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_THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, OCTOBER SCENT GAS FIGHT COSTS THE PEOPLE. CLOSE 10 $000,000 | City and State Have So Far Spent: $453,000 to Uphold Law Attacked by the Trust and $150,000 More Is Unpaid. To fight the Gas Trust there has already been expended the grea tum of $452,782.77. Before the eighty-cent gas case, now in the Unitec Btates S 2 Court, is ended, it is conservatively estimated that bill: hmounting to an additional $150,000 will have to be audited and paid. Which will | 600,000. How has this immense fund been spent? Who have been its benificiaries? erk ne U nd recently n nthe following. statement prepared for | The Evening World shows the expendi- Hanes of the city law department in Laub oo fitting the Gas Trust: the case in lower ond issue of $0.00) made tn Wan perfectly leza "05, paid to experts, stenog- o much per folio for TapHora lorem eee $49,484.52 Bi eoRaUITENG Pald trom contingencies in’ 1906 fe experts, stenographers, &c. 13,458.58 fd from budget appropriation for 1907 for expert, stenog- \ raphers, &c.., . 30,993 56 Paid from contingencies tn’ 1907 for experts, €c 3,488.83 Ls is Paid ) bond ts bf the case je rules of the SU | WT esse cscpseeses 805.95 REeaane | Paid from appropriation for ex: bremg penses in 1908, experts, &c..... 18,400.75 $26,090 for Mr. Masten. a 2155.75 Probably nost surprising bil? $128,223.24 Rented and paid was that of Spectal! sormer Judge Alton B. Parker, who | Master Arthur H. Masten, who eave jwill talk for the City of New York in the Gas Trust several million dollars’ |the United States Supreme Court, has a ey RAIS ERO eEIK pcelved $7,545.95 as yet — His total | worth of pr 4 token t feels sald to be $2,000, And ff the case had. has cashed two jis decided in fayor of the trust and| against the people the cost of the whole pr lings in the Federal courts will \have to be shared by the State and city, they dividing the expen: CHASE BALLOON checks, for $15,850 and the ot 310,000. This de cost of the refe The first public was er for pod to total the ence estment made by the 195 when the Stevens Committee took hold whether $1 per in Gas Investigating of the prope {tion 1,000 cubi vaS not an exorbitant price to charge for gas in New York It cos $37,283.29 to find out | that the public was being robbed. Charles E. Hughes, counsel for the com- mittee, received $10,000 for his services, and he was underpaid On the heels of e investigation was the creation of State Gas Commis. eion, which began operations June 1, 1906, and concluded July 1, 197. Aside} from issuing the original orfer for ®0-cent gas, the commissioners accom- plished little beyond casiiing vouchers TWO AERONAUTS Of expense totaling «10” 8%.80 German Airship Busley, An- Then the 8-Cent s law was passed by the Legisiature, Tha day etter’ te| Other, of the) Cup Racers, went into effect Joseph H. Choate 4 ss sprang lis {injunction surprise in the Is Lost in North Waters. United State Circult Court restraining the offi. als of the State from enforcing | the pei BERLIN, Oct. in the ities of the statute, and alleg- 1.—Far up ing the law to be unconstitutional in| clouds and racing toward the Arctic, that It confiscated the Gas Trust's prop-| pr, Niemeyer and Hans Hildeman, in erty, \the German balloon Busley, realizing Fight Has Been Expensive. The great proportion of the total cost of the fight has been in de- fending the const cent gas lay stenographers haye rei that they were being carried beyond the bounds of civilization, preferred to risk death by a drop into the sea to that of an unknown fate, should they continue their journey expended utlonality of t rts, lawyers ¢ aharvest. A Republican Legislature gave a Demo-) sighting the steamer Pring Wilhelm, cratic Attorney-General $82,851.94 to up- 3 Dclatinallawmitualsch cave (a7 bound for Edinburgh, they accordingly Former United States Senator Da Hill, and $10,000 to State Senator R. Page for their services in the gus litt | gation The Public Service Commission also took a hack at the big fight. It estab- Ushed a Bureau of Gas and Electricity, Which It operated at an annual cost of | gn4p py w boat's crew from the | signalled thefr intention, and while the stood by the aeronauts opened the gas valve and the balloon rapidly dropped to the water, vessel Niemeyer and Heldeman were rescued after a thrilling sea ch of the air- mer, $51,0m, and tt went into the subject Of) ang half naked and exhausted were gas making with a vengence. | Edward | taken aboard the ship and landed at , Whitney was retained to load up for | euinburgh the United Sta eme Court, and Dragged Through Sea. News of the rescue was recetved in a telegram from Edinburgh and caused tl | greatest relief here, for there was great Hut the real sinews of war have been| anxiety regarding the fate of this alr- furnished by the City of New York, |#hlp. The Busley te one of the twenty- Which alone, independent of the State, | three balloons that started in the race has already paid out $ in fighting | for the nternational trophy last Sunday he was recently In wddition $10,00 spent by the board in printing, stenographle work and special expenses on account, | the Gas. Trust. Assis Corporation y Counsel William P, Burr has dohe noth- | £m & suburb of Berlin, ing else for three years but direct the, There are atill two balloons missin battle for the city which began during |These are the Plauen and the Herge- term of Corporat tounsel Delany, Was continued by Corporation Couns Ellison, and is now being carried on b Corporation Counsel Pendleton City's Part In Fight. 1, which started Monday in the en- durance test, The two occupants of the Busley, al though they had a thrilling experience r ‘Lendent tnvestigation of the /@2d @ narrow escape, are to-day none Hy ot New Work aiuse fume tiie fact |the worse for thelr adventures, A sec- that It Was the largest individual cus- ond telegram received here gives di Pee ee natty custtoatht i? |tails of thelr Might and rescue, After the monopoly, In the latter part of lip |the start from Berlin the balloon drift- the city procured a bond issue of $5 ed to Southern Russia, and was then The bulk of this is of this money wen to sie driven to the northwest, The men saw anon seed _ Pes they were passing over Cuxhaven, Le |einding they were being carried too \far to the north, they decided to de- scend, and early Tuesday morning, at @ point about ten miles from Heligoland, they dropped the balloon into the sea. As soon a8 they were safe on voard, a line from the small boat that had been made fast to the balloon was cut, and the Busley, free of the weight of the boat, Went careening aWay over the se “By the Company He Keeps Is a Man Known” br, Niemeyer and Hans Hjedemann were li i at Edinburgh tale morn- ad i » | ing and immediately started tor home A World “Lost and Found’ | \i38 ay or London, The point where rartigaina i ictine. | | they Were picked up 4 ten miles from advertisement makes no distinc. ]| Per oiaha tion of. cree or clan—it }{ 1 is estimated that their balloon had travelled 43) miles before coming down. Search for Missing Balloon woes daily.to more New Yorkers . 1 real r 2 While the news of the rescue of the than can be reached through} | My isuconists from the Busley. was THER morni heartily Welcome, (he most serious ap ANY TWO OTHER morning | ieMenbions ure! entertained” for the newsripers COMBINE safety of the other two alrships. It te] newayay OMBINED how thiee full days since the Plauen And that’s one good reason the Hergesell have been heard from istive Imeteoroloxical observations why World advertisements—of ate that they were undoubtedly diisen out over the North Sea. all kinds— LONDON, Oct, Ib—Three cruisers of fleet, which are now at otland, have bee Give the Advertiser the Best Kesuits. hth eNorth Sea for thy ing balloons that satled away riin last Monday im the endur- contest <i total of expense to the people to more than NOOLA GREELY Sa liaise s Greatest Happiness Is Being an Old Maid, eee Countess |NeqMe REDUCED. ; Love Isa Wound and Marriage | Are Her | Amputation, Epigrams SUFFERING ITS RETURN. =z | Only Inferior Women Should | Wed, Declares Titled Rus- sian V or. | By Nixola Greelev-Smith. “There is no happiness like that of an old maid. Such Is the markable state- ment of Countess Lydia Rostop-| tohine, grand-| daughter of the Russian General who ordered the burning of Mos- cow, and so compelled Napoleon to | “e-| ‘abandon his Russian campaign. | | WINSTED, Conn. Cet. 15.—-Seeline | Richard, sixty-four widower with olght children, married Mrs, Mary | simon Seyer, forty-four, a widow wiih seven children, at the home of the bride | riage ts nothing but The Countess, who has come to this country to lecture, ought to ed | Bemis, B. 8. Browneon jr and B.C. N, eae what she is talking about, for she is seventy years old, and has never been married. “Woman's genius ts for devotion,” the Russian Countess continued. “A mar- ried woman's devotion ts limited to her husband and children, but the old maid lavishes her love on ail the poor and unfortunate. “Love at best brings suffering. It fs a wound which the heart of every woman receives at least once, and mar- amputation—the ex- tremest measure. If the heart heals of {tself—and it will if it be given time— the greatest happiness of life follows. “You are deadened to all suffering yourself, and can give all your time | and thoughts to the sufferings of others. The superior woman, the artist, owes herself to humanity, to Art. She should | not give herself to an individual.” “Then you really believe that only in- ferlor women should marry?’ 1 asked, incredulously. i} "Yes," nodded the Countess, em- phatically. “Jack must have a Jill to match. And there are so many inferior men!” No Traditional “Countess.” This Russian Countess, by the way, {s quite the most different creature one could imagine from the stage picture We associate with the phrase. She is no lithe and dusky beauty leaving @ blaz- ing trail of intrigue and villainy through @ five-ec: search for the missing docu- ments of State, but an old lady of the figure and etyle of dress of Queen Vic- toria. about her title, Her first lecture will be | given in Washington under the auspices of the Russian Embassy, as she has known the wife of the Russian Am- bassador, Baron Rosen, for twenty years, On her breast she wears the gold wreath which stamps her as an officer | of Public Instruction under the French | Government. She has lived in Paris for twenty-five y and has written many books and plays. Iam happier than any married woman I have ever known," the spin- ster Countess continued. “Think how free Iam! I have come all by myself to this wonderful country—this country which aays ‘Forward!’ to all the world. French Debt to America. French women owe everything they have achieved to the example of their American sisters. Until last year a French married woman was not entitled to her own wages. Her husband could claim them at any time, even though she was separated from him. Now the working woman is protected in France. We have women bill posters and women coachmen in Paris. I always prefer a woman to drive me when I can get one, even though the men drivers do every- Moreover, there is no question | — Secretary Who Broke Down Caring for Him Dies in | London, Oni. was not improved thi: No. 36 West Thirty-fitth street, practically abandoned hope for his re- covery. stored. PHYSICIAN FAD thing they can to make thelr tasks dangerous and unpleasant. “Iam not a suffragette” the Countess | continued. "I don't believe women | should make laws. They have nobler | taske.”’ { Yet you don't believe a woman artist should marry?” “No, because women artists cannot be true to their husbands and thelr art at the same time, Take Adelina Patti, for instance. She was madly in love with her first husband, the Marquis de Caux Tet, because she sang love duets night after night with Nicolini she en by giving him her affections and de- serting her husband for him ‘The same thing is ue of nearly a! actresses. C act with other me: than their husbands tn the enforced in- timacy of the stage engenders infatua- tion, And then, where is the home? Duse Lives for Art Alone. “Eleanora Duse is an artist who lives for art alone. She for cares ne s else, She has no pleasures, no amuse ments, Her work is her life.” “How about D'Annunzio?” I ques- tioned. “She still loves him, poor woman, ut she would not give him her life, for that belongs to her art “Every woman must love," e Countess continued, “It 1s her destiny, her surse, But it depends on circum- stances whether she should marry, “Marriage should be based on love alone I know we have marriages of reason, of convenience, in France and Russia, but they bring inevitable unbap- piness.” .nd you haye ney ‘1 have never marric ewered tue ——— 8iG FAMILIES UNITED, evasively an- Venerapie e98,"" groom Ii forrington last night. It was & case of ! rue love, both parties say, The condition of Dr. William T. Bull morning at 7 o'clock, and his physicians, who spent the night with the patient at his home, have It was said the physician was | Antonio Muzzarelli, Known Scholar, Dies in DR BULL GROWS AGED TEACHER OF WEAKER: NO HOPE VANDERBILTS ENDS FCR RECOVERY LIFE WITH BULLET : solently that Gould not to allow her to take them out. Well- His Fine Apartment, | | Antonio Muzzarelli, | had been engaged, {t time to time by ‘other prominent suicide to-day in his and have it thoroughly into tip-top shape | Traina obeyed lis command. Yester- day he handed the pistol to Muzzarellt. } “AN right now asked Muzzarelli “Well, that's good, | may have use for it soon.” scholar and teacher of languages, 15, 1908. HOWARD GOULD'S as to a in in w! His The trial before Charles L, laration for abandonment, ot said Mr sed our demand for allmony on this | smoke in her onstrated told 10 $400,000 ata ciie That His Capital Recently Has Counsel Says Shrunk $300,000. [ —————— GOUL.D’S PRESENTS TO WIFE HE IS NOW SUING. $99,000 pending mone year Aving expenses one year...... 133,000 ald to have saved teveees 89,000 Gifts in Jewelry, tases Dl More jewelry vevestsey Gift of a farm, value not stated ae Suited ts Inst wife. 140,000 Hoffman, whether Is entitled from $25,000 from refe: pe, of the stion ad. wtherine Clemmons of to $120,000 a year an Increase alimony year Howard puld, whom she is suing for a sep- having fallen through by the sudden disappearance of the woman whose testimony De Lancey Nicoll hopeed would prove that $25,000 a year was enough, Justice Bischoff to-day heard argument Clarence Shearn's alimony motion. Mr, Shearn afd that the figure 12,000 A year was based on Mr vuld’s income; that Mr. Gould's in- come is $600,000 a year, and the rule vrdinarily applied in such cases was to allow one-fourth to one-third | the hust Mri ‘Howard nd's income as alimony. Gould's Grievances, uld has sought to fustity his abandonment of his wife by attack- ing her chard er and habits, and alleg- toxicati her part," n; “but we have not in- of 3 K acts non punt, although that would have been aceor with practice “Mrs. fond of driving—one of the chief pleasures of her life at Castle | Gould—was refused the horses, when she ent to the stable, and’s by one of hi servants, who said he had orders from hus- in- Mr. men “Another man servant blew cigar face, nd when she rem- ier he had a contract Ath Mr. Gould concerning that. “Gould tried to starve her out, refus- ing to allow her supplies grown on the place, forcing her to send to the village, Port Washington, for supplies whieh yells dow: a well-known | Fight have been gathered in the gar who | den, was said, from “He filled his house with a lot of spies clear families, the Vanderbilts and handsomely ap- da for action." Itted d put | char oft-reported story who watched her every movement, and finally obliged to take refuge in the Hotel St. Regis, for years she was starved out and was thelr winter home.’ gradually growing weaker. pointed bachelor apartments, at No. 488/ sir Shearn said that Mrs. Alice Stick- Miss Rebecca J. Evans, who for the| West One Hundred and Thirty-sixth | p¢ nkhead, of Atlanta, daughter of past thirteen years has been secretary | Street. He was sixty-one years old. Gen, Long, consul to Egypt, had named and office nurse for Dr. Bull, and who| Muzzarelli had 1 til recently and | her baby girl “Katherine Gould Bank- suffered a nervous breakdown as the re-| 18 sald to been despondent. Last | head,’ but being witness to the abuse sult of nursing him during his present | Monday he called his secretary, Joseph | Howard Gould heaped upon his wife, |iliness, died yesterday in London, Ont. ‘Praina, to him and said she was so impressed that she went to phere she went servers weeks eo in vy want you to take my revolver out [the clergyman and had the name to Katherine Cle: ged mmons Bank- $60,000 a Year Spending Money. De Lancey Nicol said In opposition “Let set the Court right on this of the impove: nd pitiful condition of Mrs. Kath me AERO CLUB'S HEAD DYING FROM 100 MUCH MOTORING mmandionanins Constant Jarring of Car | Causes Meningitis to De- | velop in Mr. Bishop. [HEAD OF ARRO CLU DYING FROM EXCESS AUTO PASTIME. | | Excessive motoring ts held to be ree [sponsible for the dangerous condition of rtlandt Field Bishop, president of the Aero Club of America, and one of the |best Known automobile enthusiasts tn this country, who is suffering from meningitis In a French sanitarium. Cable despatches re that Mr. I B have become In a Sanitarium at Als Physic Bishop’ cived to-day state of ercovery He ts op's chances almost negligible. Bains. un declare that Jstant dashing about In motor \ jarred his nerves they longer endure the strain, 1 ly out of an automobile or when not asleep. While not a driver, the cars he owned and all ble of gr When stricken he was France with his wife and law. Ho had been attending the ous aerial contests In France and ( many and had travelled many thous sands of miles in his car. At first It | could not be determined what his trou- ble was, but presently It was ¢ Jas meningitis and the opini that excessive motoring had brought {t on, or at least rendered him suscepti- | ble to the attac ans who | malady ave a Mr, s cone care no was rares ball could CRIANDTFISHO? JUSTICE FORD PLEADS FOR CHAUFFEUR IN COURT. Police Sergeant Halts Auto in Yon-| kers and Makes Charge of Overspeeding. of Supreme Court while going through Yonkers to-day was at speed traversing aenosed The touring mn advanced Justice John Ford, Getty Square tn car stopped by Police Sergeant Van Steen-! yr, uishop was an indefatigable driver, }burg, who placed the chauffeur, Roy | and the driver of a speedi E automobile ‘| Wes ourth (18 in a constant state of jar, With one ee Che an) ‘ IRs tra) foot on the clutch jal and the other j street, under arrest. Justice Ford, who | root on the brake) pedal, he Is, you was in the car, demanded to know th might ae a eae Gans a with the ‘eat, and Van Steenburgh | terrific vibration that shudders through cause of the arrest, and Van Steenburg) | eee eee et car and. ts only replied: “Because you were making | slightly relleved by the springs [twenty-five miles an hour in the most | | Meningitis, while supposedly a germ mal Har VOLICHONt disease, has its seat of disturbance in MRS SO as Gt |the spinal cord at the base of the brain, Justice Ford accompanted his chauffeur | whence all the nerves of the body are to court and interceded for his em- with sensory vitality, Constant jar- | ployee. City Juc eph H. Beall, /ring of all the nerve ganglia Is bound laughingly remarked that he had often |to result in a disorganization of the been before Supreme Court Judges nervous functions, whereupon meningitis a lawyer, but this was the fir jor some other malady Is likely to occur. | casion that Supreme Court J At least that is the way the physicians | been before him, Fisher w explained the situation so far as M the Justice’s custody until Oct. 24. Bishop was affected. SR~ Se Na SU AR Dollar Waist Sale Beautiful Voile Waist, $44 “New Fall Model, Friday’s Waist Event An unusual opportunity to secure a beautiful Fall waist at than half price. Box Pleated Front, New Long Sleeve Made of rich, soft Voile—ful |} blouse of small box plaits, with ( —— less | oPib cit dinaa tn, Gatti! with tiny sik buttons. Tucked ¢ back. Pretty collar and cuffs of tiny tucks, in light biue, red | Sent Secretary Out. jan ; Still Traina thought lNghtly of nis | Clemmons Gould navy, white and black. i] employer's remark: Shortly before 8 Hon syeaie) hatabusbandh avem Nel . i employers remarks. Shortly before 8 | 55.00 a month—$i0,000 a year—for spend- Sizes 34 to 44, \ | called tt id er cea aaal J Ing money, and we have the cancelied ¥ < ee ie eecretayy : checks to show for It | 7 want you to xo out and mail a |” “Besides this, Mr. “Gould gave her THE BIGGEST BARGAIN S\N | PR Oe@ ini te $133,000 for living expenses for a single y |lstter fonime,” Ne saia\tolTraing, | ER Se Aone guia ot ine and een ON EARTH. le secr pad mearcely left the | gavin, “He has given her Jewelry worth apartments he heard a shot. | $142,000 and paid bills at fs 8 for ; ti 12 nS ES hing found Muzzarelll | §7,08) more for jewel He gave her a Mail asdens: Killed, ch RSET Gt sping for breath. | farm at Lynchburg, ae - ‘There was @ bullet hole in-hia head, and | “To sum At all up, {ould has ro- Extra for Postage K S] 2 the revolver lay by his side, one cham- | celved a total o| 4) from her hu: New Yorker Visists Cooper) te yevalver, lay by his alae arm | gehen ugk iy a SALE ALL THREE) PRN eer tee Traina found Policeman. Tels, who | worth to-day upward of $200,080, besides and Acquires New Lease | saininonea Dr! Dubois trom we'd” Hood | receiving 325,00 a year allowance from STORES i Wright. Hospital. When the physician | her husband ne ae larrive rwever, Mugzarelll was dead. Finally he decided that he had borne Zz of Lite, [oN eA reeee ftereeecill|cmn ae een crite ype at) M#PyoloWest 14 th Street © \had been living at the West One Hun-| It is a long thle, slowing the pa = jfreu and Thiet sixth aureet addtiws for | uente ant fotbmurahee “of ik Mshdd NEW YORK A Jtour months, His wife is travelling in| throtgh years of Htiglousness, of { According to the account given for) the West. So far ax could be learned, | per, of vulgerity, profanity, drunke 4604462 Fulton Street) Bublientionaby, senha Fs, Mun, of aos tin, Muzzarelll a his. necretary a pul slanicds BROOKLYN = ff hirty-third street, @ ork, | lived ahre, an old friend of the . |hls experience with the Cooper prep: | lar, He was unable to throw | Settled Lawsults for $140,000. 64510651 Broad Street) jparations, which are now being demon Oh, the mulcide, saving Muz-| He was forced to settle innumerable WEWARK strated at Riker's New Drug Store, 2 knew, there was nothing to eatise | MN" tempor toruie extent of SMM 00 Weat Fourteenth street, just off Fifth | any great worry {""In- 1908 he told her she must_ mend avenue, will prove of great interest to) Muzzirelll: Was 4 Mreemason and was | her ways or they must part. He told persons suffering from stomach trouble ee eee enna liten several books he tlawyer, Mr RP BRT NAn Raat eonia| Mr, Mullen says also and lived. with ber 80 long “I have had stomach trouble nearly | Highly Honored in France, On the question of income, Mr. | all my Ife, 1 have never known what! stugzarelli was a graduate of the Unie | Goulds income Las shrunie so my Be Sure to 1 have never been free from fitness. | Ariny in the Huginees Corps and served | during the t | See Our One doctor whom I consulted told me | through the impr ty He)” gustice I had consumption and would hold out | Sommunists | Ne | 5 Lud SeRRURLON 928 iifer'ice"vas sent to ehith and Peru |“PLANIST, AND A GOOD ONE.” |$@y.95 $ 4.9 “Three different times I was sent to my thee ene Benreary: ma ee &| | wu —_ the hospital for treatment but we. noty\tiow. a on his return to) Barley wan 5 — benefitted, I tried about all the reme-| elected president of the wemocratie | Jacques Grundberg, plantst at the | dies that were ever heard of, but none|Commune under MeMahon, In 1x76 he| Cafe I vard, was taken to Police | of them helped me. Regently I decided ae prison for publishing @ por) Hoadgua to-day, charged by Mrs, | to try this man Cooper's medicine, i Mote Number of educac| Cecile Mooney, of No, 109 West One about which there is #o much dis : y ; thts | Hundred and Pirst street, with obtain. | ues 8 to cussion. ing a $%0 diamond ring from her and | “Procuring a treatment of Cooper's | Piviten-asked what bis occupatic | New Discovery, 1 applied myself to ie Grin here threw ont HI PCupetiOn waa THEY ARE WONDERS the task of taking it religtously—if tt , it was said, | "A pianist, and a damn good one.” He ||, ~ fatied to help me would not be be- | he recelved or ‘ite, | St Mra: ‘Mooney gave him ‘the ring. | Nothing Like Them cause I had not given it @ fair chance, | Aire .M UE sak Piet | was visiting her, he took it’ ¢rom her | : ; Qiter taking its suort time I began | Mary , IN ae Peaurt ner cer oP eed Pera | Joep) 5 ‘realise efiat J had at dust foundea {Ci Te ic place in ‘Nov | Anger to ekamine It. Then he put It | im New York ‘edicine that would accomplsh sor vember a e thing, and va h day 1 noticed evidence aia You never saw prettier of its curative qualities } | . My appetite improved, and 1 began | WON AMERICAN BRIDE hats, vdaintler or Frenebler, to gain strenx ud ee er. or 80 & r fooper's. New Discovery hae benefit PROVING HIS THEORY. Ss ’ Booper'a New Ducovery tae, beret: | BY PR uCCeSs and || the money, ~ fiat to show the Improvement it my | ao aon on ss aT Phey are unequalled ior tondition, 1 to-day walked from my | WASHINGTON, Oc adie. a - . fone on’ Twenty-third street down t | jaus Deire, the Hungarian scientist good digestion 'Idashing beauty and ex- Vourtecnth ‘street, white T have: not | gag stins Lailian Coblenger, of Waaling quisite materials been able to do in years » married 10-day in the . Cotow lease on iife M3. steady’ and | apartments of the bride's mother at are closely allied to Our $10.00, $12.00 and $15.00 Trimmed Hats are reproductions of Fae mne all better. things, and white | See tte iiehuhe street Sinagogue.. The the latest Parisian models and can't be duplicated. P'do not expect to « come robust, |couple wil leave for Hungary in @ few Lie ae Aer a | RY STORES health a val ‘ ary @ “AL AKO. + | punite dally at itik nae 0 Saal ee . a Fifth Avenue, Corner 117th Street. [2 SORE PSAP RED BRBL IMAL OF PULL | her AECODIAD CS SOHO cnaiig ition «* There’s a Reason OFEN EVENENGA, LENOX AVE. SUBWA¥ STATION AT 116TH 92, sale at all the Riker stores and ¢ dw | culosis This he did with the ald of obtained at any other drug store. *e* twelve patients from a hospital, | ‘ ‘S