The evening world. Newspaper, December 18, 1915, Page 4

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ea ee wuat You Want to Know WHAT IS YO OK RUIN HICH OE HCH INT ROPE HE EET, CHC HE HC HONE HOR ORE HI THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, UR FAMIL LOK SFO HOR MICO : ° x * f “Kid: in dd UDGET? | SOLDIER-POETOF 70 'Séster-Heroines of ee toran YB _ About Your Auto and How To Drive It and Keep It ‘Expert Advice How to Keep Automobiles Running Smoothly and the Best Way to Remedy Machine Treublee— | Traffic Suggestions and Pleasure Routes | for Evening World Readere. | | ' By GEORGE H. ROBERTSON. CAREFUL motorist will always have the safety of other users of the highway in mind and he will always operate his car at mod- erate speod so that it is fully under his control at all times, During this season of the yoar the pavements are very treacherous and «reat care should be exercised in the handling of the car. The four wheels should be equipped efther with chains or good non-skid tires, whenever the streets are wet or slippery, and the courtesies of the road extended to a vehicle which is hard to control. SuMcient warning by moans of the horn should always be given before attempting to turn past another vehicle, the car speed should always be slackened in passing @ pedestrian ficient warning given in order to pre vent confusion ‘The driver of a vehicle should real- ize that because of the heavy weather *trafMfe conditions are not in their normal state, and In order to ald in safe operation he should give and take ‘more at this time than he would usually. The horse-drawn vehicles un- fortunately have been the cquse of many traffic tle-ups for the past few Mays, due to the fact that tho animals are unable to keep their footing. It might facilitate traMc movements Sf the drivers of the held-up vehicles get ‘out and lend a hand toward getting the horse on its feet. It is these little eourtesies that are given during such weather as we have at present that help the traffic authorities cope with the situation | Astomotdie Bxtitor: + a nN Tae eammameee Will the insurance company be re-| Doe not use grease that le net semi- ‘wponsible if the owner's son, sixteen | fluid in your transmission, After the GEORGE H: ROBERTSON Where Every Cen statistical basis ty 4, th soldent | gears have cut tracks in hard grease \ wile anv Dish eats promis further lubrication is impossible and wife and child, ; ne hog rapid wear the result. JOB SCHMIDT. Automotile Editor Tho insurance company, | believe, is New Jersey hills. : Is It true that you are going back liable if the person operating the car|/to the racing gaine aguin? I have 4e recognized by the motor vehicle|seon numerous articles to thia ef- law or if the wording of the policy | fect? JOHNSON WHITE. | covers this. In spite of the numerous rumors ab that come out from time to time about ‘Actomntile Kiiior: my racing again, | Can a man owning a commercial] good. I'm in ear operate the machine without a] and eale of r Hcense? GEORGE KARN, | takes up my entire time, | If the machine ie reoletered in your | Automohile ali Fame ard you are the owner end op: | row can I cure a rattle caused by erator you do not need « chauffeur’s| the crank inside the sleeve? When 1 ‘license. metimes release the gears the car | Automobile Béitor: will continue to go ahead when I let Il have a Ford automobile which is up on the clutch, I have « full float- fyery hard starting in cold weather|ing rear axle and multiple disk clutch, (and I can hardly crank it, I always Do you think it needs oil, or what? (put warm water in it to heat the M. + pylinders, but this does not remedy he trouble. I am using a medium| by the crank inside th i ie of oll, I have to turn the] refer to the starting ky Uerank about one hour and a half be-| suggest that you fit a new bea ie creasing prospert “Your today’ mh ARAL tistics is my pet subject of discussion now thi and thie | ‘ach to the budget. IT'S PROFITABLE AND GOOD FUN TO BE A BUDGET MAKER. “It is, because I have passed through my anxious days of $12 4 week, with wife and child on my shoulders, that I have continued and am compiling even now my dally, weekly, monthly and yearly state- ments of expenditures, although I am now comfortably eltuated. “| have to thank my statistics for the money | have saved, and Ido not understand what you mean ' to In reference to it works easy and the car starts.| Support the orank. at ; a Fon Nar Te Sean, | Mengde for the mouse | bought a, few Examine all the clutch bands and cluto months ago. | would never have ‘make sure they do not drag. oughly ee ned ary dared to venture into such an un- you will find that the heavy oil/ Proper lubrication, dertaking if | had not had my ind grease in the tranemiesion drums | Automobile Kaitor: ‘accounts, demonstrating down to will offer considerable resistance) ) am a rural letter carrie: o when the car is cranked. Menagha and have used ri Haney tian Davidson motorcycle for the past +) How can I make a non-freezing| threo seasons, but I find them very fmixture for my radiator? Ie dena-|hard on myself after I have ridden {tured or wood alcohol used? G. M. them oo long. What I want to do Is to That you une donee 1! machine for my own use on ge Sia part of alcohol to/ Fouls, and also handie them in « county or town here. The Ford and three the Maxwell are both sold here so I Automotile Balitor: would have to handle something that I have sold automobile parts and] could compete in price and service supplies to a minor who owns an! with them, We have not got the worst utomobile, the license 1s in his name|roads in the country, but there are Tam unable to collect the amount] lots of sand hills where you need a cont, that with very little addi- tional sacrifice, | could own a@ place rather than rent a flat in Manhattan. “Here is the way I proceed, “My wife is the cashier of the con- cern, All my earnings are placed in her care, They are entered in a cash book on the left side. The right side contains the itemized expenses for each day. The cash book is balanced every evening—about two minutes’ i of my bill, Will it be possible to hold| plenty of power, and also. th fhe father responsible for this? would be little use in getting @ high. | "Or ; "TL think that the father would be| priced car as the bulk of the business The items are then transferred by responsible for the debts of a miner. | Would be with farmers in the vicinity |me to the month's statistics, Each However, a lawyer | can-/ and, although prosperous, they are| column is headed by a budget amount ‘give you positive information. If|not “wealthy, and when they buy a for that month (this car they want service as well figure being pleasure out of it, based upon the averages of the pre- Now I would Ike to have you give |ceding year), and we are not supposed me the names of the different cars| to exc ; rye the names of the different cars| to exceed that amount. ‘This table 1 have described the conditions: to shows me at the end of the month you, also thelr addresses, Now I wiii| ow much we have spent for each, the butcher, grocer, &c,, and also the mention a few. What do you think of that Saxon Six? Will it stand up! total for cach day, A recapitulation Twre you | would go and see some good lawyer. | Automobile Ea!tor : I have « 1915 Ford touring car which seems to Jerk along whenever Eee her in high speed. Can you ‘this the cause and a remedy for ad J. KENNEDY. Automobile Editor I have a Kritt touring car 1914, which has done 9,200 miles. Does my connecting rods need taking up, would It be advisable to take out @ shim or two and how can I tell they |need taking up? I am going to put @ new piston ring on top of oach cylinder, the rings being no-leak ignition and » to hard usage? What about the Mota? Look over the ig vg | Are they proving satisfactory, and]! the total suas in each column ts je carburete: oO what is that Regal car do! then placed on the outside of the after it been thoroughly ol e J. H. McMINAMIN, | folded statistic table, so that one can of dirt and water. Am writing you in full regarding] seo At 4 glance the principal items, this. ne end of UI “ur the month] Automabile Haiitor totals are transferred into « Saari ! Is it safe to use kerosene in place of water for cooling a motor of a Ford in cold weather? LAE ‘The use of kerosene in place of water for the circulating system is not very good practice, as the former has not the cooling qualities of the latter. Because of this the motor would run hot, which is the most table, in which I ages (daily and butcher column, &o,), ablish the aver- monthly for the the grocer column, This table also shows me tho week, month and the year, “Without bothering you with details | can assure you that where my total expenses per day important of several object with step lap and have two V cuts| averaged $8.55 per d te Indtior: all around them to carry a little oll 1 lived in dvtomon on them at all times. I bought an-| York, | have ma Would you suggest tho use of hard rehse in the transmission of my itchell? If not, why? GEO T. BROWNWELL, other new ring from the Kritt people to get the measurements from, as I have not put the new ones in yet. I find ovt that measuring them from ly and | have bought a hou “Let mo ad@ that it takes but @ few minutes’ careful work each day, and ——— = oe to side with the rings closed| that the satisfaction one derives tight the Kritt ring is a thirty-| from the result repays one amply for . second of an inch smaller than the| the little trouble. LW" MOTORISTS others, I think this will make|~ Hore are the average amounts much difference? Would a solution| (monthly) which WwW" allows to of caustic acid clean my radiator] the various {toms in his budget PROBLEMS SOLVED) siostsii’ suiec'as smz.erini | these im What formula do you use? If I nit Georce H. Robertson, America’s foremest | it with kerosene and leave it for a : ¥ day, will that do? A, OHR, Ci anag get ty By lowering the lower half of the ‘es Be crank case, you can feel whether the 4 Day and Evening Classes: also private in |Fods are loose or no y taking é kenne Entertainment, fruction at hours to sult convenience, Special Classes for Lad: Call or write for booklet, out the shims the bearing is given « ot tighter fit. Your own judgment should tell’ you how many shims to take out. Regarding the piston rings, ‘eis, 5196.04 LEARNED HOW TO SAVE FRO) "T CEARNED DRESSMAKING AT NIGHT SCHOOL From PATTERNS * waTPS ME Ma, budget system that “L. W." ests me intensely,” his letter begins, average total expense for each day, a i} or a horvedrawn vehiclo and suf-!By Running Household on Budget Plan and a Scien- tific and Statistical Basis, This Man Has Pros- pered—Now Has His Own Home—Knows t Goes Every Day, Every Month and Every Year. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. “My contention and experience is that EVERYBODY should treat their household finances as they would their business finances, and NO MATTER what the income, the houschold should be conducted on a eclentific and ‘That is what a man who holds the important posi- tion of advertising manager for a well known maga- zine writes to The Evening World. Once his salary was $12 a week, and on that sum he had to support a Now his yearly income {s in the thou- sands and he owns a charming country home in the And it is to bis adoption of the! attributes his steadily in- ty. ‘# article in The Evening World inter- “Houschold sta- with my friends, who have often ridi- culed me on account of the importance—perhaps exaggerated—which [ at- ing at night school from patterns and find 1 can make a $8 waist for $1, Also, at sales, sometimes, ready- made dresses can be bought very cheap, Last euminer I had my hus band’s old summer sult cleaned at the cleaners (not the tailors) for $2 and it came back like new. Ho did not have to buy a new one. I do not live in @ steam heated and [ wouldn't; I pay $18 for tl nicest lower-part house in the heart of Brooklyn. I have five rooms and a Porcelain bathroom; stairs in the hall; I have a real pink and white bedroom in the back parlor and a spare hallroom; a real parlor; a real up-to-date kitchen and a real dining- room. The reason I say real is be- cause my home is not a sot of boxes called an apartment, and | have mir- ror mantles in every room. I de- scribe my house, as I want to show you what I get for my money. The sun @hines in my rooms all day, as my windows don't face airshafts, 1 have a real home for my money and don't live in a building the size of a factory with fifty families, I buy coal at $6.50 a ton and use it night and day from Nov, 1 to April 1. Sometimes I use one ton a month and sometimes @ ton lasts six weeks when the weather Is not severe, have learned to run my home on a business basis; that is, go where | can get the cheap- est and best for my money. | don’t run to the nearest grocery, butcher, baker or delicatessen. | watch the sale previously id 35 its und for coffee— o pound for cents now; 36 cents a dozen for oranges—25 cents now. “These are only a few of the articles I can mention that I have bought much cheaper by just going around like a business manager and finding out the cost of living. “Cake such as raisin, &., when bought in boxes, is 10 cents a half pound; bought in the department stores it is 10 cents for a whole pound. I use legs and shoulders of mutton, not lamb; smoked tenderloins, not smoked hams; sliced fresh tenderloins iced pork trimmings—much better than pork chops, no waste, bone or fat; steak, rterhouss. Spread u thin layer of chicken stuf- fing on steak, roll up and tie, then it is delicious, ut it up 8 or German pot ros use cocoa instead of chocolate for cakes and chocolate pudding, Stale bread, grated, may take the place of cracker dust, Fats can be saved by taking the marrow from soup bones, Let the water stand in which corned beef ‘or other meats have been boiled and akim off fats, Ask the butcher for the fats he trims from your meats, |For those who make their own ea) and pastry I suggest that they ren der out suet fat in a double boiler and) use it instead of butter and lard, Suet of the milk, grows around the milk bag cow and really comes from | Some of the imitation jon the market aro made from suet. got this tip from ‘one lace. “Here are my household ex- I told: i M they must fit the cylinder proper! Stewart Auto School | thy if they are a thirty second ever- WEALTHY FRIENDS, dway) |sizo f do not believe they will fit.| “Dear Madan My husband gets However, would advise you to try | $30 a week, and up to a year ago we k proof ring is better than| Could not save a cent, We met a Men desizing to be trained as Would not a richgold SaupIn, who taught us how H ic for cleanin to sive, And this is how we do it: Motor Truck Drivers the My husband wsed to have his sults radiator compound manufactur made to order for and Now ae or as Chauffeurs a for that purpose, The vapo: he looks further Kols a ready- GB, get fut intormation aiteeat By phe ion in your let hi made suit for $15-16-18, exactly the e 7 ay evening at the West | | results with same as the previous one, He does * of carburetors. An accessory of this| nc to the tailor around the corner ASTRAL ESADOT sort depends upon the carburetor and| any more, I used to have my clothes! Total . ceeeguneeees lits adjustment. made, but 1 have learned dressmak-4 “in addition there are Official French Government 4 Motion Pictures, 1p t Drescated under the ttle of i F Who knows’ Add a little salt and set in a cool mK TURNS OVER HIS MONEY To MIS Wie WhO 1S THE CASHIER duos of $3.60 to union and lodge, from which sick and death benefits may be obtained if needed. As wo don't always require clothes and home furnishings, you can readily see tht there is enough money to take us to the theatre every week. We buy 60 cent or 75 cent seats, The week we pay lodge and union dues we still have around $9 left, and other weeks around $14. MRS, 40 WOMAN OF 85 RESCUED WITH FAMILY CAT FROM SMOKE-FILLED FLAT Broadway Crowd Watches Fire, Cheering Police Rescuers Car- tying Down a Family. + A family of four, one belng a |woman eighty-five years old, were \carried, half conscious, early to-day from their smoke-filled apartment, at No. 797 Seventh Avenue. Tho fire, which originated in the basement, did not spread above the first floor, but it sent up such a choking cloud of smoke that the apartments above were filled to the point cf suffoca- tion, Those rescued were Mrs. Kathe- rine Plindo, her elghty-five-year-old mother, Mra, Inez Alzino; a daugh- ter, Alice, aged sixteen, and seven- year-old Frank, a son. They lived on the third floor. The blaze was discovered by Ser- geant Walsh and Patroiman Marr of the West Forty-seventh Street Sta- tion, They turned in an alarm and ran from floor to floor, pounding upon doors and shouting to the ten- ants to get out as quickly as pos- sible. The Plindo family, however, were not aroused by the warning, and Lieut, Hermann of Engine Company No. 65, with Walsh and Marr, smashed open the door, Hermann picked up Mrs. Alzino and carried her downstairs. Mrs. Plindo refused |to leave without the family cat, and it was carried out by one of the policemen as they gulded Mrs, Plindo and her two children from the build- ing. A large crowd had gathered from Broadway and cheered both rescuers. <ecemennstiiiamemesse BOY’S TRY AT THEFT FAILS. Lima © ht With Goods Attempt to Obey Fi + First An undersized eighteen-year-old boy, Jowoph Lima, of No, 486 Ninth Avenue, explained in the West Side Court to-day how he came to be a burglar. All the |boys he knew, he said, wore good clothes: He was shabby and could not find work. His nly amusement was to loaf in a |billigrd. room. in. West. Thirty-sixth Street. There he met two to whom he told his troubles, “They told me there were only two days to get money,” he said. ‘Barn it or steal it. If T couldn't get a Job I must steal. ‘They told me all they knew about breaking Into houses and stealing things."” Lima was caught coming down the fire escape from the apartment of Mrs, An- ela. Barbero of No. 309 West Forty- third Street. He had taken $7 and about $100 worth of Jewelry. | Magistrate Murphy held him {n $1,600 for trial, ie CITY EMPLOYEE ARRESTED. Caught in Store and eld on Charwe Max Cohen, who described himself as a clerk in the Tenement House Depart- ment, was held in $1,600 ball by Magis- trate Murphy in Morrisania Court to- day, charged with burglary n Treszger of the Central Str jon found him in the furnish- ing store of Abraham Kayner at No. 1298 Wilkins Avenue last night, The glass of the door had been broken and the lock turned from the tnside. According to the policeman, Cohen confessed and sald he was trying to get money to study law, He pleaded not monthly guilty {n court ng in France NOW BEING SHOWN AT “f, ER 18, 19 HELD AS KNAPPER OFTQPET IDES Like Gypsy Wanderers, Trio Left Lowell, Mass., to See the World. — "Grandpa" Gilson has gotten into trouble because his heart is too big and he lets it rule him. “Grandpa” is seventy years old, and when one reaches that age one may be pardoned for letting sentimentality master one occasionally. Every one in Yorkville Police Court felt kindly toward “Grandpa” when he was arraigned there to-day on a charge of kidnap- ping. “Grandpa” Gilson has two obsea- sions, He is very, very fond of lttle children—and he has the wanderlust, acquired, perhaps, during the yeans when he served the Union from Pet- ersburg to Spottsylvania. In his blue uniform of the G. A. R., its faded breast adorned with a medal, the old man bowed his white head and wept as he told Magistrate Koenig the story of how from Lowell, Mass., he set out with little Effie and Vivian James, eleven and nine years old re- spectively, to seek what adventures might befall them. How was “Grandpa” to know that his wanderlust and love for kiddies would lead him and them into im- prisonment in New York as the end of their adventure? “Grandpa” hadn't looked that far ahead, he told the Magistrate. VIVIAN James?” HE WANTED A DOCTOR, GOT FIRE DEPARTMENT | BROOKLYN CAR VICTIM STILL UNIDENTIFIED “Granpa” is a poet, too. If you} Mistaken Call for Assistance From|Chaufleur Says Woman Darted you tan te Hs ie Soldier's Family in Danger From From Behind Trollty, Blinded m” that “Grandpa” Gilson wrote : a a you may understand the sentimental Coal Gas. by the Rain. ft a p le , gee pening tea v Gilaon hag |, 2¢ ¥@9 only a doctor Samuel Meyer-] Ejforty made to-day to identity tho smhaie a iieifie By bellin tile eons Ws | fold wanted at No. §6 Second Avenue,| ody thar Nomin: who waa Fn the streets in Lowell. That is how he early to-day, but this is what be got: |down and Killed last night by ao first met little Effie and Vivien Jamel Three fire engines. Jautomobile at Fulton Street and ‘A crowd of boys was teasing them.| TWO Bock and ladder trucks. Rochester Avenue, Brooklyn, were Grandpa” mot their mother, Mrs. Alice | 2We battalion chiets. without result. F hilling of No. and took the children to thelr home| 7h®,Dolice reserves 21 Edson Place, Glendale, the at No. 130 Wilson Street. There| Meyerfeld lives with his wifo, Fan-| Chauffeur, gave bimself up after the “Grandpa” met thelr mother, Mra.(ny, and William and Jennie Wein- ered tara In huge, call tee 0: ve rg,,brother and sister, on the se Magistrate alsa mn ” Aico amen, As a result he went t°/ ond floor of the house, At 6 orclock| further examination on ‘a charge of home—and the kiddies became his steadfast friend: Meyerfeld awoke choking, and found the room full of coal gas from the reckless driving. In the car at th o time was gnats Mrs. James and her daughter, Kath-| d!ming room heater. Rotenberg, Ls y tS mercheee yn Without waiting to seo the othors'| lives at No, 1076 Bastern Parkway, [ eiaeratsteee Years old, work in a) condition ho smashed a front window| with his brother and sister. They | Lowell factory, and much of the care} with hig fist and shouted did not see the woman, they sald, and | of the younger children fell to “Grand-| Doctor!” A newsboy Schilling claims she darted from be- pa.” Effie and Vivian often went with | him through the streets as he sold his verses, Effie and Vivian were not happy j@t home, “Grandpa” @ays, and the | Kiddies, weeping in the rooms of the | Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, bore him out in that to- day. Elght days ago the longing for the open road filled “Grandpa's” aged soul, sounding an imperative call. He an- announced to Effie and Vivian that he was going to leave them. ‘They begged to be taken with him, he says. And that day the kiddies’ mother whipped them both, "Grandpa" and they de- thought he sald “Fire!” and sent in an alarm, There was much excite- ment as the apparatus rolled up in the fog and nobody could point out the fire. Meyerfeld found the other three members of his housebold had bee overcome by tho gas, but by the time Dr. Palliser came from Bellevue all| were out dang BOY SHOT COMPANION: “MEANT TO SCARE HIM?” Bay Ridge Victim, 14 Years Old, Is in Critical Condition at hind a trolley car directly in the path of tho auto. Her head was bent in the rain. She was about thirty years id, of slim build, and five feet « inches tall, She wore a shawl abo’ her head, dad # black dress and short woollen oo: —————— HAS PLACE IN HIS HOME FOR ALLEGED GIRL THIEF Business Man Would Save Erring One From Prison and Asks Why State Didn't? clare. That roused the chivalrous Don Quixote spirit in the old man's Hospital, Rather than see « young girl sent to breast—and together ha and th prison as a thief on the eve of Christ- kiddies wandered forth. Norman Anderson, fourteen years|mas, Charles R. Steele, an insurance They took the trolley and for a} old, a student in the Bay Ridge High;man of No, 200 Fifth Avenue, has whole day they rode, stopping en| School, was shot in the back by alwritten to Magistrate Naumer of the route at North Chelmsford, Ayer and} companion, John Peacock, thirteen|Adams Sureet Court, Brooklyn, and Fitchburg, where the old man pointed| years old, in front of the latter’s| offered to take her into his home, out the sights of the villages and now}home at No, 330 Seventy-second Mewbatt, twenty-two years and then paused to sell The Old Sol- dier's Poem.” Street this afternoon, He is in the Norwegian Hospital in a critical con- old, s held Wednesday on for the + charg rand Jury of stealing They spent the night at dition and Peacock has been arrested, | &rticl’s valued at $200 from the rooms Adams, where “Grandpa” obtained} Peacock claims he merely wanted to] of #rls living in the Harriet Judson two furnished rooms, one for himself | frighten Arderson, M | rooming house ut . 50 and one for the two little sisters. In} A week ago the boy came into pos- reet Brooklyn, The girl is the morning “Grandpa” bought them bag of candy, bought Vivian a d Eile a toy printing press— and told them they were going for a long ride, When for several hours the eyes of the children had gazed with unalloyed delight at the sights that flashed past their flying car window, they found themselves In Troy. The next day they were in Albany. It was wll very wonderful—not only for the kiddies of eleven and nine, but for the kiddy of seventy as well. Why not go on to Florida? That was a destination worth wh’ So it was decided—and as the first step all boarded a train for New York y day afternoon. On the train “Grandpa” sold his poems. But the conductor was a gruff, suspicious person in whose soul years of railroading had left little room for sentiment. He wired to t New York police an account of the G. A. R. veteran and the two little girls who were travelling together, And when their train reached Grand Central Station last night the errant three found Detective Kalbfieisch awaiting them, Magistrate Koenig to-day held Grandpa” Gilseon for extradition to Massachusetts. YOU NEED | to ald nature occasionally when ymond Street If the State can afford t shelter this young girl who mitted a session of a twenty-twe calibre rifte. He was shooting at a target basement of his home when he saw Anderson passing and he mitted to the police that he push the barrel of the rifle through a b. ment window, aimed at Anderson, who was going to his home next door. | and fired, each feed and nas com- Steele wrote in the er I would steal before 1 would starve and [ think you would, too, It would seem a pity, in this Christmas season, to send a young woman to prison, where she would be morally worse off when released, —_ Wins Rhodes Scholarsh, INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Dec. 18.—Robert tephenson of Rockford, Ill., has been; Mr. Steele offered to pay part of awarded, the Rhodes scholaramp ‘for|the girl's Wages as a maid to the Indiana, it was learned to-day. Stephen: 4 son was given the eholurahip for work | PerAons Who Were robbed. ‘The Mag- he did three years ago while a student| Strate wrote him the case was now jat Depauw University. He ts now teach-|in the hands of District Attorney ing in @ private school in San Franciaco, | Cropsey. WATCHES DIAMONDS ON CREDIT NOW IF THE TIME TO SELECT CHRISTMAS PRESENTS Large Assortment Gold Jewelry Diamonds, Watches, FROM $5.00 TO $500.00 liver ie alu; your stomach dis- PRICES—THE LOWEST for RELIABLE GUARANTEED GOODS, ordered or your inactive. Let PAYMENTS—Weekly or Monthly, at Your Convenience. ee ee, gente Seventies renner FUR FUACHASH PRICE allowed in Exchange. at ese organs io employer's references necessary. We trust any honest person, ip a sound and healthy condition. ESTABLISHED 21 YE fe au J x ‘all, write or phone Cortlandt 5867, Will send representative, if desired, OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL CHRISTMAS, AMERICAN WATCH&DIAMOND (2 RELIABLE CREDIT JEWELERS MAIDEN LANE _ saree BEECHAM’S PILLS Largest Sale of Any Medicine in the World. Sold everywhere. In boxes, 10¢., 25¢, catr é

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