The evening world. Newspaper, December 15, 1911, Page 4

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oo k 5 5 WILSON ura MONEY, ; AISWIFE WIFE IS SURE " Doesn’t psy if He Hid} * Any Part of the $1,500,000 | “i He Had. | “MARRIED HIM FOR LOVE. He Has Given Her Only $550) Since He Went to Prison | } at Atlanta. Te was for love and not for money that pretty eighteen-yoar-old Stella Lewis married Christopher Columbus Wileon, the aixty-seven-year-old head of the United Wireless Company, she tn- formed United Staten Commissioner Alexander, to-day. Mra. Wilson, who ‘was married the dey her husband was indtoted for using the matis to defraud, ‘Was a witness in the bankruptcy pro- ceedings to ascertain if Wiieon has con- cealed any of the $1,800,000 he is sup- posed to have secured from the sale of ‘United Wirelers stock. He is to be ot a from Atlanta, where he js now 4 three years’ sentence, to t og 2. ‘Mra. Wileon, who had been a stenog- rapher for the United Wireless, enlight- ened the Commissioner and Saul 8. | Myers, attécney for the recei as to why ehe Mad married, but dida't furnish much information as to whether or not her husband hed any assets ly- ing around that @ receiver in bank- ie TRUSTPAYS $0,000 FINE FOR RESTRARING TRADE \John B, Starches Repre-| senting American Ice Co., Hands in Certified Check. WAS CONVICTED IN 1909. | | Prosecution Conducted by J W. Osborne After Jerome Had Failed to Act. The American Ice Comp: to-day paid a fine of 85,00 to Justice Ianchard in the Criminal Branch of the Court, The corporation—known as the When the American Ice Company wax ax a corporation, Indictments | also returned against some of the officers and directors of the concern Upon motion of Deputy Attorney-Gen District-Attorney Jerome had failed to secure indictments. ruptoy cowkd get hold of. According to her testimony it would have been more profitatie for her if she had remained with her note-book, penci! / and typewriter instead of marrying @ man who at the time of the wedding was supposed to be worth millions. The Jnarriage came at the time the Govern- for Mise Lewis to use jainst the Wireless | Sune. WILSON QUIETLY DRE: SED | IN COURT. | “Mrs. Wilson has developed into a mly looking young woman. She ‘answered all questions in a quitt voice. “Ghe wore a brown skirt, a white lace Bhortwatet and 1 long ragian, Her only| ¥ consisted of a plain gold brace-| And a tiny gold band wedding ring. It 18 tho belief of the creditors of the "nited Wireless Company that Wilson (Pas concealed about 000, One ques- ‘on of Attorney Myers showed it was opinion that Wilson, prior to his “hrrest tn the summer of 1910, made a Qrip to Europe and deposited tn banks -. the State of New York. This order se- Bee pee GhOCt SEAM, Thiv was, Ste E Sho to the State the rellef asked for Mrs, Wilson, she said. Tesh fast saw her husband at Atlanta tit three weeks age, She Is now ri ing with her parents at No. 605 Wes! De Hondred and Fifteenth street and eld ee was subsisting on her bounty, ag all the money her husband had given | her since he was taken to prison, $50, has been expended. Pid you know Col, Wilson made a! sq to Europe while the government was investigating tho affairs of tho| Whigiess company?” Attorney’ Myers anked 1 know he went abroad and was in Lomfon and other Ruropean cities.” “Don't you know that he took si0,- W00"and deposited it in banks over there nd that the money 1s being handled by Roy Husbdine, his fopmer secretary?” KNOWS ONLY WHAT SHE'S SEEN. IN NEWSPAPER: “All 1 know wbout that is what the newspapers have printed and the news- | y that ‘@ part of ber duties consisted in getting out the wireless paper, the Acrogram, “Did the Aerogram print the truth?" asked Attorney Myers. a erething but the truth,” ehe answered ‘with a smile. Mrs. Wileon said the only property her Dusvand ‘had at the time she married him was a house at Long Beach, He swap offered $30,000 for it, but dt was as- aigned to his attorneys in payment of their fees for defending him. She sald he believed John B. Btanchfleld re- cetved $40,000 for conducting Wilson's de- ‘The furnishings of the house, she yaa. were given to her by Wilson. She ie ¥ were worth $4,000, The first month after their mariage they wpent at the Waldorf. September, Oc- + jtaber and November of 10 they were tegvelting in Colorado and Texas, at allowance did your husband make for you?’ Attorney Myers asked, “He paid all my expenses when we swent travelling,” sho answered, “After that he allowed me $20 a week spending money and bought my clothes. When We had a furnished apartment, for which we paid $5 a month, he gave me $2 a month to defray all expenses WILSON HAS NO LIFE ANCE, SHE SAYS. "t your husband any A. None. Q. Weren't you interested in his hav- ing @ policy? A, No, I wasn't, 1 sup- pose I Was very impractical, but I was Nat concemmed about such things when married. nit Was purely a fove match and nat for money? Mrs, Wilson blushed and started to re- she brought her lips together y and after @ pause shook her head tn the affirmatt ir. Myers asked many questions about | son's interest in the Wilson Mining | mpany of Colorado, the Wilson Oll Company of Texas and various other prises, which the creditors ass wned by iim, although he haa ferred the stock. Mrs, Wilson sald Sip knew ber twusband hed been inter. ested in these Ventures, but she didn’t | INSUR.- life tn- er that hat his had opened « mil- | Mnery establishment at Carthage, Tex ‘Mr. Myers read from notes Wilson's statement to R. G. Dunn and Company, tm which he said he had $150,000 on de- ‘Dosit in New York banks, $5,000 in Chi- jcontracts with subordinat John B, Stanchfleld, representing the |front when the country was developing] Tie pieased with, but to administer for from all check on law violenc American Ice Company, appeared We-|Fapidly, Later he was the most proml-| ty, At of the county, the Court said,|#ttuck hands and elect fore Justice Blanchard and paid the fine | nent factor In the Industr; If money were diverted, it was not a[ Md this proved in the e1 " Imposed to-day in the form of @ cer-} Chairman Stanley sougnt to show ih | Jefense to plead it was the intent of the | Ie misfortune to San Francisco, to the tifled check. Petdesll red nee ged of bh dan an. | diverter to repay, and hope of repaying | Cus? of honest busness and to the Sageky eaeeh: G s. e e eae could never be an excuse for embeazie- [Cause Of honest labor, tement which said in part ; the Lake Superior ores | tt ‘and the intent to indemnity was} “Since the startling outcome of the time criminal proceedings] w cessary, the control of the steel titante, the cae McNamara trial certain apologists of | started under Attorney-General! yusi by the United States steel Cor- |" these man have made the won, a civil mult was brought in the Supreme Court asking for thg dissolu- Uon of the American Ice Company, the cancellation of its license to do business State, and also asking for the cancellation of the contracts made with) independent dealers, which, it was P charged, gave control of the ice business [it the elty of New York to the American bination alleged tn the in restraint of trade, and same combination for the maintenance of which the indictment above referred) the to wis found. being the civil sult waa pending untried, and awaiting the final disposition of the sult, until, in May last, an was entered In the Supreme Court cancelling the license of the defendant to do business within the State, and also cancelling and annulling all of the companies 4 claimed, and individuals, which, St constituted the fllegal combination, ‘The order entered also provided that the American Ice Company should no longer be permitted to do business in in the complaint. “The State, therefore, hag secured a complete triumph, both in th¢ civil and criminal cases, 25 ER OE ‘LAWYERS QUIT WHEN THEY FIND EVIDENCE ‘DOCTORED.’ ha he calendai ny saa Bik 4 ss of te on ve been on the calendar ‘an adventurens,” “or acts whereby | those committed by the Black Hand ¢ Former Assistant District-Attorney| Of the forty casen on Justice Goffe! Mrs. Parsons claimed Mrs, Van Ness) Y any ban lescaa | ey stidurn and) Francis P. Garvan and N. Taylor| calendar, fourteen were said to have| “plundered” the estate of her late hus-| “7° fraught with an infinitely Phillips, who were appointed by Judge! been settled out of court. was indignant. “The Court expresses the opinion," he the way the attorneys an- 9 West One| swered in ‘the various cases bares evi- Swann to defend Phillp Cardillo, nine- |teen years old, charged with the mur- der, last April, of Harry Page, twenty- one years old, of No. Hundred and Forty-third street, refused) dence of a to go on with the defense of Cardillo| tween them to put their cases off, and | Van third wife of the aged mil. . |to-day when they learned the inter-| hereafter, consent, have them re- | {onaire. |treeing themselves and their preter in the case had doctored an ex-| stored to the calendar, Such practice} Mra, Van Noss was twenty-seven | from the taint of responsibility for such | biblt to help his ¢ellow country’ ‘The victim of the killing shot |@own at Thirty-third street and Tenth lavenue. When Cardillo took the stand yesterday he offered a grocer’s book to ‘show he had been making purchases in |the grocery on the day of the shooting. |1lis story was that hO was In the gro- cery store and heart the shots, He ran out and was arrested. When time came to resume the trial to-day, Mr. Garvan informed Judze Swann the interpreter had confessed to one of Garvan's clerks, last night, that he had dvstored the grover'n book to mupport Cardillo's statement. Mr. Gar- van saki he wouldn't take advantage of fabricated evidence and sussested to the Court that the proceedings be called a mistrial. The interpreter was sent for and de- nied he had admitted doctoring grocer's book. Judge Swann the proceedings ¢o confer with A District Attorney Manly and Mr. G van of thp advisability of declaring the cage @ mistrial, lowed this reading in astonishment Q. Know anything about this? A. No. Q. You wou'l be Interested if you knew he had (hat or any inoney ‘n the | A. I don't belteve no has any | at ail, In fact 1 know he hasn't. | Q.—At the time of the government's raid on the Wireless office didn't you hear he had between $1, and 000,000 from the sale of 2 A was only what the newspapers Then you don't know that he had or has any of this? A—1 know he, hasn't | Mrs. Wilson said she had seen her husband every two weeks in the Atlanta prison a husband never made a cont | Do You Digest | our Food? A Positive Cure for Indigestion and Stomach Troubles. Test il Free. | _ Threo-tourths of all diseases | With & broking down of the dig | Stuarts Dyspepsia Tablets contain noth 11 i but the natural ite whieh the promptly. re and rallable 4 are & sufferer [rom digestion or dyspepsia, try a fitty-cent At ail druggists’, or if And owned real ostate in Denver «he gal hana Aire, Wilson tol WASHINGTC rates on « from The than double the district,” He | which from cents a ton Erle Ratiroad, He Chamber of © | shrould be railroads for ha Ice Trust—was found guilty of conduct- ing a monopoly in restraint of trade in |1mm, after a trial before Justice Wheeler. | t, 4) cents a ton,” it would make a difference of #1 a ton in the cost of pie tr masters in Pittsburgh, resulted to of the Pittsburgh district. poration rates,” “Carn situation?” “E think Mr. te was absolute master of the | 8! asked the chairman, v8. some of his prosperity on favors trom transportation rates and the like. SEER LAW'S DELAY IS FAULT OF LAWYERS, SAYS GOFF. Supreme Court Justice Criticises Attorneys When He Finds No Cases Ready for Trial. Supreme Court Justice Goff aeverely criticised members of the bar for unnecessarily delaying the trial of cases. There were forty suits on his calendar, and not one was ret “Lawyers and litigants have tor years d In the County Court House there are five parts of court idie for the reason that the lawyers are not ready to try their cases, although some sald, does not need the denun Court.” THE Evenins WORLD, FRIDAY, DEOE Ban CARNEGIE PROFITED FATE OF OFFICIAL BY RAILWAY FAVORS. WHO LENT FUNDS ISOLIVER'S CLAIM RESTS WITH JURY, Senator S Much of His Riches in Busi- | ness by Secret Rates. APOLOGIST NAAR | | | | | Collector Egan. | mn the Hessemer and Lake] sei for Began, put forth every legal im-| took relating to the owned by the Steel cor | pediment known to a skilled lawyer, | titled “Murder Is Murder." that, the math [frat to prevent the trial, then to delay’| gays: 8) cents, The average cont | 't and finally to keep damaxing evidence) «Not only taboring men, Hing this trame, | of the records, but the prosecution was] wo capita have at upheld by Judge Swayze In every con- 281-2 cents a ton fefton aavanced the worst form of, class consclousneas—| honorable contrast to these m n stand Pittsburgh rate to oO net offered a long and eloquent] that of sinister and brutal class selfish various |abor leaders who have eald Senator Ollver, “and| MT ness in standing by ortminals simply be- asked fi © than a fair trial lea for the defense. Tio gist his argument was that there had neve longed to the county and not to himself. The mitted In San Francisco, in on: money In question was 0 his custody, not for him to do com- He came to the the disadvantage epicuous serting th: anaeansnseilp GIRL WIFE ‘GETS ALIMONY. ly was granted to Marla Vegas de Ros- from Capt. Hugh Taylor, A., by Justice Blackman tn th Supreme Court, tn Brooklyn, to-day, Mrs, Taylor was sixteen years old when she married. She is twenty years old now. Her husband, in his defense, ex- hibited a separation agreement volun- tarily signed by her nearly a year ago. She sal she did not know what was in the document when she signed it, decause she could not read English and thought {t was. an acknowledgment of money with which he furnished her to visit her parents in the Azores. iid Geta Meera BARS VAN NESS CHARGES. Order: what they re; ario Taylor of thelr class! Carnegie depended for and its wickedness, It ts companies, secret has to do it to protect his re not here dea sometimes as the lawgiving erjmes—murder and to-day from was formulated, Surrogate “Scandalous” References Sticken Out. jelay,’" said Justice OF “BLACK HA tried to put it up to Surrogate ‘Cohalan to-day ordered stricken from the records as “acandal- ous” all reference in the affidavit of| Mrs. Alice Van Ness Parsons to Mrs, Alice Wood Van Neas, her stepmot? the, McNamaras, although the interest of organized not one whit in moral cul menace to society. Yet, the menace is to the con Justice Goff] pand, Cornelius Van wall millionaire. Mrs. Parsons is contensting the will! ¥ Ret of her father, which practically cut her | ed ‘bor Is still greater, off and left the entire estate to Mra, | ‘3 Ness, the Corn- eneral understanding be- tion of the old when she married Van Ness, was eighty-one at the time, criminals and such crimes. and Solid Gold Jewelry DIRECT FROM THE IMPORTER AND MANUFACTURER. Our reputation has been maintained for the past 51 years by the manu- facturing and selling of only such goods as will give entire ion Finest Goods, Greatest Value, Lowest Cost An Inspection of Our Stock Is Convineing, We Offer the Largest Assortment of First-Quality Goods at THE VERY LOWEST PRICES. Koliday Fresents Selected Now Will Be Reserved Unti! Wan'et. Menufacturing and Repairing Departments on th: Premises. OPEN EVENINGS, n | Cause they were of thelr own clas has been done by capitalists wh theft—that been prohibited ever since the decalogue 18, r91f ROOSEVELT FLAYS FOR CRIME s Millionaire Got! State Closes in sidlaerent| arta “in Labor's Cause” a} Charge Against County | Greater Menace Than Those | of Black Hand, He Says Dec, 1h Senator y Justice moved with Its a BELIEVES IN UNIONISM. Pennsylvania, a witness bes toned rapidity fn the trial of Ste; House Steel Investigating Com- ), Collector of Hudson County, , tentified that the freight] which began before Judge Swayze yeu But Ca 4 3 f tC pon Leaders e in the Pittsburgh district | terday at noon, The case went to the] t Calls Upon Leaders to Free lower Inkes were too high. | jury at 11.30 o'clock to-day. Organization Fri 5 } : aM nization From Respon- a By vege rags i este evidence showed Egan loaned 8a te Poe 8 steadily maintained at] oo » had collecte 4 ibility. fi i y rate in any othor | $10 of funds the had collect . in reed sibility for Violence. tall oMcial capacity to the late Bob Davis, personal investigation | Democratic boss of Hudson County, take | that the rate on ore] ing notes made out to him personaly » Erle to Pittsburgh was 96] former Gov. John Franklin Fort, coun- article in the current Issue of the Out-| Mcnamara case, en The eral William McQuaid three of these In- ve L, 0 h Andre any intention to defraud the county and sie iis aan 4 i > Aletments were dismiased to-day Caen owed W ohent dual at hivruren.| the county had been recompensed. se BAILY rene eoeee bet aoa Sane This the case in which James W * dy be be ie Judge Swayze, his charge to the | labore e 1 of leaders who have perit . vo 4 eek Able Osborne was appointed a Special Deputy Lrabli LRRAMROHaTIGG Genearae "S| jury, emphasized the fact that Hgan| been sullty TMNT es cae peed te] Attorney-General by the Governor to| from tra . knew the money he was loaning. two offenses standjen a par from the prosecute the Ice Trust, after the then | “Carne said the, Senator, “fol- standpoint of damage municipal con- test, the capitalists, who desired to be Ahese ¢ praved who have on their | “Had wie heki control of his 4 souls the murder of #0 many in- with the advantage of the| Army Captain Must Pay Despite] vorcnt persons of them laberthe Srle for ore trans- Pan sonata nto Pittsburgh, could any Mrins ation She Signed, eagles bythe war are tet a ore le have competed with hit eparation with $0 alimony month-] Wort : yg “Not unless the railroads lowered their |, *e?' ‘ sympathy ause they: were acting in arded as a ‘war’ on behalf “The plea {s monstrous in Its folly sely the kind of plea sometimes advanced on be- halt of crooked man of great wealth caught bribing a legislature—that he business. ng with any of) of offenses incidental to the} sudden and sweeping changes brought | Jubout by modern industrial conditions into which capitalists or labor men are drawn without reat conscious mora! turpitude on thelr part. We are dealing with criinés as old with have any ral, LABOR MURDERS LIKC THOSE “The murders committed by men like nominally in labor, difte: ability from great though | mmunity, the | menace to the cause of honest organ- and no duty re Imperatively laid on the leaders | So = of labor than the duty of affirmatively followers “The labor leaders, who by thelr loud) article | moral s iN This) have} ‘The| any “1 believe with all my heart¥in the T believe with Jall my heart In organized labor, for la- |hor must be organized in order to pro- ; and, there- with all my strength I urge my the American men and mselves con- | very heavier | champjonship of previo have su | the cause the of Mover dediin identi of labor In the eyes of the have rendered an evil service at cause, Mr. Debs and the ex- | tremists of his type among the so-called Political Socialists—I say so-called | ase Debs and his followers of the Iemma Goldman kind are not Socialists at all in any true sense of the word, but mere inciters to murder and preaca- of appiled anarehy—and the labor leaders afMlated with them have al- | Ways boasted ot the part they played and in the trial of Moyer and Haywood; and in this case they repeated their familiar tactles, and held mass-meet- \ ings, and seattered broadcast papers and addresses in whieh they furiously denounced the effort to bring wrong- every wh evil class Instinct against upheld the cause of law or sought | to put @ stop to assassination and mur derous violence, “It {s worth noting that since Me mara confessed his guilt Mr. Moyer, the head of what purports to be a iabor | organization, ts reported in the press as commenting upon ix, not denouncing MoNamara for having committed the murder, but by denouncing him for hav- ng confessed it! |significantt Theodore Roosovelt has an editorial) |MURDER APOLOGISTS ENEMIES OF THE PEOPLE. “Murder is murder, and the sentimentalists or » try dent of foolish to apologize for it ‘an incl- labor warfare’ are not only but are enem! pove all, meriean wage workera, ot justic | sternly demand other clreumstances, American workingman; tect and secure {ts righ: jow citizer women Who earn their livelihood @ wage-workers, to see that thelr leade: stand for honesty and obed! are the only brands | this house. They i} HAVA These are absolutely SSP ReenRLOR, to-day, cr.tics, the hi Hovo de Romeo y Julieta Belinda Rey Del Mundo H. Upmann An early selection PARK & Fifth Ave. & 26th Street a 6th Ave. Cor. 18th St. ui Wf ‘he Christmas yi hat Is appreciate ore than any thin; ise is a beautfiul, veeping Ostrich ?iume. Ours ! the largest sto’! XN ° select fror GRAND RAPIDS, (FISHER ji URNITURE, CARPETS, RUGS AND BEDDING at the ONE CAS MAKE YOUR GaN :3 £125" Stes MADISON-AVE fog MeNamaras—as | doers to justice, and sought to arouse!‘ all Such denunciation is other wrongdoers s of the In | of Albany, whose purpose has and who now that murder shall be | n committed In the nom- | deputies, fo inal interest of labor precisely as under | clerl HAVANA CIGARS Of Finest Quality are |. the INDEPENDENT FACTORIES oF VANA, and a large proportion of choice | selections and sizes are sent only to us. | ighest standards, ‘A. Fernandez Garcia *New York's Foremost Millinery House.”’ oy LIBERAL CREDIT direetiy, with any movement whton in| any shape or way benefits by the com: | mission of crimes of lawless and mur- | derous violence." p cvnl at SS Bitte CANDIDATES BOBBING UP FOR HEAD OF INSURANCE. | Place Will Be Filled by Governor | Dix and Tammany Will Go After It, There promises to be a hot fight over the office of State Superintendent of In- surance, a plum that 4s to fall Into the hands of the Democratic party on Keb. | 1, 191%, when the term of William H Hotchkiss, the present. Superintendent, ntee of Gov. Hughes, expires, st active candidate for the place is Assemblyman James J. Hoey of the | Thirteenth District, who lives at No. 42s | West Fifty-se eventh street, Mr. y has the backing of Tam- | many Hall. He has served four terme | in the Assembly and w as Chairman of the Committee of Insurance in the last session, Gov. Div, it t# sald, Is favor- | ably inclined toward the N | Assembiyman, who live wire in| legislative work However, Bird, former City Comptroller, would fill the office of Su of Insur: e very nicely. F 3 backing in Kings and up-State, and is sald to be preparing for a vigorous Purpose of putting his before Gov, is a of Brooklyn, Patrick E. Met the Democrat! has a candidate in training. His man ts sald by 1 to be an Albany lawyer ni ‘The term of office of the State 8 intendent of Insurance Im three ye 6 @ year and carries » Including thr eof and stenographers, The Tam- many outfit figure that Mr. M may be tempted to retire his man if he n be shown something In the way of inor Job: considerable PLMIRA, N. Y., Dec. 15.—The mem- ers of the societies of Kappa Sigma and Phi Mu of Elmira College have of thelr own uccord on the ret soctet are det best interests of the the pr ighhe and sold by nufactured by unequalled in quality, | in the judgment of | Monterre Punch Eden Castaneda will be least hurried. TILFORD And seven Branch Stores Ever Held in Willow Plumes rINGES LONG” "QR OG 16 INCHES WID!: 98 Sale Pri ‘0 WILLOW PLUMES. ‘CHES LONG 5 ‘2 INCHES WIDE e IN 5 WILLOW PLUMES. _ Sale Price} | INCHES LONG & INCHES WID, "2 0 O L409 $5.09 Paradise Sprays. Sale Price} | [frees 2.48 | 83.50 French I’ (umes. iy largo ane {FURNITURE SATISFACTORY LOW PRICE OWN TERMS FREE TRIAL WESER PIANO OR PLAYER-PIANO Seat free to your home with free music and teacher to in- struct you how to play it. After you have given it @ fair trial and you decide to keep It, we make you epevial LOW PRICES and bi? Pa; ein, tn- resto If ioe deride not to keep ft, notify us and we will call and take it away, You ow nothing ind” have hat. the advantage of being taught how to play an the instrument home. Vo make this startling offer only ito convince you of the Sererions ity of our Pianos and d have enjoyed in your own Player Pianos $1508 Up New Weser Uprights” From $200 Up Slightly ‘yoo Bie Pianos from Our Pianos a Tr" nd Pia: teed, sare fully guafan- Open Evenings by Appointment. WESER BROS. (Plano Manufacturers) FACTORY SALESROOMS: 131 W. 23d St., near 6th Av. Factory, 520-530 W. 43d St. ONARCH FURNITURE CO WE TRUST YOU FURNITURE RUGS, CARPETS, BEDDING HOLIDAY SPECIALS Cash or Credit GPEN EVENINGS 161 EAST 125 ST BET 3" &LEXAVES WISSNER Player Pianos Tone Quality Unequaled Superior to All Others Send for Catalogue and Prices WISSNER WAREROOMS: Sth Ave., cor. 16th St., N.Y. 56-57 Flatbush Ave., Brooklyn. WHEN WOMEN VOTE Guided by experience to the newspaper women read, employers had r= 3,914 ~w “Help Wanted---Female” Advertisements Printed in The World Last Week— 1,981 More Than in ALL THE 6 OTHER New York Morning and Sunday News- papers COMBINED, ‘That Women Have Voted For, or Chosen, The New York World asa Guide to Employ- ment Is Clearly Shown by These Convincing Figures. Decide for Yourself If Women Read World Advts. Sharwe fo) Ate be World way be left at ict "Mewenger Uttice ta" the IF YOU WANT YOUR BUSINESS TO BECOME THE TALK OF THE TOWN, TELL ABOUT IT THROUGH A WORLD “WANT” AD.

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