The evening world. Newspaper, December 19, 1912, Page 3

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THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1919. JUSTICE FORBIDS STORE COMPANY'S ‘CUCKOO AD PLAN Grants to The World Tempo- rary Injunction Against Levy Brothers, LONG LEGAL FIGHT WON Insertion of Sheets in News- paper “Plainly to Deceive,” Says Court. Justice Stapleton, in the Brooklyn Supreme Court, granted to The World to-day @ «emporary injunction against the further operations of one of the Most persistent of those engaged tn the Activity of inserting advertising pages "cuckoo sheeta"—in the leaves of the Sunday World. This action of tho Court, directed against the Levi Broth- ers & Co, incorporated department store, No, 1013 Broadway, Brooklyn, is @ vietory for The World which follows @ legal fight that has been carried through the courts since last March. Justice Stapleton's eranting of the tem- Dorary injunction, pending the settle Ment of the sult for a permanent tn- Junetion, 48 peculiarly significant in that ft follows closely upon the decision handed down yesterday by Judge Fos- ter, in Manhattan, sustaining the con- vietion in @ Magistrate's cour: of a newsdealer for disorderly conduct in Persisting in the insertion of unpaid advertising matter between the sheets of the Sunday World distributed from ‘his stand. In ite determination to put a etop to thts intruaion, the Press Publishing Company, pultishers of The Work’, The Bvening Word and the Sunday Wort, made apptication for an injunction against The Berlin, a department store originally owned by Albert and Nathan Levi, tn the Brooklyn Supreme Court last March. ‘The Berlin then mado it a pra. ot enguging with certain newadealers in Brooklyn to insert between the pages of the Sunday World full sized pages of advertising matter for The Berlin which Jn typographical make-up and size were exact dupticates of the World's alvertis- ing pages and which, according to the World's contention, were designed to de- celve the casual reader into the belief ‘ Is Happiness in Ma Napoleon Believed that the Husband had the Right to the Supreme Declaration, “I Am the Family!” and He As- serted, ‘‘Marriage Is Not an Institution of Na- ture.” “Let Each Man Have the Right to Marry as Many Women as Are Willing to Share His Lot. Surely Four or Five Women Ought to Be Able to Support One Man,” Writes J. S. BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. Second Article of a Series rriage an Illusion Unrealizable, or an Attainable Dream? ‘The question of the happiness or unhappiness of marriage has occu- Nixo.a GREELEY*SMITH MARRIAGE MUST UNDERGO GRADUAL DEVELOPMENT. “Marriage is not an institutior that these payera were @ regularly con-| ature. The family in the Fast is et stituted portion of the Sunday tasue. tirely difterent fi) the forilly uA the ng 1 Vest. Man is the servant of nature, CUCK GOT: GAEGTS REAPPEAR! .14 the institutions of woslety are AFTER SUIT IS WITHDRAWN. &raf's, not spontaneous growths of na- Upon the application for the injunc-| ture. Laws are made to sult manners, tion the leeal :epresontative of the Levi] and mann vary. Marriage must, brothers visited the offlce of the Press Publishing Company Save assur- ances that his cilents' practice would be igcontinu But shortly thereafter, when the sult against the Levi brother. had bee: wi hdrawn, the “cuckoo” sccets again mode thelr appearance in the Sunday World. This time they were printed In creen ink on white paper. ater changed to back Ink on green paper and the terted sheets e the legend "The rin Messenger; this publication ts @ part of any news- paper.” Again application was made for an infunotion, but Justice Kelby dismissed the writ because the Levi brothers had changed the ownership of stocks in and had incorporated ax and Comp: There was again made before Justice Stapleton in the most recent name of the department store. It was that application that Justice Stapleton &ranted to-day in a@ lengthy opinion, which reviews the whole merits of the case in minute detall. Teking up the contention of the Levi Brothers’ lawyer that The World, once having sold its copies to a newsdealer, ha@ no further power over the papers thug disposed of and could not right- fully complain of any act the news- dealer might do in connection with them, Justice’ Stapleton in his opinion their store "The eale (of the paper) ts for cir- culation, and that the publication be distributed {n form and substance as issued, without improper or unfair addition, subtraction or defacement, te implied from the clreumsta of the transaction. The sale of the cunumodity hy the plainuif does not involve the impairment or de:truction of its right to protect and control ite advertising business. “PLAINLY A DESIGN TO DECEIVE THE CASUAL READER.” Continuing, Justice Stapleton said: “The plaintife (the Press Publishing charact essence which is its advertising capacity. It has the right to sex print through te ordinary ohannels of t fair deaiing, unobstructed by the tm- position of any device having an un- just purp it matters not how in- genious tealen or how planstble| the disetiimer of an intent unlawfully ty interfere Pho aby se of the def j ant (the Levi ta ‘ to 8 advert f inatver, b tack matter on to the plaintiff's publication, to impress | ! sone per the bellef that it wa: |» part of the favorable nfatt anner by the an ingenious device whieh, unless 1 bo as suggested, Is otherwise wadutent Prathe echemo (of {he Levi brothers) 1s lalaly a debign to decetve the ordinary Into believing Jsement of the in @ newspaper of as an advertising| p essential that the) ¢ nd complete if it| “6 vill probably ordinary to It ng Ainavily © ry as >--- For Young or Old, Cough or Cold, Red Cross te Cough Drops, Sc, per box. —Adrt, ) A AACR NC RATA published riage,” preter of woman, called attention to the fact that the happiest marriages existed in America, where women were e great —Balrac married very late in life— contains more wisdom on the subject of matrimony than uttered before, able therefore, undergo the gradual develop- ment toward perfection, to which all human affairs submit.” Napoleon's notion of demestio happiness was of @ household wherein strife was rendered im- possible by the absolute Csarship of the husband. And so long as women accepted it, this was an ex- cellent formule, in ite “grea- ual development toward perfeo- tion” prophesied by this greatest morals and most pitiful of husbands, marriage has reached are for the most part, equal tefore the law and before each other, Away back in 1829, when Balzac his “Physiology of Mar- this great student and inter- free. Probably this by a bachelor nm then, most book, written had ever been It contains one sentence which every married woman should learn by heart —this one: “Marriage must incessantly con- tend with a monster which devours everything—Pamiliarity.” And for men—especially those who live in New York or other dig cities and have been smirched by the cheap cynicism which ts its breath—there is this admission from one of the world’s grentest artists and greatest lovers: “It 1s as absurd to deny that it is possible for » man always to love the same woman ae it would be to afirm that some famous musician ed several violins to exeoute « of musto, that two-thirds of the dl. ple We know vorces in the United States are granted to women, and that in the greater number of these disruptions constancy of the husband is the real or the In- he hidden cause, THE LITTLE JOKER IN THE MARRIAGE CEREMONY. Yet there are numberg of men who it when they speak freely among hemselves that, 60 far as the majority of thelr sex 1s concerned, the vow of eternal constancy te merely the little; joker In the marriage ceremony. These hings and many others—the contempt pred by the slip-shod, careless larity of wives, the inconstai bands—contribute to the dif removing the question mark from the end of that solemnest phrase in the ‘anguage, “For better or worse? Is happiness in marriage an unreal! usion or an attainable drean f the latter, how may one gain {i have received several letters from Evening World readers dealing in a general do not shed the light of personal way with marriage, but they exe rience on the Kreat problem. A strange Oriental view of the modern situation ® the following: PROPOSITION TO PUBLICLY PRACTISE POLYGAMY. Dear Madam—Here ts a solution that will get rid of that puzzling problem, the superfluous woman, Let each man have the right to marry as Us! Tyee rnin gee Pied the minds of men and women ever since the family was instituted. The greatest intellects have been baffled by difficulties which here and there have been dissolved by the love and faith and courage of a sim- ple hdusehold. ~ Napoleon, who was twice unhappily married, belleved that, just as Louis IV. exclaimed, “I am the state!" the husband had the right to the su- preme declaration of autocracy: “I am the family!” This was of course but the continuance of the old Ro- man notion of domestic despotism wherein the husband and father was literally the lord of life and death in his household. During a discussion of that Code Napoleon, which still enchains the women of France and in which the present laws of the State of Loutsiana had their origin, the greatest military genius of the world, who was betrayed by both his Wives, made this declaration: many women as are willing to share his lot. Surely four or five women ought to be able to support one man. Polygamy is the most ancient institu- tion in the world, and even now It te more prevalent than monogamy, which is observed, merely nominally, in & small corner of the world, Even the ladies, in monogamous countries, especially here, are not at all averse @ progressive form, tth of a man is bet- ter than no man at all. ROSENTHAL GUNMEN FILE NOTICES OF APPEAL AND EXECUTION IS POSTPONED. Their Conviction Must Now Be Reviewed by the Appellate Division, “Gyp the Blood, “Dago Frank,” “Whitey” Lewis and “Lefty” Loule, the four gunmen ventenced to death by Jus- tice, Goff for the murder of Herman Ro- wenthal, will not die in the trie chair at Sing Sing tn the week beginning Jan. 6, ag Justice Goff ordered, Charles F. G. Wahle, their attorney, filed to-day with District Attorney Whit- man notices of appeal from the dects) of the court in Extraoniinary Term wherein the four were found gullty, and this fillng of notice acts automatically as a stay of execution, Wahle filed five notices in all—one for each gunman and one covering their cases collectively. This means now that the four men in the shadow of the death chair will get a new lease of life pend ing a review of their convictions by the Appellate Division, and, if the vice tions are sustained by this court, pos- sibly by the Court of Appeals. If the convictions are st either or both of these courts Justice Goff will then have to fix a new 4. for the gunmen's execution, eS, SUED FOR $30 BATHING SUIT. Claim of Seamstress Maken Tot 8000 Ag Actor's Wife. you wouldn't think that @ little | ke a bathing suit would be ex- pensive, but according to a sult filed in the Supreme Court to-day the one worn by Mrs, Helen Hilton Forde, wife of Stanley Forde, an actor, and grand- daughter of the late Supreme Court | Justice Hilton, cost #0. Kathryn M Kaye, a seamstress, 1 the platntift in the action nd she sues to recover a total of #0, Included in her xt 19 9 $9 kimono, a | | $20 black gown and coat, a $75 etreet | }eoat, a $100 evening gown and an irish | lace collar valued at $18.50, Mra, Forde was recently divorced by her first husband, Allan Lawrence | Story, Then she married Fords, the | reapondent. Mrs, Forde is wealthy sD | HER MOTHER GETS $1,000. Employer Muat { Pay of Services After a trial lasting threo days, a Supreme Court jury gave Mrs, Mary. Wessel a verdict of $1,000 yesterday for the loss of the services of her |twWenty-cive-year-old daughter May, | | Who hed, the mother claimed, been | wronged by her employer, Albert J behwarsler, a wealthy builder of No | 1440 Brook avenue, the Bronx, Miss Wessel hax a suit pending lagatast Sen for breach of promise of in which she | asks $10 Th u | be tried 1 the new year. preventing uring the | Newourger in the admission o hearing of ¢ Ss Copyright, 1912, by the Press Publishing Co. (The New fork Wort). fA MARRIAGE MUST CONTEND WITH THE MONSTER WHICH DEVOURS EVERYTHING ERAT STS ANG DOI SASSER a inl cettab bf dit DREW LOTSTOSAY WHO SHOULD WED PRETTER ITER Brothers Decided That Ques- tion Before They Saw A straw certainty 414 show which way the matrimontal wind blew in Saskaten- Future Wives. FOG HOLDS LINERS. DOWN THE BAY AND + ONLY THO GET Laconia Passes Quarantine, but Is Unable to Get Up to Her Pier. When the foe Nfted a Ing more than a tle this morn- score of steamships ewan for Gaston and Georges Put-| lay in the bay. Most of them had been mans, and the wind which tilted the| held up all yesterday by the heavy pall straw in the wild territory of north-| that made the city miserable and traf- western Canada carried ay across! si. by water impossible, th Brussels. Gaston and} Among the steamships which all day ne to these shores to-day|iay blowing thelr fox horns was the with their brides, Georgette and Lea,!Cunarder Laconia, with 1,796 passengers on the Red Star liner Vaderts ©") from the Mediterranean, which reached route to that dear Saskatchewan, where| the Lightsaip at 6.28 A. M., got through he straws grow. Here's the romance of the Brathere Putmans and now Messieurs and Mesdames Putmans, a Sparkling with the crude win prairies up where if yo fruit r Da quired @ cattle and became raisers of beef on the hoot the Siste uu please. Take it nul flows out t ian youths ors nn ‘Terwagne, the mist and was passed by the Health OMfcer, Hardly had she left quarantine than the fog shut down and she was anchored off Tompkinsville, Other Inbound vessels were the Austro- it comes 8 of ti American liner Eugenia, the Clyde Iner the Peace] Apache, and the freighters Nassovia and Star of New Z and, They m - ans, w strap- fled agd to re no further, ch the harbor, but could get the desire to get away from Ue! Outgoing ships fared no better, Among isin of old Europe and out to|those caught were the Finlan !, of the ronuer, went to the town of Re-. Ff Star line, the Oruba, of the Royal 4 in that British provin with e Mail line, the Almirante, of the Unit name three years ago, ace Fruit line, and the of the South. rt up to thelr plers, the € prospered in the quick way of th Lioyd Mner Berlin and Sorthweat, but ey were lonely Practically The stator of Gaston and Georges! ai trafic on the river was held up. The back in the old Helglan baud in- able to cross only at tuition 8! te tw . brotuers of t ir maids, i pe saaleonccsleahchanae who Were s and who « | tween them all the virtues ema 01d: Arreettient: dispensation. While i Donato Morosco of No, 48 Skillman K westward the i was held to-day in $200 ball by broth boys saddle Hghtful trappings of the vaquero. | Georgette | Brother Gaston ew aw Wh [before leav’ tne a Hiro! wed the re on ponies, » horn and all of and Sister and Br th strate Lodd in Adams Street Court, Brooklyn, charged with threat ening to kill Mrs, Philomena § larlat at the |of No, 482 Park avenue, vse dear de ) friends in Calabria mi Siste ra ago, she sald, but wrote to rt. She was married and camo to er Georges country. ot |and dared them to come back to Brus. met her on the street yes- nd Ket acquainted | afternoon, made impasstoned ich they straightway did, But frst,)love to her and ed her to elope the sod we near Re-|with him. Her called De they built a ist ike it, tective Sheely. When the detective lent were t success, Then|showed tno Magistrate a keen razor eth ire for Belgium | blade found in Morosco's ket the wrtant Issie—which of the | prisoner wa held without bail for should be the wife of having @ ed weapon Putmans? ‘Thoughtful sster had | 1 two photographs, each show- | 7 vision of radiant beauty ther ton, with a thomghtful! went out from the door of that ntly finished “xoddv" and plucked straws, of different lengths, Hy Our celebrated 1 the tips even in his closed fist is made from Georges drew—the shorter one | Coffees careful ; iy sa most : the ¢ djusted a tube at A quoth Gaston. nd Other Coffees: “Combination,” 20c; " Teas: Regular €0c reiail grades 40c, BEAUTIFUL ART CALENDAR Note — Selling at wholesale prices, we cannot accept orders for less than 5 Ibs. of coffee. Tea by the pound or more 82 Orders Delivered 25 Miles, Lstablished 1840 203 to 230 WASHINGTON ST. Bet, Pa ‘Two Blocks from W itn ha egg aw rnd GILLIES CHRISTMAS COFFEE SPECIAL money-sa price. Regular Retail Price, 35¢. Cash,” 25¢; “Plantation,” 27 GILLIES COFFEE Co. GEN. JONES HOARSE, BUT SHECAN STILL CRY ONTOALBANY!’ PARK & Christmas Medium size..65 Large jars 1.10 | Suffragettes Trudges On |] Figs & Dates, Stuffed, Sealine .80 Through Mud. | Medium size..75 Large jort.. 1.15) |] Layer Figs... «tail boxes 618) | Pulled Figs... boxes 165 French Prunes in 2 Ib, jars Violett's Superior. 1.60 Violett's Extra Violett's Excelsior 1.60 Wiesbaden Prunes. . 11h. bores 45 Vy lb. bores 630 inst about 5) Ibs. 1.90 out 5; Ibs, 2.25 ONLY FOUR ARE Sore Feet Do Not Deter Quar- tet, Though Man Deserts. LEFT. Baggage Finest Malaga Rai Quarter boxes Quarter cartons,. Four militant, hedraggled and limping | Large sizes, 3.00 & 5. PARK & 26th St. and Sth Ave, 41st St. and B’ 59th St. and Sth Ave. 72nd St. and Col. Ave. 9th St., ne. Garrison, the procession waded through mud knee deep. They were greeted by Harold Troubet, a three-yoar-ol! boy, whose mother had sent, hin in from the farm to @alute the marchers le was wrapped in a big American flag. He went home loaded with suffragetic Uterature for his mother and nineteen cents richer, A rest was made on the other side of Anaville at a little red schoolhouse. The teacher, Misy Florence Boggs, mar- shalled @ score of children on the steps and Invited the pilgrims in, iss Stubb ond Gen, Jones made speeches. Th asked Mies Boggs to make a speech, nd the pretty teacher admitted that though she was not bigoted about {t she w an anti-suffragette. The meeting wis hurriedly adjourned after pilgrims 4 children together sang ‘The Star Spangled Banner.” Mrs, Florence M, « appeared at Garrisons and took the Fatthful Four to lunch, They start- ed on for Cold Spring late én the after- noon ents cae ete WHITE SLAVER TO PRISON. Sentenced for Making Girl Support Him and Hie § purchaser of one of her, Guiseppe Spano, a barber, of No. 430 West Thirty-ninth street, who was con- victed of a form of white slavery, was sentenced to Sing Sing prison for not less than six years nor more than nine- iwen years, to-day, by Judge Swann in General Sessions, livid adduced on the Spano showed he had compel woma Dower f power.{n this pr trial of da youn) to Ko upon the streets to sur him and his father, 4 irl testi- uno threa er, If she bring money to him. will be doe- or} d nt in The aatisty ported. “Just Say” HORLICK’S | The Food-drink for All Ages, | More healthful than Tea or Coffea, Agrees with the weakest digestion, | | Delicious, invigorating and nutritious, Rich milk, malted grain, powdes form, A quick lunch prepared iat minete, Take ne substitute, Ask for HORLICK’S,, C=” Others are imitations. payments, wy, at your conven the of ly en coffee aall ond high grade blesded, It S cup ata ‘Clover Blend,” 32c, Other grades low as 25c; up to 60e FREE TO EVERY CUSTOMER Orders by mail and telephone ee ene promptiy delivered C. 0. D. BS Orders Delivered 100 Milow, CRANDALL’S BST ANE ISHED IMSL ‘Oldest Mak Good reliable wor at lower prices tha charged aidep'tstore | Telephone N71 Cortlandt NEW YORK, Whe 593 3d Av. | rk Place and Barclay & ‘ashington M WORLD WANTS WORK WONDERS. ee eto le TS Are Offering at These Prices Stuffed Dates, Leonore’s, | ee tal Nut filled.............boe «28 i ‘ 4 |] Caravan Dates... .Packa 09 |Light Brigade—Very Light—of | Stuffed Figs... Small jars. .45} 1.35) quffregetion watched “out trom ¢ | Ib. carton .48 2b. carton .90 Raleigh Hotel at Peekskill to-day | Ib. Raisins. detached clusters. «30 turned their determined eyes tow Seeded Malaga Raisins . .pkges .23 Atbany. 12 Gen. Rosalte Jones came out with 16 husky voice and a flannel muffler about 12 her throat. ‘The general wore rubber : ‘ ‘ boots, which looked as though they || Candied Citron Peel......lb. 124 wouNl feel heavier by nichtfall. A] Candied Lemon Peel, . 22 fiend In} n form had recommended >, te Mint Ida Kraft that Indian moceasing || Candied Orange Peel... vib. 22 would probably relieve the sore’ ot |] (Our candied Fruits are the her unaccustomed feet. Her vain effort highest grade imported.) to muporem twinkes of pain. witen abel Nes Grenoble Wal f stepped out and the soft soles landed tuts, Grenoble Walnuts. ..!b. .20 on cruel pebbles, gave rise to the gen- | Mixed Nuts....... sesoee ly 20 eral prediction that the tmasage train] Calif, Paper Shell Almo: would be halted on the outside of town It Che ms ‘ ray 22 and different footwear substituted. altan Chestnuts, large....lb. «10 It 1s a plain baggage wagon now. || Imp'd Paper Shell Almonds,lb, .38 The havehiy automobile, which bas |1 Brazil Nuts Ib, .15 Filberts Ib. .21 peen earrstng the clothing and sup bH py plies, had to go back to New York CCANG... sees eee +35 City to-day because of an engagement || Lychee Nuts... .... 50 of Its gallant driver, Alphonse Maje Salted Almond: ° 55 Mra. Jessie M. Stubbe and Mra, Lae : Dock kept right up with Gen (We sell bia! Nuts of inferior , uttering little gasps of concern size or poor grade.) when Gen, Jones coughed and snuttled. || Camembert Cheese, Ay thouss nd ada bd shes lL ae ttl Cream....round boxes .22 ered ‘ont 0} tel to cheer bikie on tele way and” Jeer” goon || Roguefort Cheese... feats haturedly at the fourteen newspaper || (Stilton, Cheddar and other corerspondents, none of whom haw de-|| Cheese in large variety.) serted, { Richardson & Robbins— ae ete Four head sonore out Plum Pudding: of Peeks Y a guard of local suf ‘ragetton, Mra. Anna MeKellar, atea L,|] | !b- cans. .23° 2Ib.cans.. .43 H. Fineh and Mrs. Joseph Finc } Ib. cans... .60 4b. cans.. 475 A telegram was sent by the marchers nee & Blackwell's English: to Miss Jane Addama, in Chicago, to be ns... ans. @ conference of the National] | 3 i}, va Nae 4Ibc » 4070 Suffrage Association to-night . cans...2.00 4 lb. cans. 1.35 If all goee weil the pilgrimage will Anne Hathaway's. .in bow!s tay at Garrisons to-night. it Entering Ansville, a little hamlet near Small......1.25 Medium... 2 00 This Comb FREE Till Christmas This handsome black comb of im absolutely unbreakable, sells regularly at so cents, We will give one FREE until C} Dr. Scott’s Electric Hair B nh stimulates the scalp LARGEST ASSORTMENTS Diamonds, Watches Open charge accoun! and pay im weekly or menthly ALL GOODS GUARANTEED AMERICAN WATC ee TILFORD Delicacies {Mince Meats, of the best ingredients H and fi * | Mi jars 1.00 Miss Martin’s.........jars 1.10 Gordon & Dilworth’s jars .80' | Crystallized Fruits, the finest: Assorted.......1 lb, cartons .70: 2 Ib. cartons 1.35 | I lb. cartons .65 | lb. cartons .90 ‘Bar-le-due Je Currants or Sti | Jams, ape and put up in England: t | Assorted Fruits, qlss jars. .22 7 Flickinger’s Apricots, Peaches and Sliced Peachess | Allin No. 3 large cans, Guava Jelly... Brandy Peaches: ; Miss North's. .... quart jars 1.70 ; Miss Martin's... ...quart jars 1.75 Gordon & Dilworth, qt. jars... 1.50 Melba Peaches, Miss North's Large Jars.. .80 Peeled Spanish Grapes, tin... 425 Pate de Foie Gras No. 10 Terrines. Larger Ti Lemarchand Sardines,Largest boneless packed. Half tine, «38 Anchovies in Oil.........bots. .70 Tunny Fish, Ispa.... Small tine a Caviare for Toast . & H. Bi Olives Farcies in Oil...bots. .32 'Queen Olives, P. & T.: | 16 oz. bots -38 | The daint: -20 Hydrox Crackers, achocolate delicacy... Tins. .24 Sunshine Fruit Cake....Box. 1.00 Nut Bons, a confection. Small box..25 Largebox., .50 i nese Rice Wafers...Box. .25 Eviches, Haberlein's, imported from Germany, a variety on display. |Many Fancy Christmas Bis- cuits from Huntley & Palmer's, in decorated tins Holiday Candie: Wines & Liqueurs Holiday Packings. 87th St. and B’ way. 101st St. and B’way, } 112th St. and B’ way. 126th St. and Lenox Ave. r 6th Ave, ported rubber, guaranteed hristmas only —to every rushes 4 brings « large: the hair. “ forerunners of inees. he and neuralgia, °al@ ir oF injure the “scalp—eniy je or send 81.00 brush and ‘eo: the roots of on Bru: ‘oreete, er Specialties, FREE. Pall Mall Electric Co., 128 W. 4th 8e., jew York. Established over 34 GOLD JEWELRY No employer's reference necessary, ance, Call Sealine write, Oven ¢ 5807 Cortlant., Will ‘Evenide 4." FLOOR AKE ELEVATOR f if inf

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