The evening world. Newspaper, May 6, 1911, Page 3

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MOTHERS STOP. How Brooklyn Women Planned and Carried Out NINC-YEAR-OLDBOY | we TWO WEDDINGS . Campaign That Raised $400,000 in Tweive Days VAUGHT !APS REAL AT TRE ALTAR »«« —s ee Roth Catholics Who Would, ot See Daughters Wed Outside the Faith. $100,000 “Branch” in WEEPING GIRLS YIELD. : aii | Discomfited Would-Be Bride- grooms Sadly Take Them. | selves OFF to Former Homes, Perhaps you financiers. of women, interes! impressive sum of Twice «wee * Mer Bugene Do ¢ 8t, 4 ‘ in Vivediny on called to perform * Mra. € Hii serremony in whien gins of | (RESET es * parieh were to ave bean the} Teel « rides nen owaide bis faith, and] ganization hoped by last night to hi contributed. Mra. Judson'e slory of the rating of| ot} $400,000 is a striking ilustration what femi Keniue and ence can accomplish. This captain of a great campaign is a silvery haired woman with blue ayes, a fine aquiline nose an a manner that t# genile, yet at the sam executive | Need a Boarding Home. | “For a long time it had been to the Y. W. ©. A, that the gre need of the self-supporting young « Bridegroom Was Ready. Miss Wa who enty-one years |in Brooklyn |v a boarding home, not a ow. f veral months hae been a] hotel, for we don't believe in hotels for aienox the dyetn 1 sponging [Young working girls, who need more pro- works Naroa 8 and his | tection and syrapathy than such an iin- fa rice, own arke {s| personal establishment affords, Our} re old. Is courtship was | present t ding department—we call it} faccenta Dennis Walsh, the girl's] that, for, like the man in ‘Timothy's ta lod his wife, ‘The wedding was | Quest,’ we don't believe in home with aj set for # o'lock Sunday afternoon. | capital H-will accommodate only forty-| x ne the expectant | three young womer home will s family home olled up to in a large | house from 2 00 girls and will nave rooms for transionts © sprang up the front | “At present © | no place in Rrook-| . Jal attire, the bouquet in| lyn where a poor young woman aloae| ‘ Land the ring in his waistcoat | can secure a lodging for a single night. | yo 1 automobile was a sult] “Having in the ‘needs. of the! honeymoon trip | younger workin ris, @ meeting wa a, tickets having been | held here in 1 ne last t ovember at] which we decided op @ great campaign of education and preparation. “We determined to write to members of the assoctation in different sections of | Brooklyn, and urge them to organize! local committeca with the purpose of arousing interest in our project, tm at the door with sto be no wed= een talking with Mgr. ud it was clear to arringe between @ Hebrew would be a . % joing Sea Organizing for Work. td , him and Rer) we organized in this way: The mem- ; aes bere of the first committee of five, each s inst on seoing Miss | | chose ten new members, and each new etween x sobs sie told Atm | member chose ten more, of whom he iat what hes mother sald was true | or she was to be the captain. and that, much: as she loved him. ther t wae really @ sort of military or- could not marry » amount of per- ganization, and the duties of a captain ay shange the mother’s | vere to keep the ten persons chosen up Eg to the mark in energy and enthuslasm. mie S wedding to wile Mat.) “she duty of each local committe mOnnelly satied, bus a which he)... to interest the ministers and id not oMelate, was to have been held | cnurches in their districts, the girls’ at the home of Miss Anna Sehuitz, at achools and the women's club ‘The No. gS Amity street, Fluahing. She was | contral committee sent speakers into married to Frederick Carmer of! very atetrict to talk tn the churches Nod @ Protestant. The | og elsewhere upon Brooklyn's need of Tea a ee ta mac |. boarding home for young women. disapproving, ady af c] i$ b 0 kin the service when Harold O1dtield|) Ob vee, I made speeches Ana AnDi Eee lady here in Brooklyn addressed six- teen meetings. “During the campaign of preparation not @ cent was asked for. All we wanted to do then was to famillart the eltizens of Brooklyn with the rei son why Brooklyn should have of the Dride-to-be, en- nd announced that he | from Mra, Sohultz to) yuld be no wedding. z did not appear. A physi-| called to control the g.rl's y she said that she woutd | never marry without her mother's oun- a boarding home for young working girls et vained ¢ Evening |72EB When we called for $400,000 in Mrs. Schultz oxplained to an Evening y pasion kar ate ES World reporter to-day that she could |twelve days every one with the situation, and the money came pouring In, We had a big clock on the | face of an office building near the City Hall, and every night the face of the! clock, which was lighted by electricity, fee no prospects of Yappiness for her daughter in @ marriage with a man Protestant faith. She Iked the young man, but until he was willing to do as Harold Oldfield, who married her older Gaugiter, had done and embrace the} told how near we were to the goal—the Catholic faith, she could not allow the | $40,000." ROATringe: fo: gOIOR. “You spoke of a home for young | Mother Thought It Wrong. | working girls a while ago," I said. | “Anna promised me long ago,” @aid “How youne = Mrs, Schultz, ‘that she would never | Thirty-five te Age Limit. marry without my consent. Mr. Care| “Thirty-five ts our age limit,’ Mrs. | mer was here visiting per last Wednes- | y4gon answered. “We feel that after | Gay. and she told him in front of me! Fee ached thet. aaa aie'| that {f T withdrew my consent #he|® Woman ha i should know how to take care of he felf and how to spend her money to the) t advantage, But the young girls, | under twenty-five, need geome one! would not ma y him, “Phe child seemed #0 set on marrying fim that I allowed the date to be aet, and in fact a number of the guests and Mar. Donnelly were already here when |to take care of them—to save them | tally becaine clear to me that it *as | from pitfalls | wrong allow the 6 ‘mony to be per- “Our new home will have po ob- fermeh TAhe's 00d Mth ARGO COFPRE | sosigun vulnm bus our girte Wil Dey Anna Schultz has recovered from her | looked after as they would be by their grief enouxi te irn to her work aa a | mothers in a loving home, We want to pier a Manhattan offic know something about them, and when} Youns 45 packed up and re-| they go out we would Ike to know turns in Maplewood, N. J. | where they are going, just as their} mothera would | ‘And the rates will be?” “From $8.00 to $7 or $8 a week, | gon answerec The former rate means two girlie {1 | The home will be self-sup- WHAT'S BEHIND THE MASK? Did you ever see| a masked face? If you did, you Mra one room. Were curious to| porting, It 1s to be built on the site of pull the mask jour present boarding department at Schermerhorn, Nevins and State streets, That's Human| we hope to establish @ branch tn the | Nature | Eastern District of Brooklyn, For that | A Mask 1s a] purpose $100,000 f needed, of which at Mystery, And a|the present moment (yesterday) 983,000 & mystery Is the | naw been subsoribed.”’ rst intevesting | SECT TES thing In existences | FIVE WIVES IN SIX MONTHS? ofessor a ry is one that took a lot of soly-| apLANTIC CITY, N. J. May 6— It brought to light some of the| pive wives are expected to appear ever ingest happer toll in any! against Hobart Partridge, now an in- mats of Moyamensing Prison, Philadel: | ti Profess¢ ‘is the Big-| pnia, awalting extradition to this ovun- ystery story he decade. It will) ty, when he is put on trial to anewer | » Wednesday's EVENING WORLD, | g ‘desertion charge. i County Detective Raitrel!, who has| t try to read yo heen {nvestigating Partridge’s career at tory, You might rself to sleep with } sensibly try to this as @ instance of Mrs. Josephine Van Sant Boothe your mind with a wire. artridge, daughter of a Wealthy ship-| BUT f you Ii the s ot that f Port Repunite, has ju if keeps you forever on the Guessing Rack, | el anotie M Hobart Var- that has an endless succession of rapid! wider, lo Waw unt! last month Miss \ Bruner of Phoenixville, Pa that t love story | Hel on, His the prett x 10 live# tn Bridgeport, vu ever read A woman who 1 7 . mn one Sohenectady and a put read every line of “The Professor's) partridge as hueband Mystery.” Remember, it will begin in) any tn eged weddiuge are said to Wednesday's Evening World | have taken place since October, Wd Y. W. C. A. Boarding Home tor Working Girls Will Be a Monument to Financial Genius and Persistence of the Sex. Will Accommodate About 300 Patrons—Funds sor a} Sight—How Work Was Done. | BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. | Tt may be $500,000 by the tine you read this, arles N. Judson of No. ot Brooklyn, told me yesterday afternoon that her or- | branch of the new boarding home for girls tn the eastern district, and that at the moment she spoke $63,000 of the amount hoped for had been CLIMBS “L” PILLA | but when assured that it was a church | THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, MAY 6, 1911. Eastern District Are in have never thought women good But when you read this story of how a little group ted in raising money to provide a! home for working girls, planned, organized and di-) rected @ twelve-day campaign in which they realized the $400,000, you may change your mind. | For | 150 Columbia Heights, president of the Young Women's Christian Association ave another $100,000 for building a AND URGES COND TO REPENTANG Man With Mania Pleads With “Sinners” as Trains Thunder By. Religiot fervor w The religious of Francis Schaeffer of York, who was exhorting sinners this morning from the top of an elevated ratiroad pillar at Marcy avenue and Broadway, Williama- burg, got a severe sethack when Police- man Charles O'Connell of the Clymer street station, after much coaxing tn the presence of @ iarge crowd of on- lookera induced Sclaeffer to exchange hia “pulpit” for a seat in the hurry-up wagon and took him to the Kings County Ho. pital. Schaeffer had an audience of curious people “guying’ mm when O'Connell found him perched perilously underneath the rails, and maintaining a semblance of equilibrium on top of the pillar by | winding his legs about the metal franie- work, while in his left hand he gesticu- lated with a Bible, punctuating his ap- peals to the crowd below to atand forth and renounce their iniquities, “You are all deep-dyed in sin," he ented, “and there is no hope for you unless you repent. . “Look at me! I fear not"— But just then @ train thundered by overhead and the exhorter had to grasp wildly at the track support above him to keep from being shaken from his perch, AS he again braced himseif for further exhortation Policeman O'Con- nell began shinning up the pi: Halt | way he stopped to do some exhorting himself. “Bay, old man,” he began pleadingly, | “this 19 no place to ave souls, They | can't hear you down below. Come along down now and I'll fx you up @ pulpit on the sidewalk,” Reluctantly Schaeffer capitulated, and | when he reached terra firma smilingly accepted the congratulations of many of his auditors, Meanwhile O'Connell telephoned for an ambulance, and Dr, Lehrig came in it. Schaefier didn’t want to leave at fira:, wagon and that he would be taken to| & nice edifice where le could always have an attentive audience he in cheerfully, Dr. Lehrig said s had religious mania and pla the observation ward. At last accounts | Schaeffer was industriously expounding | Holy Writ to a “millionaire fying ma- | chine inventor” and another who thinks | he is the Kalser’s Lord High Cham- berlain. Before climbing the fer had created a lot of e rushing up and down the ing citizens hurrying to for Manhattan, When the station hands | ejected him he lo his spectacular dash up to his elevated pulpit, pods } FRENCH AVIATOR KILLED | WHILE FLYING IN CHINA, Rene Vallon Had Hoped to Interest | Peking Government in Mili- tary Aviation, SITANGHAI, China, May 6—Rene vai. | lon, the French aviator, fell from a | great height to-day and was ingantly killed. Vallon was « Parislan and had been @iving exhibitions in this country for ax weeks in the hope of interesting the Chinese Government in military avi | ation, He made the first extended fight by an aviator in Ching, using @ Som- mer biplane. | ae LOCOMOTIVE WORKERS !DLE. SCHENECTADY, Bohenectady works 6 American Locomotive Company will go on four days a Week commencing next week. | ‘The night gang of three thousand men tn led off and the works has orders to Keep Its day force of four thousand men busy for two montha, The Covke Works at Paterson are closed and Pitts. burg and Manchester are running very ight, | DUNKIRK, N, -Y., May 6—Ntaht operation wae suspended ant @ #ohedulo of four dava a week becaine affect at the American Locomotive Works (i tite city yesterday, About MO nlgot men and 2.900 day men are affected by this reduction, said to be nevers tated by “lack of orders.” * + May 6.~—The/® Another passenger on La Provence! sas Prof. J. H. Fink head of the| Gives Bail in 00 on Cha at ‘ © of the City of New York, who! hduct} ie “Vour vf tie 4 oung went to France as t Mlarvard ex Abducting His Young change professor, He inade the com- Bride. | plete circult of t rench provinces, | tierma ah ot ing man who jdelivering his lectur Where the| wan arrested in Jersey City yeaterd French Were Pion # in Ainerica.” harged with abductioug bie wife, Ald | He spoke in English, and although most | May, from the Flatbush home of he of Wa audiences were tiree-auarters | rather, ch Mat ‘ f French, he auditors all understoog | (ther: Ceorke Hain. av ntendent of | Engush and he was praised every whore je Fren ’ Company, gay iin | for the masterly way in which he han. “lf UP Ih Plithush Court to-day, He | died the subject | was accompanied by his counsel, Louts Prof. Finley did not find the Mrenoh | Phresberg of No. 4 Court street for co ation, but found in-| As none of the Batn family was tn stances of it in (he higher colleges, He | court there were no scenes Ike th id wan convinced on his trip that there! yesterday in sey Clty, when the ——— - picnic caeatemnmoe’ _... | were no colleges eupertor to our own Daihen faraeen cit | ; Americas Absit lonk | father and son-in-law mussed one an chanical, T favor neither the one nor| ‘The Prince and Princess de Croy came| %ther’# hatr und clothes and called the other. But it is imperative that| over on La Provence for a four months’ |" nti! they were out of breath New York City should get some sort} tour of the United States, He in cap. | ¥ rl wae baled in $500 by his of a filtration plant in operation. May- tal of the With Rew t of France. | 0 ", who Ray er home, No, 42 be if the water waa flitered the people based New York stay they will | Franklin avenue, ax security, The case ye at the Hrevoort would waste less of it, 1 hope ao in] PF i ; eeaths will be tried next wlay | view of the low condition at present Three nt the most distinguished the At the Bain home Mra. Bain showed Provence's passengers were Michel t The Ev World ee eS Pelletier, Mavor of Trouville, France; | hogtat rereived to-day fram ber daugh: Travelled 130 Miles. George Breton and George Matilards i eee ee sed. concern Nes MSA APRIAR GEKA GUT RE WR 41 Mr, [are here to attend the National Propert rahe 01 ork abe Concerning n we 1 Mr. | Conference beginning May 15 at W, mother's health, "Don't worry “about Thompson gave the following graphic | rer te iinet of which te tar ‘ash-|ine,” Mra. Pearl wrote. Love and description of iis tri there with the | {neon i ch t9 to regulate | (inves) Address later | international ent rights, similar to " liter consents to let us a Mayor as follows copyrights, If my rr “On WY Nhat (he RGnWas tare ; have the marriage annulled,” said Mrs. —_——_—— ‘ 4 Lyte att i ie Anh 4 ena e Bain, “we will send her back to Halt- minus at Two Hundred and Vorty-sec , Te Mecwad Barn REA wecUREE If Th ’ » Ba} ond street ahorily after 10 o'clock. ‘The HONEST BOY FINDS CHECK. ag wher ee ere Aren’t Heavy Rains, |Siayor had not teen over our water = = syaten in many years, and he was ex-| Postal Messenger Takes Negotiable! Gov. Wilson Off for Denver. Says Com. Thom son, Upper |tremely anxious to stidy conditions ae Paper Worth $175 to Bank. KANSAS CITY, May 6—4ov, Wood iy th In Floors Will Have None. fied ile, covering pra aly: I fret the where we inspected t Board of Water supply Every twenty-four Nours New York | Mayo: | uses enough water to fill a streot 0 feet wite, 10 feet ieh and 21 miles ; benture Conporation of New York, of ig : (Un Guiidre ty raise Cie dan Le Leet] No, a Iitth ave tong—a veritable river in tteelf. TO | igher than non he Brons is now! “f found thie. check on the elreet filter this entire daily consumption Med from Kensicn and want to return it," satd the boy of M00 1) gallons Tam asking for | “Our next stv course of the day we travelled about 120 miles in an automo- overy of importance In the Crotun watershed. to Kenale 1 spending gine the lower end of Croton Lake, whic MASCOT WHO WENT WITH COLLEGE NINE ON TRIP TO JAPAN. BASEBALL ROOTING Young Chicago Lad Back \fter | rip as Mascot of Chic: College Team. go The boy who taught the ° root” might be a fitting description o nine-year-old Franklin Page of Chicago, who returned to-day on La Provence with his father, Frederick H. Page, a retired merchant of the Windy City, a who has b naking a tour of the i world, Father and son left the Untted States Sept. 2 with the University of Chicago baseball tear ‘oustn of you nowhich “Pat’ Page, a Franklin, is a pitcher: ‘The boy is mascot of the team, and appeared as suci on the diamo f Japan, where he “rooted” in true Am an atyle, “it amuse who bad 1 and aroused much curtost among hourd Ortendais, “rooting | before, r ratand what he his » Japs couiin't unc I, but they knew fre wild shouts san that he was ver enthusiastic, ‘Tae Chicag ys Won wame ihey 5 an. They have recently retur dare playing 4 Japanese team ¢ ne with them | Wed nd us| YOUNG PEARL IN COURT, to vnina and spent] BUT PAPA-IN-LAW 1S NOT. » Egypt fn Amertean son went from Christmas in ¢ ities var row Wilson of New Jersey, who spent James McGowan, & mesenger boy | > yestenlay here as the guemt of civic point | attached to the Postal Telegraph of- | organizations and the Knife and Fork flee at the Waldorf Astoria, walked | left early to-day for Denver, vane, {into the Equitable ‘Trust Company's he will remain four days ee, {oMice tn Fifth avenue to-day with @ check for $176. It was drawn by the De- Tho bank notified the corporation and an appropriation of $8,600,000 to bulla ake |was told that a ineasonger had ur; now #0 low that except ts the check tn the str walle on his} a filtration plant at the easterly the entire bottom 1s exposed to view. way to the dank, The company's of- | of the Jerome Park reservotr. Yeara | «jy rily the lake holds thirty-two bll- | feta were much pleased with ¢he THREE-DAY TOUR ago, when whe Croton watershed {lion gallons, but there J4 less than ten ld ka OUR NEW TEN. YEAR MORTGAGE you do no! have to pay off these mortgises for ten veurs but you may pay them off on eny interest day if you want to or make $100 pay- mens on eny interest day. If your present mortgage is due, we can change ft into one of these mortg>g s. Made to home owners only in Greater New York for $10 090 or less. JiiLE GUARANTSE AND TRUST C? Capital : $4,375,000 Surplus (all earned) 10,625,000 110 0 Tan bi? ms nportant part play in the the nation. ey, the Gov ernment Food Expert, knows and has stated In 1o uncertain terms what he thinks about the ordls from the fact that the BohnSyphon Refrigerator proinotes health, because of tts exclusive sanitary features, ft my Deecause it saves both the lee and the food. ‘The perfect circulation of cold, dry air maintains an even temperature 10 degrees lower than any other refrigerator, The genuine white porcelain enamel lining mot only does away with any place fordirtand germs to con- gregate, but practically lasts foreve Let us show you these and other exclusive fea tures before you buy @ other re‘rigerator, All styles, sizes and prices, White Enamel Refrigerator Co, OF NEW YORK 59 West 42nd St.,N. Y. | } ACID STOMACH can Ue dispelled (ua few minutes by PRESTS ake effervescent comblts. of salts, (irapared with fruit De, Oate & saline 14 the only dependable cure for eor RESTO-SAL will quickly relieve the 4 that arise from Inactivities of the stom Heart Burn. © pleasant ach, wer and kidneys Hitlions with Headac Diarrhes th of the Stomach ‘a will yield quickly to. the corrective powées Jn in Pharmaceutical Chem SAL at your druggists to (lace of disagreeable salts, apertent waters and roll, A free sample package will be mabled tok) addres ticon request, PRESTO-8AL ceopted by the Medical Profession, IPRESTO-SAL CO. NEW YORK CITY See aldsnmacie Gear aly Tt ought to be. ful pty May 11, 1911 by . att year, We next went substantial tration was not so urgent as now, {ty ‘Katonan, © we Inspected the when Westchester and Putnam coun- | Muscoot Dain. hardly any wa- from New Y tk tles present the appearance of a bee- | ter above the dam, and the fats are all . hive of butiding industry exposed to view 1, one of the best known Inetuding tanta! ae Jations “rCuscarere are certainly & With respect to supply of water | Not a Drop of Water There. lawyers of New J y, died to-day at one wh T would respectfully urge tha | “Our next visi was made to his home fn nton, He was etehty pe at PAA cua be oeueant Veross River Dam, wa two veare of nee. He was Vice-Chan vd e tunawerm 44 tha Bren dest asset titrda full, We nex sell fourteen years, iam gute a rorker for 100/00, 000 ey \Lake, which is thirt [appointed In 1882, and) wh T G b en myecitand find them bral with 100,000,000, aes wien | < tehired he retired from pn ; our to Gettysburg] mot sry, tices cots Far chin while tite: hi point the Maye y Bird wae born in Bethlehem townshtp 5 . Fe. to n the new dive New Jersey. He was admitted to the PMay 20. . . . $13.00 Ina built there, bar at Awbury Park in Is and was ap, w une WwW polnted prosecutor of Hu vant P . toh vot wate office, and in IS6% was sent l a Te presture, whiten a ey pal Naval by the Democrats, xerving two te blg apartment butid- | ele ings will be entirely withour water. | hae | e In three and one-half years tt ub fteen | as nr . _ watershed, wits tis 2 in obfe pig ] ae ee Sinner CaSan{, HEIPESNINY, | An Impressive as far down as Croton Lake oe tae ane i | < of the chief objects of Mayo’ ‘ - e Sh ! sere’ ty wih ne Sete aneus owing! the Croton district was to | wn upon t the work at the point wher H 9 pure Catskill water can be t arily turned into the Cr jam, | lowing the shor ‘Thia will not b wore 14, Amenais tan. Meantime we ident, and la has a capa aie not waste the w: for our purpones—state o missioner of Water, ( , wae a tricity Henry 8. Thom this tin Ryening Worl Discussed Plan With Mayor Old Dam P Mr. Thompson discussed his fitration profect with Mayor Gaynor on their trip! waa keen yesterday through the Croton watershed, have the | The Mayor is understood to api of / the Crotot the idea, as do the principal members| M? of the Board of Estimate Mr. ‘Thomp: |.) fon says that the $8,600,000 he t# asking gained @ * will provide a Mitration plan of a th of 400,000,000 gallons a du tha 1 is nearly twice what the ja | feet fron now using Naa tthe Water from the Catakil! watershed | ti, will not need filtration for some yea Mua at leawt not tintil tte population tne | him ¢ Croagen very materially, but the Croton | t Water {# becoming worge and works, sald the Commissioner to an venting & Cay a World reporter to-day at hia apartment #MOW 80 reat Waate aw In the Heinord, which bullding hy owns | v0 Aut. Me el aatince 1 have been making a vee ew eee ee aitration W Ugation and thera th every venson Why At through the trip, komething should be done at onc) he amazed at the ext There are two methods of fitration,|ing te being carried namely, the 1 filters and the me-| Westchester Covutes mption p Yo jain to Be Seen, New York will have «a filtra | plant {f Commissioner Thompson ea q@et the money from t Board of Fatt. | mate and Appo omment He not committed to any parti nysten The main thing in his mind is 1 Ke) pitt piatnly expone the water purified anf the prevent bad| View. W he lesa And odor and taste removed where t of Water Supp May hones to — Gentle and Iiffective, BD Nove THE NAME soem | CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. in the Circle . on every Package of the Genuine. | DO NOT LET ANY DEALER 7 DECEIVE YOU Ae ee UNIVERSAL SATISFACTION FOR MORE THAN THIRTY YEARS | PAST, AND ITS WONDERFUL SUCCESS HAS LED UN. SCRUPULOUS MANUFACTURERS OF IMITATIONS TO OFFER INFERIOR PREPARATIONS UNDER SIMILAR NAMES AND COSTING THE DEALER LESS THEREFORE, WHEN BUYING, PRINTED STRAIGHT ACROSS,NEAR THE BO[TOmM, AND IN THE CIRCLE, NEAR THE TOP OF EVERY PACKAGE,OF THE GENUINE. REGULAR PRICE 80c PER BOTTLE, ONE SIZE, ONLY, FOK SALE BY ALL LEADING DRUGCISTS. " gue OF FIGS AND ELIXIR OF SENNA IS THE MOST PLEASANT, WHOLE ID EFFECTIVE REMEDY FORK STOMACH TROUBLES, HEADACHES AND BILIOUSNESS DUE TO CONSTIPATION, AND TO GET 175 BENEFICIAL FECTS IT US NECESSARY TO BUY THE ORIGINAL AND ONLY GENUINE WHICH IS MANUFACTURED BY THE ~ CALIFORNIA Fig Syrup Co. 4 Mi 507,541 Indi- vidual Adver- tisements have been printed in The World so far 2,202 MORE than were published in the Herald, Times, Sun, ‘Tribune and / Press combined curing the same period, [A Remarkable Lead! t

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