The evening world. Newspaper, November 21, 1913, Page 3

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FOR HAVING TREE \ HUSBANDS ATONE First Pleads for Mercy, Second Doesn’t Care, Third Prose- cutes Lulu Powers, FAINTS AS SENTENCED, @ GREEN RIBBON \ WW Defendant Thought Divorce in One Case and Suicide in Another Freed Her. "DIAMOND’ JIM ENTRY THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21 JUDGING THE SILK HATS A very pretty young woman, dark Matened In Judge Rosal- sky's part of General Sessions to-day ‘while three husbands told how she had Married them, wearied of them, and re- turned to her father, each time, soon Qtterwards to contract another mar- riage. The first husband pleaded with to be Jentent with her. Hus- fate, but husband No. 3 thought that yearried the young woman on 1908, after he bad known her months, She lived-then with her at No, 1061 East One Hundredth | and Bixtysffth street, the Bronx, and | Jones testified he had known her ay Tadu Powers and had not known t she was married before. found it out when Miss Lulu tired him some months ago and, after ing him in the Court of Dome ‘Relations a couple of times, went heme to her father. Jones learned @mough at his appearance in court to @umpect that his wife had been married \pefore, and he began an Investigation Walch brought to Nght Charles. Voll man, who lives in Jamaica avenue, Cy- ‘Hills. Votlaman admitted he had Deleved himself the husband of Dut said he had discoerevd that Beward J. Murphy of No. 296 Valentine ‘avenue, the Bronx, had had that honor geme time pefore himself. Then Jon MeA the young woman arrested, That Beguine seek ahe had been in the | the horse show woman 1s a night ta her own ‘behalf the young woman | Dlooming Cereus that wilts in broad that she had been only seventeen |dayiight while the horse show man. yeas old when she married Murphy in| blossoms out Ike @ sunflower in the ’00'and that she had left him because | dawn's early Might. hé @djected to her going to dances and Alfred G, Vanderbilt and Judge W Partien. After the separation she sad 1H, Moore were entered in the Class A ahe-undergtoo@ that he had Kot @ 4-\¢rock cout and silk hat competition fence vale st Aad blandit copuseyen | with cane equipment. marrying Vollaman in 5 ey lived together only a few months before | Judge Moore breed sed te We 'Fetuenéd to her father, and some- | Promenade amid murmurs of delight tine Bttcrward read in the papers of the | from the railbirds, shortly followed by suicide of Charles Vollaman of Broo..-| Alfred G., who also received some lyn, Batiafied that she was a widow, | murmurs, with a fow scattered “ah's.” she married Jones, only to discover too| After a few minutes’ comparison it was easy to see that Alfred's coat was late that it was Vollaman's father and not her nusvand who had killed himself. |in petter condition, as it presented an unwrinkled surface and that his Back time, she sald, ghe had been 1! Wetim of circumstances and het own | trousers, which hung lke plumb lines, Btouhderatandtry af Tea Hever meant were putting y pointa to the good on ve more'than, one husband at one | nix je action, ‘The Judge was a bit : baggy at the ki s and wrinkled at the Murphy pleaded for the with, saying | opows, Alfred was handicapped by his that her stay In tie Tombs had been | purple puffed tle ich kept hia shirt punishment enough, but Judge Rosulsky | gn absolute mystery, whereas, the dentegced her to a year In the peniten- | Juage's 198% was fully exposed. Gary. The young woman promptly | UP TROUSERS ROBBED ted on the stand and her mother had | TURNED- fainted on the stand and he pts tb ibe assisted from the courtroom, only | skward and forward swayed the| faint as soun as she reached the) 44, (aad verdict gf the gallery over the tWo © 4) CR testants untt, with an exclamation of oe oe ROBBED MAN IS INJURED. =| horror, some one discovered that Alfred ‘ He Leaves Mievator in| 2.8 towers wee warned UP OF the bot- Falls a tom, #0 the blue ribbon went to the Crim! Courts Building. Judge without question, It was ex- ‘William E, Jones of No. Post plained that Mr. Vanderbilt, byineonlled treet, Williamsburg, was robbed of $14 | into the ring in performance ef his offt- while he siept on a bench in Battery | cial duties, had turned up his trousers to Park last evening, but Policeman Hey-|avokl the tanbark and had completely arty of the Old Slip station grabbell | forgotten about them on taking to the Robert McCarthy and Patrick Reilly, | promenade mafiore, whom, he said, he had acen| There was @ real thrill when a tpelY Jones. The iatter, who Is sixty {double epan of coach horses went xeare of age, appeared as complainant down in a squealing heap on entering in the Tombs Police Court to-day, und the ring for the Tally-ho event, The After Magistrate Breen had held them in |off-loader shied at a man close to the $1,000 all each to await the action of {rail who was attired in a checkerboars | te Grand Jury Jones took the clevator! shirt of black and white silk and whose) to go to the sirect. frock coat lapels were faced with ailk. ‘As he alighted he stumbled and fell |1t took seven grooms to get tho kicking ‘gn the stone floor of the Criminal Courts! mass of animals on thelr feet again, Building. He was knocked senseless, ang not until the checkerboard shirt end.Dr, Howe, who was called from te | roiireg trom the rail could the horwes wodeon Strest Hospital, sald that his ficiently to proceed with been fractured. He took him be calmed sufficiently fray gl Deen eel eeital sn serlOne epUEINOe. Braided tightfitting cutaways prevailed sage Bouquets Some = BY WILL B. partly yielded the palm to the men, togs of the matinee performance it's tint. Partial Vote tor Women, among the “sights.” The ‘sightecers” | MUNICH, Nov. 2.—The Lower House | observed thai spats have given way to af tee Bavarian Diet to-day passed @ / gray cioth-top patent leather boots, which have the same effect as spa | put do not conceal the trimneas of the instep and ankle, ‘The newest note for afternoon wear is the soft pleated dress shirt which falls Introducing Woman suffrage in the Mocs for the commercial and indus- courts and the Governmental Chambers of Commerce and trades or- ganizations. FSS MEAT IF KIDNEYS HURT OR YOU'RE BACKACHY AND RHEUMATIC urine gets cloudy, full of sedim: the channels often get sore and irritated, obliging you to seek relief two or three times during the night. To neutralize these irritating acids, to cleanse the kidneys and flush off the body's urinous waste, get four ounces of Jad Salts from any pharmacy here take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days, and your kidneys will then act fine, ous salts is made from the grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for gen to flush and stimulate sluggish kidney: also to neutralize the acis i it no longer irritates, thus ending blad- der weakness. Meats form uric acid which clogs Kidneys; causes * Rheumatism and ir- | ritates bladder. 1 — | Ifyou must have your meat every day, gat $%, but flush your kidneys with salts jionally, says 4 not: i Up.us that meat forms uric acid which most paralyzcs the kidnevs in their ef- rte to expel it from the blood, They me sluggish and weaken, then you lee with a duil misery in the kidney sharp pains in the back or sick Showy Togs of the Men Rob Womenof Much Glory at Ciothes-Horse Show |Silk Pleated or Checkerboard Shirt Fronts, Men With Bunches of Violets as Large as Cor- | boy, was sent to the NING of the Garden ‘Sights.’ JOHNSTONE. At the clothes-horse show at Madison Square Garden the women have At evening aress the women can beat the men in a common canter; but when the men discard the conventional black for the unconventional another story, in cascades of silky folds over low cut walatcoata, BUNCHES OF VIOLETS PROPER THING FOR MEN, The hat entries brought forth the cap- Ping climax of the afternoon with top- bers, derbies and all the soft varieties. The polished lids were pot-sahaped, bell- taped, flat brimmed, curve brimmed, nd short brimmed, high and low crownel and all of them different. “Diamond Jim” Brady, who was p1 ent with his show case, carried off the honors with a wide brimmed bell of the vintage of "49, ‘The horsey element—men and women— dress alike, and Harris tweeds of spec- trum hues and shrill designs pre- dominat The Horse Show “Johnnies” have stoien @ leaf from the women's fashion plates in more Ways than one. They have adapted the feather-in-the-hat idea, the frilled shirt front a la fichu and the tight waist. They are practls- ing the languid leaning-tower-of-Pisa bese so DP r with fashion models, They even tried !t on the horses, No stalls resembled coarse ddughter. (Se PRISON FOR DRUG USERS. Long Terms to Mem Who Mave C Twelve more cocaine casea were dis- posed of before Justices O'Keefe, Mo- Sessions, to-day, sellera were let go on suspended sen- tences. The rest were sentenced to from three months to one year in the peni- tentiary. James Dalton, twenty-three years old, and Louls Bertrand, twenty-four, who were arrested after @ raid on an apart- ment at Ninth str penitentiary for one year each, John Twenty: th street and Frank Shat- tuck of No, 2% East One Hundred and Forty-fifth street recetved sentences of six months each, Edwin Gurney of Ni Jast One Hundred and was k Thomp jt ent away for three months, a eixteen-year-old New York Reforma- |tory. — Thompson tted using th drug for the last fourteen months, a HOLD ALLEGED LOAN SHARK. {Complainant Went to Sage Founda- ton Atter Paying $30 for $25 Lent, Daniel ©, Weber, whom Walter 8, Hetl- born, a lawyer and investigator for the Sages Foundation, charavterized as a loan shark second only to the notorious Tollman, was held in $500 ball to-day by wistrate Breen in the Centre Street Court for examination next Wednenday. Weber was arrested this morning in the office of Carlton & Co,, at No, 140 Nassau stteet, He has a branch office at No. #0 Firth avenue. * Arthur Brewer testified that he borrowed #25 from Weber on Aug, 1 | Mast, and agreed to pay back $0 every two weeks until he bad paid $4.38, He had paid about $30, when Weber began to hound him for the rest of the money. Friends whom he consulted ent him to the Sage Foundation, which ts leading a fight on loan shai A Hable Ihilosophe (From the Atleuiea Constitutio De preavher say de @raftin’ politictan- ers ‘ll git what's comin’ ter ‘em here- | after, but it looks ter me lak they won't bein’ ex some of ‘em live in fine tiouses Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot in- pe ned makes @ delightful effervescent Bdache: dizziness, your stomach squr an’ order porterhouse steak wien be go high do po’ mgu can't see it tro’ a emygiess, Boutonnieres are no longer limited to a aingle flower, The proper thing Is a bunch of viol about the size of a corsage bouquet. wonder the sounds coming from the] pubic interest is organized will the su- Inerney and Zeller in Part 11, Special] 4n opportunity to etudy the operation Six drug usera and|of the plan during a visit to Madison, i” West One Hundred and | sed a8 @ social centre, vt in August, were sent to the] 4on. Bowen of No. 138 East One Hundred and] And then the voting body of each dis | have ter walt—dat dey git tt right now, | GIRL GETS AYEAR |Sxzart Clothes Worn by Garden Beau Brummels Show That Men Can Don Frills as Well as Women FRIED SHIRT FRONTS (Stu) AGROUP OP WOMEN ALPRED VANDERsILTS STRAIGHT-FI BACK -Anp-SIDE ROLLED UP PA WOMEN WITNESS THE HORSE SHOW we toes ome me) | SHOOTING OF MEN FASHION - PLATES Neither Two Vic body Else Explains Affair, So All Are Arrested. ims Nor Any- GRay CLOTH ~TOPS A plano was rattling away in the back room of Margaret's satoon, No. 1120 Myrtle avenue, Brooklyn, early to- When an automobile stopped at the door and s al imen hurried In. ve HITS AT TANIMANY AND BIG INTERESTS President’s Daughter Favors City-Wide Organizations to Control Public Affairs. Copseignt, 1013, by The United Pree Amocin ns, WASHINGTON, Novy, 21.—'The pri- Vate Intererts are organized; th ‘efore they are powerful. On’y when the Premacy of the common interest be untversally recognized ‘Thus did Miss Margaret Wilson, the President's daughter, sum up to-day the pivotal point in the movement for use of the nation’s school houses as octal centres, Misy Wilson has had Wis, and sees in it closer study by the people of governmental, economic and political problems. “The machinery for this organization of the public interest is tie common with every scnoolhouse gald Miss Wil- Every school building should be made the polling place of its district trict should be organized into a del\i- erate body for the free discussion of py bile questions, PROVISION SHOULD BE MADE FOR DISCUSSION. “It seems to me axiomatic that there should be the samo provision for all sided discussion on the part of the c wens before they vote that there is f Aldermen, State legislators or any otuer agents of the oltizens, “Whereas in Loa Angeles, Mil- vukee, Grand Rapids and other cities =the school hoi ses are used as polling places che plan Is economical, venient and helpful to the educational wervice of the achools, And where—as in Wisconsin—the State law directs the achool boards to provide for the fr: use of school buildings as voters’ com- mon council chambers—'pariiaments of the people'—the feasibility of this plan has been established by two years’ suc- ful demonstration. Not only should the school houses be provided without charge, but the pald service of a clera or olvic secre- tary should also be furnished just as this service is furnished for the meet- ings of Aldermen, legislators and other sub-committees of the citizens, ‘This programme of citizenship organ- ization, through the use of the school- houses as social centres, is the oon- structive and common sense answer to very many of our probleins, FIRST LOGICAL STEP USE OF SCHOOL BUILDINGS. “Et ie the firat logical step toward con faations, for without this sort of | (Tying to city-wide organization of the peo | but the policeman drew his ple to control their own affaire | il kept any one from leaving there is always danger of the sel- J telephone! the Verne fish interests coming back. station and soon tho “Were tho citizens so organized, t the suloon it would not be necessary for can- So far as in known no one had left the didates or parties to hire halls for | Pier Two mon were found on the polltical meetings; four-fifths of | for, (re said he was wilt the need of private campaign con- +! {wont «musician, Hivir tributions would be obviat, 1 Hifth avenue, and the oti fifths of the occasion for palitiest | ecribed hinselt ax Frank Btto, twenty= corruption would be removed, five, a bartender, Living at No, 83) Myr “Tie schoolhouses should be used] te avenue, Grotan had the bone in his not only for the intelligent constderas| ‘eft forearm shattered by a tullets be | ton of local questions after the fash] 7 shot In the left arm, the right thigh jon of New bingland town meetings, | and right lew. but algo for the discussion of State and vt no complaint to mo national affairs, and for the calm con- fives. "Just a —— | A few minutes later « second auty rolled sea [UP ated w second crowd Was added to answer to the vice problem In cltlee) i, errymakers tn tho buck room and rural communities, List “Et is the means of holding the hen five re ground gained in the fight against | ‘iceman Ni Tammany and other such organ- | to the buck de Sal out doors ver shots brougyt Po- las Nolan from the comer Men and women we and sideration of questions of international] ter among ourselve relationship, Ly this means wo shall,| "ld be willing to make a complaint 4f ts 4 people, incet these great problems | T knew who shot me,” sald Grotan, "p Worth Tdon't” f “This social centre programme should | That was the extent of the Informa. ul to Muffragasts and anti-suftra-| ton the police Kot from the victims, gists, for whether Agree that men] The crowd that had been In the saloon abd Women should stand togeth at as Lined up against the wall aad the ballot box, we must agree that men} searched. There were twelve men and and Women should sit together in the] two women, and not one of them would discussion of our common problems,| admit knowing a thing for they require for th the intellige WRONG MAY BROWN NAMED. y heard a revolver suddenly bexin to bark, and thelr sole interest was in wetting awa one had a weapon of cept the bartender, who had e polloe may I described Error Made in Story a as Thon nsonla of No, 246i From Maudaten tte VGaspaven ayer ba tae aaneee In the printed accounts yesterday of | concerned. oh er hr ier (tes from the| On the plano was found a revolver Magdalen Home for Girls at Inwood, | WIth Ove empty stella. Nobody has tm thoy it, The police were so disgusted whi one of the young Women was stated td young women was stated to teskeo “uni th crowd until ve May Brown, twenty-four yeara old, | thoy can make a further Invemtimein of Ni lay rty-fifth street, w> women dese then selves an Brooklyn Maud Sohuyler, twenty-one, of No. A Miss May Brown Ives at the Bay | Fourth aven. and May Clark, twen Thirty-fifth street address, but she In not Phat tel sh, nm, The n were taken to the Hrook e young wor lished accounts. an named in the pub- | Mins Brown of No, 35 police belleve two gangs met by a delight to the jonly In development but also in texture | and color, for in every branch of dress is this Influence of the modern schools —_—_—. Pope Puts Ban On Tango Dance BRLLANT PLA OF TOUETES TE HORSE SHON Beautiful Afternoon and Eve-| ning Gowns Surpass For- ply of the Vatican indicates that the tango must be comeide immoral dance an@ consequently prohibited to Catm Several Bishops in Italy have forbidden women wearing slit skirts to attend religious cere: monies in churches. mer Exhibitions. a hud ast waa attired in a eown PF guest Mey, Peter Martin, wha ef violet satin Hv length coat ef which MODERN ART TREND, | 01 Stole, ter hot of wack satin and | Mere Joseph Wo Hortinan appearet " jin A gown of peacock blue velvet with Decrease of Orientalism in the tiles — Jehitfon, Her jew a string of Stulas fp a! id . wear nd ‘ope of did onda. Het Styles of Frocks and Wraps | mart snd, roee of cimenae St Noticeable. n Harriman looked charm- in a gown white charmeige trimmed with royal ermine, She wore e dainty string of pearls and a large black The women of New York—and appar ently the men, t continue to be In. } hat trimmed with algrettes, In terested In the fashion features of the vx with her was Miss Mary Alex- Horse Show, where society ts playing | who was attired in a gown of the role of “living models.” And aoc. | #’tmet velvet with chiffon, She wore sty xcema to be enjoying the role, for | ® delicate rope of diamonds. Her small Ke appears twice dally, and with each |UPMrned hat of gan Mehl od tession the display of tollettes becomes | (lined with matching roses and en more handsome, Evidently soctety ie “PMN of bronze ostrich, AAVing Its prettiont fnery Mra, James R. Brown was @occom- for the last days of the show, for the exhibition | Panied by her two daughters. She wore yeuvardiy surbabes . : a handsome gown of black satin with @ ‘we ee 1 Jered net tunic with whken Especially are the beautiful evening | Net Hox gowns and handsome wraps ietnnied | eftoctt ‘The crown of her small velvet With costly furs a veritable sartorial | bat Was surrounded by upstanding white feast for the numerous fashion seekers | *!kFette, Miss Angelica Brown wore @ Who throng the promenade, skigg of blue matin, over which fell @ tie decrease of ntatlam In. the | Dick net tunic embroidered in blue irre styles has been expecially apparent in | leavent beads and dince of shade biue the evening talettes, and the strong in- | Velvet Her sister appeared in @ charm fluence of mofern art, the new move. | !NKLY simple gown of white crepe chiffon ment in fashion, is very noticeable, It|4td shadow net and a quaint blesk has produced gowns and wraps that are | velvet with a chin band and frille ef eye of the artist, not | lacy and pink roses under the back., OTHER HANDSOME GOWNS AND HAT. Mra. Joo! FE. Fisher was attired tm @ gown of black velvet, over which she wore a coat of black satin trimmed with white satin, Her hat of sliver lace had drooping plumes in pearl gray et the k. Her daughter, Miss Vieva Fisher, wore an attractive gown in electric bive taffeth and chiffon with frills of leon Her close blac: velvet hat was banded with fox and had an ornament at the front of cut steel and diamonda. Ori of art making a strong imp In the tollettes worn by soctety at the | Horse Show, ATTRACTIVE AFTERNOON GOWNS WORN. Some pretty afternoon gowns w: seen yesterday, one of the most attrac- | tive of which was worn by Mra, T, Stan- wood Menken, It was of black moire All. made up in draped effect over an| Then there was Margaret Andrew tebe Underakirt of black valvet, ‘The bodice |@ beck duvetyn with coal wiemings Was ® combination of tho silk and | am! # black velvet hat with two shadow lace, In the deep v Heo linbrsmenpel iredr tpl siret oh 0 Psi WAS) Sargent in an extremely a peels a string of matched pearls and | yuit of taupe duvetyn, the short, loose | necklace of pearls with # pendant of | Goat being held in by @ sagh of the ma- diamonds, Her hat waa a turban of i Mra. Duncan Harris In @ tetede~ | black Jet mounted high with a huge duvetyn with furs of silver fox, cluster of black tulle. Q nest Iselin tn ee re Th the box: with Mrs; Menken was of Violet satin, ‘se Olives Leeks ta © Mrs, Arthur Carroll, in an afternoon | Bl&ck contume with Jumt, @ he denn of taffeta, of which there la now | Whit. Mim. Willam Ziegler Jr. in en & stroug revival, It was in th bE emer hee pebonrey? ‘ a8 In the new | and pearls, Miss Ethel Bowers tn @ tele violet blue hade, and her fure were | ored sult of black broadciyth and white ail fox, Her matching hat was vov- | furs, Mrs. Kdward B. McLean in a wrep ered with algrottes. of green and gold emboxsed sille trimnet Mina Kat ¥ in a costume of biack| with lemon dyed fur and Mra, John D. nile with corine silk trimmings enter- | Ayres {na long coat of gray embroidered | tained in her box Miss Anna Sanda at- |" sliver and trimmed with a silver em- tired in a tallored suit of taupe cloth, | brebleral band of peacock bine velvet Miss Elizabeth Dodge in a coatuine « eli ii al brown dovetail and Mra. Hamilton V y who Wore a handsome suit of black —— satin with a Roman sash and fox ture, SIX DEGREES IN SIZE Mra. 1. Francis Hyde had an f guest Joxeph Ferris Simmons and Mra,| “pice ts plan’! an E Parker eet olm Stuart. Mra. Simmons wore al orth, th reasing the value ‘of tailored mult of verigris atte duvetyn| nix literary wares, but there are plas and Mrs, Stuart's suit was of black cloth | and pigs, Warden Hosp of the Essex with a bodice in canary beautifully em-!County Peni ntlary at Caldwell, Ne Jy brovered tn Ortental colorings, Mra! nas the document to prove It. Hyde was attired in an afternoon gown! 4 drove of pigs ts one of the assets of Mt bronze witk tb wih wable over line penitentiary, A “trusty” prisoner which she wore a long coat brocaded silk. black h «charge of the pork reserve, Warden Hor jewels were dia- Hoap was looking over the pigs @ cou mond and opala, of days ago and found they were quite COSTUMES OF MRS. ALFRED] numerous, Ie Instructed Deputy War- VANDERBILT AND QUEST, Suday to a pig. asus taken, | Mra. Alfred Vanderbilt's afternoon| The Deputy Warden passed the order kueats were Mra, J, Van der Hoorat Koch| along to the convict swineherd. Im a in ® wmart tailored sult of black, Mra,|short time the folowing report wae J, Mitchell Henry in a fetching comtume | aubmitted: in the revived black and white effect, trimmed with bandings of sable, and Mrs, Carlin, who wore @ tailored suit Caldwell, %. J. Nov. a ‘Warden F. 3. Hosp. 2 hereby submit to you full recera f duvetyn in emerald green with revers lof piget and cuffs of corn colored peau de pes 11 large hogs. 1a collar of black fox. Mra -| 16 smaller ones. dervilt's kown was of black brocaded| @ more small crepe with trimmings of white satin, 7 Uttle more smaller, Her large velvet hat waa in midnight] @ Mttle bite of things. | blue and had a mhower of black para-| 1 gumt | lise at each wide, A large corsage bou-| gotal 45 pigs. quot of violets and tiny pink roses a! forded a touch of color, In the evening, wearing a handsome coat of old ru: brocade velvet banded with mable, 4! The nationality of .¢ “trusty” who made the report as not been disclosed. BUSHMILLS Ray Thirty-fifth street ts the daughter SE tert wants iy | apr jent In the saloon to patoh uy a n years And Im employed by | Huce and somebody gut fen concern at front aiteet and <. eo concern at Fron’ et and | Old Slip, Manhattan, She laa gra | Rev tn if “a Bite ou of a Brooklyn school and tsa t Ti ae NY Cea aC): in eunmey antes Hroadway, New Hrts 8. 1, i Ve Sungay /Geheol moving in hie front yard yesterda Evan, hurehy i Turning, when a dog ran tn and. bit parents ata loss to nim, ‘The poll ew Highton were know how her n eowne connected ' jnformed and Kot a deecription of the with the Inwood escapade dog, with orders to shoot it, Tortures of Indigestion Miseries of Constipation Evils of Impure Blood Quickly and Safely Removed by EX-LAX The Family Chocolate Laxative | £:x-Lax Saves Pain and Suffering; makes people | .calthy and is safe for infants and grown-ups. the use of these buildings a» recreation Gongreewand that is a great Dart of the ExeLax is guaranteed to be efficient, gentle, harmless. A 106 Bos Will Prove Thies bey It Te-Day—All Druggiste, Trish Whiskey | When it comes to Quality, Bushmills has no superior. As to flavour—tastes differ —but most men order Bush- mills when they order Irish, And it is the flavour of * Bushmills that makes them do it. “aLex.0 [SHAW] eco.ny pllar of diamonds was most _

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