The evening world. Newspaper, May 14, 1913, Page 3

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“CLUBBY” WOMEN |Prince Says $2,500 a Year OF PROFESS LEAGUE TO BULD Couldn’t Use $10,000 Fund) for House, so They Form New Organization. TIRED OF ‘HIGHBROWS,’ ‘Want Real Comradeship, Not Problem Talks, Miss Shaw _ Explains, From facta obtained at the head- qjuarters of the Professional Woman's Yaague; No. 19 Broadway, to-day, a new 8nd interesting construction was put on the threatened secession of nearly half the members of the league, and the pro- powel organization of a new club, It appears that it is not the earnest “high- brow” members, who, deciding that there has been too much bridge, tea and frivolity and too little activity of the /ciothes and soft for which the organisation was in- tended, have decided to form @ new club, It seems that ft Js the “frivolous” fac- tion who, Aiding themselves cramped 4nd stultified by too much Intefectus |YOU @Fe not well dressed. ‘The classiest, | ality and too little recreation, have se- |8% It ceded, Of $10,000, city, and general “uplift.” faction intended the $19,000 as the Su} cleus of a larger fund for the con- Hon of a now clubhouse where Ment when told that certain would-be) i. artist cute his cloth accordingly. réal clu life could be enjoyed. SECESSIONISTS LOST ELECTION ‘hat @ sentleman BY NARROW MARGIN. The excitement and feeling generated At the @lection was stéll In evidence to-| day, Miss Maida Craizen was clected Prosident. Miss Mary Shaw, whom the secessionists had chosen for thelr lead- er, was defeated by a narrow margin, Miss Shaw sald to-day that she wi parttoularly anxious that her position should not be misunderstood. She ts a life member of the league, and in di- recting the movement for @ new club she sald she Ix not animated by other motives than a realtzation of the true Tiurposes of a woman's cl “Women want a club,” sald Miss Shaw, “which, Ike a man's club, offers them (he right sort of relaxation and pleasire. If we want education and in- formation we find It In reading, Women have just got to the point when they are ready to declare that the idea of a club 18 play not work. A time has come when women are beginning to be truthe ful—quite a new era,” laughed Miss Shaw, ‘the regeneration of women. They are getting so that they no longer pretend they ilke to hear learned talks on dessicated subjects, What they want is honest, unaffected comradeship of the best sort, ought to be possible, “*Aa far as that goes,” continued Miss Shaw, “there has been perfect sincer- ity among the members of the League. But there has been too much lecturing— rarifled an alr-of quast-tntellectual- ity and too little frank enjoyment. WOMEN ARE AT LAST BECOM- ING HONEST. “Perfect comradeship is now possible | among women, for we no longer regard every attractive woman we meet as a deadly rival; we no longer say ‘cat’ bee hind thelr backs and ‘xo glad to have seen you’ to thelr faces, We are be- coming honest. When a member of the Jeague hus made a speech Rome one who doesn't'like it gets up and says not ‘T want to thank the lady for her perfectly wonderful address,’ but ‘What the Dick- chs has she been talking about; does anybody here know? T don't! “ephe first meeting of the new elub will be held next Monday night,” concluded Mies Shaw, ‘That's all I can say, For the present the club is namele: But It will soon acquire a name, and almost as woon, funds, I hope, which will enable us to pulld a clubhouse,” (Miss Shaw firmly believes in the rights autl, particularly, in the persistence of women. “Phere's nothing in this world women cant get if they go after 14" she re- marked, ———_——_ FALL FROM SKYSCRAPER KILLS TWO ON BROADWAY. Crowd Sees Workmen Plunge From Seventeenth Floor as Scaflold Collapses, A frail scaffold upon which two men worked seventeen floors above the street on. the new Adams Express Bullding, ‘Nos, 61 and 63 Broadway, collapsed to- day. The two riggers, who were pre- paring more platforms for bricklayers nelow them, landed on the Feof of the five-story bullding of the American Ex- press Company, No, 6 Broadway, Danlel Suilivan of No, 47 Carmine strect,was killed instantly, John King, his companion, who lved at No, 130 Park avenue, died shortly after reaching Hudson Street Hospital, ‘Throngs in crowded Broadway heard the crackling of the scaffold and saw the men’s terrible plunge. In the atreot was the Rev, Father Dineen of St. Pet: er's Roman Catholic Chuyeh in Barclay street, Ho rushed Into the building of the American Express Company and hurried to the roof, Sullivan was al- ready’ dead, but King was breathing, and Pathey Dineen gave him the last rites of the church. The pylies failed to find a reason for tha collapse of the scaffoid. All the warkinen ja the building quit’ imime- diately after the aceldent, and the su- porintentent in char, nstruction alg be uaa uaaiects apnisin tt and in club Iife this | |New York’ has entertained for a gen-| In the election Monday night the chief eration, Prince Pignatelll, of Paris, Lon- | issue was the use of the building fund, don and elsewhere, says that seventy- | One faction wanted to spend it | flve sults of clothes are an excessive for more ledtures, learned disquisitions | Wardrobe and that on the sociological problems of a big /enough for any man to spend on his ‘The other, APParel — including everything, * THE EVENING WO Is Plenty For a Man to Spend for His Clothes One Should Do Very Well) With Seventy-five Suits, | Declares Pignatelli, Ex-| pert Dresser; and, as for Corsets, Horrors! Men Should Not Wear Them! - Amazed at the Report that Americans Pay'| $400 a Dozen for Shirts and Puts the Limit at $12 Apiece. “Six Morning Coats, Two Frocks, Two Suits for Weddings, Six Smoking | Jackets, Six Full Dress, Twelve Riding, Seven Shooting Togs, Twelve| Flannel, and Tenni: Even if you have not 19 suite of | do not pay $00 a dozen | for your shirts or spend $5,000 a year on your wardrobe-you, of course, being , male—there !s no excuse for saying re, cosmopolitan dresser that | $2,500 a year is from | AY ‘ socks to hats, from the skin out. | have our own Individuality, and tn Paris Prince Pignatelii expressed amaze- hances my appearance. wearing the clothes, American authorities asserted | i have nl “Do you think @ coat suitable for me cannot be welll in cut and design would also be made dressed on an expenditure of less than| for my friend here, of vastly different $5,000 a year, type, just because it is fashionable? Ah, Much of the Prince's time Is spent in| no; we pay slight attention to hobble less of my build? geous, how costly, I would not be well dvessed, It would be the clothes carry-| sailing party. Now and then the lghtor | hak nla ul ‘. . bee wearing appropriate | trousers and funcy hat bands. ing Pignatelt.. I would be a clothes |rumble of a ten-ton truck. sounded Pi bese eed bap esi ly era Ultra Stylish Bulgarians— hot s0 much, the Prince declares, what THE WELL DRESSED MAN NOT |Morse. | oul: WOuld day, ‘T Saw- asad See nanny ami le quent of Warten Kennedy of Sing Charming New Cutaways— you pay for your clothes as in knowing, HAMPERED BY FASHIONS. isd OAR aa AUFRRLIVG. She) man rete | eeaT bd dba Ae 6 Sing. She wanted a divores, did Mrs. Semi-fitt Effects— how to order them and how to weat| «ro no woll dressed gives one a senselwore it? Pout! f did not observe hime |ONEY, THIRTY-ONE FAT MEN Archibald, No. 1, with tho eight to re- e ing barseoa a - iia ares of security and spirituality not excceded | It was the coat.’ COULD MAKE THE TRIP. bape her maiden name of Catherine Rich Tailored Novelties: - ever wear jewelry (by anything else in the world. Do not] «“T ’ ap ahs if a . Prefer the coat of which you would) All told there were only thirty-one In pe pe Sete emphatically. belittle dress and {ts power to caarm|say, ‘Ah, I saw Pixnatelll. He looked| the portly party, Indies included, but “You seo, Your Honor, tt was thi $20, $25, $30, $35 and $40 Values lamond or ruby or sapphire studs OF| and impress. Above all, do not over-! well dressed (perchance ‘handsome,’ | what was lacking in numbers was moro | WY" the young woman said. “1 mar Mnke—ab, no, no, no, In fact tho Pa-| vaiue aul mistake extravagance and {qaded the Prince, with « twinkle in hiv| than. made up. in avondupols, Chiet | Met Fred May 3, 1911, and we went to saisas rene Isr taney quletly than over) show for the true art of being well) eye), ‘His clothes? Ah, I forgot to ob-| Steward Allen was observed to tear hin |/ive at tine tindm dl vil Sixty onitih 4 dressed, serve. I saw only Pignatelli.’ | hair at intervals and send out rush or- | treet and Gerard avenue, the Bronx, “There are spendthritts in Paris, ye%| “phe “well dressed man ts not the! "The well dressed man iN one who tw dera for more eupplies, the ship having | Went well unt} last December, when & Id off no doubt, but the sato and sane Pa-|man, nocessarily, who looks like a|not overdressed nor underdressed, but] heen provisioned for only ten dayn more | dseppeared. Wo hunted high nnd low woul jer. n 0 wend so muck money] fasion plate; not the man who says I as over hero. ‘Tho only men who dress | s5cnd so much on my clothes; not the lavishly and gaudily are the South) man who pays the most for kis clothes Americans. 2 jand runs to extravagance and fa “Five thousand dgilar@ @ year 0m) ay no: i clothes for a man? Why, what should| each occasion. . “Delicately embroidered The an who knows hb ¢ jook for hin Way in tite back of bo done with a man who would spend weary cotare that patil his akin ok on man ia not weil Greased who dines | wet, ine Peel egraip ate mol on to the room an vi tad 08 a iil ogee ise | | 2 m ok; ar jot we reske: 10 dince in ive rer bt io . . s ei that much on hia clothes? La, la 18 ctoar and his eves bright, Aman with alin public in his business clothes after ee a area ot the mtenty ple caters | YOU May your husband's name is where the smartest suitings hat I should say not! The best jaq color would not wear shades and|¢ Pp. M, vere sunny part of the boat deck for a| Frederick W. Arclilmid? said she reseed man in Paris spends not more tints. that "deaden the tone, certain| "or who doen not wear the same or | snapshot ‘Well, my niece, Marie L, Oxford, mar BAe Pe Ainieinito steer poeee *\ shades of green, for instance, detract harmonizing colors throughout in the| Brother Aldrich of Northflela was the| fed @ man by that name tn December N@aventy-five dollars will purchase « erik peep oaasin the natural beauty | 6¢ coteras—his tle, howe, &c, Or If hia| prise member of tho group. Owing to) Nheyire living at 18 Alnatey atrect, Clothes should be a part of one. They should add to his attrac exclusive, artists In Paris—ah, yes, the tyyonesp without in the least belng able tallors there are artists. f have My! to analyze the cause. tailor—I had him all my life, L never uy choose invisible green; it en- go near him. He has my measure. I . send to him from any part of the world| I chance to be—the ‘it is perfect. “Our tailors, ha, they know thelr full dress sult from the best, the most his trousers, walk out without assistance.” | measurement business n to a halr's breadth in they have been taflors for generations back NO MAN IN PARIS WEARS COR- SETS, PRINCE SAYS. “Corsets! Oh my! T Know of no man in Paris or here who wears ¢ We aceept no fads—no restrictic fy individuality that counts In clothes, and $100 would be the limit for a dress sult or any other kind of a suit for) even the most fashionable society man, “1 would consider twenty-five suits of FIRST HUBBY AN ANGEL, THEIR HUGRING LASTED raets, | . ‘ aca. an . 16 last, But the mean thing never told clothes quite ample for any man to ver Lived” and She’s Go- His Wife, That Was His CARRIES GRIN: Jime he hud another wife Hving or 1 cer. possess, A man will change his clothes As Plowman himself LMp0Res aa ee ee eine enave re three times a day: For the morning hej - lallc Avni C a seates to something 11ke 30, pounds, ety ae ee een aan in Hy Waar n exck coat In the atternoon a ECO Be Mrs. Wells Again, Accomplice. Statement from blm should varry come), (1 Corian: am Bal, however tne . tea or morning coat and in the evening welght. 1, for she's the dearest won ve ; ie omer cou | rN ann of the party were: /nt, fe awe ie dean comn reel A Shoe store’s “Then a man must have hie riding, Me* Willlan Marston, plump, genial! aif of the husbands of Newark who] pagar B, Aldrich of Northfield, Horace 4» seit the wtand and has clothes, his tennis, golf and shooting| with @ rosy blush mantiing her round | M&V® heen scolded recently because they| W, Bailey, chammion arid aXe 8 | ened to tie site of No. 1. Ant aa togs, and yachting suit, Americans are! cheoks, walked resolutely down the didn’t hug and kiss their wives ax the|#orber of Rutland, Vt, te W. Bane of] piston « ; - wks, walked resolutely do alste es an the Ju Hy announced, “Decree for the rule to y to spend etn ul, Vt, holder of the New Hnglan: i ; asa rule t pe to poses thet ie of Justice Guy's courtroom this morn-| !0VelWovey “Marcus Bell” did, morning | Bist}, Vt» holder uf the New England) oiaineie’ the decorum of the courtroom shoes, but the TEST in pursuit pleasure, erage man must be very lavish if he !#, @ much older woman by Soa alent or side. : : smack ' exces $3,000 a year for his apparel, | ‘The older woman was apparently ard's part of the Supreme Court to M, Doolittle of West Springtleld, Z 7 as you wear them. But 1 like Ameri I lke thel ‘ sialic 1 h Bell a f 1 Uristol teh: ee ge “But @ Americans, © thell, ney ay when and ‘wife’ were ex-| Mass, W. E. Hants, Bristol's catch-as postulating i ass, 7 busy life far more than the Mfe of {dle i a iy Pent posed as Marcud Belford, a prosperous|catch-can doughnu: wrestler, Bred 1, THAW’S AGENT IS BACK. ness, Mowever, I am extremely de- no good for you {6 Pro | advertising manager, and his afMinity,| Hall and Mra. Hail of Hostoa, Jewme - voted to hunting and other outdoor test, ma." sald Mrs, Marston, decisively. | Mrs, May Belford, the real wife, asked |. Hale of Wells River, Vt, the club's) Lawyer Anhut'e Telal Will New Go sports of my native land, I arin geOrleneg t-o w-e-t @ d-leveorr-cee | tho court for divorce in view of Bel-| treasurer, and Mra, Hale; #. D. Lom: | arkcia te) a large factor. OFFICIAL INFORMATION AS TO (-r-0-m t-h-a-t Jimmy Sfarston, and it's! tora’s haggins propensities, are ot ete Mtr. amt Stra, 1] Horace A, Hoffman, Harry ‘Thaw's no use to try to stop me no: Ol ae % Z Leach of Northfleld, Mr. and Mra, BP, ae pita sy ' A i SUITABLE CLOTHES. no se to try to atop me now. Why?) +4 never saw such affection tn my} Mtinor of Mt Jubnwbury, Vi. Dr As Mt. [MKent, Mn ne trom the eit store “How many suite should a man pos- eit aint to know, ma, It's be- {Y¢6, declared Mrw, Ada Nchwelkert of | Norton of Brietal, Vis % W. Perking | mused a delay ins arung: the eat to Lads I know of Be man ‘p) ans eee Tae ood right to call mysel jNo, 1017 nton avenue, one of the |and Gilbert B, Wood of st. Johnybury, i 'y te ut 5 riper ey ih : Hees w owns more than sults of Mrs, Lillian Wells again. Yes, ma‘am,| wives who ran to her front door each | Willian Tower of Jalrlee, Vt, he SPNARTOS OE: LAP PSNR nd clothes and no Parisian who has more/1 want to take back the name of that; morning and night to view the exhtir | Bickford of Bristol, | \"* OMbn Aeey snd /enviNnea AY Sixth Avenue than seventy-five suits, These would) qrsr husband of mine. ition, “Each morning before starting CA, ay eee en enn ieee oe ees ta [4 At Nineteenth St, Include, to be correctly attired for all ack V ‘as you well know, ina, {t? Work he would hug and wise her on} Doherty and Miss Gertrude Claffey of we ee sgt tan! ie 4 ne to occasions: | OB al rH é ¢6 pel eon wand Miss Ev | aveld aprearance ru caslonay goats, two frock, wo, Wee the beat man thet ever drew tho| thelr font Goor steps for Afteen or | Worcester, fas, and M168 va Jon 900 teenie ne eee tn Var twenty minutes, It would never break away mults for Weddings or funeral: 1 Dreath of life, and if he hadn't died so | med to me they several | mike wollcdesaaed map? We each SS i3 ship 'taal RLD, WE 1am Pignatellt “Suppose I should wear the reverse be- cause it was tho fashton and regard: | No matter how gor- | dock who wears that which is suitable for | shirts and hose a man wears with his evening| low them to guther in one spot on the clothes would not be appropriate in his coat does not harmonize perfectly with “A man is not well dresved who wears Selothes loud enough to talk back and | SHE DIVORCES NO. 2 70 TWENTY MINUTES A DAY ; RESUME NAME OF NO. 1; ON FRONT DOOR STEPS) Sa: cis nasi, |Jack Wells “Best Man Who; But It Was His Affinity, Not were avenged In Justice Ger- DNESDAY, MAY 14, BERMUDIAN LISTS | WENO. 1 HELPS TOPORT ASPORTLY. NO. 2 GET DWORCE PART BARS HER FROM THER HUBBY Archibald) Kisses rs. Archibald and They Enter Court Arm in Arm. WIFE WHO DIVORCED BIGAMIST HUBBY AND NO. 2, WHO AIDED HER. Fat Men From New England) Mr: ‘ Sail Away to Tropics for Vacation. STEWARD TEARS HAIR.|SPOUSE IS IN SING SING. Only the Midgets, Weighing|First Bride Tells How She 400 Pounds, Show Up for | Found Him Living With Sec- H the Annual Jaunt. ond After Disappearance, Although the steamer Bermudian off Two young women, one tall and the Quebeo Steamship Company was not | lght and the other short and dark, met due to sail for Bermuda until 1 o'clock Jin the corridor of the County Court to-<lay, @ huge crowd gathered at the | House thi# morning outside the room foot of the mangway as early ax 845,] where the undefended divorce caxem Tt was a dense, Impenetrable gathering | were being heard by Justice Guy and of humanity, practioally obscuring from | greeted each other effusively | View all but the tips of the ship's two ‘Good morning, Mra, Archibald, how red funnels. are you, my dear?” cried the tal, Neht] £ At 9 o'clock sharp the crowd took off|one, ax she placed a resounding buss |hin hat and waved it genially at an-/on tho cheek of the short, dark one other throng approaching down the ever felt better in my life, Mra dock. ‘The second crowd responded to| Atehibakl, dear,” replied sho of the ra nm locks as #he returned the am the greeting by waving which he flourished @ red, white and hin hand, 1) of affection. ‘That's almply splendid,’ continued blue parasol. The two crowds mingtod, | the iady af. dhe golden tresson, “and shook hands and ambled up the creaking | {t's no aweet of you to come dow and protesting gangplank, The good ship groaned a bit and listed heavily to starboard, and Frank E. Aldrich of Northfield, Mass., and David Wilkie of Boston—the first two members of the New England Fat Man's Club to arrive for their pilgrimage to the semi-tropics —were safely aboard. early, to-day, to help 1 my dle vorca, honey, Let's go in now and tea tify against our husband." FOUND HUSBAND LIVING WITH WIPE NO. 2. Arm in arm the beaming you fairly danced hefore Just! when that kindly jurist i women Guy, and called for the From that moment on until just before | cane of Archidald against Archibald, sailing time the heavy timbers of the the bond woman took the witnons thundered at intervals with the | Md Announced she was Mrs, Cather! Lorene Arc prow! of the fa ald, she but that was! 1 | footfails of the arriving members of the iWatahe wan Gio ti for him, but not a trace did we find, “At laat in desperation we had hin: ‘oalled oul’ as minsing wt a meeting of the Foresters, of which he was a met ber, and asked the other members to than the trip usually takes, Officers scurried about dividing the patty'In sep- arate groups, it would never do to al- deck for any length of time, In fact, It| Brooklyn.’ NO. 2 1S GLAD TO HELP NO, 1 TO DIVORCE. hat very ht my brother poor health during the winter, he had fallen slightly below 400 pounds, but he said he hoped to pick up a bit during the trip. “1 don't know Just how I'm going to af ret my meals,” he said, plaintively, ‘'1| Went over to the Brooklyn 4 tried out one of those dinky little ewivel | red Mine ‘Oxford chairs downstairs in the dining room’ y Comparison and 1 res and, 4 mare that sweet Httle brie here several nautically wire linguist Hae ete i me lie ra the ts shuddered violently—“and I can't get) Wun ge otiomey arnt hid Ired, we Sale into one of ‘em. I gucas I'll have to eat) oy a in Re ba last oleh ; “t : 0 pleade panei uup or have my food brourht 0) iit nicamy in the Court of G at All 6 deck. eral Sessions and was a halt K mat to Sing Sin “Our real heaviest members are not with us on this trip,” said Secretary Plowman of Holyoke, Mass, for a year an Marshall Bt. f No Four i Hro Ie way, formerly Awsistant Dtrioteatt clubs, and some of then would make the| RO Who reprewented alte Archibald members of this party took ike human | HO. ' oallel | skeletons.”” ANY STATEMENT FROM HIM | ‘Mercy me, yea” she exclaimed, "Ot course L married Bred, In Brooklyn, Dec sord, G. 8. Clab- deli of Bristol, pio cating aweepatake r Hi wry was xhattered with a resounding double yorn of Boston, W. of Wells River, couver on business and there had heard S aaiadea dibehiedadehaadaeaatiedae ee ehdieeieeetezemetinia oa Ramet NAN Wondrous Sale of Suits TO-MORROW, THURSDAY In point of beauty of these varied models assembled, as well as in the inimitably smart tailor effects employed, these suits rank far above what the price ordinarily Every Attractive Weave Popular for Spring and Summer Lavishly Displayed The materials represent the pick of the trimmings are in keeping with the beauty of the models, Every Color You Could Possibly Desire ts Here in Infinite Variety of these truly high-class suit models, It is only fair to assume that you will at least allow us the pleasure of showing you these artistic suit creations, which we now present at this price. Remember—Alterations FREE—Continued not be in evidence as you buy your From a small beginning in 1857 this has grown to be the largest business in fine shoes in America, and service has been Come in and test it—either BECAUSE THEY WENT 10 nccuioeecin S Grandfather, in Suit, Names; Secretary Rickart of St... Louis Americans, ST. LOUIS, Mo, May 14Ohargtnlt that Lioyd Rickart, secretary of the Ot. Louie Americans, permitted two ebitéren!) tn his care to attend Sunday sasedafl* amos, their grandfather to-day dled @* petition in the Supreme Court at Jeffer- son City, avking that the children be ree Atored to him. The children are Tatitie? and Rarbara Breck, twelve and fourteem” yours old. ‘Their grandfather is Lawley B. Tebbetts, Mra, Rickart te Tebbettst. daughter. Tobbetta Inst winter waa res’ Moved as guantian of the children oy the Probate Court. i ‘The petition says the conduct of spete tators at the Sunday dail eames “loud and boisterous, and at times s Ax to necessitate police interference ta) Prevent people from rioting with ther ball players and umpires.” Tt also iq’ contended that the atmosphere of Sun-) day ball games tx unfit for young girls, —_—_—— ) “Happy Jack" to Die Next Week, | ALRANY, N.Y. May 1.—"Happy Jack" Mulraney, convicted of the murs. dor of Patrick Mofreen, known ap) paddy the Priest,” a New York saloom,, Keeper, in October, 1811, will be electro-, cuted at Sing Sing prison next Mondy, Gov. Sulzer announced to-day he would, not Interfere a Fashion and considered every- the season, The tailo.ing and will quickly prove the superiority 6! SERVICE may of it comes A Tuxedos, six What you call ing ®0on T never would have married that!” “pig grannies. meee from friends In Pittsburgh that he wa " | ou hear any terms dear- jackets, ‘six full dross, twelve riding,|ornery Jimmy Marston, wo theret And| ment exchanged?” oF sndper COW SET HIM ON FIRE. wanted here, Ho had returned immedi seven different kinds of shooting toKs, if you're half the ma you ought to be,| “Did we hear {t? Yes, and saw it Bye =, twelve flannel or summer suits and tens you} testify for me, anyway, and, any-| He'd say: ‘My tootsie-wootsie won't be| MIDDLETOWN, No Yu, May d= Anhut's trial will begin to-morrow Ws O56 WE BAS YAORENg Goiie way, ma, if you don't look out, you'ra|1enesome for her sweetheart,’ and ‘fy. | George Jefferson, & farm hand near | morn Vig plat anh) SHARE “Shirts $00 a dozen?’ The Prince At et tae uh ou by, ‘ittle wifey, ‘our baby-buncney wily| here, Who had been warned several | Seabury Thaw will be brought down threw up his hands, “Oh, Ia, 1a, 1at| #lNs to lose all your money, ‘cause the | PY 'ittle wifey, ‘our baby-vunciey will | by his employer not to sinoke Matteawan on a writ of habeas they would think we had gone mad in| bottom of your bug is all torn" There were dozens of othera | while working around the farm bulld- as & withen Paris, For #8 and $12 apiece we can get| Mrs. Marston testified she lived at No.| when he did break away, what hap-| (26% $9 suffering from severe burns re- | the best shirts in the world, Nothing| 6} West One Hundred and Sixth strect. | pened? ‘ P| ceived as the result of a cow's kick, — | F better," On July 1906, she was married to| "He'd walk up the street haifa biock | Wille the man was passing « cow tn | or . a9. “But tn Parte everything I not #0) James D. Marston, an gutomobiie deal-| #0 he could see her und then be would | te SAblO the SAIBAL Rink et. Hite Shel ke H | : = Gear,” suggested @ friend of the Prince, 4, irour years ago Maraton de-| Stand and tos back kisses and wave his | nM matches he had in bis hip pocket Ln Nn | PNaN . f WA G8 DEA i, sitea Kar. abe smo hands, All the wives in the block (#¥ch # way ae to fenite them. His , “No doubt you are rights’ ho replied, | * ‘ SPAT: watched than 4 was’ oartainiy | clothes Were set on fire and there are = q y Tam speaking ax a Parisian of whut| Mra, Grace Gross of No. 101 West |! paver SATSARIY S08 e burns over a large portion of his use ) cy iS & man must have and spend to bo cor-| Bixty-fourth street textifled Marston and} Of 2m¢ love ; Q . y and perfectly attired. a woman he called hls witoetved in], ve Baleawice tested Ahab Balinre || ———— | yw calculate, If a nN possers| her rooming house trom October, 1911, | UVC Wh a nelghborlag apa nt with | -= | . thirty suits of clothes at even $100 een) to January, 1912 Rie OMI A RIUM shark ‘halred” | (he a aS a: tnlawones to: Galea. Ba said | hy it would be but 8,40, He could not pay) “Decree, inved Justice Guy woman, as Mr, and Mrs He Charles} ‘The Court wi als Hined te VP a SERN C= aie I AESONG UAW toeavie dildee orl: and beotiersit= | nore of the mass of evidence colle i Do T Po taVorite flower?’ Vidlets, Most | want ic dg Scie ority vintiff, of No, 71% Pifty+| oy Mee. Belford, who i @ pretty Brook- Sy. MORE HAN THE ‘i Pari 5 the” gh Sr vd of ooservations made girl and suspended the tescinony to] The Mellelous i.axative Chocolal men In Paris wear the whito carnation, guy Aten. Ma | ' RO IELIEVaa CONSTIPATIO: d a“ 5 ‘ singe = Weed in the ve of the oaerye dow Two otoer wt who} & im ee ie fener adopted by the King of bing-| oor erat ay sa TWAIN the cPrAIIGG Glen ladle waco mulates the stomach and bowels o Extra barge for i 24 h Fashion! What has fashion tt dol | savers There were further evidences of | jn hand Lo corre Sieaulnien ine yer fee, Sconce for Tue, World may be lott Digirict Messenger Bele” devodon whieh did nyt reguire) but thelr teammeny Waa nob Aneade digestion, (uod for young and via ‘Me, O60 and Ste, 06 al vrais Mrs. Sehwelkert, | Dayd SUNDAY BALL GAMES:

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