Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
SULZER'S LAST DAYS IN “PEOPLE'S HOUSE” | INDICATE NO WORRY Governor Serene Through Days of Trial and Rou- tine of Life Has Not Been Disturbed—Case Discussed Only Incidentally, and Then as if It Did Not Directly Concern Him. By Sophie Irene Loeb. If you were the Governor of the great State of New York, and the High Court of Impeachment were weighing you in the balance, how would you | seal * lal would you do while those Judges’ scales were going up and iN: are farmer while ploughing a field was asked: “If you knew you were going to die to-night, what would you do?” The farmer answered: “I would keep on ploughing.” ‘William Sulzer has taken the same position. In the Executive Man- @ton he has just kept on being Governor. For I was present in the Execu- , Hive Mansion in the last few days while his title has hung in the balance. The man is a marvel—a psychological study. Whether he has actually | felt the enormity of the great case being conducted to put him out of the | office he had sought for years, no one about him could possibly guess. | From all outward appearances there has been nothing that would even suggest that he was suffering or under a strain. | Once he said to me with a smile: “It's almost funny how they are trying to hang me up there.” Another time when some one came in with @ favorable report, also smilingly: “It is amusing how many optimists and Job's comforters there are around here.” Aside from such semi+humoroun re-| walrus of the season, no matter how THE EVENING WORLD, _FRIDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1918. Eight Episcopalian Bishops Denounce Slit Skirts, Tango and the Hunt for Joy SPECIAL INTERVIEW Marks there has been little or nothing | Valuable, was kept and adorned the jer hi thought as to Village street. When the Governor had fas eae mee vey eau tm, asked the natives why they did not and I am confident that no one about | ‘urn these heads into produce instead | him has ever uite fathomed or fol-|f Ormaments, they replied that every| year the walrus came for them to hunt) 0 erase Torking of hie mind a8 t0) because they kept the firat one caught | and that, though they might come any, PICKING UP THREADS DROPPED | a4), yer what if they disposed of thi IN TAKING OFFICE. first one and others didn't come? So it “Hie regular routine has been rarely Was best to be on the safe side, { Aisturbded, and he has gone on in the| And frow this story he drew the moral rene tenor of his ways, In the past] that if his enemies did not answer for a begun to get his per-| thelr wrongdoing here it would not be unwise for them to consider the po: sibjiity of a hereafter, The next night (the day of the secret executive sessions of the court) after dinner he told us various humorous in- Ciu.t* 1 the life of Lincoln, As he walked up and down the floor, an is his wont, relating one anecdote after al other, I could not believe my ears, Her: he was acting in the most every day manner, while off in the distance could; be heard the click of @ typewrit cording the outcome of the day at the trial, The day be’ore that set for the voting to begin he came to Mra. Sulzer and suggested sending flowers to a friend of the family who was married, he dd not wish to forget ‘so momen- | tous an occasion,” and even discussed | the kind of flowers it would be most these, and otherwise proceeded in the way @ man would if he were picking threads of things he had left off. a ubject of hi trial, but only talked about it when it came up in the course of conve tion. He has had several people taking not during the consideration of the cate and when one of these reported on some action that had been taken, he has received the news as though it sere a matter of course, evincing no vuxcitement, if it were favorable or \e surprised, to say the least, Ys demeanor and remarked: ‘Gover- ner, you certainly astonish me by the alm, undisturbed way in which you eet this thing. It is certainly most] desirable to send. cot Me ahd a i ket. “Why WATCHED CASE “AS THAT OF A “Do you think #07" he asked. " , ch@uld I treat it otherwise? They want FRIEND, NOT HI8 OWN." tay Job, Lam in the way. They want! In fact, reviewing his continuous ac- tions during these last days of his stay in the Executive Mansion, he hi seemed like a man Who “sits In th: grand stand and sees himself go by.” He might have been waiting the result of the case of @ friend rather than his | own, me) I was present in the Court of Im- peachment during the arguments of the lawyers as to the admission of certain testimony under Article 4. When I re- turned to the mansion Mr. Sulzer asked, quite as a matter of course: "W did you hear anything interesting to- day When I told him of the vartous legal arguments that were presented In his favor he took them, too, as a matter of course and cited some cases of vei old law that had some bearing on the case. But all the time you had the Im- Pression he was discussing an inter Ing phase of any case but that of his own and displaying no anxiety what) ever. | And Mra. Sulzer? I do not think any woman could have oorne the state of affairs with more courage and less dis- play of her real feelings than she. She is her husband's greatest admirer and her devotion to his interests is nothing | short of remarkable. “He 1s @ martyr to @ cause,” she says, nd as such We must meet the iasue, w er it is, Many jaws will be changed on account of this thing hap: pening to us. Many outrageous thin, will not be countenanced in the future. We are the victims, that is all me out and they ai fo do it.” At the end of the day when he hi talked to his counsel over the telephone you could hear him say, “Well, how 414 you think thin went to-day for yout” And at the end of the talk a ways “Well, good luck to you.” And 1t would seem to the hearer that the ase was the lawyers’ rather than his aring no expense le up his mind of hin counsel merely getting case. (EXPECTED THEM TO “GET HIM” —DIDN'T WORRY. Once he commented on the fact that many of the newspapers to which in the he had been very considerate had shown iittle of the samé treatment fm return, and that facts brought out in Bis favor were not correctly given I guggested that perhaps this was due to the fact that despite all the ad @esimony that had@ome out he had not @nawered the charges, He replied hat ls lawyers had prevailed on him not to utter @ word publicly; he was fol- Jowing their advice and that, further- more, anything he might have sad dur- fng the trial would perhaps have been eo distorted and twisted as to not carry its intention. ‘The Governor, from all appearances, heé made up his mind that they were “going to get him,” and in the mean- tim was going on just as he always did. The most trifling detaile of the! “Ostentation does not mean anything day were gone through with. There|to me. I can be contented with my hu | was no hurry about anything. And if! band anywhere. I stated before he be- you met him in the halls of the great| came Governor that I would be quite! fhouse, going to und from some room, | satisfied to retire into private life In the! Biways a wave of the hand and a smile| simplest manner at any time, and greeted you as though nothing unusuai| have not changed my views. Therefore! was going on. the more passin irom one hous to an. | “g par-| other less pretentious can have no adhe EAE nina effect on me. 1 can be contented any- | i} “thelr is own. dog, | Where he ts.” Pagione Oa yernar caite. On the day| Mrs, Sulzer, in the past few days, has zl F planned packing and moving in case | the testimony of Ryan, Peck and Mor- nthau was being debated he insisted on teaching Carl the proper way to hand out his paw in @ handshake. Also | he greeted every visitor that came. "He never missed his automobile ride td when any of the family were about at the time he was going he would invite them to come along. During these trips he talked about the various inc dents on the road, the sky, the sun or very often kept ailent; but seldom spoke of his trial and never at any time Accident. 41d he give the impression of brooding. | BOLOGNA, Italy, Oct, 17.—Willlai TELLS STORY WITH “MORAL"| Marconi, the wireless inventor, was in FOR ENEMIE: another automobile accident to-day | Mr. Sulzer always liked to tell stories, | aimilar to the one which cost him the ‘and even in this had not changed dur-| 104s of an eye some time ago. While ing this mow trying time, One evening Motoring with hix wife at Pontechta | t dinner liv ‘old us some customs of? ‘* motor car collided with 4 cart Esquimaux he -had learned while) !e turning @ corn The chauffeur ‘up on the borders of Siberia. One of| t+ ‘ed quickly and id the machine Aheee fhistrated the Idea that no one| t Tun into # horae, could afford to regard the possibilities| The shock broke all the glass inthe) of @ hereafter with scoffing; that while| Sutomobile and scattered It over the} one might not be absolutely sure, it occupants, none of whom, however, was wore safe to Uve in the belief that per- injured, Bors there was one, —_ ‘This tale was about the hunting of colns Ane DaveRnovs. 5 Selves, Always the heed of the aret Fehon yey With Father Joha'e they should leave the Executive Man- sion, but she has evinced no regret at | going. The state of uncertainty has seemed the thing she has deplored mos! Once the caso is decided, she is re to continue her future plans. | he MARCONI IN AUTO SMASH. | i Escapes Injury, ny | Willams sald; Per. Charles David Witttems Mothers and Fathers Are Looked To as the 7‘ope Save the Home From Disintegration by the Frivolous Tendencies of the Times. “Women Dress Not to Please the Men but to Spite Each Other, and It ’s So Silly,” Says One Prelate. What Eight Bishops Have to Say On the Frivolities of To-Day BISHOP ¢. E. classes of society. BISHOP W. L, GRAVET tremes which women's fashions display. BISHOP C. H. BRENT—AU the result of thy mad hunt for pleasure. BISHOP F. 8. SPAULDING—I have WILLIAM modest, self-respecting woman should respecting way. BISHOP E. D, PETERKL "oo great larity obtains in all I disapprove of many of the ez- extremes adopted are the p never seen a slit skirt, A dress in @ modest, self- -I believe unsuitable dressing and similar improprietics are evils confined to the large cities, BISHOP LR. BREWE -Some of the costumes which are prescribed by fashion are vulgar and ridiculous to the last degree. BISHOP H. 8, LONGLEY—Women up the exaggerated fashions started by sons who call themselves “Society.” BISHOP H. ST. GEORGE finds fault with woman's clothes often talking about. think it ts smart to take a set of rich and idle per- TUCKER—1 think the man who docsn't know what he is Marguerite Mooers Eight Bishops of the Episcopal faith in attendance at the Gea- cral Convention being held here were interviewed by an World staf’ reporter on problems now The questions ranged from the drama to the slit of the people. skért, and included the trend toward dances, esting replica, They follow: What ta the matter with ua? For at least a twelve-month we've heen hauled over the coals because we) do such things and we say such things ‘The clothes our women wear have come for a special degree of criticism. The . the hobble and the X-ray skirts the: rria bat th been metaphorically ripped up the| Wild oats,’ society must do its Part. ci n jot countenance practices and i > Peoria, Not con+| It must not coun’ BARES OHURER NG ‘i inces which will put a stumbling, tent with our sartorial shame we've In- vited ancther avalanche of abuse by out sensational dancing, the turkey trot and the rest of It. Our naughty plays ana | our naughty books have variously dis: | turbed Magistrates and Anthony Com: | stock. Are we really suffering from bad case of frivolous degeneration of the soul? 5 TALK WITH THE MARRIAGE! REFORMER. I'm afraid we are, For I have con:| sulted expert opinion, in fact, many ex: |» pert opinions. As you doubtless know, the Episcopal General Convention is now ik young eultva which to there Nor West d: We m iw meeting in New York, I found t approval to many of the ex: House of Bishops, with representatives Which women's fashiona from all the possessions of Uncle Sam, |“4y display, T have not myself seer ; lunching at the Hotel Marseilies Ana| the turkey trot and the ot dances | Bishops Kast, West, North and & uth | Which you mention, But, Judging from what each had @ nice little sermon to preach | * on our frivolities~feminine ones, particu larly. The first of the ecclesiastical gentle: men whom I approached was Bishop Charles B, Williams of Michigan. He 1s perhaps the most noted of the pro Bressive leaders of the Episcopal Church In hls own diocese last spring he carried to victory the movement conditioning marriage on the posvession by the contracting parties of a certificate of mental and physical health, Bishop th Ho » “Et is indisputable that at pres- ent too great laxity obtains in all classes of society, This irrespo! sible, Moentions spirit manifests ¥ iteclf in many forms. hoi young Qre the sensational Gresses, the by who rather improper dances, the hectic Uitera- ture and drama admired by s0 wish a minister of our Church to unite ainet div end in misery “But than a young woman, needs to ‘sow his observa worthy the and deterioration.” WE ARE GOING TOO FAST AND direction minded society has even been of Ron tenness.”” wrong ideals, I th ening | Marshall. | minds uppermost in the the tango and other weird | To all of the queries the Bishops gave forceful and inter- |what is really worth while in 1ife What right have we to fight and then off ages whi while wa are seeking to com: e notion that a young man, more in the way of Its youth, ‘Th woman of the present day must ute that modesty and delicacy | will inspire the you! men to be If there Is @ constant app aser instincts of the latter, is bound to be weakening of fore TOO FAR, {e Bishop William L. Gravatt of Virginia, satistied with the present of society, Bishop Gravatt | are going too fast and too far. | ust call @ halt. 1 cannot give 1 have heard at them, 1 do Wink that they are meritorious. sks and on the # notes lorable have said merely corrapuion the in the days of tts Z shed and nodded, are not declared, "Things besin in hai, Hut they do not spread all over the towns and large ones, e hot lost falth in human Todo not that a men and women “But the niflned he rk, lave } to offend are thoughtless than Wicked. I think that many many persons who ought to know women who Wear criticised better, And the direct or indirect {lo it without xing the effect of al) this letting down of t! that they make, bare ts the demoralisation of ma: “Personally, I decry many of vinge. the frivolous tendencies of the “so far the Church has concer ent, But I do not ity efforts on tightening the marriag: decrying will rccomplish after it has been bound. But! believe] amy change for the better, It is that prevention is the most efficacious! the home that can raise the social method of combating evil. Therefore } shall support with all my strength any standards. fathers who, It is the mothers and if chey will, can train their sons and daughters to ang that @ health certificate will be nepes- eery for a persons of either sex tag. @ higher conception of right liv- ‘We must sot permit the OBTAINED FOR THE EV. | | Going to do it, and that the phase of unrest through which we are That the improper dressing dane cing of to-day Is a symptom rat! than @ disease Is the opinion of Bishop Charles H. Brent. @f the Philippine Islands, Bishop Brent said: BLAMES THE MAD HUNT FOR PLEASURE. “There ts a certain set of people in ‘the United States wh ‘0 be pleasure, excitement, ne are entirely selfish, thinking thetr own comfort and hi the extremes whjch th which are rightly ob, more thoughtful, are the result of this YING WORLD. J country villages, There from the corruption and wreat cities. The young men and women are not cheated by tawdry glitter; they do not try to be sophisticated and artificial at expense of heart and cons BISHOP BREWER SCORES FASH- 1ON EXTREMES. Rishop L. HR. Atrewer of Montana cakes A serious view of modern soctal eondl+ tions although his conclusion is opti- mistic. Hishop Urewer sald: “Indeed, 1 do not approve of the #llt skirt and the ot jon, 1 do not delicate-minded of the costumes which by fashion. lous to the last dexree. Yet you seo | adopted even by quite young you get awn Wworldiiness of | t any modest, wear some proscribed t wirls. “If the girl who Sore such that much mistaken. The right sort of man always prefers a girl who by her quiet, deoorous drese shows nly That type makes the ideal wife and mother, and young men know it. “Mothera should ughters have better contro! Hut many mod- have received more a thelr p, 8, ard aso the bond of obelience i» ov ern youns nina seh mad hunt for pleasure. Hven the very young have caught the fever the pity. “What we need to [habit of thinking stop living for the sensatic moment, must stop to —more’s tnek th We must of the srs give pla the thinvs of the spirtt | We must reflect Ike human beings, Ine stead of rushing from one senfation to anoth If we did reflect, many of the sensations would lose all charm.” Bishop F. 3. Spaulding of Uti wos not entirely downcast over the situa! tlon, According to thay bishop, a lot of the corrupt practic the effete Mast haven't yet made their way to Utah ADMITS HE HAS NEVER SFEN A SLIT SKIRT, Bishop Spaulding sald; “1 have never seen a slit skirt. ‘They don't have them where I come from, and since | reaching New York I've been sy busy that I've hardly been | und I haven't heard about them, course TI belley respecting wom. in a modest, self-respecting way, “But our ung People In Utah are thoughtful, serious-minded lot. We ho our jocal problems, of course, among them the Mormon influences think many of our boys and iris are thrown together a early an age, and youthful 1 suit But, on the whole ay) stralehtforward body of youns 4 | “E don't think, anyway, that we | should indiscriminately blame all e wo! styles. can't choose. They have to wear what they can buy, or what the tailor and dress- maker will give them. The wom Gon't design their own cloth Frthermore, they 4: to please not to please men, se of two or three butterflies in shoer emulation.” "It y be tr buy costume to “You surely de irl who does that?” 1 never saw ulding silly, too. a4 woman I oher, bu 1 obse the doesn't ha ved. who Of cou It must alw eterkin of West Vir “DL bellewe A stinilar tm ed ty the large ¥ population. y thousand poop town in which I ive, and [have served ont of in We have no vuly Uwe, courte, the have thelr parties, 1 ‘girls are naturally delic and jin thoughts and manners, and Sout ern home life !# noted for the devotion between husband and wife and parents and children, vk u Rome to Gisintegrate, we must ‘Bee salvation of the nation lies im its | | delicious tas }olate laxative, as pleasant as pure, sweet | ehoeo! yet unfailing in tte bowel: Moving work. It frees you from sick slackened tuo soon ria and boys are so wure they kn at hey throw off parental disc ai an early tut Dam a xr er ine! nd Tf thiok that caese annie bring up 1 dor't t." r of lows The trouble t# that the women, young women, are all to in thing It is smart abeuid, exaygersted by a set of rien and persons Who call themselves ‘a It is not mersly the rich who I taste, Kainst § four hom he the, en of Cash. | rr They ure vulgar and rid- | | ONE 0° HIS BOOKS “ASGIFTIE TOCOUSIN Steel King’s “Life of the Kal- | ser” Sent Through Fellow Pas- senger to Mrs, McGregor, IN NEW ZEALAND. And, Hoot Men! the Giftie Was a Big Surprise to Mr. Throt. | SHE'S Whuaper! Auld Andy Carnegie ha’ gt'en @ woe bit giftle to his cousin, Mistress Mac- Greegor, in the faraway town o' Dune- lin, New Zealand, Hoots, mon; but ‘tle #0. ally at'en a giftie away. way o't: ‘Tho Laird of Skibo, who camo back to his own country to-day aboard the Mauretania, chanced to go down Into the second cabin threo days ago. Thoy were having «. mea there, and the Laird ia 0 great ‘un on ames, you know. Ry chance he fell into conversation with Mr. Rewa Throt, who comes from Dunedin, and ho asked Mr. Throt if he know « certain Mra. MacGregor. “Tin right, I do,” sald the man from New Zealand. “She's a neighbor of mine." HE'D TRUST HTM ON HIS HON: EST FACE. “Laird love me!" exclaimed the tron- master, “Hut ye must do a great nor- I know I can trust ya, mon, for ye have an honest look about ye. Tcan trust ye to take this Mis- tresn MacGregor, a cousin o' mine | whom T latd eyes on laat forty years | wone, & wee bit gift Mr. Throt was embarrassed by the thought of the great trust that was about to be laid upon him, but he stam. tnered between blushes that he thought e was honest, and any little bankroll or anything Ike that— “Tush, mon. I ken your honestie,” lbreke in the Laird. “ ‘Tis @ great thing ye'll do for me." Whereupon he disappeared in his cabin and brought back a mysterious I askane, wrap tightly about with | heavy paper. Perhaps it was @ bundle |of bank checka; perhaps some shares He ha’ actu- « view for in the United States Steel Corporatior who uid know? Throt of New land trembled as the tronmaster atarted to unwrap the bundle, IT WAS A BOOK, MON, SURELY iT WAS. ken the worth o't?” queried as he took off the last fold of paper and disclosed—"The Life of the Kaiser," by Andrew Carnegie, On tho fyleat was written this in- come to ye. Will ye no come back again. COUSIN ANDY." When the Laird met his old friends, the ship news reporters, he was most karulous. He looks forward to being Interviewed all the time he is at his broad estates in Skibo and when he finds It absolutely impossible to dodg the reporters he finally. o ® few words on mon and affaira, What Mr. Carnemic wald to-day can be tube ulated thus, for encyclopedic reference: CITIZENSHIP—There's no doubt about my American citisenship. I'll vote her | I'm going to register Just as soon as I | get ashore. PANAMA CANAL—A great work—a nd thing, It weds the oceans or, be it doesn't exactly wed them, but er i . aN ae ne in |e cnganes them, at leant. life Joining in the whirl of ft 1| 7 TA very erratic man, He Imitatiug somo one with aw s{erabbed Panama money shan themsel You a SULZER—He has many attractive that | veping Up With Lisale Ite all there. “The remedy is for the mothers to calla halt. They must see the folly io which their daughtei indulging and pute stop They must lead the way back end ® eauer to more my and whose Martha Washin Bishop Tuck to ty tree aatrivtic optim Bishop| 1 beleve, after all, that the Amerl= an woman can be tr 1 [have spent everal sears indapan, Butalthough Uve I many changes since Lf returned to nav New York, T haven nygle woman Jwhows costume 1 felt called upon to I bellove in modest, refined Hut ft think the man wao woman's clothen with a N what he's talking run Vd trust the the herself Ex-Lax Will Stop - Your Constipation No Gripe, Pain or Purging From this Gentle, Chocolate Laxative. Works Nature’s Way, Don't take pills and harsh cathartice when your bowels ge! cloned Lax Will relieve you quickly, without leaving mia and 9 echoes you weak and ined, nis ne physlc te a alm) Reddechy tor: \pe of Diliousness ond Diosting, quclities, His impeachment will y a great harm, MITCHEL-A grand young man. 1 will vote for him, M'CALL~An honest judge, GAYNOR—He was a great man. have been re-elected had do aif a glaan with meals, 4 IN GERMANY—Not so many Kalser Hil got after ‘em, UDRESIDENT. WILSON —One of the | greatest Presidents, THY WEATHER—Tn tt not grand? OUR BUILDINGS—Now, ye're fash. ing me, lade, et REGISTER TO-DAY, To-day and to-morrow are the last days of registration, Registration |places are open from 7 A. M. to 10/ M. If you do not register you cannot vote. It without @iscomfort or pain. Get your in order with Ex-Laz and you'll) You wili never | oy real health while you're conquered} by constipation, Children love to take Ex-Lax, Decause it tastes like chocolate candy, and adults econ learn to prefer it bareh, ol Listen to the! UNCLE ANDY GIES | "5 Fen row Tomes Woman Charged With Robbing Victims in Churches Has Lost Health. Mra. Katherine Randoiph Fitzh looking @ wreck of her foriner « Pleaded qulity before Juaticn Gavexan in the Criminal Branch of the Supreme Court to-day to the two indictments f 4 grand larceny on which #he has b kept tn the Tombs since March last tice Gevegan remanded her for nentence until Monday, om which day, it in ar- pected, he will auspend sentence in or- der that the woman may be taken to Virginia and placed tn a manitariurn Mra. Fitzhugh was arrested lit March for the larceny of a gold ine ‘Dag valued at #80 from Mi Dorothy Fide, daughter of Pliny Fisk, a Wat street broker, while Miss Fisk was ii St, Bartholomew's Church. The mesh bax was found in Mrs, Fitzhugh's pos- session at the Hotel Flanders, she claimed to have found it, Subseauent!y Mine Irene Munsey, an actress, of No. ‘TMS Broadway, charged Mra. Fitzhugh with having stolan a bracelet from her No. 26, 1912, in the Church of the Trans figuration on Twenty-ninth street, be« tween Fifth and Madison avenues, Mre, Fitehugh hae been il), Always plump and , she han failen away to less than 100 pounds, Worry hi: done this, so Assiatant District-Attn ney Thomas C. Presa told Justice Gave= wan to-day, “Sd respectfully recommend,” Mr. Preas told Justice Gavegan, t the defend- ant be given her Ibert: ——— HURT IN BOSS’S AUTO. . Crash on Night Ride, and Ownes Presees Theft Charge. Samuel Carter of No. 2194 Third avenue was held in §500 ball by Magis- trate Campbell in Morrisania Court to~lay charged with thel technica theft of @ $1,500 automobile from his employer, Berry B. Simon, a real estate broker of No. 116 West One Hundred and Eighteenth street. Carter came to grief with th t Third avenue and One Hundred and Thirty-sixth street 1 roll, ® Long Inland Railroad of No. 1% East One Hundred and Twenty-second street, and Thomas Halleran, a printer, of No, 91 Kellor avenue, Who were In the automobile, were thrown out violently. Halleran's akull was fractured and Carroll's face and hands were badly cut. Carter was? arrested and Mr. Simon appeared in court to-day as the complainant a, SIXTH _AVE., Cor. 17th St. ~ BELIEVE ME! am conrinced—send me another bottle, it has done all that you said it would.” These enthusiastic words came from # woman who tried El Rado, the abso- lutely safe liquid hair remover. Our ple statement that its periority be demonst: with » single ap- plication was verified by ber. We offer the same assurance to every woman an- noyed by superfluous hair on the fa orarms. A little bit of El Rado, a ¢ application and the hair disap- pears. El Rado acts instantly wherev: applied, leaving the most delicate skin soft, smooth and clear. are it to-day, \d and 81.00 per t all Drug ind D Dep Stores, or direct from i o Filgrim Mfg. Co., 37 E. @8th St., N.Y. dcmes Furnished| Credit Terms 5 am $49-081 83 Pore gs § « % 7804s 166 Muiled Free, Ve 99.08 le for Catalogue, AWeek Opens an Accouni [238 AvEtno'S é 2190 os, Ru-Las te the dest thing yet tor relief ef comatipation. All druggists sell le—ortes, 30, Oe 3035 3037 3 AvElOS