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. TLS OF WEDDING OF RCH MAN OF 73 OHSS Walter’s Nurse Tes- His Bride Guided Hand as He Signed. SWERED NO QUERIES. ‘Aged Bridegroom, After Cere- mony, Declared He Had No Wife, Js Testimony. According to testimony given before Justice Bischoff tn the Supreme Court to-day, the Rev, i. A. Tappert, pastor of the Washington Hetgits Lutheran Church, performed a marriage ceremony Tan, % last, uniting Herman N. Waiter, seventy-three years oli, a millionaire manufacturer of carpets and tapestri to his housekeeper, (Miss Anna Kuth Mr. Walter at the time, it is charged, was so afflictel with aphasia and par- alysis as to be unable to make the cus: tomary responses, and his bride had to mulde his hand when he aMxed his name to the marriage certificate. ‘The story of the wedding was re- counted by William Shaller, a trained furse, who attended Mr. Walter from October, 1912, to Feb. in the suit Srought by Moritz Walter to have Her- man Walter, his elder brother, declared incompetent to manage his vast proj erty, Herman Walter is now confined in @ sanitarium at Yonkers, “Tell us what happened on Jan, 25," counsel for Moritz Walter directed the nurse, “It was between 6 and 7 o'clock the evening,” Shaller said, “when Miss Kuthe opened the door of Mr. Walter's edroom and brought !n @ young man, who, I learned later, was a clerk from the City Clerk's marriage icense vureau., He had a lot of papers with him, SHE GUIDED HIS HAND WHEN HE SIGNED. “He and Miss Kuthe sat beside Mr. Walter on the bed, the tlerk pulled out the blank license and proceeded to ask Walter the questions written on it, Mr. Walter couldn't answer any of them—he couldn't answer any ques- tion correctly, in fact—so Miss Kuthe made the answers for him, When the clerk asked Mr. Walter his mother's name Miss Kuthe said; “Oh, he doesn't know what his mother's namo js,’ and they passed on to something els “After all the questions had been filled in the clerk told Mr. Walter to sign his name on a certain line. The old man first tried to hold the pen with iis right hand, He made some scrawls, but the pen dropped from his hand and the clerk erased the scraw ‘Then Mr, Walter tried to write his name with his left hand, but he couldn't do that either, 80 Miss Kuthe put the pen back inte hia right hand, and then guided it, widle gether they made something th@talooked dike his signature, When hes#wore to the affidavit he nodded and Mjss Kuthe held up his right hand for hi “What happened later in the even Ing?"Mtho attorney asked. ‘About § o'clock,” Shaller continued, clergyman, Dr, KE. A, Tappert, called, and Miss Kutho brought him in. Miss Kuthe took Mr, Walter's tight hand @nd Dr. ‘Tappert read the service, Mr. Walter made none of the responses, He couldn't. When the ser was over Mrs, Walter guided her husband's hand while he wrote his name on the certificate,” TELLS OF HIS QUEER ANTICS WITH PREACHER. “Did Dr, Tappert call again “Yes, he came on Feb. 5, Mr. Walter could walk a little by that time, Dr. ‘Tappept asked Mr, Walter if he remem- bered who he was. The old man didn't I'm the pastor who married the preacher explained. Mr, ‘Walter made no answer, but he shoook Dr, Tappert's hand, Then he walked away into the other room, Dr, Tappert following. When he found the clergy- aman had followed him he shook hands again, and walked back to the front room. Here the same performance was epeated, without Mr. Walter speak! @ word, They went through this rig- marole four times. ‘On Feb, 7 Mrs, Walter discharged Asked about the aged man's condi- tion wefore the wedding, Shaller sald e Was completely paralyzed on the right side and unconscious for a time, Later he Improved, but he was unable to make coherent replies to questions put to him BRINGING APPLE NO SIGN OF SANITY, DOCTOR SAYS. Dr. Gustave F, Boehme, connected with Bellevue, St, Bartholomew's, the West Side Dispensary and the Vander- 1 Clinic, who treated Mr, Walter untit Feb, 7, when he, too, recetved his conge at the hands of Mrs. Walter, said that in his opinion Mr, Walter is @ hopeless paralytic and victim of asphasia, “I asked Mr. Walter several times be- fore his marriage if Miss Kuthe were lin wife, and he replied ‘Yes.’ After hia wedding, when I asked him the same avestion, he answered ‘No.’ In reply to questions by Mrs, Wal- ter's attorney Dr. Boehme declared that even though Mr, Walter improved so far that he could bring an apple ther room when told to do so ot nee n that he any mi nee it, Uke a A girl who It of a commun cup in a public place will All her mouth with hair ping at home and carry her car fave in her teeta. in| inielotoln! *SOME GIRLS COME ALONG IN SILKS AND SATINS. WHILE OTHERS For tHe WANT OF DECENT CLOTNES HAVE To Stay AWAY FROM. CHURCH wares “ KATHRYAI® «Even if a Minimum Wage Should Become a Maxi- mum Wage It Would Not Be as Bad as Having | Some Girls Come Along in Silks While Others Have No Decent Clothes to Wear to Church,” Writes “Kathryn.” $100—IN PRIZES FOR LETTERS BY REAL WORKING GIRLS—$100 Cash prizes amounting to $100 will be given for the most help- ful letters from REAL WORKING GIRLS on the subject dealt with in this series, The money will be divided as follows: Two prizes of $25 each. Five other prizes of $10 each, The seven letters which, in Nixola Greeley-Smith’s judgment, are best and most helpful will receive these awards. i} | BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITR. “I've worked and won, but I've had to work so hard to win that I don't wonder so many girls have fallen by the way. This note of pity and understanding of the girl deserter from the army of workers is sounded by a young woman who says that “the woman who makes $8 a week can certainly be good without much praying or preaching, but how about the thou- sands of girls who make less than $8 a week?” The writer of this letter adds that “even if a minimum wage for women should become a maximum wage, as you seem to think, it would not be so bad as having some girls come along in silks and satins while others, for the want of decent clothes, have to stay away from church,” 1 wish this young woman had told me more of the way by which she has worked and won—her struggles, ex- periences; how she has managed to QNKOLA GREELEY SUMNEF tive on wmail wages. If she will do this, if other young women workers will give their experiences, then per- haps some faint-hearted straggler from the ranks may be turned away from the thought of desertion, There are of course highly spir- itual natures to whom the right and ‘wrong of things seem paramount to all other considerations. While I have no wish to quarrel with any one's definition of what 1s right and What is wrong, I feel that more girls! ¢an be reached and helped by sayin, | “This is bad for you; don't do It,” than and satins and {have no decent away from chureh I have no doubt that future generas tlons will look back upon this age and marvel at the immorality and barbar- ism which could flaunt luxurtes {t had but did not earn in the wan faces of others, clothes, because they must remain by laying down a general moral law | those who earned but did not have and telling them if they don’t observe | them, it they are miserable sinners, If wo d t want to be discouraged by the thought of how long we have still to go we must look back to see how far we have come, out of sa’ agery, out of slavery; out of years when all women were merely poor beasts of barter or capture and feared THE QUESTION OF “WHAT CAN A GIRL DO?” It 1s sometimes asked what a girl can do who has lost her job, who is on a pro-| longed strike or who finds that she can-| not live on the small amount of money she Is able to earn, “It was this—or| OF hated each other, to this time when the river” is the way melodramatio| 4M awakened womanhood reaches its sinners are generally made to expras!hand to the woman outcast and says: ppl “This is my sister. What she ts ts my ‘Yet many girls who work in a | Problem as well as hers. If I can't pail, paar make much more save her I can at least try to save money in domestic service, ana |°thers by removing the conditions which produced her." It is this new spirit which speaks in the letter of the girl who writes: “I have worked and won, but I've had to they would find » clamorous de- mand for their Iabor at all times. ‘There would be no slack seasons, ‘Why does not this alternative sug- Gout itself instead of “Thie—or the | river"? Perhaps the strongest reason is the supposed social stigma which attaches to being “a servant.” I can understand this feeling and sympathize with it, but surely the “stigma” at its worst would be less than that which follows the girl deserter, There should not be any etigma at- tached to any honest work. In the minds of really intell!gent persons there is none, But It is better to serve even among the unintelligent and get ahead and save money than it is to be chained for life to a $6 job because that job offers a supposedly greater chance to $18 a week certainly can be good “be a lady." Any woman who really} Without much praying or preaching, deserves to be called a lady realises but how about the thousands of girls der so many girls have fallen by way," Her letter and the views of other women readers follow: VIEWS OF A GIRL WHO HAS WORKED AND WON, Dear Madam: As a working girl T wish to give you my views of the girl who works and wins, 1 was much amused to read the opinion of the girl who sayg {t doesn't matter if a@ girl makes $8 a week or $18, “Tf she wants to be good she can.” The girl that makes between $8 ant the what @ farce, what an accident this| Who make under $ a week? I mean ‘peing a lady” is, I am sure there} Sits without a home, What have cannot be very much satisfaction in| they to look forward tot Where o realizing that if your father or your] they &0 to amuse themselves without husband were to lose his money you} Money and dresset in last year's would not be able to face life as vali-| clothes antly and as successfully as the girl Every young person wants to go to who makes or sells you the clothes for| places of amusement once in a while whieh your father or husband pays, but where is THREE GENERATIONS FROM a is 5 if a ms A ene oney fr SHIRTWAISTS TO SHIRTWAISTS.| fre ire jee toon Here in the United States we have| lunch, her laun been told it is just th senerations from shirtsleeves shirtsleeves—and it's Just three generations from shirt- and then, and if she right kind of fri her tim nds she has to spend by herself, It doesn't look sts to shirtwaists, too, It is un-! as bad on paper as it js to go through of course, a8 one gir! hi ree ob all You seem to think that a work so hard to win that I don't won-| THE GIRL WHO WOR | |marked, that “some women have sills | | | | | | THE EVENING WORLD, THTRSDAY, MAROH 13, 1913, How Does She Live On?! Live? minimum wage would develop into 4 maximum wage. I don't think so, but even if it shotild tt would not be as bad as having some girls come along in silks and satins, while others, for the want of decent clothes, have to stay away from church, The average employer does not pay his girls any more than he HAS to in onder to get the work done. I've worked so hard to win that T don't wonder so many girls have fallen by the way, KATHRYN, LEAVE THE FACTORY FOR DO- MESTIC SERVICE. Dear Madam: It is absolutely cer- tain in my mind that the average, 1, educated, pleasant-mannered son cannot help succeed in any lk of Mfe, providing that person has health and a ttle diplomacy. On top of this if she pitch right in Ang roll up her sleeves, figuratively King, the game is w6n, In other words, nine times out of ten if an employee ts worth more moi he or she gets It, As to the girls in factories and stores who receive so little, 1 am dally surprised that more of them do not enter domestic ser- vice, especially those who cannot live at home and #0 save on board. . ery for help comes from all over, And large wages are offered for un- skilled labor, too, sometimes an hig as $3, and no heavy or difficult work, cither. Let those already in aid those dropping out and joi ing the hungry, weary sisters who ave half paid but who feol they are not servants, ‘Their evenings aro f If these underpaid girls do not soon wake up to the matter, the refined gentlewoman will get in ahead of them and occupy all the best and most paying places, 1 know of a number of families Itv- ing plainly in #mall apartments, with one or more children, who were always without a servant until they suddenly thought of advertising for & gentlewoman at $7 per week (a lady, but not on equal terms with the family, however), I always have a woman Ike that in my hou: hold, and by doing so avoid endle changing, to say nothing of count+ less other disagreeable things. Count up and see what a good wage these women are earning, and if people living modestly will pay so well, certainly there must be a bie fleld for self-supporting women who have no profession, I firmly believe that {t is “not the position that makes the man, but the man who makes the position.” There is always room at the top of the ladder, and no matter where one begins, if one holds her head high enough they can set the fashion, I only wish I could put sense into some of those girls on $8 weekly; but they want thelr evenings free and they want to be ladtes. ML, WORKED FROM AGE OF NINE TO FIFTY-TWO YEARS. Dear Madam: The girl who works and wins I have a great respect for, I am a woman of fifty-six years, I had to go to Work when twelve years old,. I was a good sewer at that age. My mother taught me how to sew when I was nine years old, When I was twelve I had m first start in a workshop. I earned Hoa week. At thirteen years 1 earned $4 to $7 a week; then $8, then $9 a week, then $10, 0%, $14, $15 a ek, Then | would make overtime n the shop, sewing 9 o'clock in the even With the overtime 1 earned $20 and $22 0 week, 1 worked Like a 1 was fifty-two years old. my health broke down, I left the snop at ¥ P.M and it was 945 when I got home. And then I would do the Rousework, My good mother was a saving woman, and eo was 1, We lived ia & nile, respectable house and paid 1 rent a month, T dressed in atik, vatin and velvet, was very stylish tn every way and we ate and drani well. I made my poor mother a very comfortable home, ‘Three years ago 1 bw my good moth 1 am all alone In this: worl with no r tives, and feet y unhapt faved enough money. I can lve & nice, comfortable life and have re= tire from business, Was earned honestly and respect ably. Nowadays people don't want to Work as in former years, Yet 1 Was a much happicr woman In my young years, working hard for a living. A working girl who has a Bood character will n Ko astray ho matter how little she earns in the beginning. If she has any ambition in her she will work herself up. But you have to hustle, and a great many people don't want to do that; they Nke to lead a lazy life 1 s WOMEN MUST BAND TOGETHER TO A UNIT, Dear Madam: You say you would ke to know what women think about the low wages paid to «iris, just because they are poor and thelr parent® are poor, and the girls sim- ply have to work. Here are my views: Nine-tenths of the shopping done in the department stores Js done by women. Now, then, let the women select the stores that pay the beat ‘wages to women as thelr pirticular store to deal with. No matter what inducements the stores offer in. bi gains where the help 1s underpaid, no matter if you can save two or three cents, pass that up and help out the ‘store where the owner is really doing more for 14s help than the other stores do. Women simply must band together to a unit If they ever want to have an equal show. Men have for so many years been used to making doormats of the women that even the worms have turned. Never stop until men and women have the same pay for the same work. Woe have sons as well ay daughters and we all are willing that when equal pay Is demanded the storekeeper shall take his cholee as to whether he will employ men or women. One thing ts gure, If fo employs men he will not be able to tell them to make up their salary in an immoral way. And if the giris will only be sure that the men whom they marry are earning a suMetent wage to keep at least three, the men will seo to it that thelr “boas” pays them living wages. Women need ths vote to obtain bet- ter wages. What right have men to say we aro not ready for it? To qualt- fy, shall we learn to chew and swear and drink from three to thirteen cocktails per day? To Join some se- cret organization where they take all your clothes away from you, blind+ fold you and lead you around with a rope, and finally make you knee! in front of the Holy Bible and take a cutthroat oath that you will never tell how you were initial ? The question ts, if we did do all of this, what would be the next excuse? I only wish that not another girl or woman would get married until ev- ery State in the Tinton has women an well as men voters. N man voter Is there to-day but who has a woman fe his moth and let us all tne struct our daughters to postpone marriage unt!! the State in which they are Supposed to live Klves the vote to her as well as ty him. My fon {nforins me that he will never vote untll he can take eith his mother, His sister ‘or Ais wife to the polls with an equal chance, My husband soon settle the question if it were left to him, He can see no honor in yotes for men unless it can be given to the w en who bear the burdens along with the men PBA KS AND WINS "arses" | Aatatntnlnintontalalatatatatafutatntntatalatatntetaiatatetatataieialatedolaintetaintattotolmintatoteton| Copmright, 1913, by The Prew Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World.) “T’ve Worked So Hard toWin I Don’t Wonder _ So Many Girls Have Fallen by the Way’’ E MAIDA ATHENS, ERE THEY PART, ASKS $$ “FOR BROKEN HEART Gave Her Love to Hotel Man, but as the Altar Neared He Ran! | | WEALTHY DOCTOR, DEFENDANT IN LAW IT, AND HIS WIFE. |AH, ’TIS SAD, SAD TAL 'One Thing Will Now A Still Despairing Show Girl's Wail—8s50,000! sesmnera i | How thle heart cltatet of a young | damosel of the stage may be besieged | first by one suitor and then by another | | until the bastions she knows Qot whi: to the Inner sx battered that 1 warrior has won tum was explained to- day by Mrs. Ruth 1. Trffant—known to the purchasers of orchestra chairs ax Maida Athens. Mrs. Trufant—or Miss Athens Ing Henry G. Williams, proprietor of | the Hotel York, for $000 for breach jof promine. Naturally Mr. Williams | Was curtous to know how he had Wighted Mise Athena's affections to jsuch a pecuniary extent, so he ine Maced her to tell her heart story, through the medium of an order for an examination of pre trial, signed Junticn Davis, Here is Mins Athe! the by oung woman Suprem Co: 8 life story Karly in 1908 T ved in New York from Denver, Ob, y 1 had had « moat distressing mat wiven= ture, and my husband, Mr, Trufant had divorced me for deserting him ‘d Went at once to Mr. Julian Mitehell, }the big musieal comedy prod and! [he was just too sweet! He gave me a| J job, right off, as ‘Curly Locks’ tn Baby 1 Toyland,’ at $5 a week. At the ent] I ame back to New vk up my quarters at t where TE opal $f 1 Kot another paltion rlaht salary in Happened or Jof our York and t Hotel York, Luekily, t the s Nordla se FELL HEAD OVER HEELS IN | LOVE WITH WILLIAMS. | Hone day the clerk at the hotel told | me my rent would ve raised to 8% a week. I just couldn't stand for such a thing, #0 1 protested to Mr, Williams, He was too nice for anything; toll m m to mind, inly TP could ha the rooms for #% a month | 'Mr. Willams made a ibig hit with me right away. He was just the sort of man to fascinate me, though now Tecan see he ts growing older and leas attractive, T fell head over heels in love with him—and I Just told him so: so there'—and he ald he thought a lot of me and promixed to a off Ike that rry me, right “Then we had a ttle trouble, An architect who lives In’ the Waldorf. Astor me and began to send me a lot of flo te He heard me sing and tot me f must Ko to Europ my volce trained, From the purest philan- throple motives he gaye me $2,600 for | the trip and $00 m; ra chapeone. | “Mr, Williams arrived in Italy three weeks after [ did, We had an awful scene, Yes, and he made me send the $60 back to my friend. Then Mr Willlama made me o back to New York and lived at the Y Didn't you have anoth 1 Mr, Willams's attorne: Well, if you insist Ike that, yes, T aid lived somewhere in Twentys third atreet,”" Miss Athens also said she had another caller when she lived at the Great Northern Hotel. MR. WILLIAMS TOOK HER DIA- MONDS OUT OF PAWN. “Didn't Mr. Willlams give you some money in April, 192?" the attorney con- tinued. “Oh, you,"’ replied Mise Athen ly, “It wan $700, Rut you ne to spend part of It, Alber for the plano and furntty Then he promised to buy mo a fur cont, but he Aidn't; #0 T Just pawned my diamonds." rk again. admirer?” bright+ T had $2,000 went “And Mr, Williams got them out?" "Yeu, he certainly did, and it cost him $600, and I'm glad of tt. But our awtul amashup came about Christmas, 1991, wi Mr. Williams told me he wan @ married man and so he couldn't marry me. I was to broken up & couldn't eat for a day or so.” ‘Hadn't you noticed his children about the hotel?’ the attorney in- quired, Yes," answered Mins Athens tear “but I thought he was getting . I'm @ broken hearted gtr, and 1 want my €0,0% to cure my heart aang cia LONDQNER HERE TO RAISE $500,000 “SLAVERY” FUND. Ardcen Foster, a dapper Englishman, wearing white spats and a tall etlk hat and who bears a title ghat for length shatters al others that have entered the Port of New York, arrived to-day on the American Line Philade | phia, Mr. Foster ts International Com- | | missioner of the British Federation for, the Emanctpation of Sweated Women, Girls and White Blave Vict And Mr Foster has a mission, He is after halt} # million dollars, which he has pled himself to raise by January, Wit, | Mr. Foster expects to raise the hailt] million speedily in Amert and bears many letters t And women of wealth, Mr, Foster wit! ateo deliver « | nertes of lectures. | ‘London ts t w is mart,” said t itor, money to fight the trath the London n parts of the wor Wand tf we ean the traffle iu the British metrop one f the Kreatest possiole blows will have wen struck at the evil Mr, Foster will stop at the Hote! Marie Antoinette, *| With .|dividuality which accompany SAY DOCTOR LOST $2,660 IN FLIPPING COINS; HE DENIES IT > Dr. Borden Admits Signing Note, But Says He'll Fight Holder’s Suit. hors of a mtd will t when the inet Dr West 8 trial to recover &.00, gay ers night Su ne sulteot nM. Rich- Matt! Horde enty-ninth street, fa Hord ring through ond Dr, comes to which aire cotton #1 M. @. PD, Borden, and who recetved something more than @ million dollars of his estate, ehan to make the casual acquatntanc J. 0, Walah at Deal Beach, whe has a summer Dr, Borden blames all the prevent trouble on that meeting. er, Hor and va attorn several in them, and According — to Walsh, Hichmor invited Dr, He the party nw to New York in a big automobile, All of the om even Walsh, were comparative strangers to Dr, He cn is an abstems : dem if taking ink, but he al- lowed himrelf to by ed to ta several on this occasion, But he doesn't renember taking many he re- a itl, If anything at all, after the machine into Central Park, Dr, Horden 1# of the impression that a stop was made at McGowan's Pass Tavern, in the park, faint remembrance of taking part tn a little game of fipping coins as he sat and talked with his new friends, Weary- ing of this, however, he decided to go Lome, only to discover he was indebted tu one of his companions for an alleged gum of $2,560, us man, The physician had no such amount about him, but he ts hazy as to the way the ightened out, He rem given a check for the nount and giving his note he says, the check came back from t bank no good, He heard nothing more ull Richmond's aut turned uy Dr, Borden's marriage to Mi Negbauer of New Haver have caused his father from his will, but lie Mildrea was maid to to omit him Was taken care of Mberally by tho other helrs after his father's death —_—_.— ALL THE SAME TO HLM, (From the Chicago Tribune.) ed Mrs. Dork. “do tit think of a man who ep While his wife is talking “L belleve I do, Maria,” drowastly ans awored Mr, Dorking But don't let that stop you; go ahead and get it off your mind.” Whereupon he went to a REG. Ud. PAT OFHICE CELEBRATED HATS the character and in- exclusive shapes and fashions NEW YORK Chicago Philadelphia Agencies in All Principal Cities nd there he has | “FRIGID” BRIDE, SUED, SAYS HUBBY’ | THE REAL ICEMA a Coe |Professor Demands Annul- | ment—Each Blames Other for the Cold Hearthstone. With each party charging absolu after the ceremon } A to the frigidity of demeanor whieh made them yurt Tuatiew marriage ab A wife, Supreme ¢ Fitepate Rrooklyn, to-day found elf sorely purzied during the tria of the suit for annulment brought b Prof. Edward Newton Frances Ite R Cook Reser teacher of art In a lowes that he met a matrim 14a Joke supper against | nia wi | pr | privat | Ma wife through | than t Th | wt I with et ris nint adver nt lamed vide when several in Cloeinnat matching of coins as to take up the correspondence then Miss Cook and he might met won be conaid- [ered n hin fate On “atand the Me reviled Prof. Reser declared that marriage wife repelled over, le declared that she him before thelr neigh: bors and friends { South Oxford atreet, Brooklyn, He brought as witnesses tn behalf Aaron Bancroft, the age barker, a neighbor, who bed of a package of me rites About two years attempting deposit vault Bennett, « also testified Reser had sald after him had was nd ey whil ago to deposit them In a safe | Mes, Cornelius Bancroft of the banker, saying Mrs she kept her room ¢ locked, Mra, Reser took the stand on her own vehalt and swore that it was he hand who h the cold sh | Sho testified that she wanted his affec- tion after marriage as she had wanted It before, but that lid not x | She said that she embraced and kissed Jom, but that he turned away from he he is forty-four years old, but do {not look as old as that, Her husband {9 fifty-on) ; Mrv, ser swore that after thelr frigid honeymoon her husband gave her a set of rules to follow, She was not allowed to the back parlor of thelr South Oxford street house, He reserved it for his study, He insteted on the front parlor being furnished ac- ‘cording to his taste Hle ruled against alleged to owe him on a note. her dic in anything about the cou Richmond has the note to back up his hie lite Jaims, Dr, 1 ita oe sien defendant denied that they he t but he elatnm itis e-* a leet met through a matrimonial adverti wri » belng axed on a RAMU) ment and eaid that she had met h transaction. formally through @ friend and that th one d Jast summer Dr. Borden, A corremponded agiong time wbefe wie is @ xon of the late multi-million-| they decided to marry. They were mar: ried Mareh 2 10, A match—a ring of smoke, and a smile—that’s ATIMA Dr. Bord » says he knows nothing more of them now than then, In New York the auto party started dott big hotels and cafes in about Broadway and Forty-| Thisclever, Turkish-blend of pure, ‘ond #treet, According to Mr, Welis| good tobaccos is the outcome of wishing—it's the smoke answer! “Distinctively individual.” W. L. DOUGLAS *3%°4 & °42SHoEsS For style, fit and wear W. L. Douglas shoes are unequalled at the price. They are the standard of quality everywhere. Storan In Greater New York sean Ntreet Broadway, cor. ah St, oadway, cor, Lath Mi. 9 Hroadway, cor. seth Bi, 1a Market Street, coi 4 Newark Avenue phage Furnished $110 On Payment of $1.50 Per Week inkenbers S. E, Cor. 183jh Sty 34 Ave, N. ¥. &