The evening world. Newspaper, January 26, 1909, Page 3

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\ ee AER ea WSEAS I LEARNT SARNIA ) A ¢) \ . is _THE EVE NING WORLD, TUESDAY, JANUARY 26, 1909. MAING PICTURE SHOWN COURT MAY WIN UI ——— ‘Lawyer Throws Photographs on Wall Before Jury in Op- posing Claims for Damages. BOY SAID HE WAS LAME But the Pictures Represented Him as a Wrestler, a Run- ner and a Boxer. If Mayor McClellan and Commissioner Bingham want any stipport in thelr at- tack on the moving picture business lehey can get a lot of it from the MeGortys at No. 19 Eighth avenue, | Brooklyn, The McGorty family would {tke to get their hands {nto the halr of d moving pletures. ' the man who tny / Small “Steve” MoGorty used language | that would have made the inventor very | uncomfortable, George Kirc’ | Island and Bro: could he have heard tt, r, head of the Coney tf way's law de- who droits! partment, {8 the one 1© discomfiture | {ng pictures to t McGortys. Justice Aspinall and a fury in the Supreme Court had hard work to | suppress their smiles when the ingenuity lof Mr. Birehner’s method of fighting a | damage su to them. Stephen Met i pme time ago ag Brooklyn Com dani Islan juries recetved by being ejected a car bY A gn ductor four years ago when he was ten years 1 omplalnt set forth that as a result s being thrown out Into Franklin street at Brevoort place, his left leg and hip were per manently injured and that paralysis aid that he was no with the ald of a followed H to walk except V gical frame brace hed to his ig. . Moving Picture Defense. When Stephen Baldwin, the boy s lan- yer, had brought out the evidence tend- {ng to show that Stephen MeGorty ought to have $0.00 damages for the hurt | the conductor had done, Lawyer Ku railway for the str dressed Justice Aspinal "If your hor “have her were taki show the real ext juries." "Can you set up and show us the pic Justice “Sure we can,” said Mr. Kuhn after a consultation with the photographer, The window st down so that the room would be made dark and the machine was set up so that the pictures would be thrown on the wall opposite the fury box. My, Bald- win did not seem to feel that he was in a position to object “Hurry up,” sald Justice “Commissioner Bingham may along and raid us” The machine began to buzz and Mr. compan a few weeks a0 nd which nt of this boy's Ine ine here asked the ur mac ures?” des were j inal come Kuhn lectured while George Dobson, operator, flashed out the scenes on the wall The First Picture. “First of all,” sald Mr K have a picture of young Steph; Gorty with the protective brace on his left leg just after he has been to his lawyers to make an affidavit in this case, He is mounting the steps of his former home at Taiqueer and Court streets.” The picture showed Stephen climb- ing the steps with a visible Hmp. The brace was plainly visible on his left sald Mr. Kuhn, “we have ple- tures taken three days later, when Mr. Kirchner visited the neighborhood and invited the boys, including Stephen, to participate in a series of athletle con- tests which might be exhibited In theas tres all over the United States. Thero Are a number of these. “Number one-a hundred yard dash.” The mi ne threw on the wall a ture of Luqueer and Court streets, with alx boys, set on their toes for the start of arace. Stephen Me nent among the orty was promi- s. They began to run and Stephe * ahead and won by six feet. The populace was seen cheering the victor. There was anotler heat, also won by Stephen, and a third fa which Stephen came tn second. In a Boxing Bout. sald Mr, Kuhn, “Next,” while the MeGortys squirmed on thelr chairs and » have a Ste- muttered vain things, three-round boxing bout bet Phen MeGorty and Willie Dunphy the championship of Luqueer Poth are members of this club." The form of Stephen and that of Wil- Me flasited up in front of a semi-circle Of excited spectators, big and , Stephen chased \Willle out of th the first rounds, but W Strong at the finish, and atepi ndfng several hard jolts in t went down, He was not counted however, "A wrestling match,” announced the amiling M hn. Young Stephen Me- Gorty was lou toward the door as though he wondered whether he could Ret to it bet his wrathful elders, The plecure wed Stephen in the embra of another boy larger than Kimself and struggling sturdily, Then MeGorty delighted all of the spectators except himself and those directly :on- nected with his side of the case by tossing his opponent vodily in the sir and landing him squarely on his back jaw, out, MecGorty won a second bout also and came uy smiling “Now we lave young Mr. MeGorty In a Ji on,” {t Was announced Young ii arty slumped down still lower in rand uttered low whines In the plteure Metiorty danced mos vivaciously and with « ha amile uns HL all but one other cont t were tuekered 04 Th were ralsed and the attended to the sworn to tell how they Ste ig es AR Sus, att & by using |. moved slowly for a time. Fitty Years ALDERMEN A “PROMPTLY CN THE TAX-METER LAW ried Circus Riders and He Committee on Laws and Legis) Mite. lain Reports avorably on |SCLOWNING IS NOT | Evening World’s Ordinance. | (7 Ts ao | , WHAT IT USED TO BE.” OLIVER'S VIEWS | | Venerable Entertainer Laments the Fact That It Is “All Busi-, ness” With Men in the Ring To-Day. ASK FOR Chief of the License Bureau | Requested to Make a Re- port on Measure. | Prompt action has followed the Intro-| By Nixola Greeley-Smith. lauction of The Evening World's pro- Kings Have | posed city ordinance providing for W their golden ju- oMoctal inspection and regulation of tay H] bilees, and Queens [lead meters, and Popes, These The Aldermanic Committee on Laws and Legisiation, which held a public | hearing yesterday, to-day reported fa-| | vorably Tho Evening World's ordinance, | and it was at once forwarded to Chief F. | are stiff, pompous affairs, to which there is much gold lace, and perhaps not very much emotion, But next month will mark in New York a {Interesting and novel V. 8. Oliver, of the License Bureau, In presenting the report of his com- mittee, Chairman James W. Redmond | a Tie pronosal to place taxicab meters | under official inspection and regulation is an {mportant one and requires much consiteration at competent hande, 1t|¢lown. taxica es are to be passed upon by in his fifth season at the FIippo- this board, the proposed ordinance will drome, who in February will com-|} of much more celebration—the golden jubilee of a He is James R, Adams, now pave the way for a readjustment of plete his fiftieth year in the saw-| charges. But what 4s most {mportant how ta that all taxicab meters be in-| dust ring Some people in England, where this dean of the Hippodrome's clowns was born, still believe In the divine right of Kings. But more, perhaps, cling to the superstition of the divine right of clowns, James Adams was born to the purple of clowning. His father and his grandfather, and his great-grandfather were clowns, And true to the traditions of the circus, they Ity of no misaliiance with the but each and all married spected and regulated under official su- | porvision It is the desire of the committee that | there shall be a simple meter—one that face, bears no complicated figures on ! and one wh! can easily be read The Need of Inspection. “Thousands of taxicabs are coming Into use, and it is high time, the com: | re belleves, that their meters be in- It js the purpose of The Evening World resolutton—Introduced by Alder- | man Dowling—to prevent. overcharges. At present the public is at the mercy of the taxicab meter. We have recelved evidence that taxtcab meters vary great: ly and that they Invariably vary tn the | Interests of the owner of cabs "The object of sending this resolution to the Chief of the License Bureau {a to obtain a solution of the problem con- fronting us. We want an ordinance that will be effective—one that will pr vent overcharges, and compel PHape Fifteen years ago he married a ballet tion where overcharges can be traced. | dancer, who first came to America with n the matter of adjusting the taxi) Adelina Patti. But his wife ts now a oa a cee omels, the adeieabit. {helpless invalld, whom, in his lelsure stead of the rear wheels, the advisabil- ity of establishing an tndependent bu- | hours, the veteran'lown takes about in| a wheeled chair. | reau of Ingpection and supervision and other aspects of the situation must be/ "vo... seen him at the Hippodrome, of course. He plays the “old ube,” were 5} outside wo cireus rid | The dynasty goes back in unbroken line to 17% one of our millionaire milies can boast such a pedigree, But James Adams Is the last of his line, and because of that, outalde of his clowning, he {6 @ rather sad and subdued little mi Wife Is an Invalid. Several of His Ancestors eel s - Chose Ballet Dancer for aj a Clown Is the Record of — __ ‘SENTDEATH SHOT ‘LYNCH DIES OF Adams, Who Will Celebrate Jubilee WHEN: HE MARRIE Q HEROES SAVE LOWER WABOD CHILDREN AT FIRE TUNNEL TUB over the other till the heels rest on the| opposing thighs. The first day the mas- ter showed it to me I succeeded in doing it. You had to do what he told you, or you were whipped until you did, But the hext day my muscles were sore, and my | 34 so swollen that when he orderad me | ‘lock’ I failed. He whipped | 1 failed to do the me, and TI stil Then he lost lis head and sald he fi would make me. He grabbed me as 1 | 7 \ ’ .' prevsed his knee a Kk and my leg snapped. | ithe “This was at Milan, and I was eight months tn the hospital. It was called an ‘accident’ In pap and many! : 2 2 . ‘ M . ladies came to see me and brought me No One Knows Men Who | Connection Will Probably Be candy and fi, Those were a very ~ , rates 1 — happy Lean tell you, And| Brought Four Young Ones Made Within Next Twen- —-— ee the ve! mont the mas never asked to do th * . . Hock’ after that. | ~ From Burning House. | ty-four Hours. “Well, when I finished m ship, I clowned all over land and the Continent, I came to Amertea In Y apprentice: = ——5 Two modest heroes rescued four small | ust when the Franco-Prussian wap | children from blazing apartments on the broke out. Since then I've been about Second and third to: a three-story g in the circus business, tenement at No. 925 East Elghty-fourth | ve made a lot of money as a clown, |Street. this morning, and then disap- * | peared before any one could learn who The second pair of tubes of the Hud- }son and Manhattan Railroad Company under the North were withing fourteen fect of a connection to-day,? Jand Vice-President Wilbur C, Fisk an- River and lost almost as much taking out | nounces the completion of the Cortlandt showe of my own, There's a saying |they Were: | street al within twenty-four hat a good performer makes a bad, At ! o'clock Mrs, Bertha Isaacs, who | hours. for Newark, Jersey manager. I've proved it many a time, | CcUPIES th ond floor of the building, (ity and Hoboken will be in operation { was eight years with Coles’ circus, (22% Smvke coming into the dining room | py July 1 out of the Hudson Terminal from the front of the house, She] fjuilding at the lower screamed with fright, for a few minutes | o¢ Manhattan Island ‘before she had left her two children, | ‘rhe headings of the iower tubes will Jacob, two years old, and Annie, four, ener ated © years with Ringling vnc ele then with Forepaugh. “I've clowned from here to San Fran- Brothers, and fully considered. Wo shall request aj} report on these and other phases of the question from the Chief of the License | and besides that does an acrobatic Bureau before final action." specialty on stilts, Up at the Hippo | | drome they think him a marvel of light- |ness and skill, supertor to almost any performer half his age. Yet the man’s! Santen ania | CUBWAY K ]| ‘tem was broken just below the thigh | | when he was nine years old- intentton- | ally broken, he si bya ster acro- (IP DURING THE bat to whom he was apprenticed. os But I'll let the little gray-halred gen- tlemanly chap tell you his story himself, Just as he told it to me yesterday after- | noon—modestly, deprecatingly, id with | a soft cockney accent that I can’t hope to reproduce. “In the old days, in England," he ‘Was a boy cisco, and from Cuba to Australia, In the parlor to play.’ Mrs. Isaacs tried |come together the river But do you know," added the clown to Bet to the front rooms, but the smoke | point 30 feet off the Manhattan shore rarity, Oe Grrl iki an ct, was so thick that {t stifled her. She ran|at Cortlandt street. The event will be ey : P clowning | downstairs and out Into the street, Celebrated by the company In the di Was in the regular (heatrical busi- | sereaming “Fire. tribution of prizes among the workers, | ss before I came to the Hippodrome? , WO young men who were pasaing followed by a trip through the tunnel Net wnatitelUsed to.6 dashed ‘upstairs, and making thetr way President W. G. McAdoo and his . ed to Be. through the smoke and flames got hold after which there will be a ‘Clowning isn't what {t used to be. It Jot the Isaacs children and soon had juncheon and some speeches. | ¢: Tt) them in their mother's arms. The youths land| et terminal set uf isn't handed down from fat 0 #0 elr mother’s arms youths! “The Cortlandt street terminal set o pies nene A down from father to #on| then learned from a neighbor that Mra. tubes has a length of about 6,000 fect,” any more, and it isn't considered a lite] Alice Hess, who occupled the top floor, said Vice-President Fisk When seen toe work, It's all business. Nowadays, a ELE dla Aa) young biden, and y at the Hudson Terminal Building, own 5 vn one year e © mother nov the youngsters \,, 2% Church. street Yesterday the clon may be a clown one year and @|had been seen or heard from the men |snieids from the New Jersey. shore carpenter the next—all depending on|hoited up the x again, and In a) yore within thirty-four feet of those which he makes the most inoney at.|Short time reappeared with the Hess | working from the Manhattan side of That's no way to do. youngsters, who are about the same |ihe river. The New Jersey workers ae as Mrs. Isaace’s children, Once they had reached the «idewalk and had put pave come the greater distance—some ‘A good clown makes anywhere from fert—as the Manhattan shields wre $25 to $19) w Week, and a good season | the Hess children in safe hands the two F 5 lasts from May to Christmas. Wut ne} young men vanished, No-one in the ow a little less than 10 fect, from hever thought about the money when 1| neighborhood had ever seen them before, | oUt, termtt Fanaa blast Before the blaze was Mnally, put out shall be able to Bot off the final blast “He Was all the tlme trying to thi « {it had completely destroyed both the SO Te ee LENG 2) G3) up novelties, and if he saw anotler|Isaacs and Hess apartments, entailing ° Sto vhen. th . clown with a new trick that got a laugh, {a loss of probably $2,000. ite RH eee GE he Was miserable until he got a better cine eee Seer e econ eos THER ‘ ‘arc one to Newark and the other eding to SOCIETIES TO GIVE OPERA. Raids Reva uate CO RIV erRIRRAIIC penta? 1 lost my h art tor . See ‘ , i Hoboke r wh re connection will be ' SENG ¥ Che annual entertainment and recep- | made with our Sixth avenue, or upper cles in the circus. Fine carpet given by the United Societies con. | pair of tubes, under the river. Phe lald over the sawdust, and eve Aly weted with the ( hureh of the Immacu- | trains will make this rot trip before S ircui i nok part In the spectacle. | Conception wil ! their return, As the |i tubes ¢ Short Circuit Stops All Trains | tek ee aiting cand there | ntral Pal stil under compressed alr to-morrow'a Be he y y ow re limited to those who ea e : UNE : party will bey limite e who can From the Bridge to the | curtain, lke that at in any m,"" stand such a Rip.” idge t e that shut down over it Yeasvoihuy Grand Central. When the changes were being made. | "Our family had been in the clown to in to be a e're 3. My mother continued us rider long after her chil- dren were born “[ made my first appearance with the circus when 1 was four years old as Gen. Booni in the spectacle of ‘Cinder- ella.” During the height of the rush down- town and across from Brooklyn this morning there was a block of all sub- way trains south of Forty-second street, which began at 745 o'clock and contin. [ON an riedged itttle ued until § ue 5 ie Herring |clown, for my father did a clowning spe- fine lech yes uae ee seater eal clalty on horseback, in which he pulled | Sea ie ¥-second |v jot of things out of a clothes-basket— | street. Trains on both express and local |, 71) thing being me, in a litte baby | Supa n “At six I was apprenticed to a master, {tween stations, and those bound down-| .1.5 scok me with two other boys to the | town were jammed to the platforms. ORR Rent | While the circuit below the bridge was| «1 have my apprentice papers framed jworking the block of trains above the| on the wall at home, It was the cus bridge kept the Brooklyn trains back, | tom to apprentice clowns In those days and there was a tremendous jam at the} outside of the family. Atlantic avenue and Borough Hall sta-| “1, was thought they learned more tons In Brooklyn. Many of the pas- | quickly away from home. The waster ‘eengers left the subway stations and Py GHEE crossed over to Manhattan on the sur- er eae that was to face and elevated trains, The Tg ac Manhattan send three shillings, or seventy-five were at Grand Central Station, Four- month home to my mother teenth street andthe Bridge. Atthough | °°n* & pon oaths he Ucket takers Were aware no trains But he never sent it, and we tra were running, they continued to admit | elled from place to place so fast t passengers until the plu.tcims at these | mother soon lost track of me, and « jget no word even through the Brit Consuls as to my whereabouts, —‘T places would hold no jwore. Then the trowds gathered outside and fougnt to master had changed my name so as to | prevent that, be admitted. When the trains did get a start they | “We called him Master, and he wa Jour master, I've carried a broken leg fo- forty years that proves it. Yes, nd he broke it Intentionally, too, but | I'm coming to that later, “He taught us boys the rudiments of re aie PURSE TAKEN FROM MUFT. Misa Schneider Accuses Two Wom- en, Who Make Denials, Miss Anna Schnelder, twenty years clowning—the split, how to make a old, of No. 982 Union avenue, the Bronx, ‘funny post'—that's bending forward appeared In the Essex Market Pollce with your knees stiff and your feet Court to-day as complainant against together till your face touches the floor Mrs. Pearl Jaffe, of No. 14 Eaat One —then we learned to do these things Hundred and Fourteenth street, and stdewise, and then came the ‘lock.’ Mrs. Annie Jacobson, of No. 10 West ‘That's how he happened to break my One Hundred and Fifteenth street, whom | jeg." she charges with stealing $i2 from her The Terrors of the “Lock.” muff while in a department store In | Diviston street last Saturday. | Now, the sensitive reader had better The women dented the charge, but! skp about the “lock,” for it's going hey were held for cla G ‘al Ses- (it for celal In General Ses: ito make him feel as faint and sick asa sions by Magistrate Barlow. He fixed ball at $1,000 in each case. j Jack London story of starvation, He ae lis warned. All the time the soft-volced FORMER PROMOTER A SUICIDE, clown was telling it to me with abso- LA LUZ, N. M, Jan. %.—Judge Will. | lutely no suspicion of its harrowing fam Baly, one of the original promoters cruelty, I couldn't see the small, gray- of the Big Four (Cleveland, Cincinnati, | haired man before me, but only the Chicago and St. Louis) Railroad, and | ittle, forlorn, homeless, tortured child ‘ormeriy & prominent figure tn eastern % financial circles, Killed fiimeelf with a |e nad been forty-five years ago. revolver In a lonely im the moun- | “The ‘toc! he proceeded, “Is made taing two days ago. bec) ubcaadheotetetir tron YA 4 Lh ‘, I'd yather my son would be a clown than \ hing else, But T haven't, It's a great) c an invalid, 3 vow a ballet dan now, She ha ts It m the ¢ was wi Ww she « ossificati with rh wa ga § to dance, But s' James And therewith Adams, ¢ ast of Nis home to have | r with his “great woman,” > DE FHS 1S WB RCUSD UNDER ‘Prisoner Dravved to Execution | While Crowd Clamors to See Him Die. i | CARPENTRAS, France, Jan %.—The [Second execution in France under the |revival of the law of capital punish- ment took place here to-day, and al-| jthough the scenes accompanying it | ; Were not so violent as those attending the quadruple execution at Bethune |Jan. 11, nevertheless they were of such Ja character as will probably hasten | Parliamentary action toward making future execu tons private The gulllo'ine was erected on a public |equare alongside the prison. The local- |ity was cordoned with soldiers, who ef. | fecttally blocked all the streets, but ar impatient crowd of people who had as- sembled dur the ht demanded y be given a chance to witness up on lad ings, while the w | with spectators. man named Rem |shot an first made of the | prison. He came out of the p Mvid face and staring eve necessary gulllotin: the fall the yells crowd that surrounded” the yand with | and it was e and hi head of the blade, fee ae QVER TELEPHONE | HURTS RECEIVED. TO SISTER'S EAR ON THE REPUBLI fas SIS Wambold Called Woman Up Brought Here on the Florida, to Hear Him Die In He Succumbs In a | Store Booth. Hospital. | | — of Boston, who was crushed In his berth when the Itallan Mner into the side of the | Deserted Wife and Children to |* REPU On ee ; A‘ this morning at 4 o'clock in the Long Spend Thousands on Pro- [stand Cottege Hospital, Brooklyn, | tracted Spree. SQUANDERED LEGACY. i} | Engene Lynch, | Florida eut amship Mr. Lynch was not moved from the | Florida when the others of the Repub- lle's passengers were re-transferred to | Peter Wambold’s family to-day ex-|the Baltic, The pain he had suffered in | plained that he shot and killed himseit | Delng moved from the Republic to the |ing which he squandered a bequest of | Florida, if she wi golng down, than left by his} Ro through the torture again, Mr. ntly In Germany, | Lyneh had little hope ef living; he ; knew tov, that his wife had been killed, six years old and) cia io sald that he had litte ambition to live, Friends Came to Meet Him. The Rey. James Lee, of the Church of the Immaculate Co jon at Revere, Massachusetts, James MeGinnen, Wille fam Tuttle and James H. ( of Bow ton, came to this ety to meet the Flor <0 several thousand dollara | mother, who died |The suletde was forty retired from the restaurant business a | year ago with a snug fortune, } Wam! | Frank, seventeen years old, and Peter, five, Were unab! to find any t 4 wife and their two sons, , until his tragic death, © of the missing man Jatter he got the money left by his ! $ Jmother. ‘They have been staying with | 4a and do what they could tor Mr, Mrs. Emma Wendell, a sister of Wam. | neh. They found him conscious, but bold, at No, % Central avenue, Brook- | W!th only a spark of ife left. Ells lem hens lend thigh had been terribly crashed and, | ‘The telephone rang at the Wendel |iany of the bones of his body were! J home last night and Wambold's husky | n. Per {s also had set In, | vole was heard at the other end of the | He asked Father Lee to see to It ry TER i, |that every member of the Florida's you, sister?” asked Wam-| crew recetved a gift sufficient with hh ny wife there which to buy some little token of his (No: whete fave you been?” Mrs, | Appreciation of tho tenderness and | Wendell queried enre with which he had been treated ‘Never mind about that,” replied the {On the Italian ship “LE have decided to kill myself, Saw Wife Killed, ask why, There's lots of r To ono of the Boston friends who gon for It, but L can't collect my mind. been here with the Lynches when Listen now, and you'll hear the shot.” | they sailed, dying man told the Heard Shot Over ‘Phone, story of his wife's end and his own Theinext ins hurt. He sald $ aver ie “Twas Int peed Wambold shot himself In a telephone booth at the drug store of Otto Stuft, No. 693 Bushwick avenue, The druggist rushed to the booth and found Wambold dead In the ehalr with his head hanging upon his chest, Wambold had shot him- self through the right temple. It took the police reserves to Keep the women and children out of the drug shop, so | keen was the morbid curiosity. The suicide left three letters on the telephone stand. One was addressed to his sister, another to his son Frank and a third to a Mfe Insurance company. They were taken by the Coroner, Drink and too much spending money | | were the reasons ascribed by the widow | for the suicide. | —<—————— man the ant a pistol shot sounded wire and Mrs. Wendell herth and my wife was opposite,” he sald, "E nted her to sleep in the berth, but wouldn't. I heard the whistling and was wondering if we Were In any dan- ger, when there was an awful noleey the side of the stateroom gave way and! IT saw my wife belng pushed past me! on the prow of the a, which hed run into us. I see It Uie time. T was Knocked to one . Then it soemed as if the whole cavin fell on top of me. I felt tne other ship back away, I couldn't mo) “L knew my wife was dead, I called, put nobody heard me. ‘There was no | way 1 could get ald, and I lay there in ageny for hours, all the time believing that we were sinking and that [ was to be drowned, From thine to time I tried to call, but It was u I believe [ should have died very n iif they had clear all sid DEMOCRATIC SENATORS TO VOTE AGAINST COOK.’ Caucus Order Given to Fight His | Confirmation as Highway Commissioner. ALBANY, Jan. 2%—At a caucus of the Democratic members of the Senate to-day it was voted to direct the ml- nority members of the Finance Com- mitten to vote against a favorable nom- ination of Herbert H, Cook as the/| Democratic member of the new State | Highway Commission. Mr, Cook's qual- | : aa Proc omit i Pull? 3 (cae An Old Fashioned Soda Cracker, | “Another” 5¢ Package ifcations as a Democrat have been questioned by minority. The oppo- sition will probably be carrled to the floor of the Senate. don the ground that | stent Democrat. Cook 1s oppo: jhe is not a con: [H. LEHMAN CO. Upholsterers 146 West 23d Street Opposite Proctor’s Phone 2733 Chel. ESTABLISHED 1883 Re-Uphoistering of Furniture... Five Wlece frame wilt ered und made, aypemoe in BEADS Mie UL | DAMASKS, APESTRIES, VEL: URS of rich colors, 1914.9 Slip Covers 338009 MADE TO ORDER, The best Belgian Linen Damask, abowing 20 perfoct ft guar. HAVE YOU TRIED OUR 25C ICOFFEE The Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co, { 325 Stores in the U.S Le Moult The Florist Removed to 202 Bowery |

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