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Tae FINE COLONY CLUB | CLOSED TO WOMEN BY TYPHOID FEVER Epidemic Breaks Out Among Servants and Doctor As- sumes Full Charge. FEAR FOR THE MEMBERS. Many Well Known Women Visited Restaurant Before Alarm Is Given. ‘The fashionable women who have been | accustomed to drop into town for a day or two from Newport or Lenox during the summer months and “put up” at the Colony Club, the most exclusive wom- social organization in this country, Will have to week new quarters during the next few weeks, because the clubs | house at No. 122 Madison avenue has | been practically closed as the result of a typhold epidemte among the male ser- vants. Only the general reception and writing rooms are open. The restaurant and all of the sleeping apartments have been closed as the direct result of an order from Dr, Charlos B. North, the sanl- tary @xpert who was called in to run down the source of the epidemic and who wae given full authority to aot ae he deemed best. The first cases of typhold developed at the club the latter end of Inst week among porters and hallmen. At present there are three positively diagnosed eases in various hospitals and two others under suspicion. All of the elghty-odd servants, who eat together in w servants’ hall, are under close ob- servation. MEMBERS EXPOSED TO DISEASE IN THE RESTAURANT. Though Dr. North is silent as to the possthle cause of the epidemic, and will have nothing to say along this ive until he ts certain, {t is generally be- lieved that the disease brought Into the club by food produéts, and that possibly some of the members who ate in the restaurant prior to its closing last Sunday were thus exposed to it. ‘The number of club inembers tn town in the summertime ts, of necessity, ex- tremely sinall, but that the restaurant has been more or less patronized dur- ing the last few weeks {3 admitted. Dr. North in discussing the matter to-day said: : T have « corps of experts at work running down every possible clue. Until we have eliminated all the impossibill- tes and worked the case down to a Jefinite and incontrovertible basis I do sot care to have anything to say as to the cause of this outbreak. ‘The di- ctors of the club have acted with mmendable promptitude and no danger ft the spread, of the disease from the lub Rouse can be anticipated. We are ooking now for its cause.” Dr. North is a sanitary detective. Ho has working under him a corps of trained experts, who operate very much in the manner of trained detectives. Many of these men are physicians and Xpert bacteriologists. In a case such s# that at the Colony Club extraordin- srily comprehensive measures are taken to run the source of the disease down, MILK AND WATER STERILIZED BY THE EXPERTS. To begin with all milk used te or- Jered sterilized and only distilled ater is permitted, These, of course, ‘@ «fundamental pr lons, Then ooltmres are taken from every one per- nanently connected with the club to ascertain {f there ts a “typhoid car- rier? among them. Lf such a person ts ot found @ careful investigation of the home life of each of the servants is made to see If they have come in con- tact with any person suffering from he disease. Every food product which could pos- sthly transmit the disease {# carefully traced’ to its source of supply. Not y person who han- is watched and examined, In this manner no possible] * source of contagion can escape the trained exper —-—-— FIRE DRIVES OUT GUESTS | OF SOUND SHORE HOTEL.! | Two Hundred Escape Flames That} Destroy the Momauguin Near New Haven, NEW HAVEN, Conn, July B.—The} otel Momauguin, on the shores t long Island Sound, a few miles E ¢ this city, was destroyed by fire e yeday, Starting in the kitchen of the M ignin (Callahan's) Hotel, the flam ept the big wooden structure almost ctore they were discovered, In quick secession the flames licked up Hoyt's Hotel, skating and dancing pavilion, several concessionaires’ stands on the boardwatk, and Wiliam B, Hall's ote we. When it looked as tf the fire would ep the entire water front with its scores of beautiful summer places the vind veered around and gave the volun- er bucket brigade a chance to flood langer zone with salt water, The F Haven, New Haven and Branford < artments arrived too late to be of any ervice, Proprietor R. V. Callahan and his Ife had narrow escapes in quitting | lazing hotel, About two hun yuests had to take flight in scant arly estimates place the fire loss | at $30,000, | st ——_ Outing of the Rader Club, | The outing and games of the Charles \. Rader ciation takes place to- norrow at Witzei’s College Point Park, Mv. Rader is secretary of the Tammany | jal club of the Fifth Assembly Di trlet. The steamer Seagate Gansevoort street at 9A. M. Pri @ awarded to winners of the and athletic gam madi leav | occasions this Ingratlating slogan: “George Washington, first in war, first a “Subordinates Her Children, the Preservation of the Fam- ily, to Her Own Personal Grievance. French Wife Who Forgives Shows More Courage.” M. de Tessan Amused by Story of His G. W. Jig-Step, Finds New York a Midnight Beauty, Seen Best in Glare of Electric Light. | M. Francois de 1 cousins are the Marqufs, Count and Viscount of the French family of Chambrun, and who is himself a well known contributor to French magazines und news-, paper, {s on a holiday trip around the world. Ana | what could be more natural than that he should spend 4 year of his long furlough tn the country which he has long admired—the country of Washington, the step- country of Lafayette! So M. de Tessan and the charming lady who 1s *. Madame de Tessan arrived in New York this week on NIXOLA. the first lap of their long journey. The de Tessans GREELEY* SMITH crossed on the Touraine, and a New York paper related that on the way over an American traveller had taught M. de Tessan that| the way to make himself agreeable to Americans was to repeat upon all BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. ° in peace, first in the hearts of his countrymen,” and accompany it with a buck-and-wing dance. The story added that M. de Tesean had followed tnstructions so Mterally that before the Touraine landed every- body on board would dance whenever George Washington was mentioned. means not only the union Now M. de Tessan is a highly stud-| Of two loving hearts, but of two fous and serious young man, a con-| families, tributor to the Kevue des Leux Mondes, | MARRIAGE IN FRANC. & specialist on English and American politics, and he has spent seven year in collecting material for a book he tends to write on American life. the {dea that he had danced his way into New York harbor was not alto- was, it from the et of the family is very strong with Us. We have just as pees love matches ae you have, but with ui “The old people get together and ar- So | Tange the future welfare of their ohil- dren. Our dowry system is greatly | misunderstood. Young people don't eecioe plousing ts Hite j have any more discussions of money in ‘I read in the American papers the e than they do here. ‘They fall in other day some picturesque detatls of | 10V® And the parents give each other my way lancing tho jig-step to|/Certain guarantees of the financial honor the memory of George Washing-| ‘ttre. More and more the French girl ton,"" M. de Tessan commented yester-|!8 taking the right to choose her own day at the Hotel Buckingham. ‘The |¥sband, of marrying the man she loves, accounts were very amusing to the “The French marriage unites the no doubt, but you do not know| {eal and the practical, while here out it. My friend, Mr. Hugh| 0W have only the ideal. after ten Bayne, taught me that excellent man-} OF twelve years, when the ideals of ner of celebrating G. W., only to] youth are gone, there remains with make a joke when meeting my| €8 practical ties of interest ana of | Fran of SoH American colleagues of tke press, and| family solidarity. With you, when I am delighted to think I succeeded 00] the ideal ts fled, there is, what? well. Perhaps that in be T have} divorce, visited America before. I here to) “Think of the enormous number of describe the Roopevelt election tn 190,| your divorces.” and I have become something of a| “The number of our divorces te student of American humor. to the height of our feminine ‘deal, py replied. “We have a single atandarnd of EN eee ER |dopuily: tor: husband anaraite Gk ane eehUTy ne Deo A Ee: foa, while in France women attll be- w Yo as changed grea el eve it 1s ther duty t - that time,” M. de Tessan added in thing, iy, teh eare os ereey faultless English. “I admire more than} «But the American wi c roma ideal ‘s ever the mechanical perfection of life! that of an egot! here, and I think your city, particularly Midatees nee Ohtaeeens “She subordi 5 at night, has grown much more beautl-| preservation erie tally tines ae ful. Dersonal grievance. It takes courage, “Wew York seems to me @ mid- | certainly, to ‘I will crush my life, night beauty. In the daylight one [and begin over again and make a new sees the incongruity of your build- one,’ but it requires more courage to ings and the not very clean streets, {renounce vengeance, to say !n the face but at night, seen under thousands {of a personal wrong, ‘I will stand by of electric lights, New York gives | my children, I will help save my hus- ® wonderful impression of energy band! When a woman forgt and power. France we do not laugh. We say, “Last night T spent at @ roof garden. | splendid! What sublime renunciation! We have no roof gardens in Paris, and] “You see, the French woman. still I have devoted all the article which |clings to the Christian idea of forgive- I wrote for Le Matin this morning to|ness, We are in some respects much describing the crowds § saw there! more conservative than you. Our'tde gathered about a cow. In Paris I do} go far, very far, too far, in my opinion, not think a cow would pay asa theatri-/btu our actions do not go so far as cal exhibit, And I saw persons fishing | yours, For instance, the two young also. The {dea of fishing on a roof women under indictment for attempted murder, who are exhibiting themselves in a theatre here. Such a spectacle would not be possible in Paris. It would not be permitted. We exhibit any pic- ture of any erime, but we do not show would seem to Parisians very amusing. But it {s an interesting taste. It leads one to suppose public 1s very bucolic in its Ideals. ‘And what is the French {deal of life?” I asked. criminals, They would not dare to ‘Much more simple than youre," M.| show themselves, If Madame Steinhetl, de Tessan answered. “It « to have a/after her acquittal for murder, had home and a little bit of ground to culti- vate; to be able not to work in one's old age; but the poor Frenchman does not dream always of millions as the poor American does. We have our at financiers, but they do not con- a national ideal, {deals of harmony, of beauty, of are very strongly developed in France,” M. de Tessan added, “I have i seon in the homes of simple workmen !n America and England the good taste in the arrangement of pte- tures and flowers that the humblest French housewlfe gives to her home, WILL STUDY WORKING CLASSES AS REAL AMERICANS, ench housewife {s thrifty, she id cook, she has not so much of luxury as the American ventured to appear on the stage in Paria sie would have been hooted off. But I do not venture to criticise these things !n Ame: in life. I merely find them very interesting.” A a JOHN M .BOWERS TO WED az MISS STARKWEATHER. Well Known New York Lawyer to Become a Benedict Again in Cooperstown To-Morrow. To friends in New York and other cities the news will come as a #urprise that John M. Bowers of tho legal frm of Bowers & Sande of this city ts to |marry again, In Christ Episcopal Church, in Cooperstown, N. ¥., to-mor- row morning he wil] make Miss Kate Starkweather his bride, The Bowers summer home, Lake Lands, 1s at Cooperstown, and tt was there that Mr, Bowers‘’s wif, Susan Dandridge Bowers, died, Sept. 16 1909. Tho future Mra, Bowers {s the daugh- ter of Mra. Annie Nelaon Starkweatiier good tast idea an Yet I find the Avertoan woman very beautiful and charming and with that delightful, conquering air that distinguishes her from the women of other nations, But fn writing about the Amertoan women Z shall not make the mis- take of teking a fow Indies of the al and belongs to one of the oldest and wront world typioah shall | most prominent families in that part study the girls in che shops and | of the State, She {9 about half the age facto and the wives and | o¢ Mr. Bowers and ts very pretty end daughters of wovk!ngmen, for they r in society, fre the real Az 2 women. will be performed. bp I greatly adm » efforts made to m Olmstead, a brother- untonize An n « Tam Pid rag ty Pigg By age 4 glad they are suiccens, Raipa Birdsall, rector of Chri In France the very Jealous| Church, It will be a simple wedding, Gt RAERiRen ic wana helr ranks, ‘The| the bride wearing a travelling gown, feminists have fought many a battle on | 494 after @ wedding | pee | mother’s home they wi at pon F York by automobile. F mata card declared the #ure! they will r Europe. ng M. de Tessen, “I believe tr x ae She be the influence and power of) ren gootetios’ Dancing Conteste, Woman everywhere, for I think it will ? dae festival of th he conservative of god, Women are], Th® annual dancing festival of the v power in France. They have ve held at eltic Aiwaen lean var neweenlt tovmorrow afternoon and evening, ; Fi : at ¢ P.M. All the Irish You mean women of a certa! type, associations and dancing classos like Mme. Steinhell, for instance "No, no—g00d women, serious women,” | , M. de Teagan answered. “and femininiom is very strong teams entered in the compe @ committee will award the chan im France, aud growir; stronger, t in the pa Fou do not hear muoh about it, for hed op tren pipers. Our women are not sensational, not aggressive, They mot attack a there will be other gympagtic and calls- th ive ers CLUB |““American Woman’s Ideal That of an Egotist. Divorce Courts Prove ARR WIFE'S PLEA FAILS T0 SAVE. HUSBAND WITH LONG RECORD With Two Children at Side, She Says She'll Reclaim Him as Before, _ A wife with two Mttte children hang- ing to her akirts made an ineffective plea to Judge Crain in the Court of General Sessions to-day on behalf of her husband, indicted under the name of Albert I. Webb, for forgery in the second degree and awaiting sentence under a plea of guilty The devoted wife was unsparing in her rovelation of a surprisingly con- sistent criminal past on the part of her husband, but was quite sure she would be able to take care of him and keep him out of temptation {f she could have him transferred to her control from the custody of the law. Judge Crain sent Wer to the peni- tentiary for @ year. Mrs. Webb an- nounced her intention of reclaiming her husband when he ts released and keep- ing him etraight for the rest of hie life. According to the story told by the woman, who arrived this morning from her home in Columbus, O., with her two Metie children, she married Webb seven years ago. Hin real name, she oatd, wes Kyser and his family was prom!- nent in Ohio. When @he married him she knew he had served a term as a boy tn the Ohlo State Reform Schoo! and two long terns in the State prison ‘at Columbus for burglary. WIFE BROKE HiM OF THE mor. | PHINE HABIT. In order to avoid the detectives who were hounding her husband tn Ohio, the women eaid, they came to New York, Wedd had contracted the morphine habt In prison, His wife broke him of {t and he seoured a position with the Manhattan Toy and Body Company, an automodile concern in Weet Sixty. fourth atreet. Webb worked for this concern sey: eral years, handled many thousands of dollars and was scrupulously nest. Hia wife thought he had reformed 004. During the Christmas holldays of Mra, Webb wont to Cleveland to at the golden wedding mother, Left alone, into his old Starch He and senten years |. us prison SHE GOT HIM PARDONED FROM OHIO PRISON, Through the efforts of his wife Webb days ago 1910, found guilty the Col charge, Webb 0 New Yors without extradi- tion and entered a plea of gu The automonale ¢ which Webb forn nploved gent ge Cr a r asking that sen tence be suspended and offering to put the man back !n h's former job, The c taking due consideration of tho confidence reposed in Webb by his wif former employers, decided thar record entitled him+to at least a ar of imprisonment, * a | HELENE, Mont., Jv SAVES HIS WIFE AND BABY FROM FIRE HE WILD Williamsburg Man Cut and Burned in Rescue and At- , tempt to Fight Blaze. Edward McCtusky's rescue of his wite and child from fire which followed the explosion of ap of! Iamp in his apart- ments at No, 854 Broadway, Willlams- burg, early to-day, and his return to give battle to the flames, will cost him his Ife, When the firemen rushed up to the blazing rooms on the second floor they stumbled over his body at the head of the stairs, McClusky, who is thirty-seven years of age and a sales- man, was unconscious and bleeding trom deep gash tn his right arm. His body Was a mass of burns. Dr. Levine, who removed him to the Eastern District Hospital, anid he had no chance of re- covery, McClusky was awakened at 5 o'clock by the explosion, He rushed out of the bedroom and saw that the burning ofl had set fire to the tablectoth and Was spreading all over the living room. There was no means of escape except the hallway, the door to which was beyond the blazing tabte. | He hastened back to the bedroom ang caught up his wife, who hal not been awakened by the explosion, and taking the infant in his other arm, started | with them through the ving room, ; Which by that time was filled with smoke, He dashed toward the door, holding his wite and child in front of him to protect them from the flames back of h His arm etruck one of the glass pan- Jels of the hall-door with such force jthat 1t smashed, and one of the long | slivers cut @ long and deep gash. Pay |ing no attention to his injury he turned the baby over to his wife when they |reached the head of the stairs, and. | Starting her toward tho street, returned {to the apartment. | Mrs. McClusky shouted an alarm as she ran down staire and aroused the other te who made thetr way to the fire escapes und roof. McClusky fought the fire until he could no long: endure the agony of his burna. he started for the street and fel im @ heap at the head of the where the firemen found him. All the other nants ot out safely. and the fire, which caused a demago of $500, was confined to the McClusky apartment. — Died After Boxing Rout, ©, Murner of Helene !s dead here following a box- ng matcn at a smoker given by @ local and he H!s oppon- died a few ent was J. F Beets of Livingston minutes later White. Trose CEYLON TEA Solves your tea problem Dandy for Iced Tea | | | | | | | MANY ARE INJURED ” Says French Writer \N CRASH OF CARS | DURING RUSH HOUR Seventh Avenue Trolley Bumps Big Hole in 23d Street Crosstown, | POTH ARE JAMMED. | Young Woman and Man Badly Hurt, Others Cut by Flying Glass. A young woman and @ man were dan- gerously hurt and @ ecore of men and women badly cut and druteed during the traMe rush hour to-day, when « north-bound Seventh avenue . trotley car collided with a west-bound Twen- ty-thind street car at the crossing point of the two lines. The Seventh avenue car caught the Crosstown car squarely in the middie and opened a gash In the vehtcle| through which a taxicab could pe riven. Miss Mabel Smith, a young stenographer, of No. 28 East Fifty- second street, was altting at the point where the side of the car was split open. She jumped up, but as the car was jammed she could not escape the crash, She was thrown senseless to the floor and suffered contusion of the brain and internal injuries. She was taken to the New York Hospital. the shock threw him back so bis head struck the controjler box. electrical flash at the same moment that shocked him {nto unconsciousness. Many of the passengers were stunned by thelelectrical shock. BOTH CARS SHOT FOR CROSSING “AT SAME MOMENT. Willam Kelley, thirty years old, of No. G18 West Fifty-first street, drove He declared erward that he did not eee or hear the bell of the crosstown oar. Fred Theis, motorman of the crosstown car, made & similar statement. They both shot out for the crossing at the same time, and the fact th her car had wand, that the rails were wet and slip- pery and that both oare were jammed with passengers, adding many tons to the weight of the cars, made a collision unavold Theis'e car failed to regpond to the brakes until {t got directly in the path of Kelley’e car. Then came the crash that not only carried the bumper of the Seventh avenue car two feet into the a#ide of the croestown car, but also crumbled the vestibule of Kelley's car an if & had been built of pulp. Kelley was buried under @ pile of debris, and when he was dragged out he wae euf- fering from cuts and contusions all over the body, None of hia injuries, however, was serious, EVERY WINDOW 8MASHED, GLASS COVERS PASSENGERS, Both cars were forced off the tracks by the impact. There was a bad short ciroutt that filled the air with explosive flashes of electricity. Every window in both cars was smashed and the passen- showered with broken glass. was «a shrieking stampede ‘among the passengers in the crosstown r, and in fighting their way out the weaker men and women had their clothing eipped and torn and were bruised and scratched. The passengers on the Seventh avenue car got out In better order, but many of them were bruised. ‘Two ambulances were called from the New York Hospital and the surgeons treated a score of passen) taking Miss Smith and Patrick Joyce to the hospital Others who were ministered to by the @urgeons and consented to give their names were Lucy Dean, fifty yeare ol4, of No. 11-2 Dry Dook street, Brooklyn; Joseph Roig, twenty-seven yeare old, of No. 24 First avenue, Manhattan; Frtia Martin, thirty-five years old, of No, 1780 Firat avenue, and Arthur Berg- man, twenty-eight yeare old, of No, 121 East One Hundred and Eighth street. When the wrecker arrived, the crew found both oars badly smashed and three-quarters of an hour before the tracks were cl traffic resumed, THE TIDES, _ Dr, Lyon’ Tooth Powder neutralizes the destructive acids of the mouth—cleanses, preserves and beautifies the teeth, and imparts purity and fragrance to the breath. PETER POELCER $1.25 the case of 24 bottles: one cent a bottle more than the ordinary beer. A little higher in price—a great deal higher in quality, jFoR SA By ALL DEALERS | t pene Samer Pam 21 ee — = GIRL BURGLAR FAINTS IN COURT AND DROPS BABY civoueinons Caught in Neighbor's Flat in Brooklyn, She Confesses Thefts and Is Held When Mra, Pauline Law 1 years old, of No. 1030 Willoughby ave- nue, Brooklyn, was arraigned before Magistrate Reynolds in the Gates Ave hue Police Court to-day, charged with committing @ series of burglaries in the flat of her neighbor, Myre, Clara shet+ fleM, she swooned and dropped her seven-monthe-old infant on the floor, The young mother had spent the might in the Hamburg avenue station following her arrest in Mra. Sheffeld's fiat. She had let herself into the flat with @ key #he had stolen on a pre vious occasion. » She had the baby in her arma and set it down on the bu- reau in Mra. SheMeld's bedroom before she began pulling out the drawers and going through them. Two detectives, who were on guard in an adjoining room, atepped tn and arrested he ‘The prisoner was very pale and weak when arraigned to-day, and just as she reached the prisoner's place before the bench she slumped back Into the arma of Mra. Tietien, the probation officer. ‘The baby fell from her arms to the floor, but was injured. When the gir: been revived In an anteroom she was arraigned again, She that confesped ef her ne’ 3 She could not explain why she turned burglar and nuoch of her talk was rambling. 4 sh tted weveral Her husband, John Lawson, a night! watchman, informed the Court that bis girl wife has acted queerly ever since the birth of her baby, Notwithstand ing her seeming feeble-mindedness, she was held in $00 batl for the Grand Jury. Her baby was restored to her and she was taken to the Raymond Street Jail. eceneenatifpeem—e BABY IS BADLY CUT IN FALL WITH BOTTLE. Tumbles Out of High Chair and Glass Smashes Under Him. r Joey Cah, whore parents live at No. 110 Bradhurat avenue, ts just old to understand what he ts told by his mother and to make an effort to obey instruetions. In times part he has been particularly reckless in handling the milk bottle, and he must have dropped and smashed at least a dozen, 80 to- Gay when Mother Cahill «ave him his bottle ahe shook her finger at him and warned him not to drop it. Joey wan hound he wouldn't do that thing for whioh his little hands have heen slapped time and again, and he hung on ¢o the bottle for dear life. Mrs CahiN stepped out of the room and Joey began tilting himself backward and for- ward in his chair. His enthustasm got the better of him, and he ewung against the back of his chair no heavily that tt teetered backward, The next instant he was turning @ somernsault out of It. But he hung on to the milk bottle and, ae he fell, the bottle was under him The bottle amashed and one jagged plece cut into his left breast. Soy was hustled off to Harlem Hospital, where they may he will be all right tn a few days. Department and as a result superb values are offered at drastic outs lin prices. Among others, Lawn ana] Batiste models, trimmed with Val. land Cluny, or in allover embroi- ideries; necks low or high. Values $2.00 & $3.00 Special 1.2: Sale Saturday L, M. BLUMSTEIN, West 125th St, det. 7th & Sth Aves WISS PIANOS rely absolutely upon their intrinsic mertt, USED UPRIGHT PIANOS in good order, $75 —$90— $100 $425 $3 to 85 monthly Square Pixiios $19 Up. Send postal for cata! , WISSNER WAREROG \ 06 6th Ave., cor, 16th ‘iv., \ Avo. Mi Brooklyn. 65-57 Flatbush AY OUTINGS iS Lake Hopatcong $ EVERY SUNDAY AND HOLIDAY Loave W, fit Bt. 4 Oa. Leave Liberty 8t, 0.00 a Mauch Chunk NEXT = SUNDAY $750 Loave W’ 2ird Street 4.20 a.m, Leave Liberty Birest SAU Sct NER’ o SUBNDER Margaret Knolly, now, if you plane, The fascinating leading te@y |’ of the Ijou, now more fascinating then#* ever, amonished all her frients on Broads Way the other day by presenting to their... admiring game a elt and willows f tn place of the p outlines with which Ie the gayty salied away 4 to new triumphs and foreign eheces leet January. Afier © good deat of diptemelie « crose-examination from interested fat | QUaintances the secret was sant n | Whispered to a few dear friends, with Freult that everybody knows it mows ft Was not exerciee, nor feating, set Cie bir | alr, nor worry about her new | that had brought about tie wonéerMalaid> willowy change im the charming Mar, @aret; no, none of these; nothing on “8 ” simple mixture which all good @fo familiar with and ean anal cost, to wit: One-ball ounce Mar oe Mola, one-half ounce Fluid Bxtraet Ons- earn Aro three and one-hall “drown, pant w. | after meals ana # the now slen@erautt mply wonderful, Dok these warm summer ut the grenmy, ‘sticky’ feeling "Of Past seasons, It takes off the tat quietly, as much a# a pound a day, and keepe tee | off, You can eat what you Mke, too, ome! that rempeot it is unlike anything of @he Kind T ever hoant of, and besides tt Rae.» another ire—tt te heey suse x or depress the * harmlces, o t days, and wilt 1 think mint An NOW enjoy | fat and wants to get thinner; a9. cj owider, In omter to et the Beh, i results, however, you should buy the Mar.” mola in the original package and «ix [it tn with the other two ingredients after you Ret home.”* EPAIRING I8 » QUICKLY DONE —”. in all of our workshops. — - We operate the shops on ; our premises to insure accuracy and save time. Broken glasses replaced without prescription, Best Crystal Lenses, 50c. Special Lenses Proportionately Low, hulich &Sons Oculists’ Opticians 23SixthAv.,15thSt. 217 B’dway, Aster House 350 Sixth Av., 22d St. 101 Naseaa — Aum St, 17 West 424°—Bet. Sth & 6th Aves, New York 498 Fulton St, Car. Bend St, Brooktym. Get a bottle from your srooee 10c : ” 91d English ¢: LAYUE FOR SOUPS, SALADS AND COLD MEATS © M ONARCH FURNITURE CO WE TRUST YOU FURNITURE ws <} Carpets, Bedding 3.00 Down on $50 5.00 Down on 75 12:50 Down on 100 — waite eit ant Relivosd | 161 EAST 125 St BET.3" & LEX AVES ] OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS Some of the | Newest Beauties ~ | on Broadway Types of girls that make Summer Foot- lights Attractive and yt something about their kind of good looks. A Magazine 1 ow feature of NEXT SUNDAY'S WORLD No bxtre Charge tos r . Adverisemouts ioe Phe World a poco ‘iemmuges “Ohass | Pa ye “nein “a EO 2 Ses, ~“ES