The evening world. Newspaper, November 10, 1913, Page 16

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r i Father and the Girls RESPITE CE eS a By Abe Martin “Th’ oletime father, with his wife, would pick out 4is most likely son-in-law an’ move in on him an’ loaf ever afterward, passin’ the evenin’ o' his life pitchi in’ hoes shoes.” Copeent, Tne Adama Newapapar Service.) th’ good ole days when th’ only avenue open t wamen Hut things have changed. Women don't marry fer Jed t' th’ altar er th! circus ring a father wux supposed | homes any more, uniess ther in w trance. ‘They git out t' feed wn’ rig out his daughter till some gay bothario] fem under th’ gentle influences of th’ home In ther teen rig out his daughte! #0 0 Pot oie i Aropped along en’ took th’ load off hie shoulders, Then | {™ ROU Work. A girl that hus a Job an’ a few wrinkled ls ® Up paper dollars enugged away under box o' combin's tn he'd buy nome clothes fer himself un’ go one NIMEArY] ty ‘buck Jeftnand corner oth’ top drawer of her pollen Falls excursion once in a while If he wuz unfortunate enough have three, er th’ remuiation full set o' daugh- tera, his none wuz kept tn clone proximity t' th’ grind Hone until each had been mathered in an’ inarde mistress o her own establishment. Then in his weakened condit th’ oletime father, with his wife, would pick out nis mont Wan’ move in on him an’ loaf ever after. in’ th’ evenin’ of his life pitehin’ hose shoam be- the pust-office an’ th’ Grand Central Huttel, er ular Shoe Store, acope t-day th’ proposition, No No wink full o° dist care o' @ fern ere at th’ very though She'll hold ont’ whietle blows an’ cI service ponitio own cloth unless tween playin’ dominoes tn th’ back end o' Th’ ¥ where th’ earnin’s o' Nis long an’ honorable life had n| ¢ @pent. It wus no easy-task t' work off @ Job lot o' daugh- ters in th’ days when you couldn't tell whether @ girl weighed eighty pounds er @ hundred an’ seventy—ape, cially if they didn't have nothin’ back o' ‘em but a per- pendicular farm er poor but willin’ parents, Then, too, ther wus th’ possibility o' one daughter out ‘o w possible three comin’ back on you. Then she, in her damaged cc ition, had t' be practically rebuilt an’ thrown back on th market. Th’ whole process meant a considerable financial outlay, t' say nothin’ o' th’ mental strain, : t, but it's hers © anything @ modern age an’ feela a lone! hunts up th’ help father never raises atin’ expenses. other advancement things eny easter fe world—she wants t’ oak dresser can't se@ @ offer o' her dow eat ke ap Jist as soon an a daughter Women are progressin’, daughter t' Grease lke other girl marriage nnder a micro- ther's a auto an’ @ matd danglin’ from clone confines of th’ kitchen fer Ellyn, ven for thy! She might stand fer th’ wold fish, but she shiew an’ rime away tof beatin’ rugs er whittlin’ p'taters, own fob an’ go home when th anner mover, She'a got a there tab! she buys her m at an’ If whe seen a hat she Ikex she pays on It UN tts hers, Lot's 0° times It's not hers til it's worn, ntually an’ futher never feelw it. An‘ father don't feel te all right with him. reaches th’ ostrich wreath in’ fer a corduroy dress comin’ on, she wanted column an’ patient, ploddin’ @ hand, ‘cept t' mark her off th’ oper- But ther progress, ke ever’ er Innovation o' our day, don't make r mother, Most any mother wants h but she's afratd o° th’ keep her at home. FEARS SHE WILL WRONG INNOCENT MAN; REFUSES TENT POTIVEL Stenogiapher Declines to Say tially identified him an her avsatlant, but ahe had recovered muMctently this morning to appear before Magistrate Appleton, “I'm not sure he's the man, judge,’ she told the macAstrate. “I have been thinking about what an awful crime tt} was, and how the guilty man would be sentenced to many years in the peni- tendary, and I'm afrald to say that he i, 1 thought he wan, though, when I eaw nim Saturday. “Take a xood look now,” the Magia- trate told her, and for fully five minutes the prisoner and witness stared at each other. MecKeyttt belie Seite cae ‘Kavi AF he ordeal, but * Collins finally WeKevitt Is Her Assailant broke down. "Ican't tell; I don't think he's the man,” she sobbed. and He Is Released. Deputy Assistant Diatrict-Attorney Devel then moved tnat MeKevitt be Gincharged, and he wan releases. Miss Collins was found last Thuraday afternoon unconecious in a wash room in the Woolworth mulling. “When she recovered connolourness she told of an attack by a man. The following day MecKevitt was ar- rested at his home, No. 12 Front street, Jersey City, by Detective Martin Sher- Teabella Collins, the Stenographer Who was attacked on the fourteenth floor ofghe Woolworth Bulld- ing last Thursday by an unknown man, feared she might inflict an unjust pun- ishment of many yeare in prison upon Because Mies in innocent peraon she refused to iden- | 4”: tity Patrick McKevitt in the Tombs Japan Police Court this morning. TOKIO, Nov. he Foreign Min- Miss Collins was too {11 to appear Sat-| intry announced to-day that there Ix ‘i no truth in the report published in the urday, when Alagistrate Freachi held) taiteq Sates that Japan has request MeKevitt under $10,000 batt for further] ¢he abrogation of the AngloJ@pan examination after Mias Collins had par- | alliance. News Oddities ORGINAL “BOILED OWL"—Pet owl @igarettes is owned by a Bronx saloonkeeper. that drinks wh Key and smokes DEER FOLLOWED RY A DOF broke up a golf game on the Gedney! Farm Country Club links near White Plaine. SPRINGFIELD GIRL has raised a fifty-pound squash, but has not decided yet what statesman to send it to. RED “DEVIL WAGONS” of the rural postat service are to be painted green @o they won't irritate the bulls. ROBERT ARMSTRONG will soon have the distinction, if the law in carried out, of being the first man hanged In Hermuda in thirty-three years, WOULD-BE FLIRTS were discharged bya Milwaukee magistrate because the young woman wore a silt skirt. NORTH DAKOTA judge has refused to confer citizenship upon applicants engased In the liquor business, COURTAHIP RY SERENADE, eight months of it, has ended nevertheless in @ happy marriage for a Patchogue couple, DR. TANNER, who holds the long-distance fasting record in this country, fs bout to propose marriage to Mra. Pankhurst, according to report. NO SIONS OF WAR Pf THIS—In a Denver maternity hospital twenty-three sirle have been born {n es Many consecutive days, but nary a boy. BRONX MAN refused to pay for a veal cutlet tn a restaurant examined the cutlet and honorably discharged the prisoner, HEADACHY, BILIOUS, CONSTIPATED, CLEAN YOUR LIVER—DIME A BOX You're bilious! Y sensation in your b bad taste in your mouth, your eyes hurt, your skin is yellow with dark rings under your eyes Magistrate and don't resort to harsh phy irritate anc ies that that your have a throbbin ) aned | ring with gentle, your lips ure parched, No wonder you Tieton ee wall mean and ill-tempered. Your} keep your head clear and make you feel full of bile and constipated | cheerful and bully for months. Get Cas- : properly passed off, and what | carets now-—wake up refreshed—feel like a cleaning side.” Don't | doing « good day's work —make yourself continue being a bilious, constipated nui- pleasant and useful. Clean up! Cheer sance to yourself and those whi love you, | up! CANDY CATHARTIC }O CENT BOXES -ANY DRUG STORE * ALSO 25 & SO CENT BOXES > RK WHILE You SLEEP | | OLD AGE PENSIONS FOR GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES Mayor Kline to Preside at a Demon- stration in Its Favor at the Hip- podrome Next Sunday. Mayor Kline to-@.y accepted an {n- vitation from the Natlonal Association of Civil Bervice Fmployees to preside at @ demonstration next Gunday after- noon in the Hippodrome in favor of old age pensions for all Government em- ployees. The committee that cailed on the Mayor wan compored of Patrick McNab, chairman, and Lawrence Dunn, Guatay Wanbach and James M. Saries. Doan and Wanbach were appointed letter car thors in 1967, the ¢ormer being stationed at Station D and the latter at Station P, which embraces Ellis and Governor's Islands, Sarles was appointed a le} carrier in 198 and 4m etationed 1, Wall street district. George W. Perkine will gpeak at Sun- the sting, which will be opened clock, He will discuse the ques- pensions as an aid to eft S in business. Foank A. Vanderiip, Presl- dent of the National City Hank, will speak on “Tho Justice of Pensions,” and Myles 8. Dawson will dis cuss pensions from an actuarial standpoint, Mr. Dawson assisted for- mer Governor Hughes during the in- murance = |) estixation. Martin Vogel, Asalstant ‘Treasurer of the United States, will also speak, It was announced to-day that came of Robert Turner, @ post-office clerk sixty-one years in the service, who was sald to have been practically to retire, will be used as an ment in favor of old age pensions. MEDALS FOR BRAVERY ARE GIVEN FIREMEN ——— Congress Recognizes Daring Acts on Part of New York Fire Fighters. the George Farr, an engineer, and Joseph V MeDonald, a fireman at- tached to the Areboat Zophar Milla of the New York Fire Department, were to-day presented with ailver Congres- sional medals in the offices of Fire Commissioner Joxeph Johnson, The presentation, made by Congress man Peter Dooling, was foe bravery displayed in rescuing two drowning men in the Kast River, The first rescue, that of Charles An- dereon, sixty-two year No. o Howery, was made by rand Mo. Donald on May 6 Anderson fell asl on the stringpiece at Pier N River, at the foot of Beekman atreet, to which the Zophar Milla is moored, Ho rolied Into the water, Parr and Me- Donald Jumped overboard without re- moving their coats, Anderson was selzed as he wax sinking the third time and Was taken aboard the fishing schooner Litiy turr aly figured in the dye cue, on June s. Shortly before midnight esaw Christian Nnultsan, thirty years No 1!) Pioneer street, Hrooklyr oon t of Pler Noo 2s and fali into the river, Parr swam with Knuitsan back to the Zophar Mills, > —_ Secretary Garrison Rack, Becretary of War Lindiey M, Gar- STOLEN BABY BACK, Stead Reports Life in Spiri Messages to Dau | REVEALS ANOTHER (MOTHER'S ROMANCE Mourning Her Own Dead Child, She Craved to Possess Another, irs Thursday after mother, Mr August Sauter, at No ' and Mra Sauter te Fidnapping was a For the new ar avenue, onvineed that her Wlessing In diagatss of his child's disappear August Souter, the hus father, to 0 sense of duty Judge Harris in the Court Relations granted the plea of the man Who had deserted his fly last June, for “another chanee, “TH take August ko Mra, Sauter had said do tears, and “Pil help you find Florence,” Sauter had replied ax ombraved hie wife, and th roused band and ond to-day of Domest n some one exelalied jen who's her: And out In the hall, at the door of the courtroom, stood Mrs, Satiter's broth- er with little Mlorenee In hie arma, “My little girl my baby," sobbed the mother as she ran toward her, and ‘it- tle Florence «miled at her, but firet he must put out @ hand and pat thirteen- tmontha'-old Rita, whom Mrs, Sauter held fn her arm: “Baby! baby!" she repeateds again And again between Kirsea, and then she turned to her mother and father and hugged and kissed them. It was a ‘apply reunited family which started up etairs for the Yorkville Court, where Mra, Rowe Hero, who had stolen little Florence and so had been the un- conscious means of the family was to be arraigned House There Santer had been arraigned on Saturday, for Mre, Sauter had sus. ected him of stealing the Httle girl, and he, reading of her suspicion In the Papers, had surrendered to the police reunton, hefore Magistrate In perfect Means of Com- munication.” | Fortune Tellers, Miss Stead Declares, but Its Truth Is ‘‘Being Estab- lished by Science Every- where.” By Sophie Irene Loeb. Do you believe in @ hereafter? Do you think it possible to com- municate with those who have al- Feady gone before you? Thin te not only possible but in actual Process, according to Miss Estelle W. Stead of Lamton, who has writte book, “My Father," which {# now & Publshed in thts country. She Is a ne the known author who went down on the Titanic. Miss Stead ts not “spook it. Neither ia she an idle dreamer deiv- ing only into the @upernatural, the un- known, but rather a young woman of Practical ideals, who having proven to her own satisfaction that spiritualism 1s @ fact, proceeds In the way of her ‘y T asked Miss Stead to tell me some- thing of the epiritualistlc communica- tions which she did in a manner that bespoke more than & superficial study of the subject. To her it ie all plain and easy to tell about, just as one would Harrate early talks with people, “Other ‘blographera can tell of n father's work but I would rather convey late on Saturday night, deolaring that he wanted to return to his famtly and to take a hand himself in the search for hin child BEREFT OF HER OWN LITTLE GIRL, CRAVED FOR ANOTHER Accorling to the police Mra. Bero, the young woman who took the litt! irl away, is almost aa much to be pitied aa was Mre. Sauter in the days when she was ignorant of the fate of the little girl, for Mre. Bero, the Police Say, loat her own baby daughter five years ago and ever since has yearned with @ passion which hae been almost ®& mania for a baby girl of he n Magistrate House tried to question the distracted young woman, but she could not answer coh tly, #o he held her in $2,000 bail for examination n Wednesday, when he will have a Bohemian interpreter present, Nero speaks Mnglish imperfectly and Was #0 nervous and excited in court As to appear deranged, She has been fn an asylum Lieutenant Murphy and ta of the East Thirty fifth ‘atl managed to lear from her that she had left her home at 88 Fourth street, Long Island City, Thursday to find her husband, Frank, @ teamster, who had departed that morning without leaving her any money. In St. Gabriel's Park she was accosted by several dhlldren with whom wan litle Florence. They wanted @ penny to buy candy and having no change the woman said she took them all to a nearby candy store and bouxht them soda and candy The little girls enjoye t, but as though by prearrangement ran out of the place am soon as they had finished thelr sodas and received their candy, leaving Mra. Bero with Florence. The woman told the detectives she called to the children, but they did not return and finally she took Florence with her to the home of her alster in Seventy- third street, stopping on the way to buy Florence some boots and a cap, TRAMPED STREETS WITH CHILD NIGHT AND DAY. Not finding her sister at home, Mra, ero returned to her own home with the child and on her husband's return from work got into a quarrel with him whioh ended in her leaving the house with Florence. They tramped the atreets ail, night, and on Friday, Mrs, Bero ways, she took Florence to the home of Mr. and Mra, Willam Layden, at No. 4 Second avenue, ¢ormer friends, to whom she explained that the little «irl was hers ,and that her husband had turned them out and as she was penni- less she asked them to keep the little girl tll she could find work and rent a room, There Florence had been ever since, and the Laydens were going to turn the child over to the police to-day when Mrs, Bero led the detectives there. Murphy and Ginta had little trouble finding the child, for they learned of the meeting with the woman from other children and located the store where Mrs, Bero bought the shoes and cap. it was near Thirty-fourth street and ‘Third avenue, and the good dexcription of Mra, Kero given to them by Mra Rosie Bernstein, the shopkee ber, enabled a youth who fr ents the corner ot | Phird avenue and Thirty-tourth street to recoguite Mra, Bero at once. She in the nelghborhowl before h | marriage. Thua they learned of |new address and found her in her | home this morning. At first she denied | all knowledge of the child, but finally confessed and led the detectives to the Layden home. —_—_— Life to Be With Dend Mother, >t tison and party returned from the Pan- ama Canal this morning on the Par 'Stcamship Company's iiner Col the party were the Secretary and hy. wife. Gen BoM. Weaver, In of the cost artillery: Mr Willa) Pedigo, the former being Mr Garrison's priva etary; Me. and Mew. 1 Mrs. Thomas kW Secretary left for Washifigton from the Pennsylvan station at 1 o'clock this afternoon, Frank Bodell, twenty-eight, was found | ditfieulty his spiritual side for I was closest to him," she said, “When I talk with my éather through mediums 1 recognize Presence tm- mediately, id Miss Stead, "First of all, he shows himself in a peculiar that I diffeent from any other tight that appears in a seance. His strong Personality, as it shows itself here, is ‘fott at once, and the things he says, the way in which he says them, the vi ttle mannerisms that mani‘e selves, just as they did at home tn our own study, are conclusive beyond the shadow of a doubt that it i# he, VERY FEW SPIRIT MESSAGES ENTIRELY AUTHENTIC. “So many people claim to have com: munications from my father that we get thousanda of letters about them, but we take it that VERY few are entirely authentic. For tu every spiritual com- munication there are two so-called in- struments of transypission to consider, the spirit that is cammunicating and the brain of the person who is conveying it. “It is just tke giving @ message to some one to deliver. ‘They may present it exactly as you have given it or they may #0 change the construction of it in deilvering it to you as to change its real intention, “Therefore it happens that com- munications from the spirit world are not always to be relied upon, since you cannot tell exactly how | much of it is the spirit and how much the medium. | “For example, my father tele me there are thousands of spirits who come to him asking him for mes: s to send | here, very much the same as inter- viewers came to him in life, He gives Victim of Titanic Disaster | Gives Out Interviews, as He Did Here, but Is Not Always Correctly Quot- ed—Hampered by “‘Im- | Spiritualism Has Suffered Much From Quacks and daughter of William T. Stead, the wel! far from | ambitions, For xhe has organized @ Shakespearian company abroad and ie hersel? studying for the staze and looks forward to estaliishing herself in that| | markable proofs | spirit THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1913, | } tee Cea NEESEEN SSIES ism to pervade through the universe in Seen DOSE ® beautiful way. one that will give comfort and advice rather than in a curious sense. fe belleves that science will eventually establish intercommuni- cations between the two worlds. Presumably spiritualism is right- fully the next step in the process of evolution, In other words, the Rt step of existence is the spirit stage. PROOF OF PREMONITIONS F.RST INTERESTED HER. father appeared before answered. “He was plainty T recognized him ir diese ate tot the only meth= y convinced me mor ods that have th as to the truth of spiritual niimate source of proof h Sar, .O cntirely satisf, , “When L first began to be in In this {t was through my father’s ree ¢ premonition, For Instance, we would et @ communtca- tlon that a certain thing would come to pass. Instead of waiting until that thing did cur he would write it dowa a8 @ premonition, and then when it did in reality come to pass there he had the written proot “There were so many of these verifi Premonitions that they could not poss ly be attributed to coincidence, “Then we had the many various mes- sn. A nalist, who had paid us a visit in Lon- don once and afier she had entered the land through various mediun manifested herself in remarkable way For example, it was throuxh Julia that We established in London the Bureau of 1 Communication, or Several years she urged this, but my father was loat act upon tt She wished this to wnducted as a them @ message, and, not unlike the in- terviewers of life, they send their own story of that messag “He also tells me there are just as many sceptics in the spirit world as there are here. It seems equally dim- cult to make those who have passed over ret they can communicate with earth people as tt 1s for the unbelieve: here to think it pousible to send me: sages across, ‘At a trumpet seance, when the volves are distinctly audible, I know my father’s volce at once. And then, when he leaves and my brother comes, q difference in the whole atmosphere and the voices Is certainly evidenced; sin my father had such a forceful peraon- ality, which was quite different from my brother's, go that I sense this dif- ference and it is one of my strongest proofs. DO NOT GROW WINGS OR HAVE GOLDEN HARPS. “Father tells me that spirits who have passed over are very much like they were in the body and must be dealt with accordingly, Thus they act | in many ways as they did on earth. They do not grow wings or become angels, as the old-fashioned notion would have us believe, but they progress in knowledge and wisdom as they @ older and gain a clearer view of the spirit world, just as people in thelr arthly work. “They are all around us and impress free method of communication which it would have taken consiteraile money to launch. But Julla insisted the money would be provided, “oon after @ prominent publisher in America invited father to write a series of articles on the subject of spiritualism. At this time Julla explained to father that this money was to be used for the establishing of a bureau, But father told her it would nut be enough money to do so, HOW THE “BUREAU OF COM: MUNICATION” IS CONDUCTED, “she then advised him to ¢ to the publisher that the insufficient and it would needs be doubled ere he would write the articles, Wather sent this cable and soon received one from the pubilsher stating that he waa willing to accept @ contract at tl double figure. Now this bureau with few exceptions did most effective work in establishing authentic proofs of spirit- ualism." “How Was your bureau conducted?” I asked, “Birst of all,” suid Miss Stead, Vody who wished to communicate with some one in the spirit world and could prove that he was not merely a curiosity seeker or an imposter was given an op- portunity to meet with threo different kinds of mediums, at which was present & stenographer who took down every- thing that was said between the medium and the oth on, The person seei- us, yet they cannot give direct messages because For examp! or the conditiens are not right Mf gil the parts of the telephone or telegraph are not rem w t smit messaxi it is with that they are transmitted, wirange that people do not realize this, and seem to think that if spiritualism 48 true each one ouxht to be able to get communications under any and all circumstances, Tho lawa of nature ure various and not all com- prehensible, so it l# unwise to ridicule that which wo do not know. Almost “it ts | dead on 2) Van Horne} wtreel, Jersey City thie morning by Mos. Homans, who keops the hoarding house there, The ae Was tu noand in tie room Wik a note a Bedett| had Killed himself becaus did not! want to Hye without is mother Hedeii’s mother died a zew months ago. | She was a widow and she and her son, | "he wae e clerk, lived together, every Dig Invention that has practically | revolutionized things has been subject to scorn and devision even after it had been born | ary that it is no eas) make through correct! them through comes and goes so rap- td As yet ne has not been able to get as many messages over as he would Uke, Dut he wante the idea of spiritual- get ing commup'cation would write @ de- keription of the spirit he wished to com. | munteate with, including names, &e, | which was placed In a sealed envelope, and not until after he had the sittn with the t Mevent mediums was the envelop and the facta com- ed, | “Aa @ result of this method tt was | clearly shown that in the majority of cases the mediums agreed very sub- mantially with the items of tdentifica- ttons that had been enclosed in the 'CASTORIA \ For Infants and Children, | The Kind You Have Always Bought | Boars the Signature ot 4 ESTELLE W. STEAD... sages from Jula Almes, a Chicago jour. | t World ghter, She Says se Of course | tums were a ted | their rel nthe 8 “there Are so many ations Just as th getty sion 4 ve indirect or faul- ty, Aven n the e of my father's exsages With Julia it was really rather diMeoult to know how much of thes Was my father's. SHOULD DEMAND PROOFS FORE BELIEVING. “He always told me, that often the best aud does so now. q be ob. Persons who do not know their Pergons who can practtoaiiy thelr own c lon of the message and pass it through jist ns it comes, ut there are now sc many quacks and fortune tellers, un- ee ereee sees ence on unsuspecting plorable to say the least. Peet. shonid not believe in any form of spiritualism unless proof comelu- sive is established for hag Lal the shadow of @ dou! Jrather has always been particularly anxious to stress on this, and thal spiritualism should dominate int most beautiful way possible, U thi the play, ‘The Return of Peter Grimm,’ jhas had a great influence for good in its appei Hecause a power for was established as a real reason for tl spirit manifestation which shoul@ be the only reason for it, “I also wish to say that there has been so much ridicule of spiritualism on account of quacks and fake seera of the future that it ally dificult te con- vey the real meaning of spiritualism in jita true mission, Many of my father's friends Im accordingly to gt fit up « suffer from It as to {po but he falthfatiy [kept to his bellef and now that he hay passed over and has communicated to me many things that 1 know it ;Would have been impossible for others to have knowledge of, I must naturally follow his footsteps and carry out his wishes “1 fee! Ms spirit with me constant! and at crucial times when T need ad= Vice or guidance he seems to place tn my path just the right persona to bring about the best results.” iss Stead's principal impression of New York is that its thoroughfares and ings are fo much allke that {te en- plans have been made, signed, led, delivered and built as it were In one night, Just a tn toyland or in fairy. Hana It {in such contrast to her home city, London, where the sections of th city were practically unplanned anc ‘grew siowly with time and progress She ts also impressed as to the dress o {women of moderate means who wee j similar gowns to those of women of | higher classes in England, paaocieneaes asia (NOT THE WIDOW OF WITZEL, M Learatas \doneph = Wetzel, Error, Drops Claim on Eatat “Mrs. Joseph Wetzel of Atheniaya suburb of Passaic, N. J., has discoverea that she was mistaken when eae claimed to be the widow of Joseph Witzel, the hotel man who recently died in College Point. She still claims, however, that she | discovered about three years age some where in ihe suburbs of Brooklyn or, Queens a long lost husband named |seph Witzel or Wetzel, who nad de jserted lier years before in Germany, | She identified him, she says, by a sear ‘on the nose When she read of the |death of the hotel man she jumped to jthe conclusion that it was the man | she had identified, | Joseph Witzel of Cotiege Point left @ |witow and grown children who have [been put to much trouble and annoy. Jance by the mistake of the New Jersey woman, <> i Sphing Club Banquet. The Spatnx Chib, the New York or nization of advertising men and mer interested in advertising, with members Nl over the world, will hold its banquet 2 Moat the W rf-Astoria, There will be no guests and the speakers wili he members of the club onl ~You'tt Get A SQuaReE DEAL AND ® NOSEME HOSIERY y AT THESE | | | Perfect-Pracess Hosiery as there is that sell it, jhosiery gives full money's worth. BRONX ine Mlarizan Co, h At , sat, de Od ave, a this Webetet ave, is Bion Samuel Weiser, Melrose a eM SA Third al M, Wertheimer, 116th st. UPTow: Argyie Elliott stoiva, 1 & Broadway, 12 31, Nicholas «0 Hind ince, ATG 1 imer Cy 210 Be “Ea LISLE 2 5.¢ BRAND See the “G" Line Mush- room Tucked and French Pique Dress Shirts. EARL & MAKERS OF TROY’ here is the same satisfaction in wearing Notaseme Long-wearing, sheer and lustrous, this RED MAN STORES in dealing with stores Aacnan int & Cement, “Bg wae demise ta thant a nines 12 Kinde Aone dio Bane ant Mo Tambert ortlanet ate ae th ave, Pr ptlennert jennett Bennett Mortie 5 Troadway Behance & Sha & Wontte NOISEME < THORNWOOD >> Front Effect of the WHITE. WOOD, but Without the Deep Points, 2 for 25c, WILSON "S BEST PRODUCT | ) |

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