett worked the artificial respiration and brought the dog around, after which, he To-day Duke gent for a veterinary, fs wan but alive, feeling somewhat like a gas tank. If you von't belleve it, there ta the dog, thers in the gas steve and the neighbors testify to the accuracy of the account, MONUMENT TO HUGO. BRUSSELS, Belglum, Aug, 9% — A simple druldical stone, inscribed ‘To Victor Hugo, immorta! bard lat Water- y00,": Is to be placed at Waterloo In commemoration of Victor Hugo, Count Lous Cavens, who has directed the preservation of souvenirs of the groat battle, has given the ground for the un: ostentatious monument, Tt will be dedi- ted toward the end of the year. happiness. But the middle-aged bler's wife, who had sacrifice us band for ‘him, sacrificed him for the mere boy whom. after a ten years‘ Ualson, she killed because he told her he was throuch with her. In young Guerin's effects was found @ poom, sald to have bean sent him by the woman whom he was endeavoring to cast off, It Is called “The Curse” And the last yerse runs as follows: “Body aad it fir love bereft, hole "how cant never de; Heayen Itself shall take what I left, Rh ith love of me. zi She shot Guerin td death, Now Mo- Donald, who sought her out in prison, and obtained her freedom, ts dead. And true to the gambler’s tnatinct, (facing bath women trying by Joyous barks and/ ho betrayed him, the eae CUNNING LTT MAIDA GET ACH UK LOTER |Lizzie Muehlman .Took Just About an Hour to Clear Out Each House. Liszie Muehiman, the _ prettiest, neatest and eleversst thief the Detec- tive Bureau has entertained for a long time, was arrested to-day, but it took quite an aggregation of dotectives to nab her. Credited with the job are Lieuts. Howry, a Greek; Unger, a Jew, and Dietsch. a German. They were as- sisted after the capture by a Swedish patrolman and an Irish sergeant. The police first heard of Lissie late in May. Complaints reached Hesd- quarters from women who had adver- {ised for a maid and employed a charm- ing little girl who answered the ads, She always explained that she had been working for a family in Flushing and left her references in her trunk, which woukl arrive next day—tf she got the Jov. She was so cunning, with her fresh complexion, her trusting eyes, her white, snug shirt waist, her little high- heeled patent leathers, that she always got te job. -Bhe-never~ kept one- for more than a day. If there was no loose Jewelry around the house she would depart unobtrusively and her employer would wonder what happened to her. If there was loose Jewelry she would depart just as unobtrustyely and so would the jewelry. Early in June she secured a place with Mrs. Elizabeth Sandorf at No. 316 West Ninety-third street, In less than half an hour she stole two diamond rings and a pair of diamond earrings. Another quick job was accomplished by Lizzie on July 2, when she as employed by Mrs. ‘Irving Van Loan, of No, H&A Seventh avenue. It took ‘hi just an hour to go to work, steal an For dhrmond=brocch; pawn it- for F100 In One Hunderd and Twenty-fifth street and vanish. Lizale's description has been read to the Central Office men many times, Howry, Unger and Dietsch saw a girl answering the description tripping in and out of apartment houses in the vicinity of Twentieth street and Lenox avenue. They hesltated long about ar- resting her, and were almost convinced Uiey hud made-a mistake when she put up & tearful protest. Once at Headquarters and under the ‘kind:y—eye_of Inspector —-Mctafferty; Iiazio melted. She confessed to half'a doaen robberies, Mrs. Sandort and Mra, Van Loan ‘were sent for and {dentined her. Inspector McCafferty intends to stage manage a reception in Lizete's tn- terest. at Headquarters — to-morrow, which upward of fifty women who have been robbed by @ cunning maid, wit attend. . TAY NEW CURE as King of the Gamblers Died |() SAVE A MAN | npn tn AIM RABE Take Case} Pronounced Hopeless at Pasteur Institute. LOSES HS SUIT (GANS WIE FOR CHILORE William T. Francisco Fails to Establish Charges Before Vice-Chancellor. The nurgeona at Bellevue have under- | taken to cure @ case of rabies that the | Interested will be lused The patient is John Roach, thirty-flve | yoaes old, of Homecrest avenue and! Neck Road, Sheepshead’ Bay. Five | weeks igo a dog invaded hin chicken | coop, He endeavored to drive it away, whereupon the animal epr him and mnk his fangs in the back of his tight hand, es he wound was caulerized’ and Roacts aloh« all right Vaasteur Institute abandoned aa hope- leas. A new and spectal treatment in | which the medioal pr@easion tx deeply | j at seemed sti be getting today, when he was suddenly) with’ advanceg symptoms of; » Pasteur Insti nform: was rushed td ‘There his phys tute, thet it was @ hopeless case and that! Ne had better be t was taken cnarge ofiby Dr. A. B. Ari Ward 25, and the new treat ment prepared for hit, Tila treatment, h has been auc- cessfully used In’ several cases, conaiste Of Kraded injections of serum prepared from the spinal cord of a rabbit that The firet jection Is one » to Bellevue. ur died of rabies, Jouble centimetre of an emulsion taken from a rabbit's spinal cord that has been |hung In preparation for treatment four- days, Then on the following day another injection ja made of a prepara- tlon that has been hanging thirteen days and so on da yby day until the one-day preparation ts reach If the patient in sti alive on the fourteenth day he wil wUrvt LOUISIANA HAS. ORE SPEED THAN “THE CONNECTICUT i Government-Built Vessel Fails to Quite Equal Con- tract Vessel. WASHINGTON, Avg, §.—After a year jot speculation and conflicting” claims | the relative speed of tho big dattio- | snips Connecticut and Louisiana has been finally und formally estavusned, and on the face of the returns tne private built beat Loulsiana appears to have a slightly better record. Her speed record, establisned @ year 450, is given by the Bureau of Steam En. Finecering -as 15.823 knots, made on four hours’ continuous test, with her propellers making 127.63 revolutions per Connecticut's trial Wag maae during the night, and completed to-day on the Tun trom Hockhnd, me, 64 Provincetown, M. , and the result 1s disclosed in the following telegram reoelved at the Navy Department from Capt. Clover, the president of the trias board “PROVING TOWN, Mass, Aug The Connecticut finished very success- ful four hours’ trial at 4.90 this A. M. Average speed 18.78 knots”? The Connecticut and Louisiana are xixter ships, the former bulit at the Naw York-Navy -Yardsand-the: tatter bythe Newport News Snipbullding Company. At the Navy Department it 1s potnt out that the Connecticut on this rial was carrying 3 ons more welght than was the Loulala p her trial, which caused her to draw five inches more water. Therefore, {t 1x naxerted that, if allowances are made for these con: ditions the Connecticut's performance jn really superior. On the other hand, the private ship- builders assert that the fact that the Louisiana had her trial when the ship was brand -new,—while the Connecticut bad @ year's shaking down, confirms the eupertority in apéed ef the former oat. ——_$_$_$_o___ LOSS OF HIS HAT COST TWO LWVES The body of Lawrence Gilkinson, of No, 18 Monroe street, wio was drowned yetth Miss Madeline Rivers, of Boston, in the Dight-Mile River, near Hamburg, Conn., yesterday, was brought to his home to-day. Hg was twenty-two are old and live with his" parents and. several brothers and sisters, He had been em- yet as a bookkeeper by the H. B. i Eishin Company, at Worth staeet West Broadway, for the pa Two weeks ago he went vacation with bis sister, Helen, and her GIRL FALLS 70 FEET. ROCHESTER, N. Y,, Aug. 9.—Anna! Blake, of Naples, fell from 9 oliff into Canandaiva Lake and ‘was paved by Anna Button, sevenieed who swam to her and towed her ashore Ritter Miss Blake had gone down twice. Miss Button is now the hereine of the Inke country. ‘ M A | ST i‘ ES R. KEAN ZE° AVE OPEN MONDAY XN chum, Mabel Hess The Boston young lady who met her death with him was not known to his ‘The couple were rowing in Fiver near Hamburg Cove Wind carried away young Wilkinson's bat. His companion reach- 4 for It and fell overboard. Wilktnsen jumped in to wave her and both were Exo ” BET 2 DAY 2A gy. EVENINGS After hearing a great den! of evidence on poth edes Vice-Chancellor Howell, of Newark, handed down a dectston to- day denying the petition of W ‘t Francisco, a (wealthy In: agent of this clty/for te custody o hin three children, .who are ‘iving at} Montolair with: /their. mot! trom | whom, he 1s sopatated. The ion of the court carriqa with ft, the clearing away of charges mada against Mrs, Tranctgco by her husband ‘The couple were married In this city in 1884., The/children gre Lena, aged fourteen:.Geqrae, aged eleven, ‘and Cy-! nine, The Franctscos separated In 104. | Fraolsco says it: was becatise of attentions pald to hia wife by thelr coachman, a may named Taltot In hls petition asking for the custody of the children he alleged that hia wife rus, was not the proper person to have} charge of them. & He charged that Talbot donbineered | over the children, Mra. Franc! counter charges against husband She denied his allegation that she con- templated taking the clilldren from the State of New Jersey. NMS NOW OS NTO BELMONT ~ NEN TUNNEL Forces Admission from E, P. Bryan that Extra Fare Will Be Charged. The inquiry into the affairs of the Interborough-Metropolitan system be- ing made by the Public Service Com- mission was continued this afternoon In the Aldermantc Chamber at City Hall ‘The first witness called was E. P. Bryan, President of the Interborough Rapid Transit Company, who bad been on the stand previously. “{ understand,” began Willlam M, Ivins, counsel for the Commission, “that the so-called Steinway tunnel was ac- | elevated FLEVATORS AUN |TRIES TO BOARD WITH MILLIONAIRE! MOVING TRAIN INFULL CHARGE} LOSES HER LIF Frederick Potter Directs the| Girl's Two Legs Cut Off on Work in the Great Em- Day Her Vacation Comes pire Building. to a Close. ~~ With her legs almost severed by an Frte train at the Rutherford (N. J.) sta. ‘This way to the seventeenth foor, Local trains to the left. Hurry, hurry!" | Tenants of the Empire Builling and the-thonzands of passengers from’ the trains of the Sixth avenue line who use the main floor of the Bm- pire Bullding in reachihg Broadway werp startled by the sound of a round, resonant yolce from a dapper little man with a cane in'his hand who was direct. Ing the work of loading three of the Dig elevators of ‘the Empire Building. Hundreds stopped for a minute, but the Impatient little man was bustling about so nervously that hada chance to get a quod lovk at his wor- ried tace “Well, Potter, {s that you?’ came th audifen exclamation from’ Willlam tion and brulsed from being dragged along the tes, Mia Matilda Braasch, a stonog- grapher in the New York office of the Wells-Fargo | directed ‘every step In her removal to the General Hoe- pital th thie city, ‘Then she had rela- tiven and friends called to hor ‘bedside and bade them good-by. After ghe hed been taken from the operating table she |made a will, and, conscious to the last, ed to talk to her mother until the last spark of life fled. It was Miss . Express, leant 9 | coat Gee Mah dent of the Unite Jiraasch's birthday, and her vacation of el “Corporation, as c SR reer tne twa w 1 just come to an end. Frederick Potter, the millionaire man-| Miss Braasch lived tier mother AINE Crustee of the Potter eatate, owa-| and sister in Carlstadt and took a train rs of the Empire Building, He. was at Rutherford, She was a moment late In. reaching the station, The train had Just’ got in motion when she ran through the waiting room at the west- ern door, The ticket agent saw her make a dash for tho train, and shouted: personally directing a flgbt agalnat the twelve elevator men who went out on atrike yesterday because the Potter es- tate would not grant \n Increase of & month—a total of $M for the dozen Omiy Uiree OF (he br cievuiors Were runing on scheaue Unie tu-auy, rive more were making trips to ie upper | “pon: ° nore, DUC IL Wak explaaned that. tie Pon te Sten Pee te aa eee cena curs ‘Were in hands of inexpert ‘There'll be another local in a few min- men. Much us ine owners die duler- | uina, s ved Lo Win Against (hy wievator men ey Were unWining (o risk the lives uc Liver tenants by clumsy handling of the Kieut cars of the bullding. ‘Trustees Kelmey and Potter held a erence early to-day, It was de- ed-to--comoat—the strikers” for kn= Other Cwenty-four hours at least, Ir, Poller did not say Who compelled the men to.letve suetr cars, bata com— mittee Of the “strikers cuinposed — of Charles Denzer John Eliott, Thomas Savage and Hurry McKenna, ‘who were on duty outslde the building, stated that the Fidelity Casualty Company, rance on’ the building, Potter to remove tie “Oh, I can get It." she replied, quick- ening her pace, There was @ blind bag@age car at the rear of the train, and this led to the tragedy, She en- deayorsd ts yun alongside the rear platform of the second last. car, Twe men were on the platform, and they reached down to assint her. She caught the handrall and attempted to jump to the step. But she was without strength for the feat, and before the men could selzo her wrists she shot junder the train and the front -wheeu- of the baggage car passed over her logs. The doctors said w requested Mr. green hands. “Three persons Were hurt in that bulld- Mey deciared Biliott, “Une \Gem-—-« imessenger boy—almost ud the loss of blooa his arm taken off whew thy re satus cloned, a are making ho, disturb was so great sho was without strength ance! Yo have nothing against Mr. r Pate Weperintendent: phsaity entices | t rally from the shook of the loss of at fault. both limbs. A hammock for two; Just you—and ‘Zu Zu the glorious little ginyer snap. autred by. Mr. Belmont. “It waa," said Mr. Bryan. ten years ago. Q. Do I understand that the tunnel ts completed? A. Yes, Q. How long will it take to equip it? A. Tho tunnel could be equipped within six months. Q. Well, if it could be equipped with- in six months, why won't it be?” Question as to Charter. At thin point De Lancey Nicoll broke “Five or {n and sald that the question of the charter had not been settled. . Q. Has it been decided to what use the tunnel will bo put? A. Not yet, I belleve. a The witness said thar the tunnel would have.no-phyaloal. connection with the Queens County Company. “Then the present plan js to havo the service end underaround on tha other ide of the river tnd connect With the subways on this wide, Is {t tt?" asked Mr, Ivins. “No, was the reply, “It has not been so decided. There are to be but two atations—one at or near Third avenue, Manhattan, and the other at Jackson avenue, Long Island City. There will be shuttle trains between the two ata- tlons, Q. What will be the fare? A. Three cents. It’s not what you pay, but what you get that tests true economy. __White Rose Ceylon Tea Double Strength Saves Half. KEEP THIS'ON FILE 3” Maiden Lane, N.Y, 389 Fulton Bt., Brooklyn. EMIT aba STON MAN NEW ENGLAND'S Bes} went; CIGAR amar “man—allwearW.L. Douglas*3.50 for what better company could you wish? They’re snappy and have just enough ginger. BEST QQ NA A Men in every walk of life, in all professions and trades, the gentle- man of leisure and the working- shoes because they are the best. To *26,000| frsseievenbety Reward ) orc inen nes than any other THE REASON W.L.Dougias $3.50 shoes are worn by more men in all walke of lifo than any other make, 49-hecause of-_thelr excellent style, onsy sisting: and superior wearing qualiti he selection of the leathers and other materials for each part of the shoe, and every detallof the making Is looked after by the most complete organization of superintendents, foremen and skilled shoomakers,who receive the highest wages paid In the shoelAsy Industry, and whose workmanship ‘%, cannot bo excelled, : ?, If I could take you Into my large ° factories at Brockton, Mass., and show you how carefully W. L. Doug: $3.50 shoes are made, you would then understand why thoy hold their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are of greater value than any other $3.50 sh = My method of tauning the bettom soles produces more BB” fexidie and longer wearing leather than any other tannage. W. L. DOUGLAS $4.00 GILT EDGE SHOE Oannot Be Equalied at Any Price. 1.78 AND $2.00, _JUST-THE SAME AS MY MEN'S ME. LEAT! ‘W. L. DOUGLAS BOYS’ SHOES $3.50 SHOES, THE S. CAI ION. The No Bubatitut. . FOR $1.78 AND $2.00. ped on bottom. ‘Take 5 'L, Douglas store, ask your dealer for W, L. Douglas shoos. If he cannot nupply Your send direct to factory, Shoes mailed everywhere. Illustrated Catalog free: / L, DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass, W. L. Douglas Shoe Stores in Greater New York: 433 Broadway,cor. Howard. | 2779 Third Avenue, BROOKLYN, N.Y. 785 Broadway, cor. 3th St. roadway, cor. 14th St. roadway, cor. 36th. her head and body cut and;