The evening world. Newspaper, September 29, 1908, Page 3

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THE EVENING WORLD, TUFSDAY, SEPTEMBER CALLED CRAZY FOR FINITYS SARE, Sn TELLS COURT Wealthy Mrs. Langdon Pro- tests That She Is Victim of Her Husband’s Plot. | GIRL PLEADS, TOO. Saved Mother’s Life, She Says, When Prominent Railroad | Man Tried to Kill. Protesting that she was the victim of @ conspiracy between her husband and her family physician, Mrs, Georgia F. Langdon, the wife of Averett L. Lang- 4on, traffic manager of the Long Island Rallroad, was committed to the psycho- pathic ward of Bellevue Hospital for examination as to her sanity by Magis- trate Barlow in West Side Court to-day, Mrs. don charged, in court, that! her elderly husband was seeking to have| her put out of the way in an insane @sylum after he had ma un unsuc- cessful attempt to kill her by smother: | ing her with pillows, Her charges were corroborated by her daughter Margaret thirty years old, Mrs. Langdon's ago 1s given in the court papers as forty-vight vears, but] she looks olde Her husband !s sixty 1. He fs, In addition to be-| of the Long Island | New York | n Company, the] Raliroad, a and Long Is! Belmont controls the Long Island trolley Ines outside Brook- lyn, His office !# at No. Fitth avenue. i Physician Says She's Menace. | The Langdon family lives at No, 238 Wea: Elghty-third street, Besides the @aughter Margaret, there {s anothe! ehild about ten years old. Mr. Lang: don, accompanted by Dr. Charles G. | Brink, of No, 210 West One Hundred | and Seventh strect, appeared in the | court late yesterday afternoon and ap- | lied for a warrant In conformance with the statute regulating the commit: | ment of possibly insane persons for in- | vestigation as to thelr mental state. | Both Mr. Langdon and the physician made aMdavits. They swore that M Langdon ts 1 lly irresponstole and @ menace to herself and those about her, Maglstrate Barlow issued a ware rant and gave It to Court Officer Sulli- van for service, | At the request of Mr. Langdyn, Sulll- | van held the warrant until § o'clock this morning, when he ent to the Langdon home. He found Mr. Langdon aud Dr, Brink awa him, Mrs Langdon was summoned and rold that @he would have to Ko to attend to komo important ousiness, Her daugater was with her when Sullivan served the war- + runt, Nelther of the women appeared to realize the meaning of the proceeds ing. Accuses Husband in Court. There was ataxic: and Mrs, Langd and Margaret 1 ab at the door. Mr. Dr, Brink, Sullivan ngdon entered it and were driven to the court. When the par- ty entered ccartroom Magistrate Barlow ordered that the case be taken up at once. Not until Mrs. Langdon reached the bridge before the Magistrate's desk did she ar to realize that an attempt Was being made to deprive her of her Vberty, ‘hen she began to sob. Her €aughter embraced and supported her. @urning to her husband, Mrs. Langdon orled: feared you would "Shame upon try to dot “Your Honor,’ she continued, turn- ing to the M “Lam not in wane. This is a conspiracy ty put me} out of the way so that my husband may carry on uninterrupted an affair he has with his niece. He has been corrupting the morals of my children, and because L objected he is resorting to this “T admit that my nerves are shattered. It is because that for more than a year my husband has treated me with | the utmost crueliy, ile has beaten me until the blood flowed. On one occa: sion he smothered me with pillows un- {il I way unconscious, and I would have died at his hands but for the interference of my daughter,” Daughter Corroborates Her. “What she states is true,” put In the) Gaughter, “I rescued my mother from my father, dragged her into another room and locked the door, Everything! ehe says is true.” There was no doubt as to Mrs, Lang- don's disturbed nervous condition. Magistrate Barlow ruted that in view of the affidavit, tt would be better for ther to go to Bellevue and allow Dr, Beegory and his experts to determine ber mental state. “Don't send me there!" pleaded Mrs, Langdon. "I'll never get out if they get me inside asylum walls,” Magistrate Barlow asured the terri ined | ‘woman that he would personally com- municate with Dr. Gregory to see that she was treated with every considera: tion. Margaret Langdon then jnsisted vpon going with her mother to the hos-| pital. Mrs, Langdon protested, but the! @aughter was firm, and the Magistrate | said he would ask Dr, Gregory to let) her seo her mother and be with her as much as possible during the five-day Period of observation. ‘The formal commitment papers were speedily prepared. Mrs. Langdon, her daughter, 0: n, Mr. La. lon and Dr. Brink then entered the wait- dng taxicab and rode to Bellevue, where Mrs, Lanedon was placed in the nsycho. | pathic ward with extra care and at- tendance, for which Mr, Langdon guar- anteed to p | a | BIG HOTEL FOR SHABRIGHT Af a first step in a movement to make Geadright a year-round resort, a fire Proof hotel, to cost $4,000, will he bull this fall by a syndicate of Philadelphia | ead Toronto capital Amon; them! fe Bdward Pannac!, who has conducted @ dotel at Seadright for twenty-dive} rr iii lly iin itt jmind? Jt is just as much art as to [trifle more prosate, Woman Paid Betier tor Pla: ying “Fool” as Clown Than pe Maud Kimball, of the Hippo: drome, Tells Why She sook Classes for the I TALKS OF For- ng, ane WORK, Tries to Be “Ugly” in Makeup But Draws Line at “Aging” —How Laughs Are Made. By Ethel Lloyd Patterson. This woman spends hours each day in obliterating what every other / woman spends hours in enhancing. The thought mind as I shook hands, behind the scenes, with Miss Maud Kimball, the woman clown at the Hippodrome. Conscientiously she had endeavored to make herself look ridiculous, and it I were to speak conscientiously as she had worked I would have to flashed across my admit that success had crowned her efforts. Success with “a string to It,” as one might say. For when she | smiled her achievement was utterly | wrecked. One caught the real curve | of her lips and the quick smile in her, nyes through all the disguise of mis- leading grease-paint lines, “Don't you mind It,” I gasped “Don't | you mind making yourself look ugly and | ridiculous?” | “Why, no, Indeed,’ Miss Kimball laughed back at me. “What Is there to} To be al to me it fs ‘all in make one’s self look pretty. the day's work.’ “But you are young! You are at- tractive!” I exclaimed, “That might be the reason why I do not mind St," she smild. “Perhaps {tf I were quite an ugly off the stage as I make myself on it I might feel different about It.” Pays Better Than Teaching. I took another long look at the scarlet wig done In a travesty upon the fash- | fonable coffture, at the absurd hat placed at a preposterous angle. “Were you really a school teacher?’ | I sald, wonderingly. "A school teacher {n Omaha," she con- firmed, “and I know what else you are going to ask me, so I will save you the trouble and answer. I left tt and came} here simply because I could make more | money this way, Perhaps you do not realize that the salary of a chorus{ or ballet girl the first year of her | experience, exceods that of a public school teacher who has been teaching | five years.” “Could I make myself any uglier {f 1 tried?" Miss Kimball repeated, gazing at herself {mpartially in the looking glass. “Yes, I think I could. You see, | although my appearance Is ridiculous my | make-up is nevertheless ‘young.’ I think | it I were to add more lines of old age to | my face it would make me look what | you call ‘uglier.' ” | “Why don't you do 1t?"l queried, Miss Kimball fidgeted a moment, and | then broke down, “Lam afraid 1 suflty to feminine she admitted. “Edo not put In the Ines of old age, becnuse I feel the time will come soon enough when I will have to play ‘old parts," and the lines will be there without any make-up,” Mrs, Kimball stopped to consider sev- eral moments before she answered my next question. Finally she said Hard to Plan “Fun.” “T hardly know whether it is easter to make people laugh or to make them cry. Of course, to make them laugh you can call to your aid more gesture, nore byplay. Sorrow must be dignitied. But even with the additional latitude 1 think it Is hardest to get the laughing sympathy of an audience, But on other hand, there is an unexpected side to humor that helps you out. Some- times you will plan and rehearse the most subtile bit of comedy, You will| imagine that it will ‘bring down tho] house.’ ‘The night wrrives, you spring your little joke, and—not a leaf stirs. ‘Ten minutes after you will be amazed at a perfect uproa that has greeted! somo trivial bit by which you scarcely | [hoped to win a smile. “Just such @ surprise occurred the other night. A laugh followed, and now | we have Incorporated that particular | funny episode In the performance. I was standing near the ring, really not thinking of anything, and as Marceline passed he pinched me. Tt was just time for the entrance, of the bears, I was sure it was one of them that had gotten [beyond control. Of course, I gave the |most unearthly scream and jumped. | Vell, the people almply laughed and laughed! We do It every night now, and we always get our laugh. To tell you the hdnest truth, though, neither | Marceline nor myself can make out | what there is about it that 1s so amus- Ing. will have to plead vanity, after all," Strange Sense of Humor. “There {8 a peculiar streak in the kind of comedy that I am creating," | continued Miss Kimball, in a grave! voice, “that has always puzzled me.) In a way the bear story is an example | of it. Any facial expression or sudden | esture tndicative of actual pain seems to amuse an audience. Extreme fright, | horror, appeals to their humor. The other Aight, as T was running out of the ring | tripped and fell, I knocked my- self almost senseless and neeriy broke my nose, A perfect howl of delight went up from the audien “But do you think they realized that | you were honestly hurt?" I asked her, | aghast at the Idea. ‘Whether they did or not. it te true! | asked, fol | ma'am. jand was et | nervous, muscular twitching of the [to Jan alwa, that kind of an yokes a laugh.’ The call boy knocked at the dressing- accident pro- room door just then, and the Lady Clown rose to leave mi “What have you in your handbag?” 1 wing her toward the stage. “Apples and carrots,” e plained, ‘I eat them all during this a “Really eat them wheth are hungry or not?” “Really eat them whether I am h ry or not," she reiterated, ‘You must hot forget," she called back over her shoulder, as she ran to make her en- trance, ‘that 1 was a country school I can eat apples or carrots any tim ——7.—-—— TO WELCOME BATTLESHIPS, PEKING, Sept. %.--The United States was officially notified by the Chinese Government to-day that Prince Yu Lang and Liang Tun-yen have been se- lected to receive the American battle- ship fleet at Amoy next Novemb n behalt of the Government. Liang T yen is a graduate of Yale Univ one time spoken of Chinese ier tone Uns to the United States, E SAVED AT EVENTH HOUR CLAIMS CAST Had Previously Lost Hope! and Craved Death as a Release from S.tfering. The following letter, recently given for publication by EB. A. Castle, living lat 0, 300 West Seventeenth street, New York, with reference to the Coop dleun na Werefnomlseinevcenbnatrsteal| at Kiker’s New Drug Store, No, 2 West Fourteenth street, just off Fifth avenue, speaks for itself: the interest of human! retrain from expressing publi Cooper's New Discovery ts a imo markable and that it has, without doubt, actually saved my “Three years ago, overnight, 1 stricken with pavalysis of my right leg and from that time on I gradually lost the power of my functional organs, which ceased to perform their natural duties, except through artificial means, causing severe constipation, extreme sickness of the stomach, with ag: ing pains, nausea, the formation large quantities of gases, attended by continuous belclilng; no appetite and ways severe pains after eating, ligt and feet, always tired and exhausted | bevond description, terrible pains in the back and the very slightest effort would, completely exhaust me and cause short- age of breath, “I became so completely weakened and run down that 1 was hardly able walk or stand. I could not work, i though most will and anxious to do 80; much less could I get employment of any kind {n my condition, becau! the extreme weakness and untold ag nies which I was constantly suffering had made me most cadaverous looking, my eyes had that fixed, glassy stare of madness. “TP became thorough! after having been p discourag: and in se’ s and a number of pr pecialists, who performed sey eral operations t spinal cord ag Well as long treatment in yarlous other Ways and with all Kinds of medicines~all this without ar good results whatsoever, until fin had wasted away to n erable wreck, with he hope of recovery and earnestly wish- ing for release from my misery by death. “T do not know what inspired Jone day a thought came to me né | give up—that there was still a glimmer of hope left. 1 had heard much of Cooper's New D: y. so With a des- erate effort I staggered into Riker's | Drug Store aud explained my condition to Mr, Ballanl, one of Mr, Coop who Immediately st as Well as nved to able assistant: | played much Ince courtesy to m most. fortunate thing that ever h pened, for since that day, three mon , { have continued taking Cooper’ New Discovery end am happy that 1 am now almost a we! m although somewhat weak. I 4 beg to pudilely ac ledge my grat- Ktude for what Cooper’a New Discovery has done for me The dem edies Is In New Drug Store, teenth street, just New York, whe: tants are in constant attendance to say daily pr No, The Cooper preparations are on sale at all the "ruxer stores and can be odtained | drug store. *%* at see other was | a pam DIVES 10 DEATH for Teaching 4S WIFE ACCUSES. A Policeman Arrest Ready Him as He Plunges From Window. to KISSED SLE! PING SON, Widow Refuses to Give the Body Burial and Says He Was a Forger. rge von der Schulenberg, a che ist, in Harlem Hospital at 3 A. M to-day from Injuries recetyed by jump- ing nan alrshaft at No, 19 East One Hundred end his i nim of blgamy and Twenty-eig! h street when i and wife accused a policeman to arrest him, Although Von de chulenberg in a moment of conseio: a few ain. tites before his death dented to the hos: pital attendants ne was a bigamist, the accusing wife insisted later that he was, and declared that she had a signed con. fession from him which admitted that he hada wite t tied her, and t five years ago, the wife said also the wife » ctfered to prove her a Taking her four-year-old son, Herbert with her, Mrs, Von der iichulenbe: e+ came housekeeper for Josep! Manont i the latter's home, {n East One Hundred tive years at w » married her, was living ve still livin and and Twenty-eighth street. Von der Schulenburg has made repeated at- tempts to get her to return to him since, but she has refused and threat- ened him wit harrest. She Called Police, He called on his wife late last night | ile dented that the first woman he mar- ried was allve and pleaded with Mrs. Von der Schulenburg to return to him. Running to the window, Mrs. Von der |Schulenburg began screaming: "Police! = olice!” | Police Sergeant Grubel, of the East One Hundred and Twenty-sixth street station, saw the woman leaning from the fourht-story window of the apart- | ment-house and ran up. tremendously excited woman in the front room, Near her stood Manoni and pven der Schulenburg. Mrs. Von der Sciulenburg, pointing her husband. “He |s a bigamis iT} ” | married him and found out that he had |decelved me. Arrest him!” | “Be silent, Bertha!” commanded Yon der Schulenburg. ‘Be silent,” he said | again | Mrs. Von der Schulenberg again asked | the Sergeant to arrest her husband. Von der Schulenburg glided swiftly to the Gaye i IMPUR rear of the flat. Ilis son was sleeping in one of the rooms through which he passed, and he kissed the clilld of- fectionately, The policeman and Manon were watching him closely, _—— Dived from Window, Suddenly Von der Schulenburg made a Court Believes Mate Stoddard ¢ash for an open window overlooking the airshaft, and with a spring dived Big Enough to Take Care — head-tirst down to the bottom. % When Dr. Harrity came in an ambu- of Himself. iance from Harlem Hospital he found Von der Schulenburg horribly tnjured, The man was hurried to the hospital, where he died three hours later, First Officer Charles B. Stoddard, of Von der Schulenburg came to this the Ward liner Vigilanca, came from | country fifteen years ago, when he was Pier No, 18, Brovklyn, to the Adams! twenty-three years old, and got a posi- tion In a drug store. He married Clara Miller five years later, according to tne second wife, 8 ago Von der Schulenburg met Miss Bertha Roeder, He represented to h street court to-day, answering a sum- which his Mrs. Etta St. Clair Stoddard had got Magistrate Gets- mons wife, mar to Issue for him, thereby scoring | that he was un- No. Mn the latest development of a| married and told her of the death of his ed aftinity game that Ineludes,| first wife. They were married by the Dr, John Schneider in the chureh jes the two Stoddards J, Hermann, Stoddard fo: tion of Mrs. Mr. George | Re’ who has been sued by| at $50,00 for alleged aliena- | YT: Schneider had also married Von der toddard’s affections, and | Schulenburg to Clara Miller. ‘ady, as yet unnamed, residing on] “Mr. Von der Schuienburg told the Twenty-third street, Manhatian, and | Parson,” said Mrs, Von der Schulenburg frequently referred to by Mrs, Stode| to-day, “that his frst wite was dead, 1 tee ient Wty ay believed contivently tat te frst wife Rene Co) MATA ERS) itty | \vas dead untit three mont , wien Accor the complaint of Mrs./1 heard direct tom her, She his said Stodda © went to the she and her husband had lived togel niibwaerivenliCcateniae | at No, 8) flag, One Hundred and T. n it arrived veste | ty-ninth street, und that he fad dese er husband rexarding his attentions to) eq her three montns before he married e fair unkifown of the he sa On pretext ratr. | me. he lured ho Accused Her Husband, “I accused my and he made of explaini tho cireumstances to he TEM IGEELGOne accuse him, 0 ateroom, and t «| denial, but I continued to accuse him, into a stateroom, and tl adminis) Cri fioally he signed a confession that tered several hard spanks, concluding | he had another living wife. We were the entertalnment shoving her then living at No, 28 East Thirty. rainst a be She ad ‘o trying | fourth street.” -rainst a | e admitted to trying | fourth etieet taking our child |to hit him with a gold bracelet, which) with mo, and went to my mother's, she took off her arm and threw at him, weeks later I found empioy necked Manon}, and 1 was makin But he dneked, Nenont hen Von Denies She's Affinity.” | burg began his urn to him, Of late Magistrate Gelsmar continued the| has heen living at No. 208 Ml Oct. 6, meanwhile releas- WAIL TUBES IN aie Vost-Oflce Department Asks Per- miaxton to Inetal Service on his own recognizance. , d's lawyer wanted the wife put under a bond not to annoy him, but the Magistrate said in his opinion Stod- ig enough to look to 7H Union! The Federal Government wa to In- where she has lived since she | sta In tl » subways pneumatic tubes for Men from her 4 Mrs, The 1h \ ave out a intel Pu Wane ‘SN e Ae e denied ti was Mr, Peale » G ‘ Hermann’s affinity The Post-Oftic arcinent has. al- my oad the game books and are! ready con! installation of interested in the same things and that tubes and power all, posit va ld she, “T ad- mire Mr. Hermann tho purest Uf d ken yw. My husband Is not vure, STO nate, she wan [| CHARMS THE | “She ts not a soul mate, She fe an OUArek eve ME HOEMMRN aonhe net APPETITE wrt rye husband. (Hinks, Tam doing Delicious wrong, hy doesn't he sue for a di- P t ee ee TRIES SUICIDE BY GAS. os a e Valzh's Wife Detects Odor and Toasties Calla a Poltceman, Despondent long period of Crisp, Sweet, Flavory and to work, Ignatz forty-one year old. a ior “The Taste Lingers ttempted to end his Hite tts alter- inhaling gas. We wad IS¢ pkgs, His wife, Yetta. t the gas t Made by is room. ‘She called a polienan and Postum Corea: Cuupany, Limited, e oor was broken down. Valzh was Battle Creek, Mich, taken to Bellevue Hospital. It was {said he would recover, ‘ ern . - He found a) "I want this man arrested,” screamed | nd avenue and Twelfth street. | 29, 1908, HARRIMAN UNDER DoCTOR'S CARE CR CLD MALADY ae Financier Again Suffering From Stiffening of the Spine, SPECIALIST CALLED IN, Dr. Lyle at) Fifth Avenue Home to Give Osteopathic Treatment, Harriman has had a seri- that has award H currence of a malady d him for yes ous 1 othe: 4, and to-day Dr. W. G. Lyle of No. 00 West Fitty-elghti street, was summoned to the Harriman home at No, 874 Fifth avenue to give opathic treatment Meally the railroad ma Liffening of the spine, and for has been compelled to jold corset, He has had sev- attacks that incapacitated Drugs have failed to relleve him, but osteopathic treatment has been of great benefit, and he has treated by many osteopaths in ntch ntly his aiairs called him to| while journeying to that ur his splne stiffened and he was severely racked with pain Mr. Harriman turned over his business into other hands and went at once to the office of Dr, R. W, Lovett, a spectal> st, of Marlboro street, Boston. Another /iolent Seizur . ‘manipulated’? at once re repeated until he felt well return to was making plans for another extensive railroad journey when he was afflicted with an even! more violent seizure Dr. Lyle was summoned to the mag- nate's home, as he has treated Mr. Harriman for years for the same trou- ble. It was the who designed the celluloid corset which the capitalist wears, both waking and sleeping, Long ago Dr. Lyle advised Mr. Havri- man that his trouble was largely due to | lack of exercise, His circulation was| | poor as a consequence, and when rheu- hi Nor troubl seve is Al year ar a cellul we eral him for weeks been many diff Very ree and Boston city in als pri He was and the treatments © was greatly relieved. — Ie enough a few days New York ago to | matism gripped him it Immediately at- ew York osteopath | $1(0,000 no soi /BABY IN HER ARMS, WOMAN IS ARRESTED FOR BEGGING. ORCED N CONTEST FOR _—--- F Mrs. Press Was Caught Playing a Hand Organ in Front of a Harlem Theatre. Mra, Annie young woman. ‘Twelfth st Press, a poorly dressed in ‘0, 637 Bast was arrested on One Twenty-fitth street Imst wing, ra week past she tle fl in fr of Harlem thea tres, playing a barrel organ with one arm and holding an eight months’ old baby In the other, Agent Cook of clety met her was breaking to go home. While he was talking to crowd of boys | mud and bricks, Cook arrested Jeremiah — Sullivan, {thirteen years old, No, West One Hundred and 'Twent, treet. Sullivan was locked up on a tare of being out at night without a proper guardian and was later sent to the, Chidren’s Society Mrs, Press» without money Ngtlosday (me found on her. will of Benja- has been a pa- With Daughter, She Claims French Housekeeper E erted Undue Influence. the Children's So- ast night, told her she law and ordered her her a gan to pelt him with DECREE IN EVIDENCE. Counsel for Proponent Argue That Court Order Bars Her From Legacy. sted that she was when searched $7 Another sens the te American millionatre whol SOLIG Gold the contest over nin Hart, died in Parls May i Stewart &| earer, attorneys for Re Hart, | Ey eglasses nephew of Hart, submited to Surto- . Rate Beckett, In reply (9 ang ” $ | .00 a Pair by Lawyer Franklin Blen for leave to AOnen : : elle Kitty Hart, wa claims to lu the pro: at Hart from Hart's widow, to arvene ition Ink PRMD 8 ceeding, an amid mary May Supreme ( had, on © over the leading optician Donohite Day Was grant on the grou f this wife’ misconduct with a man kn 1 Magela ats of the ah a state towart nd that precluded Mrs, Hart trom mak- claim on Hart's Lived Lavishly in Paris Hart. who accumulated a peddler of cothing in in Paris for prior to his death Shearer Ms any estate %. slay AOGE, 230 8t,HY, lexcpisles Nowe 4th Ave fortune as | Remember 2 stores ony. 41 Fulton St, B’lyn Virginia, re} ‘ished 187i, Near De Kalb av twenty-tlve years living 4 most lavish seale. He left m than $1 Did 690,00 ever tast EY iney yentay naeeolienmrant 1d you ever taste was presided by Madame Gab- Melle Jullette Antoinette de Ble, to | the Peal fla avor of tte CocoaBean? whom he left an annuity of $14,000 a year. ; If not, try To his nephew, Michael Hart. he lett in cash and the income of his residuary estate, which ts valued at several hundred thousand dollars, His | adopted daughter, Isabel Lucches! Hart , illemin, wife of Jean Guillemin, a) prominent member of the French diplo- | |tnatic corps, was cut off withaut any-| thing, | Guillemin contested will, | ing that {t was procured by undue | UNSURPASSED (ocoa Chocolate, fected the spine, Uther piyaicians and} influence on tie part of Mine, de Blo osteopatiis had advised the financier) Ad others, and, Mrs. Hart, who was FoR EATING, DRINKING against living so sedentary a life and| name of Mos. Elizabeth Wright, also C hever taking any active exercise. | Med objections to its probate, claiming AND GOOKING ~ Nowtime to-eneroi | to be Hart's widow. \ ‘ 0 Time to Exercise. Mrs, Hart alleged that the wil It 1S there! Mr, Harriman repliod to all of them |,not executed In accordance with Fr . that he could not afford the tlme for! “Surrogate Beckett gave Mr. Bien a exercise, Tle affairs were go vressing| week in which to meet the contention : that the only mode of travel possible) with evidence in controversion ALL GROCERS. Was in motor cars and on flying rall-| road trains. He had fallen so out of] [the habit of walking and riding horse- | | back that he doubted If he could take tt| |up again without violent effects upon| his tem. Consequently, the osteopaths diagnose it, his spine has been settling, and the vertebrae growing together. If he will not exercise, then he must take con- stant treatment and have the trouble leorrected by means of plastic surgery. Although there is no immediate dan- \ wer chere always the possibilty that an ailment of the sort may develop into paralysis, The only way to prevent this is neve attacks of to allow suttne 2 1 treat ert) an | stant ent w the advisanilits th about with hi companion | —— | The Public and lis Servant, (From the Waehi “Do you belleve that an officeholder Aran of the public? do. as a con 1 do not fe publ retain a mber that i no one fs Is valet.” Platts es ane Odorles s Sold every vhere. Write Henry B, Platt, 42 Cliff S ‘ew York, for free book, c. WEEKLY Payable $1 Every 2 Werks NOTHING DOWN We will send on approval any- where within 300 miles, allowing freight charges, (his handsome Sid Boston Leather Couch SIZE We Also Furnish Homes Complete on Easy Terms Kalus Bros 107-109 WES? 125TH ST, Ovev Monday aud Saturday Eveainzs, very high| London Smoke Suede Boots For Women Newest with Pearl shade of gray in All-Suede Buttons.to match - $8 London Smoke Suede uppers—also buttons to match—with Patent Leather foxing oye | tect eee car G7, Tan Suede All-Suede == = s . With Patent Leather foxing Alexan der trees 30 Made to Order, The best Belgian Linen Daniass, : rie” 5-plece frame Suite re-cover- ed and made to appear new, $14.98 H. LEHMAN Co., Uphoisterers, ele Pet REA ek AS PRM solcrlogs, fend rer will call Poor Man! His Purse Is Getting Slim, So Send This Mailing Slip to Him. Private Mailing Slip oa i To Mr, THEY C, U, COMING: When you returned from shopping One day last week | thought From your long face that you had paid Long prices for what you bought You're far too good a fellow To be so led astray, So here's a tip; Por bargain Read what World Want Ads THEY CUT HIGH PRICES ALL TO PIEGES. say

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