The evening world. Newspaper, January 23, 1911, Page 3

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"YO JUMPED BAL INSPECTOR WALSH “ SOMAYHOLAIAN “Don’t Scare Men,” Says Blanche Bates, Who Knows, Because She Has Studied Fifty Spe- Government Files Action for| °"6"* of the Type. | $250,000 for Frauds by |, Rosenbergs, Silk Importers. “They Want to Please, Know How, and Besides, a Man Doesn't Have to Make a Bluff to Them.” CCUSED ARE IN PARIS. ‘wo of the Members of Firm| Left $10,000 Cash Bond | By Nixola Greeley-Smith, What every woman would like to know and what nearly every one Behind Them. Raeen ony at one time or an- | : other Is contained Jules and Hugo Rosenberg left! ao ion? 10,000 each in cash ball In the hands ARE WIDOW Uncle Sam, and it has been Impos- CAPTIVATING? ble to cox them across from Paris As many times trial in the Criminal Branch of as the question @ United States Ciroult Court on in- eee eee letmen.s charging them with cheat: | Sica ik Ce from the depths the Custom House out of $234 by! Wdervaluation of an importation of Milinery on La Tourraine in 1905. ‘Their bail was declared forfeited by of her own experience or the far reach- of her intuition has undertaken to answer it. But Miss Blanche Bates has made a Hand last October, and to-day special study of widows. For weeks be- agistant United States Attorney Pratt fore she donned the very becoming stituted a suit against Hugo, Jules Weeds which she wears as “Nobody's Max Rosenberg, whose establish- Widow" in the comedy in which she is t at No. 130 Fifth avenue was one starring at the Hudson Theatre she ob- the largest millinery importing served tho species—soulful widows, ouses in America, for $250,00, which, doleful widows, pensive and expensive is alleged, represents the amounts widows—and the result of her observa- Hof Which the Government has been tlons ts herein set down. “Muded by the concern through sys-| A bold young woman, you decide, You ematic undervaluation during the last don't realize how bold ti you have ix years. heard what this clever student of } When the brothers, John and Hugo, Widows has the honor to report. ere arrested in 1905 their books and Widows!" exclaimed Miss Bates, pers were seized by Treasury agents. A the facts on which to-day's sult Is ‘why, widows are easy—of course, I mean easy to explain. I didn’t think wed were found in the books. so at first. Till I knew that I was to Max Rosenberg has always been In @ppear tn ‘Nobody's Widow’ and wear Paris house of Rosenberg @ actual widow's cap, I shared th and when Jules and Hugo Popular superstition that the fascina- left New York they joined Won of widows is as inexplicable as It and a Their 48 certain. I knew I was to be a stablish: otier Widow in name only, but I wanted to hands, though there has been no change | D€ plaustble, at least. So I went to kas sign, |every one of my women friends, say- | ing: ‘If you know an eligible widow, fairly attractive and not too old, ask her to dinner and have a man there, and let me come, too.’ Met Fifty Widow: “In that way,” sald Miss Bates, “I met nearly fifty widows, and I'm willing to give the result of my observation to @ny poor unmarried woman’ that wants to hear it. Thats," she added, with sudden dimderite, "ft you'teally think I'm qualified to give advice on the sub- Ject ‘MAY QUIT POLICE; 0 one could gaze upon the sophis- ticated allure of that widow costume and doubt your wisdom for a mom: I replied, and, thus reassured, 3 Bates began her exposition. “Widows want to please men. ‘They know how to please them and they don't have to pretend other- wise, They fascinate, first, because 4 tie qt {Smiling Dick” Likely to Be \\Rétired by Surreons; Reduc- Lction Angered Brooklynite. cinated, and, third, because he The big shakeup in the Police De-| knows she has fascinated. In love partment last Saturday night caused| men are hopeless sheep, you know. echoes of comment that have not yet| Tf one jumps over @ fence the oth- ers all want to follow. “The widow of a man who has died peacefully as her husband has a sort of reference from her last employer as to her general character an¢ amiabil- ity, You mustn't overlook that. Then, too, widows court the next man all in the name of mourning the dear de- parted. A man who heard a young girl talking about the joys of ma: ried lfe or the sweet comfort of companionship would be shocked to death, But a widow can outline the iost alluring programme of conjugal happiness and by adding ‘Poor John, how I miss him!’ masquefade as ingenuous and still sorrowing babbl of past felicity. She's Patience on a monument, the first man's monument of course, smiling at griet and his suc- cessor. @ed away, and also brought up some live and persistent rumors. One of these Is that Inspector Richard Walsh (Smiling Dick") contemplates getting Out of the department at an early date, He. is in command of the Fourth In- @beotion District, wh takes in the naw Tenderloin, and the work demanded ‘by the position ts hard and exacting, Bor some time past his health has been Poor, but he has s to the Job, Walsh a policeman twenty-five Years on Io, 25, 1910, He Is entitled to retirement on half pay by his years of service, but he is not yet old enough to Ask retirement, being only fifty-two years old, The minimum retirement age is fifty-five years. However, he could be retired on the recommendation of the Board of Surgec ector George Hulohan of Brook- Jyspowho was reduced in rank and fo ‘the Flatbush station, 1s reported to Widows Not Romantic. “Girls are proud and romantic, ‘Widows are neither, and if there Giticrisin a snort aime, | $5 Sazshing. em curtn the scares George MeClusi vho was taken | the average man of sai joule command of t age it's romance.” wetion district a Morri: jobody's Widow" saw the protest in in Precinct, hus had so many ups and | my _ey sent to downs in the Pollce Department that he| “O) old Tenderloin | I know they like ft in pla dngebecome philosophical. He gets hls | she exclaimed, “but men are all homoe- Inspector's salary anyhow, and Mor-) opathists when it comes to sentiment, risania Jsn't so bad anc a girl {s 80 apt to say ‘Do you love “in MOO me, dear?’ when @ widow's oue would Dead Commander. | | 1. ‘We have beefsteak and onions for dinner.’ “Another thing about widows,” Miss Bates added, “is that a man doesn't er late com-| have to make a bluff to them, He can sho died while! be himself and noy be called a mon- the vicinity of the! ster or a brute, He can be selfish; he i Wireless messages received at the Charlestown Navy Yard | etatidn last night said the United States Des Moines would arrive to- w, John his je] was in Capiimerde Islands on Jan. 8, can be grouchy; he can be lonily as -——- — =| an office boy (I had just met one In} the Belasco business offices, ppre- ciated the simile) all the while know- Widow Is Comforting. “Girls,” said Miss Bates, ing, difficult, divine, but a widow's na- ire is as comfortable as a pair of new shoes that your maid has broken in for you. Of course the shoes are apt 7 ing that the widow understands his kind and ¢Coesn't expect, anything else | from him, You Like. Many a family lives under a cloud of gloom—a shadow that is cast by | (yt ie and exclusive at the mame tim an-unsuitable house, flat or apart-\ 1p can't be done. rt. “It's not the facts of life that men and won quarrel over, it’s ve Into the Sunshine! nove the Wlusions. One of the illusions nearly all men have is that they like to be wooers. Why, if court. ship dopended upon men they'd all in Trappist monasteries! Foung girls are taugnt that love ts Delightful places to live are ad- vertised “To Let” in The World) « i year. | an Edelwelss that grows only on snowy Bvery day in the year | hetgnts and that It takes an expert ostt 173,374 "To mountain climber to gather, but + abide wepianes Orhars ¢a1 | Widows know it’s @ climbing rose with More Than AMY OTHER Mew = |!i! 1001 very deep in the and that York Newspaper. Move IF NOT SATISFiED choose to plant tt. | “After all," Miss Bates ended, “the ‘whole secret of the widow's charm Is ove : the widow's cap,” and she tied the white tulle etrings of Ger own widow's ‘are charm-| to be a little down-at-heel,” she added, ; “put there's no use trying to be com-| ‘it will grow and climb wierever they, THE EVENING WORLD, Why Widows Are So Fascinating! Because They're Not Romantic | | BLANCHE ATES: 3 MONDAY, JANUARY 28, 1911. a COMPARY PUT RECENER'S HANDS Creditors of John Matthews, Incorporated, Say Liabilities , Are Near $220,000, ‘The ancient soda water manufacturing concern of John Matthews, a corpora- tion, of No, 333 East Twenty-sixth street, has gone to the wall. | The National Cork Company, Runkel Brothers, coal dealers, and the Powers- ! Weightman-Rosengarten Company, with | small unpaid bills aggregating only $900, joined In a petition to Judge Holt In the United States District Court to-day to have the Mattthews corporation declared ja bankrupt. The corporation ts now owned by the sons and grandson of its founder— Matthews, John H. Matthews and George Matthews jr. Attached to ihe petition was a minute of a me ng of the Board of Directors of the corpora- ‘BIG SODA WATER GOODWIN DIVORCE CASE ON; LA CANT HEAR TRL Comedian’s Lawyer Pleads for Secret Hearing of Edna Goodrich’s Suit. — Edna Goodrich, wearing @ little hat of sable and a sweeping cloak of the me, and flanked on one side by her mother and on the other by her law- yer, Herman L. Roth, took the stand to-day before J, Campbell Thompson, who was appointed referee by Supreme Court Justice Goff to take testimony in the sult for divorce she has bréught against Nat C. Goodwin. She merely furnished proof of the marriage and after the depositions In the case were handed in was excused until Friday at 10 o'clock, when the hearing will be re- sumed in Mr, Thompson's office, No, 63 Wall street Nat Goodwin wasn’t present at to- day's hearing. Veteran of the divorce tion held last Friday, at which a reso- lution was passed declaring that the concern was deeply invoived, unable to meet its obligations and “willing to be adjudged a bankrupt.” This minute was signed by the three Messrs, Ma and by Joseph T. Lee, acting sec! The petitioning creditors say that t | corporation has labilities approximating ®, with assets approximating $10,- | 000, Itw in bankruptey be dir business, which employs many m also requested that the receiver | cted to continue the 1 ell as Judge Holt named Lindsay Ru receiver with a bond of $50,000, ‘The petition was signed by David Suth-) erland jr. and Henry Schwab, Louis Run nd Charles O. Loring, for the respective creditor firms, and was filed by Thomas & Oppenheim of 6) Wall street | | re AND CROWS, | | BUT WON'T LAY AN EGG. Temperamental Chicken of Verona, N, J., Refuses to Declare Its Sex. The Rev. Pier the Verona, {n, pastor J esbyterian ot . in his hen yard Church, has a ¢ that xeited ical and poultry | circles the Montela t to an unusual des Last Spring 0c. | Mr, Chamberlain obtained setting of « a fellow-clergy- man, the Rey, Charles 8, Little, pasto of the V Methodist Church due season the flock attained the ag of discretion and the cockerels began crowing and the little squab hens bega: cackling. | But there was one in the lot th promise’ with itself and nature by do! both. This weird cr has ble w no com), a long ta no It looks som) ¢ like a ba n and somet a Cochin} China rooster. By nat appear vacillating, yet tempera ntal, with a in its compositi not offered to lay any touch of th As yet it has eges. The Rev. Mr. Chamberlain !s going to send for good old Dr. George Henr: |} Smith, the chicken expert of Honey | Grove, and ask him to diagnose the strange case. ——=— \ponnet as she spoke. Vasn't Thackeray who said that any wom without an absolute hump yuld win any man she wanted ’ A widow knows It, and when she anything he wants she sets her cap, her tr- resistible widow's cap, for tt ‘That's why people say that widows are so cap-tivating. And before I could call for help, she was on the stage N attorney's, | ¢ courts as he Js, this latest breaking of the matrimonial yoke, according to his friends, 18 the hardest blow of all, and wi he isn’t rehearsing for a new sketch he mourns in the Lambs’ Club. But the comedian's jawyer was there, and notwithstanding the referee, Mr. Thompson, and Mr. Roth were both will- ing that the hearing should be public, sted and insisted on Mrs. Goodrich- ndwin giving her testimony behind closed doors. This decision was a great | disappointment to several score of Mr joodwin’s friends from the Lambs and j Numerous friends of his wife and moth- er-in-law, One feature of special interest to the bs, of which the popular Nat h n officer, was the inclusion in the estate, which ts part of tne of contention, of $7,500 in Lamt Club bonds. These may become the prop- of Miss Goodrich along with mumer ous railway and mining securities, as an A as been made by which th ‘ome of the trust fund 1s to be shared by Goodwin and Miss Goodrich is Was @ concession to the actor for erty not defending the sult. ‘The beautiful actress, who was chased across this country nearly all of the eontinent of Lurope before she agreed @ marriage with Nat Goodwin, 1s suing for a divoree on statutory ground MADAME CURIE REJECTED BY ACADEMY OF SCIENCES. Woman Who With Her Husband Discovered Radium Loses Member- ship by Slight Margin, Madame Marie Curie, husband, the late Prof Curie, discovered radium, was o-day in her candidacy for in the my of Sciences, t twent votes s Jouard Brant, postales AOE MARY GARDEN BETTER. | Miss Mary Garden, the opera singer iis under th a physicqjan at the Ritz-Carlton in the hope that she will be sufficiently recovered to appear in Thais” at the Metopolitan to-mor- row | Miss Ga returned to New York rday roa week 1 Was un: ‘Thurs- 4 on Saturday. sald 2 ee Clie A CULD AN UNE D, gene SAN & a a ulate, Pt Vivid dE WIFE OF BANKER TOEAT A SQUAB A DAY ON WAGER bs oe | Mrs. Cuneo Will Win $200 If She Keeps It Up a | Month, Could you eat a nice broiled squab for lunch every day tor a month? Would you wager $100 that you could? ‘There 18 a difference of opinion on the matter, and it will be tried. Mrs, A Cuneo, wife of the wealthy Itallan banker, and expert woman auto driver, will try St, and her husband has posted a wager of $100 that she can. §. Ron- danina, a well-to-do butcher of No. # Mott street, has covered the wager with $200, and the first squab will be eaten by Mra, Cuneo to-day at an eating house not far from the banker's oMces at Park and Mutberry streets. It all came about in this wise, The banker and other wealthy men eat luncheon every day at a certain cafe, and several days ago Rondenina entered | the place and ordered a squab, Sud- dently he changed his order. “You may make that half a squab,” he said to the proprietor. ‘The other diners laughed. The idea of & mon eating half a squab seemed to them ridiculous. The qeustion then arose and the butcher held that tt would be impossible for @ person to eat a squab every day for a month running “The tdea that one would be com- pelled to eat the sqiab or any other bit of meat or poultry would turn one's stomach,” said the butcher. “Now, I'll bet you $200 to $100 that you cannot do it,"" he continued “Well, while I might not,” said Cueno, “Tl bet my wife can.” It was put up to the wife, and she consented to make the trial. It was further agreed that on Sundays those in the party should dine with the banker at his home in Scarsdale and the squab should be served as usual w seen to-day at his offices Mr. | Cuneo was not inclined to talk about the wager. “It was a little private wager between friends,” he sald, “and I won't discuss it.” Mrs. Cuneo !s noted as being a dar- ing automobilist and has entered cars in the Vanderbilt Cup contest repent: | edly. Louis Disbrow is her racing driver. — WHOLE DOG FAMILY TOO MUCH FOR BED FOOT. Danneweither “Lost” Pups Separ- ately Till All Were Gone, but Was Ejected When Queenie Vanished. John Dannewelther, a baker of No. 411 Seventeenth avenue, Brooklyn, didn't mind much when his wife, Pauline, in- sisted that Queenie should sleep on the foot of their bed, Queenie being the family dog. But when Queente glad- dened the world with @ large litter of woolly pups and Mrs. Danneweither wanted Queenie to continue to sleep on the foot of the bed, surrounded by her family, John said things, though with- out effect. Mark the eraty guile of the man. One day one of the pups disappeared. | The mother had plenty left and didn't seem to notice the loss. The next day another pup disappeared, and the next day another, Within a week the Danne- | welther household was out of pups. ‘Then one day, Mr. Dannewelther took the disconsolate parent out for air, | came back and reported that Queenie | was lost—lost, he feared, for good. Mrs, | Dannewelther seemed to lose her temper in a lump, an it were. She told her hus- band to begone, an dnot to come back until he had found Queenie, i] He be-went, straightway. But Queente must have been hard to find, because he didn't come back for three weeks, Mrs. Dannewelther located him in a furnished room around the corner and got @ Warrant in the Brooklyn Cour: of Domestic Relations. To-day Magistrate Dooley tolad John to go home and behave, and told Mrs. | Danneweither never again to expect ner husband to sleep with more than one dog on the foot of the bed. pth ale Fa Ba SCHOOL FOR FARMERS, Long Island Railway Opens C! n Agricultare at Riverhead, The Long Island Ratlroad's school of agriculture for the !mprovement of poul- y and vegetable growing tn its terri- tory opened to-day at Riverhead, The ame lecturers as those who teach In the | New York College of Agriculture, Cor- nell University, will repeat the instruc. n they give in that school as far as i: applies to Long Island oll and ec ate condition: For the day ses #, which are to be held from 9 to 8 every day, there ts an enrolment fee of $3, for which R, HL Dayton, registrar, Easthampton, L. 1, ssues @ card good for the holder or | any member of his family. There aro alco to be free lectures every night, most of them of particular interest to the wives of farmers SHOW IN OLD COURT. | Moving Pictures Now Clinton str Broome streets, which ‘The old Clinton een Grand and » owned by the to the proprietor t court houre, be- otty, of @ 8 been leased moving picture f the landmarks | ou In 1820 tt was a r Fire Departme as an engine Later {t was trans- ferred into a civil court house, The same people who have occupled the old court house are trying to ne- ure from the city a leaso of the old Hissex street school house, No. 61 Grand street, Which was formerly @ public mar- ket. the east ed by th _—— Away from Admirer, She Dies, HATTIESBURG, Miss, Jan, 23-Mlss Maud Hixon, ¢ pretty elx ear- aid gil, despondent through enlth and being separated from her sweet- heart, George Kony, telephoned goodby to him Baturday night and immediately afterward drank carbollc acid, Sho joes yooterday, | | priate, clear headed and effective pre- |sentation of health-giving auto-sug- including santtartur WILL TRY TO EAT SQUAR A DAY TO WIN A WAGER. INSIDE HISTORY Some Self-Kxplanatory Letters. Battle Creek, Mich., Jan. 7, ‘ll. | Dr. EB. H. Pratt, Suite 1202. 100 State St. Chicago, Mlinols. My Dear Doctor: | “Owing to some disagreement with —— magazine several years ago they | have become quite vituperative, and | of late have publicly charged me) with falsehoods in my statements} that we have genuine testimonial let- tert “Tt has been our rule to refratn | from publishing the names either of laymen or physicians who have writ- ten to us in a complimentary way, and we have declined to accede to) the demand of attorneys that we turn | these letters over to them, | “Tam asking a few men whom 1) deem to be friends to permit me to) reproduce some of their letters over) their signatures in order to refute the falsehoods. “We have hundreds of letters from physicians, but I esteem the one that you wrote to me In 1906 among the very best, particularly in view of the fact that It recognizes the work I have been trying to do partly through | the Httle book, ‘The Road to Well-| ville.” “I do not sell or attempt to sell the | higher thought, which {8 more im-| portant than the kind of food, but I have taken considerable pains to ex- tend to humanity such facts as ma; have come to me on this subject. “In order that your mind may be refreshed I am herewith enclosing a copy of your good letter, also a copy of the little book, and {f you will give me| the privilege of printing this over) your elgnature I will accompany the | printing with an explanation as to) why you permitted {ts use in publi-| cation in order to refute falsehoods, and under that method of treatment I feel, so far as I know, there would be no breach of the code of ethics. “T trust this winter weather is find- ing you well, contented and enjoying the fruits that are yours by right. “With all best wishes, I am, “Yours very truly, “C. W. POST." Dr. Pratt, who is one of the most prominent and skilful surgeons in America, very kindly granted our re- quest in the cause of truth and jus- tice, Chicago, Aug. 31, 1906. Mr. C. W. Post, Battle Creek, Mich, My dear Sir:— “I write to express my personal appreciation of one of your business methods, that of accompanying each package of your Grape-Nuts produc- tion with that little booklet* ‘The Road to Wellville’ A more appro- gestions could scarcely be penned. ape-Nuts Is a good food in Itself, but the food contained In this little article 1s stil! better stuff, I com- mend the practice because I know that the greed and strenuousness, the consequent graft and other types of| thievery and malicious mischief gen- erally can never be cured by logis: lative action. “The only hope for the betterment | of the race rests in individual soul) culture, | “In taking a step In this direction. your process hag been so original and unique that !t must set a pace for other concerns until finally the whole country gets flavored with genuine practical Christianity, “T shall do all that Hes tn my power to ald in the appreclation of Grape-Nuts, not so much for the sake of the food itself as for the accom. panying suggestions. | “Visiting Battle Creek the other! day with a friend, Dr. Kelly of Evan | ston, Ullnols, while I was congultin with Mr. Gregory, my friend visited your factories and came away greatly amazed, not only at the luxurious) furnishings of the offices generally | | | and the general equipment of the place, but with the sweet spirit of courtesy and kindness that seemed to fill the air with @ spiritual ozone that was od to breathe The principles expressed in_ the ttl booklet, ‘The Road to Well. ville, 1 well know are practical and they work {n business of all kinds, 8, as Will be fair- ly tested before time 1# done, “I know you will not regard thta letter of appreciation as an intrud! one, It is simply the ealutation of good fellowship to you from a man who, although he has never seen you, feels drawn to you by the kinship of thought. The only thing that makes a man forever In the hearts of his coun en and hts race Is the good t he does. Your posttion tn this re spect is an enviable one and I wish y congratulations, “Yours respectfully, “E. H, PRATT." od, ib nad \ to extend 2 | wt -—=LEGEETT | Last Season’s Discontinued Styles HELD UP AND ROBBED BY THREE IN STREET. Two Highwaymen Hold Victim by hroat While Third Goes Through Poe A young man who was Richard West of No. & Horatio street, ran nto the New West Twenti t " early thie ne and said ud been held up and by three a Twenty-seventh and Seventh nue He said one of the three approach him and tried to enter into a oren jon. West demurred and the mer Orbe, Portas. .tor Sieve ished him up against a saloon window Br-far Me Co, 17 While two hetd m by the th ut th EEE third went through his pockets, tak- | 3 ing $8 { ‘The men then ran up Twenty-seventh Sunday World Want Work , t, he sald, and entered a t He gave a deser of | Monday Morning Wonders. The authoritative standard of uniform perfection in all things to eat. CANNED CORN The farmer's wagon, the freight car, the railroad siding,thejobber’s truck, the market place—then to you. Such is the history of the average fresh vegetable and fruit. Premier vegetables are canned in the field. Their freshness, sweetness, tenderness, ‘maturity and perfection are real. Among them, one of the tenderest of vegetable luxuries is Premier Corn. Ask your dealer. er Premier Breakfast Coffee FRANCIS H. LEGGETT & CO. HAS. BAUMANN & BRO ea Tm m I TALK FOUR No Money Down” Club plans or ridiculously small deposits will attract the inexperienced buyer, but, wise shoppers will look for honest concerns that don’t draw pro- spective buyers into a net of high prices and ironclad conditions. Proof of our straightforward dealings is borne out by the fact that we are one of the largest Furniture and Carpet distributers in the country. Thanks to our enormous pur- chasing power, WE are enabled to offer you the Best Credit System—One Low Price—Cash or Credit eeey Turkish Couch, 11.75 ies = Large ‘Turkish Couch, with any fink en in 6 x9 girs 7.629 git 8.3 x 10.6 Siu',, 9 wI2 Sais 10.6x12 33h", KRAKAUER * dridden Woman Well In Two Months, Less than two months ago I was orac- at Specially Reduced Prices! Large Display of New Styles ; Other Makes Range From ¢ $100 Upward Musicale Player Pianos »« $390 ess Meakanar Beee até than one hour at ¢, and to-day thanks to your won- Swamp-Root, | am able to and | can walk down fering from inflamma- s and bladder and it Greatest difficulty I | and when | did it me. My husband got Imer’s Swamp-Root $s store and yrom the enced relief and a few bot- a e a well woman, You can nat use you like of this letter ag ¢ your remedy enough, Yours sincerly, S. FRANK ARNGLD, Soringville, N. ¥, 4 yat Mr 14th St.yN.Ys | first 1 UNITED UPHOLSTERY CO. T West 14th St. Phone Chelsea 1765 Slip Covers noone to Unie | Dr. Kiimer & Co, Blaghan N. Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For You Kilmer & Co., P°agham- 4 sample bottle. It will one. You will also receive PHC PAKLOK SUT 4a Dookiet of valuable information, telllny tapestry, siti sgl pee ent | tr about the kidvere abd Ginaaae Manan Iehed Hike new. 2% wn Se et eee York Evening World. Segular fifty-cent and one-dollar size bottles for sale at aif ‘drug stores, \ ASPABA 'S odin or. Sees ony of { f {

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