The evening world. Newspaper, February 6, 1909, Page 3

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¥y } | i | Ii SEERESS TOLD IM TRUTH, GIRL + HADHS WOE {On Fortune-Teller’s Informa- , tion Schmidt Had Edna e Clark Arrested. AND GOT WEALTH BACK. But Relations Between Roch- ester Man and His “Lieb- chen” Are Strained. A discerning Harlem fortune teller was responsible for all the trouble that Gustav Schmidt and Edna Clark made for the Harlem Detective Bureau last night and to-day, bewhiskered, retired ice dealer of Ro- chester and Edna Clark is a handsome, richly dressed, bejeweled young woman who says her husband 13 a Rochester electrician, and that she has two chil- dren. Gustay, who talks with a strong Ger- man accent and pulls nervously at ils whiskers, landed In the Harlem Detec- tive Bureau yesterday afternoon and @rmounced that he had been robbed by @ woman of $810 and a certified check for $1,500, The woman, he said, had been stopping with him since Tuesday at a hotel tn Third a je near One Hun- gored and Twenty 1 street. A detective went to the hotel and are rested the woman, who proved to be Edna Clark." She gave the name of Edna Ash and sald she lived in Yonkers. Bhe had the bankroll and the check and did not hesitate about ever to the police. Then He Balked. When Gustay saw his money was safo he balked on making a complaint, but the police insisted, Finally he consented to file Information charging the woman with grand larceny and she was locked up. But when she was arraigned in H Jem Police Court to-day Gustay tively refused to further the prosecu- tion, “I was fooled," he told the Magistrate. fy e-her my mon and check to keep when we came down from Roches- ter, Yesterday she went away from the hotel for a while. While she was gone I went out and saw a fortune-teller's eign. I asked the fortune-teller to tell me something about a certain woman, “*Have you given that money?’ the fortune-teller told her I had. The fortune-telier then told me that the woman had run away With the money. I gave the fortune- teller « dollar and called the pole Qustay went on to say that he was Quite certain his “kleines liebchen” had No tntention of stealing his money. He patted the young weman on the arm, muttered endearing words through his whiskers and generally acted in @ man- her meant to be coltish. There Was nothing left for the Mag- {strate to do but discharge the prisoner, who was about as mad a he could be, She turned upon Gustay and treated him to some conversation that made him back up until he was stopped by a wall Never Will Be Banker Again, he idea of having me locked up in @ cell all night!" said she to the court Qttendants. “I'll tell you his right name. His name {8 Donnellson and he comes from Rochester, I have teen taking care of his money for eight year. and he knew I wouldn't steal it. He has to have some one take care of his money for him. But Tl never do it again, I'll never have anything to do with him again.” While she was talking Gustay had been restored to his money and check. ipt he used the name ors, from his igured tl be his rig Gustay is an elderly The coupie the court-room to- gether. As were going out Gustay gald, holding out the bank “Do you want this , Sweet: hear “Yes, I'l take It." she replied quickly, Gustay, with a sly wink, put it in his pocket. EXHUME BODY OF GRRL WHO DIED SUDDENLY —_o—. Miss Salg Not a Victim of Pto- maine Poisoning, Detect- ives Report. Bupreme Court Justice Garretson, in Gpecial Term of the Supreme Court at Flushing, L. I., to-day, signed an order directing Coroner Nutt to exhyme the body of Miss Lydia Salg, the elghteon- year-old girl who died suddenly in a bathroom in her house a week ago yor. terday, At the time {t was sald that her death was due to ptomaine polsoning, caused by some candy shoe ate or soda water ahe drank tho nignt before. Si detectives trom Brookiyn have’ vet et work on the case, and they reported to District-Attorney De Witt that they be- Neved the young woman's death was Not due to ptomaine poisoning. To-day Assistant District-Attorney O'Leary made an BOSSE, for permission to exhume the body and have It thoroughly examined. Coroner Nutt will have the body exhumed and examined as soon ag Coroner's Physician Frey can Coron be sum: ee AT 105 DIES FROM SHOCK. News of Rabbi Radin'’s Death Proved Fatal to Simon Harris, Simon Harris, who said he was 108 years old, died from the shock of read- ing I @ newspaper of the death of an eld friend yesterday in his home, No, €@ Grand street, ne one we wo handing them | | really Unable to Appreciate Music, Art or Literature, Declares Wife of Steel Trust’s Head. NOT TRUE, SAYSPRINCESS Author of “The Quick and the Dead” Commends Culture of New Yorkers, 4 By Ethel Lloyd Patterson. That most of Netw York's society women are satterly .incapabble .of making intelligent | artic by Mabelle Gtiman Corey on | the Mareh Cosmopolitan, American women are the cultured, brilliant women in world, .maintains Princess betzkoy, formerly Amelie most the Trou. Rives, | author of “The Quick and the Dead.” | Yet this 1s not a contr: would Princess Troubetzioy have tt a tradiction, Mrs, Corey has never the Princess Tro tzuoy. ‘The Princess Trowbetzkoy never read Mry. Coreys article, nor did she seem to recal! Mrs. Corey's name when an un- | usualy striking photograph of the one time actress was show nto her. “Oh, please, no, I do not wish to c tradict any one,’ protested Prine versie, Nor as Troubetzkoy from the soft green depths} of a lounging chair in her husband's! “And—don't you think that it] studio, loks presumptious, somehow, for us to place ourselves before the public with our opinions?" questioned Prince Trou- 'vetmkoy from the other side of the { atudlo, where he was cocking his head |ter focus the half-finished portrait of one of New York's society leaders, Just Wanted an Opinion. “T assured Prince Trobetzkoy that his position placed him above the {mplica- tions he feared, Then I assured Prin- cess Troubetakoy that a contradiction {was not what was wanted, An opinion— that was the thing, Her opinion of the }culture of New York's women.” | “Well, then," Princesa Troubetzkoy commenced apparently more at “don't you think that all those old tales jof queer entertainments and queerer folbles on New York soolety are really rather legendary? They are like the nice hoary old mother-in-law jokes, | “Por instance, it seems to be @ sort of religion in a certain class to believe that ‘amart’ people talk, and tall loudly throughout any performance of an opera. Well, anybody who attends Hehe opera Knows better than that, Any {one who ts near enough to the boxes to distinguish properly can see quite clear- liy the Interested, absorbed expressions of the women In tiem. “And all this talk about ‘bridge’ '’—a Jute ripple of amusement came from the green arinchair, “Why, one so sel- dom sees it played, At the ‘smart’ din- ners the latest music, operas, Debussy, Richard Strauss are always discussed, and discussed intelligently. “phen,” 1 questioned, "you do not believe tl ew York's soclety women Histen to the songstress, criticize her figure, perhaps admire her gown, but of the master mind that has given the singer her marvellous vehicle they know nothing and care composer and the art principles by means of which he expressed himself are nam simple names, and little less." I was jnoting Mrs. Corey, but Princess Trou- betzkoy did not know it. Calls It Ridiculous, “Well, that Is really a ridiculous Princess Troubetzkoy answered. ease, |"Fancy being Interested in the cos- /tume of a prima donna! Why, you know, they are always the same, That Is, are simple costumes of the part period that the opera portrays— ainly conventional.’ | “1 produced the Cosmopolitan and to read ‘Mrs, Corey Says;" | 1 were asked what I should lke most to see done here in Amer- fea; what, to my idea, would most quickly make us supreme among nations in every way, I would say the reconstruction of society on a basts of intellectual gifts and talents | being recognized as the open sesame to the finest social life of our land.” “But, but," protested Prince and Princess Troubetzkoy almost in the same breath, that is the very basis upon which our society Is constructed. What else could be the corner-stone? We are very young! No, where In the world !s brain a better passport.” “Then you do not think that. “It the great Indies of New York soclety'’—I was reading the Cosmo- politiln once more—"hostesses who spend thousands of dollars every year in the most frivolous of enter- tainmenta, should devote the energy and money which now go into fool- ish pastimes to the establishing of a new regime, fashionable affairs would be brilliant and pleasing things Instead of deadly dull gath- erings where the Indies yawn behind thelr fans and the men gather In smoking-rooms bored to death and seeking reilef in the soothing nar- cotle,"” Do Not Bore Any One. "O, dear, 4 really that {s untrue!” roteated Prii Troubetskoy, “Why, he New York women are too generally well Informed to be bored themaelyea or to bore others. fale are fo wit awake, #0 conversant with current af- falral” of ‘The Passers-By' rupted nt inton ?' stupid, dull, In your opinion?’ quee- tioned Prince "Troubetakoy. L assured him that she was not. “Yot," he explained, “I did not Intend to portray an unusually brilliant woman, She seems to me a normal, every da; She {s typical of the culture York woman. | think ah would be my protest—my defense of Now York's society woman,” “And seo what @ mane and Inter | attitude the New York women |{aken toward woman's suffrege,” monced Princess Tronbetzkoy, tion sounded Interest but suffrage has not va =. CR Ta evs ea gt ao New York Women Uncultured, Says Mrs. Corey; Finest in World, Replies Princess Tro -eriticisms of) poetry is the gist of a many paged! on one sile and closing one eye to bet-| | | | com-| county jail, at Pate; become an art, so I took my departure. | g! j {nto his mental condition, | , THe EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY ubetzkoy eR, PRINCESS TROUBETZXOY MABELLE G/LMAN CORE HL FOR-MAN WHO EDT STEAL GL Cross, Who Broke Into Ruth- erford House, Crazed, His Lawyer Says, Sidney Arthur Cross, who broke into the home of John B. on, at Ruther- ford, lay at midnight and trled to kidnap Davison's thirteen-year- old daughter, Dorothy, was arraigned before Recorder Mileham, at Ruther ford, to-day, on several charges. To the first, that of disorderly conduct, he gullty On the others—at- abduction and breaking and he waived examination. A fine of $10 was levied on the dis- orderly conduct charge and not hay- 4 Ing the money Cross was sent to the Hackensack jail for a seven-day term In th ntlme an inquiry wil! be hetd pleaded R. H. Moore, of No. 256 Church street, this city, was in court to look after} Cross's Interests, He tried to persuade | Davison, whose husband {8 in! on business, to withdraw the! serious charge against Cross becauso fe | {snot but a crazy man. | said she did not feel a1 he was at large and Insjated upi pressing the compla nt pounliis Seaeee DIAMOND BROOCH STOLEN FROM A PRETTY ACTRESS, It Belonged to Lillian Lorraine and | a Scene Shifter Is Under Arrest. Lillian Lorraine, who plays in “Miss Innocence" with Anna Held's Company, came to the Jefferson Market Police Court to-day accompanied by an auto- mobile, one of those swish-swish gowns, a three-ring-and-elevated-stage hat, and Florence Ziegfeld jr., her manager, to make a charge of grand larceny against John Lang, of No. 177 West itty fourth street, a scene shifter.at the New York Theatre, ‘A week ago as Miss Lorraine was un- dressing to go on for the last act of the show at a matinee performance she missed a lovely diamond brooch—an old family heirloot which had been in. her possession ever since last season, There was fear that Miss Lorraine might. catch cold from going on the draughty stage without her broocli, but she took a long chance, and that nAlght she reported the loss and at the same time offered a reward of $8 for the re- turn of the pin. Lang, it seamed, fell under suspicion, Last night Detective Decker, of the Central Office, who had been assigned to the case, arrested Lang as the scane shifter was cmolng out of a pawnshop on Amsterdam avenue, where, according to Decker, he had been trying to pawn Miss Lorraine's missing brooch, neonate Moss held him in bonds of _—_—_——s WIFE CAN CARRY HE BIBLE, Lippak Also Signs the Pledge and Is Released from Jatl. 'T hereby agreo in tho future to per- mit my wife to attend the Baptist church. I also agree not to abuse her or the Baptists. She can use her horse and buggy every other Sunday to go to ghuroh, and can carry and read the Bible when she pleases, also agree hengeforth *o tain from indulging in the demo. ES fi € dana tt y ny la agreem in Lip- refeased yesterday from the on, N, J. Lippak an arrested recently at Riohfeid on a charge of assaulting his wife ‘The e'inaleted op cerrying the Bible with je Bible fle. dot {iat housework, and her PT braacratd LURE OF ThE STAGE SALLED BRE BECK aie Drummer’s Reply to Actress’s Suit for Separation, Charg ing Him With Desertion. Jessta Thompson, of James J. Core bett's ‘Burglar and the Lady coms pany, has sued for a aeparation from Uriah ‘Thompson, alleging that he has abandoned her, and her counsel, Leon Laski, submitted to Justice itzek in the Supreme Court to-day er affidavit in an application for $35 weekly alimony and $250 counsel fee, The actress says they were married on June 1M, 1907, and went to live at the University apartments, Forty yenth. street, near Broadway. They spent the summer at the Brunswick, Asbury Parks, and that winter lived at the King Ed- ward Hotel. Mr. Thompson {s a drummer and was on the road, and so on much awa: ont Sept. 1, 1907, his bride re ped the stage with the “Gentleman Jim's” coms ext res | pany on tour. The company’s turn to New York was In December, Gave Her $5 in a Year, ‘Thompson was in Boston, After a week the company was off again and did not return until May 27 last. Thomp- gon was in Boston In tho employ of Rosenberg & Co., and showed no dispo- gltfon to concern himself about his bride, She says he has contributed nothing in a financtal way to her com- fort {n more than a year except a $5) bill which he guve her a few weeks ago when she chanced to meet him and told him she was broke. “I am now living at No, 10 West One Hundred and Third street. I am penni- less, I am compelled to borrow from my friends, 1 had eome jewelry, but I had to pawn it to get money for my necessities,” says Mra. ‘Thompson, Uriah Thompson in reply says he did not abandon Jessta, but that aho went badk to her stage career and took an “affinity” in the person of @ theatricar mar whose name, he says, will be re- vealed when the case aomes to trial, and on whose account he demands an aboslute divorce, Both Probably Innocent. Mrs, Thompson attaches to her aff- davit this copy of @ letter which she says she received from Uriah; “Why not be honest and tell me tf you love me and want to live with me or not? _I do not remember of i you, You know if you wore and I know {f I was, and the result (8 that neither one of us knows whether the other has done wrong or nol, so why borrow trouble? I guess If the truth was known we both can look one an- other straight In the eyes withour a gullty consclence, “Be a ~ood, dear, sweet, little child, and let me from you every day, All my love, ag ever MONK, “Jan. 9, 1908. Justice Platzek reserved dacision. Oe SLATER GOING BACK. Watves Extradition on Charge of My Glasgow. In the case of Oscar Slater, accused of ts murdee of Marian Glichrist tn Glasgow, Scotland, on Deo, 1 last, Hugh Gordon Miller, counsel for the prisoner, to-day Informed United States Commis- sioner Shielda that his client had de- cided to walye further examination in extradition proceedings and go back to mest his accusers, Commissioner Shields held Slater tor the warrant which will come from faahington, When this arrives hers at | De made to take the jer in MOTHER AND CHILD HELD UP ON LINER caren Mrs. Stade, Fearing Decree of Court Might Separate Them, Confesses Flight. Acting upon the request of the Ger man Consul here, Commissioner of Im- migration W. Ellis Island of Mrs. horn has caused the de- Marla Stade, of Darmstadt, Germany, and her beautiful ten-year-old daughter, and not until Monday will 1t be decided whether mother and child can come here to live, or be compelled to return to their Fath- erland. It was through fear of ‘losing her daughter that Mrs. Stade fled from her home in Germany, where proceedings against her husband for divorce are pending. Fearing that, with the granting of the Gecree, the court would give the girl Into the custody of her father, Mrs, Stade hastily took passage on the Graf Waldersee and came to this country, but, In the course of the voyage she re- vealed the fact that she had abducted her child and, this belng reported to the German Consul, at once requested that the woman be dotalned at the island, The Board of Special Inquiry to-day examined Mrs, Stade, but {ts decision ‘was reserved until the oase can be mors thoroughly Investigated and until this {s done mother and daughter will be de- talned {a Island, tention at BRUARY 4 190% BOUGHT ROUND OF ORS, BUT TOK PON HSE i} Ex-Convict, Just Out of Sing Sing, Found that Wife Had Deserted Him, DIES .IN A SALOON, Friends Thought His Strug- gles Were the Effect of Medicine, Franceaco Carruccl, ao fresh from Sing Bing that the prison palor was on his face, killed himself with poison at) 2 o'clock this morning because his wife, | a young American woman with whom he was.madly In love, eloped with an- other man while he wae serving his sentence for assault, Carrucol's wife was known only as) “Mamie” to hia friends along Mulberry | Bond, The oouple lived In Brooklyn, and | Carruce! had made and saved money. When he waa found guilty about two years ago he mado @ generous provision for the woman so that she would not be In want while he was away, | For a few weeks Carruccl got letters reguiarly from "Mami Then they} stopped. His first move after getting free was to hurry to Brooklyn to search for "Mamle.” He learned the truth, and for days he walked the atrects look- ing for the woman and the man who had stolen her from him. Heard She Had Eloped. Carrucc! was in Mulberry street lest) aight, No one had seen “Mamfe," but they had heard she had eloped; they didn't recall Just who the man was. Carruecl entered @ coffee saloon about 11 o'clock, for a time he played cards with friends, Then he said: “L’'ye got a atomach trouble. I'll go | over here and get some medicine,” On returning to the coffee house Caz- rucel called out: “I'm going to blow the house, Come | up, everybody.” Everybody came up and everybody was served, Carruccl took a glass of soda water and Into it he poured a pow- der. Fell to the Floor, “This {s for my trouble," he laughed, Everybody clinked glasses or coffee cups, and Carrucol took his off at a gulp, falling to the floor the next in- stant, “it's that mediclae he took,” sug- “WOMENS CHR WANTED ON EAH SHAY TRAN Mrs. Longfellow Will Demand Special Quarters for Her Own Sex, RESTRICT REAR COACH. Public Service Commission to Consider Plan Hedley Calls Impossible. A novel proposition, that of reserving the rear car of all Subway trains in rush hours for women, has brought before Commissioner lustis, of the Publle Service Commission, and Frank Hedley, Vice-President and Gen- eral Manager of the Intorborough Rapid Transit Company. The Interboroueh s Against the plan, and Mr. Hedley thinks {t Impracticable, but It is tain that the proposition will go before the Public Service Board as a whole, and will get fair and deliberate con- sideration. ‘The plan Is fostered by Mrs, Frederick ‘W. Longfellow, whose husband is a partner In the firm of Delafleld & Longfellow, and was an attorney for Harry Thaw. Mrs. Longfellow is a member of the Morrisanla Branch of the Women's Municipal League, which organization has for some time sought to bring about Improved transit condi- tions, Mrs, Longfellow, Commissioner Eustis and Mr. Hedleygrecently conferred on her plan, She told both men that women are compelled to ride in the subway tm rush hours, and asked if something could not be done for their protection In what really amonnts to a contest of prowess and athletics, This condition was so patent, so clear, she sald, that there could be no need of having to show It, or to attempt to show It, Mr. Hedley advanced reasons for the Impracticability of the scheme, principal among Which was that disorder would be caused by any effort at segregation. —_——>--—— MRS, WILHELM IS SET FREE ON BAIL —_>— been gested an Italian. In a few minutes,” So Carrucol was dragged to a rear room. For an hour he writhed about the floor, and his friends and acquaint. ances wondered how soon he would begin to improve. A policeman happened along and sent for an ambulance, The young surgeon looked Carrucol ovar and exclaimed: “The man's poisoned; he's dead, 1 could have saved him if 1 had been | here twenty minutes sooner,” In Carrucct’s overcoat pocket they found half a pound of oxalio acid, That's what did the business,” ree marked the doctor, and he drove away {n_hie ambulance. ‘The ex-convict's body was sent to the Morgue, and his friends began @ search }tor “Mamie,” to tell her ehe was free to marry the man with whom ashe eloped. a WAITER, HEART SICK, DIES, Gulla of Hotel Belmont, Was, Crased by Loss of Wife, One waiter was missing last night from his accustomed place in the Hotel | Belmont dining room. Huguet Guillaune | was his name and he was lying dead, a | gutclde trom gas, in his room at No, 21 | East Thirty-third streot, | “Stl do him good For five years Guillaune was a waiter at the Waldorf-Astoria. Four months ago his wife died, leaving & fifteen-day- old baby, The father took the infant home to his folka in France, then came ‘back and got a p! at the Belmont. Widow of Slain Justice Re-|¢ leased as Rival Opens Fight for Husband's Estate. Mrs. Mary J. Wilhelm, widow of the murdered contractor, Frank Wilhelm, | was to-day released on $1,000 afl, as a) witness against Nicholas Sica, who 1s charged with the murder. Ball was provided by Mra, Welholm's sister, Misa Bertha Stafford, of Philadelphia, Mrs, Wilhelm was taken from DPu- Nee Headquarters before her release and for nearly two hours was |ueéea- | tloned by Prosecutor Mott at tht court- | house, He then ordered her release on bail. Mra, Wilhelm walked to her home, accompanied by her sister, and was met there by her aged mother. At the eame time Sica abandoned hope of release before the Grand Jury has the charge against him and his attorney consented to the dismissal of the writ of habeas corpus issued in his behalf yes- terday. Counsel for Mrs, Fredericka Wilhelm, ot New York, who also claims to be a ‘widow of the murdered man, to-day filed | in the Surrogate'’s Court application for Jetters of administration of the estate, Title to all of the Wilhelm estate rests with Mrs. Mary J. Wilhelm, but it Is understood to be the purpose of Mrs, But, ugh he always had a smile | for the gueste, he was heartbroken over ‘the lone of his wife, Fredericka Wilhelm to proceed against her In an effort to have title revert to the estate of the dead man, The Flour of Four Generations Milled from the cream No‘other. FLOUR 42.0 LEFTY WOMAN TD HER HORSES NO DUS To Her Husband Mrs, Mary B. Snow, of Hartford, Gave Only What Law Provides, ITARTFORD, Conn., Feb, 6.—Forty-two thousand dollars is given for the mante- nance of horses and dogs by the will of Mrs, Mary B. Snow, which was offered | | | for probate before Judge Waldo Marvin in the Probate Court to-day, The anl- mals were the pets of Mrs. Snow, who died at her home in this elty on Jan, 19 |last. To her husband Mrs, Snow lett only what the law provides, ‘The estate is valued at about $50,000, When the will was drawn in 1900 Mra. | Snow had seven horses and thirty dogs, | It was her iftention that her estate should be used entirely for the care of. these animals. A trust fund of $32,000 | was set aside for the care of the horses, jand it was stipulated that they were to be turned over to William Patnam, of |Hoston, He was to pay James Morlarty,; Mrs, Snow's coachman, $1,500 a year as, iong as any horse survived and 3900 ane nuully after the Iast one died, he sum of $10,000 Is left to Miss Philay C. Miller, of Orange, Mass., to be ust in caring for the dogs. At the death ot it just dog the sum will go to Miss Miller | AIL but one of the horses have dled |since the wil was drawn and only ten dogs are now alive, ‘year ago Mrs. action for divorce ‘Dr. Prank 8. Sr marr! ¥ 18 court ¢ Snow brought an he ided fn his favor. Mrs. Snow gave natice of an appeal to the Supreme | Court and the record jn the case was being prepared when she died, r, Snow has been in this city this week, It fs expected that he will con- test the will, Mrs, Snow in early Mfe married Dr, Henry P, Duclos, of Hartford, who at his death left her wealth | LIFE OF A PIMPLE |Complexions Are Cleared and Pimples | Disappear Overnight Without | Trouble. ‘The dispensers of poslam, a new skin dise covery, ask that notice be given that no one | Is urged to purchase It without first obtain- ing an experimental package. Those who have tried {t will find that the fifty-cent box, on sale at Hegeman’s, Riker's, Kalish's, Kinsman’s, Jungmann’s and all drug stores, 1s sufficient to cure the worst case of ecrema, where the surface affected is not too large. The itching ceases on first appli tion, 1* will also cure acne, tetter, blotch scaly scalp, hives, barber's aud every other form of itch, Including Itehing feet. Bein | flesh-colored’ and containing no grease, th presence of poslam on aurfaces,, such as the face and bands, Is not per- Water and soap cannot be used skin troubles, sometimes even caus- volon M4 them. 8 to the experimental package of nosiam, {t can be had freo of chargo by mall of the Bmergertey Laboratories, 32 West Twenty- fifth street, New Y Tt alone is suffi. eleut to ir the complexion overnight, and to rid the face of pimples in twenty-four hourte PLAYER-PIANO This famous Piano equipped! 1 |} with the most marvellous self- |] playing attachment yet devised. {] Absolutely unequalled, Inspection invited. Write for catalogue and full description, || Easy terms if desired. Liberaf \} allowance for old pianos. 237 East 23d Street) lowest 125th Street (NEW YORK I speak “Yj chair of wi a iat a bargain i. you seek, } seek and find h chairs without delay, ta Sunday World A Ask and find If tho particular bargain you seek in second-hand Turniture, Rugs, Paint- ings, Bric-a-Brac, etc, is not shown through World “For Sale" or “Pur. chase and Exchange” advertisements & World “Wanted” Ad. will locate it ia ‘p hurry. way.

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