The evening world. Newspaper, March 13, 1909, Page 3

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WOMAN EDITOR OF FLATBUSH LIF * WANTS A DIVORCE a a Bie T. Ashbrooke Accuses “Rlusband, Also an Editor, of f\, Railing to Support Her. Denies Having Any Improper fdssociations and Says Wife “Wants to Marry Again. ‘Afico Tuttle Aahbrooke, editor of ¢Wletbush Lifo, and president and tre: $ wrer of the corporation known as The Y ratbusn Life Publishing Company, in whieh she is recorded as subscriber for ‘ewenty of the one hundred shares of @teck, is eulng John Thomas Ashbrooke $e Who edits a fashion magazine, for en adbosijte divorce. ‘The motto of the Flatbush Life, as re- { vealed by Vol, 1, No. 13, presente? a8 “exhibit A” by the husband Is; ‘It Gteuds for « Square Deal.” ' afre. Ushbrooke charges that her hus- “wand visited the Hote! Van Henssalaer “with an unidentified woman Oct 16 last. , Che accuses him of Mirting with vartous ‘women from the day of their marrlave dy the Rev. Dr. Stryker, at Passaic, W. J., on Deo. &, 142, down to the day re qed for divorce—ied. 1, le, He fs, not daunted, 5! askel Justicg , O'Gormen in the Supreme Court for an @rder directing hun to send her $s weekly alnony upnding th Ber aust. Justice @oaled down her request a ‘weekly, The Wife's Charges Tn her application for alimony Mrs. Allce Tuttle Ashbruoke charged that her husband had not supported he alnce they separated on Aug and she has been comp to sut herself. She sald on the report ¢ Charles See at Eight! last and fook ber ty Hotel. That J hey that Mr. As Cafe Martin |ant ing with a we arm street about be: Jose Soberano said in an aMdavit that he witnesses the Cafe Murtin incident and also tho rr papers were served on Ashirooke, at 1 street, and women int Kensey taer air he did kenuw th Ashbrovke is) sum: marily, lie says t self Introguced to flr identity says he does know, nd well kn Hat she has Since married honor es in this city jand for tiese rt she refrains from diy hor na he went wita Seesse) anid ‘this w Rhinelander, in F ° left her « Ser cse toom. As for 8 wald he was ton night @bout the waist of though he admits the little wine He Turns Accuser. n may have had a Then Mr. Ashbrooke had a word to bay tn bis own behalf Tt began with a atory under oath that his wife con- fessed to him on July 22, 14s, that an- other man had made love to her and that she ha returned his love; that she o longer loved her husband, and that it was the desire of the marry as soon as they co) man dbe free to Oo 80. "Prior to this confession we had al- ways Ilyed happily together, and there was nothing in her conduct to warn me ‘any clandestine conduct on A consed part, nee of wreak Aug id Ashbrooke, “a the confession it » up our home, and Ashbrooke alleged his beller that his this suit supposing he by default and th marry the other man, As for her S anil Benet he dechired that waged ina highly prof at No. 1 Flatbush her paper commanding hich tates for e vertising space, and that the In demand, — CHARGES RIDICULCUS SAY FRIENDS OF EAMcs. Prima Donna Declares There Is Not One Word of Truth in Wife's Vague Statement. CHICAGO, March 1%.—"'There !s not @ word of truth In the statements made Sead tan tes was all Mme, Eames would say con- @erning tho sult for separation filed ty the baritone's wife. “The suit !s the malice of a jealous ‘worman,” blurted out Gogorza. “I have been friendly with Mme Eames be- cause Iam singing with her, wales friendly than I am with many ers of my acquaint: hay @ cross bill w make all right. Th: is nothing but jusy in the charg: in all the years of Mme. fe brilliant career as na diva has ‘ever been the slightest breath sug- fe of scandal, an not until sie gued Sullan Story, the artist, for two years ago, did the outside pa] Suspect that her married life epything but ideally happy was and still is regarded by all koew her professionally or socially @ high-minded woman she lives fer art, and her countless friends (seer indignant and astonished wwendo In the wife's sult should against a woman of Mme. '@ known character. has fee laa w ‘or been more * society of Ni no singer, not even Patti dead Jenny Lind, has been welcome In —_—o ee Q’ | WE MAKES CHARGES. the @ented a!) her charges in his answer, | born American | a higher | w York and position; to have hie meals as punctual “Howto Keep a Husband”Made Easy #\§ Big SRPRSE Dress Makes the Flirt, THE EVENING WO RLD, “TREAT HIM LIKE A CHILO” , EN (1 20N' WANNA \ Go BYE-BYE ') | Some of the Many Interesting Letters Written | to The Evening World by Fair Readers Who \ Have Tamed the Domestic Animal and Know How to Manage Him. F you area husband or a wife you will be Interested In the following letters. If you Intend to become a husband or a wife you will be interested in them. If you are not a husband er @ wife and ever intend to marry you Will be interested in them, too. They are the lettere of women, telling how to hold the love of a husband They came tn response to The Evening World's offer uf izes of $10, $5, $3, $2, and Ave $1, for the best letters on this subject. Mme. Hatton, In a lecture entitled "How to Keep a Husband,” told the Chi- cago women how to do It. Mme. Hatton saya: “You must decelye your husband into thinking that you are prettier than you jare ever let him seo you with cold cream on your face. Do not eat too much and become overloaded with fat. ever let you husband see you with your hair In erimps "Stay beautiful and don’t let him know how you do tt.’ This and a lot more is the wisdom of Mme. Halton, Below ave the letters of women from all over the country, telling our readers how they have heli the love of their husbands, These are but a few from the first instalment of missives recetved In ‘The Evening World office, Thera were lots moie of them ono The Evening World expects them to keep coming until next WW lay. ‘The prizes will be awarted In next Saturday's Evening World, Don't Show Your Love Too !lueh. | Young woman myself, aged twenty- rot ‘The Bvenine World He fe fone children, and married let him think he's the only man 3 past, and think I've had Lean gat, and don't show you love| Wlte w little expertence with mankind, jim too much, for as soon ae they think| | feel that a husband has to be re- : you tor sure then|®4rded as a child. 'Tis far, better to it they have g¢ thir : hey it ldo as they: pleas ,{humar him In most all cases, for they know you will stand {t. That‘e] MRS. HERMENIE, what [ think MRS. STANLEY, Bridle Your Tongue. To the Eatitor of Th Every true wife who cares to keep her band should cultivate reflnemen: and a bridled tongue, for words are Feed the Beast. To the Exiitor of The Evening World Tam a stranger and an old maid. 1 know very little about American men, but I presume they are all allke on the {whole glove! My view on the subject { make home such a hallowed | ‘#© Bewst BIGHT. place that the partner of her joys and! Boss Him, but Do It Diplomatically, it to all else, Of} Byening World rs gorrows will prefer To the Editor of The Event wilt ute | To the EA ng World ourse, religion 18 the foundation, but) “4ry opinion is a woman ahould use an \ loving life ts the best religion, To ba |abundance of diploma: 4 slave to household duties to the x) not want to be cluston of compantonship 18 ® WAY NOt) 4g i in such a to keep a husband. System 18 00d. noticg {t. ‘Then again, I don't think he The little unnecessartes asllenced f0Fliikes to be “‘coddied” too much, Just @ sake will never upbrald one, Lov- A man does “bossed,”” but you can way that he will never ov ‘s es little at the right time will work won- ing thoughtfulness, which begets iever 'S/ ders, 1 do not believe good looks have best ANNIF BROWN, | anything at all to do with it; it needs Be Sweethearts to the End. rot The Evening World something more enduring. Instead of wasting tlme and her husband's mone: Piiets-tive years of married lfe| OM Fouge and cold cream she should try to Keep a husband ja{t0 massage her braina and learn the loan in the home, Be 8entle art of diplomacy and good, sound cctuearta the same after marriage as common fense, Been married almost een then he comes home from fourteen years and it only seems like visiness don't. worry him about the Yesterday. Mieeaor abou the oueenoidlatalra) MRS. THOMAS M'DONALD. talk about the neighbors; don't $40 a» Week Should Do It. don't speak dlarespecttully st hime ra ra alter at mee even eevee es, Ifhe has trouble in business, “mits ig too easy, It greatly depends, e kind to him and sympathize with oF course, on what he has bean used to. Make his heme a place of reat I think the we be neat and nag him. , If he has not acquired too extravagant and comfort. We have been s¥et- | i abity a real nice, amiable girl earning jearts for thintycnye sears sep, (#9 with a tittle economy should be able | MRS. J. ASB. 11, Keep a inusband and make him very | Listen to His Troubles. |comfortable and possibly contented. ‘lo the FAltor of Phe Evening Worlds IMA KINICAL. Keep tidy, don't scold, give him his} | Keep Him Courting You. own way, go out when he wants you, be home when he ts, dont go to bed) asiered with cream or curl papers ‘k your best morning or evenings, as at is the only time the average man Te the FAttor of The Evening World: My opinion of keeping a husband Is by having everything as nice ‘as ‘possible in regard to the home, and then the wife keeping herself as sees you. Listen to his troubles and oie" aa when she wae courted. All sympathize with him, Don't tell im Going my married life we haven't your troubles; he has troubles of MIs) suarretied or been. initiferent. Su own, If he wants to amoke let him. yas the aame in coul ad che if he spolls anything remember he has to pay for it, MES, EMMA HINE! Laugh at His Jokes. To the Faltor of ‘The Evening World: In the first place make his home eheorful and a8 comfortable as pos: Vithout being too extravagant. Dress)" 09. George UNDERRINER. cording to your means, and at) Haye his) Be Nice to Him at 2 A.M. iieals well, cooked and always on |-Te the Batitor of The Evenine World: thine, and if there are children train! It makes a man feel much botter If his them to be obedient and respectful tol wife greats him with a smile at two or | thetr parents; alao to try to keep ones three o’ciock in the morning than If | self well and atrong, and to avold she scolds him, She should let him mplaining, if possible, and, of all, have his own way at times and make her side to be this there wil! syations, This (the main thing is vor ne | jealous, and by doing [be less divans ie 8a small suggestion, and the truth as ep a husband, and cant how amail the salary to how to | done no matter may be. | times be neat and clean, tell a Joke, to laugh and enjoy it, even 'fsn't). That is what I do with mine jif you have heard ft a dozen times bée- | and I have no trouble. fore. ELLEN COMERFORD. MRS. H. BOLLE. Train Him from the Start. | These Six Ways HCULD DO. To the Editor of The Bvening World: To the Kditor of the World: | To keep a husband one must degin| Be sure you REALLY HAVE him in | training him the first week one has|the firat place. Remember that there | him to keep! That ts the only way to| must be two ‘bears’ In every home— j Make him worth keeping, Later on It}: * and "forbear,’’ and generally. Wt S80 eaRy to show him how charm: | the wife has to do most of both. Don't s you are if he hasn't lewrned It In| spend your time in seeking mere physi is all it's cracked up to be-that you cay paauty of face or figure. Nine mer from Missourl or not—that marriage out of ten care but little for this, anc is all is cracked dp to be-that yon q man WORTH keeping won't exper: are companionable, sympathetic, not ;@ woman of forty or fifty to have the only willing but eager to make hin home | treghness and beauty of @ girl. Keep the one best place on earth. But teach | yourgei¢ neat, the children clean, and him at the same {ime that you 4r@ 88! make home the most attractive place ready to receive as to give That You! on earth—a veritable haven of rest vaiue his companionship, the little at: | tor the weary man Be more than a tentiona that gladden the heart. Men! mere housekeeper—be & COMRADE to value more a comrade in a wite than| one who strives to be mother, school-| times more for a wite of whose intel- mistress or slave, Keep close to your] iigent 9 pport and sympathy {is eure husband's heart and you will keep! than ne dose for a mere doll-baby. Keep j your husband, ROSAMOND. | gut Jealousy and suapicion, and above all, DONT NAG! Treat Him asa Child. E. JOSEPHINE BATTERSBY To the BAltor of The @yvening World: My theory ie this: To be good, fath-| You Can't, If He Won't Siay. to ful, industrious and have a lovable dis-| To ue Biter of ‘World: im the world to keep Wishes to turn trem ‘Bach ene hes o different exvese a& an0RMr. aa possible and to be home at the hour fhe te expected: ‘This ali to the rightness of @ man's nome I om @ things, never nag at him, and, should he! jim think that he is the bors only be) your husband. A true man cares ten| by the Experiences of Many Wives [Toon'r wanr 7) (G0 NO PLACE - CHAIN HIM DOWN” MARKET W. MEN ~ OF PARIS HUNOR MOREL Wail Following Ancient Custom ' They Offer Her Best Wishes on Approaching Marriage. PARIS, March 18.—Miss Murlel White, the daughter of the American Ambas- andor, Henry White, is engaged to be married to Count Herman Seherr- Thos, of the German army, was the reciplent of an usual honor this after- !noon. She was visited by a delegation {of the Dames des Halles, a corporation of the market women of Paris, who came to cngratulate her and to extend thelr best wishes for her happiness {n her approaching marriage. The Dames dos Halles is a very an- clent corporation and enjoys many privie leges, Including the election of a queen of the carnival. One priytiege to which jmuch importance ia atached and which Was first exercised In the days of the Bourbons {8 that of greeting and con- j@ratulating future Queens of France, when Marie Antoinette entered Paris ¢he Dames des Halles camo out from the city in procession and wel- | comed her. | The tradition was revived last year on {the occasion of the engagement by Mile. ‘Pallleres, daughter of the President of who the Republic, but this is the firs: time \such a compliment has been paid to the daughter of a foreign Ambassador. The act was decided upon as a manifestation ef good feeling toward the United States | ———. RICE SHOWER ON SHIP. Some little excltament was caused to-day on the American Line steamship | pler, at the foot of Vesey street, North river, a& the Philadelphia sailed tor {Southampton by the arrival of a bride ‘and bridegroom, accompanied by a j couple of score of friends to say fare- ie couple-Mr. and Mra, Jacob Bo- hiaw married last evenin thelr friends showered them ica, old shors and c etti fust before the Phitadelphia’ cast off her lines The Flour of Generations 4 | | | | | | Milled from the cream SATURDAY, MARCH 13, 1909, HAS SUGDE MSTOCUEST Young Parisian’s Whirlwind Feast at Monte Carlo Had vie Finish He Planned, Wo ‘BORED TO DE and Was Gayest of Party as He Promised a Sensation an Shot Self. Drew Piste! PARIS, a wealthy March 18 young auletde at Monte Carlo last night under The young Man wave @ supper to a number of his Fernand Ravenes, Parisian, committed sensational circumstances, friends at which the pleasure was fast and furtous, Several times during the evening Ravenez cried “This is nothing; a big surprise ts awaiting you at the end.’ At dawn, when the party was separating, Kayenez shouted "Now for the great sure prise!” At the same time he arose abruptly and walked toward the gypsy orchestra, which was playing an Hungartan rhap- sody. His friends, expecting a practt Jcal Joke, watched him, expectantly They were stupafied to see hin sud Jenly draw a pistol, place dt at hts temple and fire, He fell den before anybody could reach him The only reason for his act !s “sheer boredom,” Ravenez was only twenty years old, but had been a familiar |ure on the Paris boulevards, ‘king for vivid clothing attracted at tention, Three years ago the young man figured in a sensational duel He challenged a swordsman | aw a vesuit of a cafe quarrel, but the} [swordsman refused to tight the | ground that Ri 2% had yet reached his majority Undaunted, Ravener Issued a chal- jlenge dating It ahead of his elghteenth birthday, and devoted the intervening time to rigorous training, When he did meet his adversary on the fleld the contest was of the fiercest oharacter and it do by Ravenes plunging his sw elght inches into Me opponent's bord. ! ————_———>—_——_ 70 FREE HARBOR OF FOG BY ELECTRICAL DISCHARGES Experiments With Hertzian Wa in English Channel May Be Perfected Here, PARIS, March 13.—M. Dibos, a French engineer, Is at present conducting A series of experiments on the English Channel which have given rise to the hope that New York harbor may ultl- mately be kept free of fox. Attracted by the English experiments for pating fog by means of electrical dis- charges, M. Dibos conceived the idea | Ng where his professional on not of a combination of Hertzian waves, Beneath a powerful Hertzian plant which emits waves of {0,000 Volts he placed four huge blowplpes directed to the four points of the eon Stmul- taneously” with the dl of the} Hertalan waves the t ipes, enact giving a temperature of degre centigrade, were lighted. In from, twenty to thirty minutes a thick fog vas dispersed over a zone of 2%) yards couraged by this success the expert- ments will be continved > THT, BONG CARUSO SINGS, The words and music on an sung by Caruso In Verdi tat the Metropolitan Opera House, will be given with to-morrow's Sunday ‘orld, ms HILL GAINS CONTROL OF CROW’S NEST PASS ROAD. TORONTO, March lf At the annual meeting of the Crow's Nest Pass Coal { Rathway Company t Ie wos vinced that Janes ited control of t > ait: disst- | ut Says Man Who Studied Bellies oi South Atrica Uganda Sirens Might Be Sent Here to Preach Gospel of Simplicity, Is View ot Arthur Collen. By Nixola Greeley-Smith. Dress makes the flirt, and want of It the modest woman. Such, at least, is the startling opinion of Arthur George Pomeroy Collen, who will lecture before the League for Polftical Kducation March 16 next on “Darkest Africa," and who contends that the African belles who wear the least clothes are in reality the most modest women in the world, NIKOLN Seley calls even from a tailored gown, At any rate, so it Mire. seems to Mr. Collen, who a son of Lieutenant-General Sir Edwin Colien, for forty years a resident of British Bast Africa, Clothes, according to Mr. Collen, contribute everything to the vanity and coquetry of clyilized women, and he belleves that Uganda sirens might be sent as misstonaries to Europe and America to preach a gospel of sar- torlal simplicity. Nevertheless, Mr. Collen himself, whom I saw yesterday, was attired to the verge of coquetry, If we accept his standard and judge him by them . A Symphony In Green. pene {hese timid creatures. ‘That + ) he has them u He was a sympnony In green, Gtee™ Christian and HUG aaa clothes, green te and a scarfpin of the BO him give up all but one,"’ Which one is he allowed to keep Interpolated, fade: “It may seem, of course, very ridleu- | Br H Jous.” he sald to me, “to compare oe Wellotloourne ne anould rer it African women belonging 10 ¢r!b®S Ars one and oldest, but [ belleve there Where free love prevails to the really . ‘8 a little latitude allowed in this re- spect,” was the reply. "Generally the converted chief keeps the wife he Ik African girl, with practically noting best. The fact ORC he has acholes i on, 1s less conscious of her charms than | the only evidence of love 1 have Leon un English or Amertean debutante, and | abte to discover, The wife lp title hen she Is tore inodeat by just hat I8M0F- | ter than a slave in many respecia, Sov moral women of elvilized countries, But tt Is undoubtedly true that a young ance of her own attract eral chiefs have told F . : nid me the only trou- Thy misstonarles In East Africa," | pie they ever had with thelr wives vy continued Mr. Collen, “have done tm- as about olothes." measurable good But the least benefl- | Qiuitg Uke American hush cent of thelr reforms ts getting the | gajq nds," 1 natives Into clothes. Near the MIs | ¥en gamitied Mr. Collen," sions all Gia Bast Africans, men 8nd! you're not going to lure ea id ut women alle, conform to more comparisons of African any \deas of dress. But It you get American women, I'm in troubie enougi enough away from the villages you Will now," In troubie enough women clothed only {n a strip a plece of woollen blanket, and these are the only ones who are tely free from coquetry—as T sald utterly unconsclous of thelr, Wife of Well find the of bark ———e——___ MRS. KATE CUTLER DEAD. absol Known +: Wwapaper charms."" Man Suddenly St-teken. “Well, asked, for th seen of Afr ing ugliness The Native Charm, Yertainiy,” replied Mr. Collen “For the natives they have a greater charm than the most dazzling visions of civilized loveliness could exert. And | even according to European ideals the young girls of the Wandarollo tribe In| ganda would be consider, attractive. | ‘Their lips, of course, are too thick, and they disfigure thelr ears by stretching | eweiye or fifteen years they any charms? 1 only pictures I had ever | an women were of appall- how Hove Kate Cutler, the wite of Monte Cutler, & well known newspaper man, was found jdead last night at 11.90 on the floor of the bathroom or their apartments at No, 177 Amity street, Brooklyn, | Mr. Cutler discovered the body of his | wife on returning trom Mannattan. He summoned physicians and an ambulance. The ambulance surgeon, upon making a superficial examination, found that the body was still warm. Death had been due apparently to heart failure, } rs. Culler was forty years old, and had been suffering from heart trouble for the lobes with weights Ull they Reel Inches long. But thelr fig- | — ¢ fregueitty cherie |COUNTY CLERK A SPEEDER, rhaps the marrlagg customs of the | Wanderollos would be Interesting to! Polleeman Kewantel ne, Oicanear peas you,” Mr, Collen continued, “Practl . calle, of course, they have free love,{ Bite Threat to “Break Him.” he uuse when elther par becomes | Leo Lipschtk, chauffeur for County lissatisfied he or she takes another | Clerk Niedersteln, of Queens County, mate, There is very little love known | Was arrested, charged with reckless among the Wonderollos. A man selects ativing, at Flushing, to-day. He pleaded a particular git] because she will be a | not guilty before Magistrate Fiich and t ball Was fixed at $100. Sherift y nod worker—the women do nearly all of Queens County, furnished tay the work—and he asks her hand from} According to Mounted Policeman Lo- the chlef of the tribe, offering for her | Were, of the Newtown Preainct Mr. Nie- of clot, and orname: dveste'n whe was in the machine at f cloli and ornaments. the time, threatened to have the officer nom, therefore, whatever trousseau there ts, tains the ¢ 4 consent, there ts a wedding feast and much native beer, from the banana or plantain. provides If he ob- Formerly bride was supposed to be very shy, and after the feast she went back to her parents, and the! groom t ed to his home, and an elaborate and prolonged courtship was fe through Shyness Has Been Lost. yness has been clvil- I suppose, and e two Europea has many AodURING SERVICEABLE W ESTIMATES AND SAMPLES ves ed to my qt er oor on polygamy ast vatis ate SS is d ie COMB West Twenty N Positively n to secure the Bargain, Lost impossible a manner, A “Want” ad like a great steam shov sity while you sit qui n advertisement greater circulation da able through the H Press COMBINED. World Advertisements FLOUR has the * Quality Temptation lurks in a Mother Hubbard, allurement | | LIGHT WEIGHT DRAPERY STUFFS INATION FOR INTERIOR FURD in the M Scatier in Al (FFT HUSBAND “CUT OF HER WIL VHS CONSENT ee Mrs, Camphell Said He Had Received More Than She Could Give by Legacy. 4 (ET ‘S TO CHARITY. Most of Her Small Estate Goes to the Foundling Hospital of New York. “With fill knowl ‘my e anil consent of nothing to me for my money, yet what he has recelved In hie jlfetime ts more than T could have ever given him by legacy." husband, 1 bequeath him, as he did not marry y | Such is the wording of a paragraph Jin the will of Mrs. Lizzie B, Taylor ‘Campbell, filed for probate with the Surrogate in this eity to-day Mra, Campbell died on Oct. 10 Inst, in Denve ve her husband, Arthur Russell Campbell, 1s employed in the | United States Mint. She formerly lived in Westchester County The petition filed with the will saya the personal estate is worth $6,0, and there Is no real property, Several bes quests of jewelry, laces and household effects are made to friends, ‘The Found- Ings’ iospital, of New York, is to ree celve $2,000 from an insurance polley, ang, with the exception of $1,000, which goes to Sister Mary Bernardette, of that natitution, for her personal use, the hospital is to receive the residue of the estate, wh ———— There Are New York, li Re Se Franks” tm t aight One Can't Located, (Spectal to The Evening World.) SCRANTO: Pa. Mar 13.—Frank Devlin, a Yale graduate, whose home ts in New York City, has answered a sum mons in a sult for divorce brought there by bis wife Elizabeth, There Is sald to bea mutual agreement for a separation, George Bice, counsel for Devlin, ale leges that he met the plaintift as Miss Elizabeth Thomas when she was really a married woman, and that afterwards he discovered that her former husband, named Swenck, was living in Easton, the couple were married {n 185, Mre. Devlin is now $n Dickson City, Lackas wanna County, Pi There are several Frank Devlins in the Manhattan and Brooklyn directories, but those found by The Evening World denied that they were bringing the sult, LICORICE TABLETS, (S 8104 PACKAGES.) FOR COUGHS &COLDS. MADE WITH PURE SPAMISH LICORICE GLYCERINE TABLETS, (104 POCKET TINS.) FOR ACLIEF OF HOARSEHESS ATHROAT Al Me (FNOT SOLD BY YOUR ORUGGIST, ty MAILLO FREE UPOMmICHPT OF PRE, 863 Baoaoway, wy.city. Stern Brothers ARE SHOWING EXTRA FINE QUALITY Manchester Damask and Belgian Linen ‘ for Furniture Slip Covers EAR AND RIOR FINISH SUBMITTED UPON REQUEST, Awnings and Window Shades OF IMPORTED AND DOMESTIC CLOTHS MADE TO ORDER. > COLOR ISHINGS. ethird Street Can One Man Dig the Panama Canal with One Shovei ? t! Still you sometimes see men Worker, ! Make Business Troubles Ail Direciions.

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