The evening world. Newspaper, October 31, 1908, Page 3

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ele & EVE NING WORLD, SATURDAY, UCTUB ER “31, “19te Mary Garden’s Will Be a Salome on the Half-Sheil, Clothed on One Side, Nudity Effect on Other ee She Will Portray Dancer as “Vice In- carnate,’’ Lean as a Flame, With Hair Red as Carrots. NOT SHOCKED AT NUDE DANCE, Opera Singer Says She Saw One in| Paris, and Declares That It Was “Most Beautiful.” By Nixola Greeley-Smith. New York ts to have a new Salome—and this time—| when Miss Mary Garden makes her debut in the sensa- “onal Strauss opera next January—it will be a Salome on the half shell, ! | | MIILLIONAIRE’S | DAUGHTER BRIDE Romantic Wooing of Divorced Mrs. Kennedy Began in Steak Delivery. Also a Check, but Discarded Husband Will Demand His Child. A romance begun at the back door with the delivery of a porterhouse steak | has culminated In the marriage of Fred- | lerick G. Bird, an orphan butcher boy, |and Mrs. Mae Nutting Kennedy, daugh- OF BUTCHER BOY Not for me! Nor Ay DLA GREELEY Sti “or,” sald Miss Garden when I asked her about it! to-day in her apartment at the Lorelei, at Fifty-sixth | street and Park avenue, ‘my Salome will be completely Jothed on one side and will give a partial effect of nudity on the other. But she will not be naked—dear me, no! will she have bare feet—I think bare feet are disgusting—Ugh!” Miss Garden's expressive ehudder was as Parisian as her speech, which, though she was born in Scotland, is a polyglot affatr, containing many more French than English words, “I conceive my Salome @s very, very young—sixteen perhaps. @ flame.” Miss Garden 1s, I think, a trifle stouter than she was last year, and gaz- ing at her loveliness I could not help wondering how she 1s going to make the weight for a Salome so lean— But I didn't dare ask. z A Red-Haired Salome. “Her hair will be red as carrots," con- tinued the singer. “I have had a gor- geous red wig made for her. Would you Mke to see it? "Louise!" * she called tn rapid French to the matd who answered her ring, “bring the perruque of 8a- Jome!"* While the wig was on Its way I looked about Miss Garden's bedroom—a pale- blue symphony, by the way, where we were chatt beautiful paintings of which adorn {ts walls. the prima donna’s bed was hung tho kneeling figure of an undraped young girl, called “The Captive,” while on the chiffonier near by stood a rather Gallic picture of a physician engaged in sound- ing the lungs of an attractive woman patient, propped up in be Roses, chrysanthemums and orchids mingled thelr fragrance in the asteam- heated air of the apartment-house, con- taining both a tailor shop and a laun- dry, where the marvellous singer, whose yolce brings her $1,600 a performance, ‘Will spend her time while in New York. mature nude women On one side of Before the maid reappeared I asked | Miss Garden to let me see the costume in which she is to dance Salome, {f, in- deed, {t were visible to the naked eye. But she vowed she would not. Her Salome, tt appeared, was to be velied tn mystery, 1 nothing else. Glimpse of the Costume. But the maid had misunderstood her order, and now entered the doorway laden with a cloak of flame-colored silk, elaborately embroidered + abesques of vivid blue. Under e many yards of thinnest organdie, h Tiden- Ufled at once as the seven veils. “Tak I sald ‘the wig!’" at away. commanded Miss Garden quickly, and the Salome costume disappeared like flash through the door “Yes, that was my ‘Salome’ cloak, admitted the singer. “I come on in it, When I begin the dance I take off my sandals, and, do 2u Know, I remove the seven vells one by one, At the tear ing off of the seventh veil here momentary effect of dity. But Is an effect. I will wear tleshtngs com- fing above my waist and made with toes" — Here Salome's wig was brought—an fneredibly red mop of rather short hatr, which Miss Garden took and ringered longingly. ov see, It 1s made with a fring what you call a bang,” sho explained, “and that will add to Salome's young tude of about 2,000 feet and attracted jot electrical weather disturbances, at g, and noted the numerous | She will be very, very thin—lean as their vices, shall I say? And now,” concluded Miss Garden, “let me ask you @ question: Of course, the production of Salome’ is viewed properly here as an | artistic event; but why all this extraor- lnary interest so early?” | 1 explained as briefly as X couta about the ‘Salome’ craze which has been so rampant in New York that & man when asked by a waiter the day after he had | Seen Gertrude Hoffman if he wished his | Potatoes with their jackets on, replied: No, I want them nude.’ , Then I learned from Miss Garden that Paris until recently has insisted upon Naving {ts dancers with much more than their jackets off, Nude Dancing In Parla, “Until this year,” she sata, “man: |dancers have appeared cee nude in the vaudeville houses in Paris, 1 think the most beantiful thing I ever saw Was @ young girl of about seven- teen who danced with nothing on but the narrowest plece of gold net with jmeshea about her. She was perfectly | formed, and her dance didn't shock me (@ bit. And looking about the house I could see none of that screwing up of opera-glasses that marks a disgusting performance. But they have stopped these things in Paris now, aud, of jcourse, America would never tolerate | them—not in a thousand years.” getting ready ‘How I love dear ‘America, | which no, interview with a |prima donna ts complete, when some one asked her what she Mked best about | Paris. |, Its freedom,” she replied promptly; | Ite respect for inumacy and private | fe. People over there don't ask ques- tions,” “Miss Garden, what do you think of New Thought?” asked another new: uper woman who was present. I'm tremendously interested in 1t,” the singer replied, enthusiastically. * cabled my father to have a room re- served for me at the Hotel Astor for on night. I want to see the crowds 3roadway."” Did Miss Garden have the idea that |the New Thoughters are a political |party, I wondered, If 90, of course It | would be interesting to know for whom | Miss Garden was just for the without |she would vote for President. But tn I knew. Of course, it ts Oscar | Hainmersteint | —<$—<>__—_— AIRSHIP OVER ROME. |Italian Army Flyer Mukes the Eternal City Stare. ROME, Oct. 81—An airship attached |to the Italian Army circled and ma- |noeuvred over Rome to-day at an alti- ‘“‘Adores”’ ning-Proof Cellar i By Ethel Lloyd Patterson. The north wind doth blow, ‘And we eball have snow. | ‘What will Mra, Jack Gouraud do then, Poor thing? | m her own cyclone cellar, ‘Neath her new Larchmont villa, Bhe'll watt for the coming of spring, Tender thing! Ghe'll wait for the coming of spring. ‘These are not Mra, Jackson Gouraud's real winter plans. The cyclone cellar part of it is authentic, Mrs. Gouraud really has one beneath her home in Larchmont, but, of course, she is not going to retire to it and there await the coming of spring. Besides, it is not @ snow storm cellar, anyway. It's a real live cyclone cellar, but Mra. Gou- raud says if you haven't @ cyclone handy you can use ft when there ts a thunderstorm. Mrs, Gouraud never had much hopes of a sure enough cyclone in Larchmont, but she is just dreadfully afraid of thunderstorms—hence the subterranean chamber. \ 1 ] Common people have to crawl under the bed or cram their head into a pillow when they object to Jove's mutterings, Fortunately for Mrs. Gouraud, however, she 1s placed beyond the necessity of protecting her temperamental nature by such undignified means. In a chamber fifteen feet deep, about twenty feet Square and furnished in luxurious Ori. ental fashion, she may console herself | With the thought ¢hat the worst shaft of | Ughtning is as harmless to her ay the last feeble fiicker of a consumed candle, | Too Scared to Use Cellar. In her winter apartinents in the Hote)) Seymour, on Forty-fifth street, Mrs. Gouraud admitted quite frankly her fear Woman “Scared to Death” by Thunderstorm but Just an Earthquake Mrs. Jackson Gouraud, Who Has Special Light- n Her Home, Will Go to India for Excitement. thing new, romantic! That sort of thing 1s lite to me, “Then—you will laugh at me—but I am going all the way back to India to return a stolen Buddha to his shrine ‘The last time I was in the East I saw this little ugly god and wanted him, A man stole him for me—really it was quite dangerous. But ever since I have had him I have had the most dreadful lucie, Couldn't Appe: Him. “A ttle while ago a woman, a Bud-| dhist, was calling on me and she saw him. She was quite horrified when she found out how I had obtained him, and assured me that I would never have any luck as long as I kept him. Well, I thought I could get around it at first by pleasing him. So I hung my cross Buddha with jewels and had incense burnt in front of him—but {t wes no good, #0 I am taking him back. “It is no hardship to go back, love the Orient. I love everything Ori- ental. I am really glad of an excus to make the trip. Of course I will not remain in India long. I am considering & permanent residence in Paris. The People know how to live there—how to get more out of life. The Orient is for I | glorious, but next to it I think I love! France."” > WHIPS ‘L’ GUARD FOR ANNOYING HIS. WIFE Young Mrs. Meyers Complains of Alleged Insult, and Mix-up Follows, | ter of a Brooklyn millionaire On Oct. 22, 1907, the present bride of butcher boy Bird obtained a divorce from her husband, Robert D. Kennedy, of No. 117 Quincy street, Brooklyn, ‘father of her four-year-old daughter. | Kennedy asserts that he permitted his wife to obtain the divorce, and says he will attempt to prevent his daughter from being fathered by the whilom wielder of the cleaver. The marriage of young Bird, a strap- | ping youth of twenty-two years, to the |matronly Mrs. Kennedy, ten years his senior, was celebrated on Monday last jin the home of the Rev. C. B. Benedict, of the M. E. Church at New Canaan, Conn. Andrew J. Nutting, father of the bride, attended, and presented to his Gaughter a handsome check. There |were only two witnesses to the mar- riage, and every effort waa made to maintain secrecy. Will Remain Butcher Boy. Young Hird 1s now Installed in the splendid residence of his wife at New Canaan, but it is sald he will return to the block in the butcher shop of Ernest J. Brown, from which he has been ab- sent only a fow day According to Brown, Mrs. Kennedy Bird two years ago when he appeared at the back door of her home and de- lvered a steak, Brown recalls distinctly that {t was a porterhouse steak, for a day or so later he received a telephone message from Mrs, Kennedy, asking for another cut of the same artistic merit and insisting that the blue-eyed youth with the yellow curls deliver it. She had been in the kitchen when Bird arrived, and, according to romantic New Cansanttes, when their eyes met for t! first time the psychic spark called “loy: Jumped from orb to orb. After that Mrs. Kennedy did all her In the village. She would be served by none other than Bird, and, furthermore, insisted that he deliver the meat, Clever Knight of Cleaver. “Fred was a clever performer with the | cleaver,’ said Butcher Brown, = |cuasing the romance, “and I noticed Kennedy watched his work with in- terest and admiration. 1 could see that they had become fascinated with each | gther and knew that a romance was | rewing. Sinlght have gone farther and |tared a great deal Worse. Fred ts a |fine youngster and took to the block and cleaver ke a duck to water and |showed a whole lot of class in his “Bhe work. I patd him §10 a month; he saved iit and bought a small interest in the busin I'think, now, he will buy me out altogether.’ he former husband of the new bride declared to-day that he still loved her | devotedly “Tam simply wild to think that shi chose @ butcher boy as my successor, he said. “I cannot bear to think that my child shall have to call that boy her father, and I will move heaven and earth ‘to prevent It. [shall exhaust every expedient of the law to recover the custody of my daughter.” A singular fact in this romantic tangle ts that the former husband is @ manager of one of his former fathe in-law's string of clothing stores, ———$—<__— PERIURY IN GASE OF POLIE-SALOON MA first looked into the big blue eyes of, own ordering a! the little butcher shop | and Butche FRE CHASES DY EANIES INTO STRE Garden Court Apartments Emptied by $50 Blaze in Coal Cellar. Fire starting in the cont cellar in the Garden Court apartment house, One| Hundred and Nineteenth street and Bt. Nicholas avenue at 1.15 A. M. to-day, id Uttle damage, but sent the twenty- four families in the building to the street tn their night clothes and caused a lot of excitement tn the neighborhood. A citizen passing saw the smoke curl- ing up from the cellar and tried to awaken the night hall boy. The boy was not to be awakened, and the citi- zen began jamming at bells in the front vestibule. As heads were stuck from the windows from the first to the fifth floors, the citizen informed men and women that | the place was on fire, and the rush to | |the street began. ‘The citizen than ran to One Hundred | and Twenty-first street and Eighth ave- | nue and turned in an alarm. By the| time the firemen arrived there was no | one in the house. Mr. A. Weisburger, his wife, two ohil- Gren and his wife's two sister's, who | were on the ground floor when the citl- | | den rang their bell, were among the firat | | to reach the streot. Mr. Weisburger then | ran back into the building and saw to it | Brooklyn Millionaire’s Daughter res Daughter | MAN ON LADDER - KEPT THERE BY ARMED WOMA | aaanatpese. Had no Chance to Get Away | Until Husband Arrived— Accused of Theft. Mrs. Mphraim Gerson, a bride of a few |monghs, of No, 50 Bast Bighty-ninth ftreet, told of a capture of n negro, whom she suspected of stoaling from @ pockethook in her bedroom, a necklace, diamond pin and a diamond locket, valued at $200. Her husband also figured In the arrest, as did Policeman MeManus. One frightened the prisoner to death and the other carried {him away | Mrs, Gerson employed Percy Wagner, a young colored carpet cleaner of No. 58 Ninety-sixth street, yesterday to wash windows and beat carpeta. Wagner kept lis eyes busy while polish= & the windows, Mrs, Gerson told Magistrate House, and while she was in th leathy kitchen filched the jewels trom the case. says she suspected the theft, and © sure sought the property, It missing. Without @ word Mrs. Gerson secured he hush: 's revolver from the dining room and. returned. Wane Was very busy on @ high chair to me was, Stay right where you are until my husband returns! You stole my jew- jelry. If you move I'll shoot!” she com- manded, When Gerson walked fn, a few min- utes later, he was astonished to find his wife seated on Morris chair, guarding the negro, who was badly scared, fearing the nervows woman ht’ accidentally pull the trigger. “Just take this thing and hold it un- til I get a policeman,” Mrs, son told her husband, and ran out of the house. It is not plain just what happened then, but, anyhow, the prisoner made a dash’ for’the back yard. The gun was on the floor. ‘The husband did manage to shout something about a thief, and drew the attention or Pollceman Mc- Manus. He got the fellow as he was leaping @ fence. Mrs. Gerson roundly chided her husband for causing the of- ficer ‘all that trouble after I had him shivering slowly to death.” Wagner was held for trial. The Jew- elry was found in his pocket SSE UEEEnecoraeeenee SNATCHED GIRL'S PURSE. A negro who said he was Reed, a walter, of No. 222 West Fiftty- third street, ran into the arms of Po- A tratn of the Long Island Railroad, |!iceman Herzing in Park avenue, near 5 I'Thirty-seventh street, while being pailenrunning jet nish pecan throuah| @ young woman, a taxicab | chased Glendale, 1, I, early to-day, struck /driven by Michael Bryan, abd a crowd | uundred persons, ‘The woma John Jennings, a clerk, thirty-three <f ss) Helea “hompzon, Ot N , me 5 Javenue, sald the negro: snatched Yests jcld) iat “the. “Drya Marber: Fond | purge containing $12 and ran, crossing. |purse was found In the strect. Jennings was hurled many feet and! picked up in a dying condition. The TRAIN KILLS A MAN} Accident at Crossing on Curve Unprotected by a Flagman. Sixth her The train was stopped and the trainmen| FOR hurried for a doctor. Jennings, who! was badly injured internally, besides | ore Tea having several bones broken, only lived! ® fow minutes, however. \ Coroner Nutt, who was notified, or- dered the body removed to Rueff's Morgue at Ozone Park, where it was/ clatmad by Joseph Jennings, of Rich- | mond Hill, L. 1, @ brother of the dead | inan. When Jennings fatled to appenr at | his home !n Brooklyn last night, his wife called up his brother, and Joseph was | communicated with by the police Coid in Chest Omesa Oil that every one else was awakened. The fire was quickly put out, and the! loss was not more than $50, | MUTINOUS TURKISH TROOPS SETTLED WITH ONE VOLLEY | Quick Action by Loyal Troops of | the Sultan Halts Uprising— | Three Killed, Fifteen Wounded. | CONSTANTINOPLE, Oct. 31. — A threatened outbreak on the part of a{ company of Turkish troops attached to\ ‘the garrison at Yildiz Kiosk was/ | premptly put down to-day with a single volley from a loyal battalion, Three | of the mutineers were killed and fifteen | were wounded, | | ‘Phe mutinous spirit manifested itself | when the company was assembled and | threatened for @ time to result In sert- | ous trouble. But a hurry order was issued and a battalion from a regiment | recently brought in from Salontkt was marched to the scene and one volley | Rub the throat and chest with | Omega Oil; then bind around the | throat and lay on the chest pieces of flannel soaked in the Oil. ‘The Oi soon as they heard of the accident. The crossing at which Jennings was killed 1s situated on @ curve, and {s un- protected by a flagmnan. A big lumber- pile hides the curve, and there have been ‘@ number of narrow escapes from ac- cidents. goes in through the pores and reduces the inflammation that causes the trouble, Trial bottle 10c. ! FASHIONABLE FURS Cc. G. Gunther’s Sons - * Established 1820 Models for the winter season are now being exhibited, Fine Russian Sable and Silver Fox Skins H look. All the women of that day ayed the attention of the entire capital. The {the saime time proclaiming partiality for| When Mns, Alley Meyers, young and of bullets ended the mutiny. their hair to fantastic shades. I will|Wwhirring sound of the propellers could |other moods of nature that would ap-| 00d looking, of No. 69 Hast Ninety-| Another criminal twist tn the case of —————— | 184 Fifth Avenue New York have her skirts very short—they did not be heard all over the city the alr- pear at the first glance far more alarm-|seventh street, boarded a Sixth avenue | Carl Luerssen, the Brooklyn saloon-|TRUE ORIENTAL POLITENESS. | 4 wear long skirts in those Gays-and that | Ship moved first over the Quirtnal and | ing, jelevated train at Franklin Janz | REePINE policeman, who was dismissed) TOKIO, Oct. $L—In order that the New location will be Fifth Avenue at will add to her youthful apbeurance, then eyuns over the Vatican. The bal-| “I am, Indeed, dreadfully afraid of |*{evsted twain Fanklin street last | eeomthe department under a charge of prominent Americans who have taken t ‘They will reach about to here,” and the house at Bracciano, twentyealx. miles |& thunderstorm,” Ars, Gouraud ex-/ "sit the guard, John Jurrist, “took | extortion, came to ight to-day, when | passage on the steamer Mongolla may Forty-third Street, winger illustrated by raising her own, from here. plained. “I would go to almost any | notice,’ she suys in a way she re- William M. Duffus pleaded gullty to iearn the sult of the election In the ‘ih Diack skirts a discreet dis:ance. oo length to make myself forget that one | sented, and her husband walloped the perjury before Justice Dike in the Kings | United States, the departure of the ves- “Will Be Incarnate Vice,” My ‘Salome’ will be incarnate vice,” twhe continued, “but she will have the funconscious vice of extrene youth, She TO PAINT MISS ELKINS, TURIN, Oct. 81.—The Duke of the Abruzzi has quietly placed an order for was in progress, beneath the house in Larchmont with- out any electric Mght wires or gas pipes or anything else that might act | as @ conductor, thinking that I might | T had the cellar built | | guard at his wife's request. Meyers was arrested when the tratr reached Eighteenth street and was taken to the new West Twentieth street sta- | County Court. Duffus was Luerssen’s bondsman when the latter was discov- ered to be the proprietor of a liquor tore through his arrest on a charge of sel has been delayed a day and she will sail on Noy. 8. - PRS, OTT 4 4 “ the painting of a large portrait of Mi tion, Jurrist, bearing violating the exctse law rite sees ca8 ret UO BSIARS sists (Batherine Blicin uughter of Benutae | teel comparatively safe it 1 could retire | Charced him with concalt ‘The bond wes fixed at $2,000, In qual-| a ‘phe MaPUSt's | Stephen B, Elkins, of ie Virginia, to/to it at the first fash of lightning over According to the husband, " i LU an ASPET TION head, because she realizes that it is the Whom he is engaged 10 be married It| the Sound. : oneerel jl huge } ho 8 a | ity 4 bond 1 ft are Sa ‘ hi al ia be vec ihe painting wi 8 exe- | erfully built yun in, he and his w the owner of the property eee eens the eee et HOM |cuted “by. the famous portrait nainier, | “But do you know 1 have never been | Nite had just taken sears in. tha Leanna aint aNeMoealavennd: aeecien f ee ay ny the moment aie Boas | Grosso, ‘but the artiat denies ¢he dom: in it during thunderstorm since It Was| When gho whispered to him that the | acy ae ihn ee eee rooniyn, 7 course, her trouble is cerebral | mission. ret mr RAer iticderanaeink v 0 ©} valued at $8,00 and encumbered by a . easure, Bi e aan The Duke pplied built? The minute th #128 | guard had insulted her. Meyers acted |g» 00 mo: , ’ ip 4 moaeur . But she {8 a type of her! ganna of Mien” nfupnlied, three photo. SIRE TIT Sa PPE, AE cheat Facer ganeoete Any acid $2.40, mortwage, He said ms lived). 90 ; time, when people lived according to picture ts to be painted. hare had the strengih to reach |PIOMDUY ANd a Mlsap ensued, which | No, 744A Lexington avenue, Brookly 5 the cellar,” Prearintatneae h tO) A tip conveyed to District-Attorney 4 Highteenth stree e re aU SATAY =} srs, Gouraud ignored a suggestion | ‘7% Clarke a few days ago caused him ti | At that station some of the passengers nterfered ad rescued the guard from be trate husband, y of Duffus was an iron Duffus's bond. look up the secur It was found that moulder and owned nothing but the fur- that she pul in © sort of chute to the cyclone cellar with @ feather bed at the Awaken your sleeping friend right away } hat when she felt her | “76 hings of a flat. Ho never held ttle ay 4 +): i A ; bottom, #0 tha The motor 0 g | Mshings 0 : trong going at the first premonitory |, The motorman sounded his eiren and) to" 'the st. Mark's avenue property. F : : y mailing to him this slip to-day. strong . ; "¥ | held the train untl! the police responded | which’ is owned bya. man, named .C | . rumble sie could just topple into the | el se ee a arrested Clemeng, He way Indicted “yesterday Pr vena abs fer. chute and safety. eyers told the polic ay | fund arrested at his home at # o'clocl ' ; Pay We ag ; \ chute a | Bre. Meyers told the police the guard | Ard arrested : \ Just Dotes on Earthquakes. had made an insulting vemaric to her |" Wen men to the District-Attorney’s ASHBURN-CROSBS Capea hye) % hr 7 | fed to flirt with her. Her hy office he calmly admitted that he hai . ¥ J is | vin spite of my disiike for thunder- | and tried to fir with her. Her hun Feit ee Rae Ur ee PRT: at a gtr me e | storms,” she sul@ “1 positively adore | band, Torre eee unuger of a dead. [ugness to take his medicine. The a! i i é | alte , eight yours old, 18 manuger nENeeA tO redo ; earthquakes. They are almost a fad) PRN Tote” and’ restuurant, ‘He fon: me Alcina in the shape of & sentence will | with ime i consider them a most de-/ and athletic looking ~ | Hghtful werisation, No, 1 wax mot in) Jurtist denied that he had insulted [the big one in San Francisco, but 1/ 21% iy his head and had ‘placed Wa | have been in lots of them ip India, and | hand to lis hose 10 ease the smarting | $0 ME. RAVE 4. CARE you have no idea how charming and sensation, Jurist Uvee, at No Bb eas We often seo you sith | exciting they are. fave to remain 4 home # few'days to | ip meditation lost, ‘That 1s really one of the reasons 1 ayrse his wourles, | | NEED i oY eyel'ses be ds th Vnmindtul of the chances am preparing to visit India again~|,Phe Mepetses poarded the train at | ‘That are toward you tossed | for more earthquakes. | reasons, though— th “First and foremost, Only one of the © are two other the pal Sac '*TOO MUCH WALDORF-ASTORIA, It's time Fon took » brace, sir; because e a ny day MONT, Mass,, Oct, 3).--" sent NE Ath Son | Bast is so mystic, so romantle, so full| ‘ HARWEMON a Maas Ont bn he You are letting slip away, Jof adventure, I adore romance, mys civiliaa ie ad rian icuen an nen a | 4 ticism, adventure. Here there ts noae S ria,’ maserted Ebert Hubbard, of | . WORLD 00, ABR POOT LLORES on |of it. Everybody ts too busy, Why, the! {80 Aurora, N. ¥., yesterday, at’ the | B STAGE "S0CCESS," i hats +|average New York woman does not |ivankiin County teachers’ convention. i i | 5 aa : As @ people we ¢ ne 2 per cent . Know what an adventure ie! A real | "AS @ heople we consume % per cont Because It Makes Strength adventure, 1 mean. So 1 am going (athe and go to 4 nities | At che Leading Drug Sores. | bank to the Orient im search of some-!aur nackethook eut aut" 100K HOM TRB VINOL BIGN— ' .

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