The evening world. Newspaper, November 22, 1922, Page 24

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eRcal HENRY FORD _ GENIUS OF = EN fi * MAN OF MYSTERY HIS STRENGTH AND WEAKNESS United States 4 |, North American Newspaper ance. Also protected copyright in countries of the la. All rights reserved > O great man was ever great- est in Me ‘eyes of those him. In the case of Dr. Marquis and Henry Ford the Boswell appears to be more than usually frank in nson. In analyzing “some elements of e@uccess” as they have affected Mr. Ford's career, his biographer has mot smoothed over any rough spote for taught to lend a glamour to the Ford hato. He has written as the weader would want him to torite, possibly as Mr. Ford might choose who lived nearest to what he sdys about his Joh 4f he had had a say in the preparas fion of the articles. A very interesting instalment of the Ford biography appears daily dn The Evening World. Everybody who has ever asked a question about Henry Ford will prodably find {t answered in some of the articles. CHAPTER V. Bome Elements of Success. ENRY FORD has built up a great industry; he has amassed @ great fortune; he has paid bor a itberal wage; he has he has set in opera- tion agencies which have in thelr day tone a great def of good. To human thought, to pflitics, to science, the arte, education, religion, his contribu- tion—directly or indirectly—is yet to built a hospital; be made. What he has done for others has ‘been along lines that have as a rule brought a lberal return to himself. Seriously and to his credit I would Say that his most valuable contribu- tion to humanity.thus far has been his discovery of some very profitable A good thing done for reward is good. Nobler and better things, however, are possible. 4 wish Henry Ford had more good to his credit that had cost him some- In actual service to humanity and in unselfish use of his wealth his old ranning mare, Couzens, has done kinds of philanthropy. thing. 80 far more that will live, Henry Ford plays a spectacular wonderful hitter nance and the idol of the bleachers. But, there are better all round men in He is as temperamental He has And he cer- tainly muffed a couple of balls in the case of the Peace Ship and his Jewish He must play the game alone and for himself, He has advanced a good many men on the bases of the finan- celal diamond, but I do not recall that game. He pulls some stunts, He is a pinch the ‘game. as an artist, and as erratic. been known to fan out, Glatribes, He is not a team mai n. he ever did 80 by a sacrifice hit. Henry Ford has attained attained that which nence permanent, makes namel; ing things and doing things; is achieved by being. soul. Henry Ford is most remarkable man—but great man, not yet. There him neither that breadth nor depth of grandeur, mind, nor that moral which are the distinguishing of the truly great. Some are born great, some achieve great- nes, but no man ever had greatness thrust upon him, Shakespeare to the He may be thrust ino into eminence, for eminence is reached by climbing contrary. prominence, but not an inward spiritual ascent. If Henry Ford would quit ing the popular winds, take down his devote those upon industrial could attain great and enviable reputation. political lightning rod, and himself to the solution of human problems which him for solution as an leader, I think he press a prom! eminence. t Prominenece may be gained by say- eminence The essence of eminence is in a man—in his mind and n uncsual, not are mar! e men wate! It in that direction, I believe, that will find the fulfilment of the wish whieh he expressed to me when he said, “I do not want the things which in re- markable prominence, but he has not a a in ks a Is he his hobby. made on one last, one block, and all coats according to one pattern. beauty of reduce the cost of living. When it came to automobiles Henry Ford decided to make them ».° AFTER 5 YEARS and Great S- STUDY Anal: An ay THE EVENING WORLD, Sasa gy ae NOVEMBER 22, WRITES, Uis F FORD sd f t c THE BEST FORD'S FIRST TEST OF THE RACING QUALITIES OF A MACHINE DRIVEN BY _ HIS MOTOR WAS WITH BARNEY OLDFIELD AS DRIVER. MARQUIS SAYS THE PICTURE DR. AT THE LQWER LEFT |8 THE “BEST PORTRAIT OF HENRY FORD EVE greatest number largest number eon t as his can buy him in the best of} for the of stan tity prod ufacture at m the great ardized Once he got going he di and put into pract ome ve w of being gener division of profits with his yaid in dollar made it none the less a boon to labor. sharing some profits with the consumer by His policy the price of widened his market good will fidenc He did what life, t majority afford, No one was ever money, R MADE.” It would not but inimum cost. and cents. Whe car als no other ma been able to do—touchea of the people through th books He never went to ¢ knows all th know in so f the dollar success 9 psycho! ar as it has Most conspicuous among the things which have entered into his are those of courage and te- it would greatly nd we He would have all shoes 5 made on add to the tion and therefore of man- of his utting o paid, It mm the con- the public. an has ever the heavts neir pocket- but he there Is to to do with ean be bought with money. I wan'| pacity, His courage has not always 2o live a life—to live so that the world] peen guided by tho best of judg will be better for my having lived u.] ment, but on the whole it has won it.” He has had the vision. He has| yim more than it has lost. His te- the ability and the opportunit Danity. (bortere. at times on obat{s In 1914 he entered with great er | nacy, and is coupled with a cool 1 thustesm 9 new path in the feld tlence that seems to render him social justice. The work he then in- | tnaifferent to the passing of time. q@miured gave promise of a notable} He seems to shrink from encoun: Pontribution to human progress along | ters in which it will be necessary for industrial lines. It quickened the con-| him to say unpleasant things, In other science of the employers. It roused} words, he hates a quarrel, but he hope in the ranks of labor. It prom-|joyes ‘a good fight. Ho is of Irish ised the restoration of that which | descent, He keeps his Me hial as modern industry has lost and which | ponent—-many eyes on bim, in fact—— would prove the greatest boon any| and is ee is the nit of malting: man could restore to it, name This is SAAD She SERIO, personal relation between employer] he en alk Gf whieh hb Lae and employee. That phase thel hes their ehare. ‘be: tenia work, with some other distinguishing | usually so long drawn out. There » features of it, is for the present in}are so many courts of appeal, and eclipse—only in eclipse, it is to be| the more the merrier ° hoped. At times he wearied of the Sel “ © As to Henry Ford's success in in-| patent trial, but when the bell dhistry, it is no mere accident. You|for a new round he alwys came +” gannot say that it is a matter of luck] back smiling and full of fight. The ' that a man’s boat is floated by the | Dodge trial dragged a weary length; rising tide if he bas carefully calcu-]|the Tribune trial was long drawn out; lated the time the tide comes in and the Newberry fight is still on, These has built his boat where it.would be | are illustrations of his bulldog grip. caught and carried out to sea once he takes hold, He may consume Mr. Ford anticipated the rising |so much time in the accomplishment tide of the automobjle industry. He] of a thing that you think he has for must be ‘given credit for that. Credit] gotten all about it, and he may travel also is due him for the way in which] in so many devious ways tu reach ais be deliberately planned to take the}end that you think he has turned * @allest possible advantage of the tide ide to other things, but he never for when it came iv. Sfandardization is The long years of wtruggic against poverty and ridicule in the de- velopment of his car is the evidence of the presence in him of a quality to be admired by his friends, but to be most seriously and fearfully contem- plated by his enemics CHAPTER VI. Mental Traits and Characteristics. CROBS section of the mind of Henry Ford would reveal some striking © His mind does not move in logical g600V It It is not a know how t I doubt tf it cannot endure th burden of logic, long to the man who is reaching con- clusions through rational processes. does not reason to conclusions. He jumps at them, Jun’ He Jess the rule more busin and said to an policy d to an opt another is the k victions, has Me a their ¢ occasion cause an end to opinion is high rate executive high, to those and death full of mis cut down continueth judge of national repute once said to me, “I have a great admiration for Henry Ford, but there is one thing about him that I regret and can't understand, and that is his inability to keep his executives and o' friends about him.” ‘The w it is not matter of inability, but bility can't help it, He 4 ‘The in him mental altituc him as a genius, and there are points below mental sea level. mind of strength wisdom and foolishne: a t 0 th nD, unerrin, reasoned crawl of other has told me that Mfe “to grab the first hunch Concerning matters seems to enjoy a discussio cerning matters pertaining to his own s8 on whi up—and It general noyed by opposing opinion. send me Jed nist definition nan Who agrecs the and 1 have to change his mind on t nty nw ions tor the the of As two certainties in lif at Of the man climbing up in the organization | hath but a short time like a itt ap executive turing to question the wisdom of some RSTORE gyee and cautious man would not, may ene owe”, | stumble upon things, make discov- eries, the train man would not be likely to make. The fools who rush i t t There are which mark ontrasts, A complex weakness, of s—a mind the and Ik, s not w It leaps. ned mind, Tt does n nk consecut and d do 80 tieit could. It pace and bear th and {t cannot listen A bad thing, un as in his ca is asa than the slow minds. H early in he learr in general he but con mind fx he se made us an t out, once von- he wo optimist who upon, “Ty And tha of t to talk ives you with you, of his con- known him an important was made up. Minds itively, T have observed, of finality in regard to the feminine mind on example. It 1s sq be it And there is n This in my chief reason for the mortality among Ford uu know, the rate is yr executive has udded taxes that is dischar Ford that he and te courage neve on hird, t may be said to live cometh up and is flower. He never Jong on the Job. A He favorite executive seers way employ G Pi being ignorant of times suffers on of knowledge of If Henry Ford he undoubtedly tempted some things which have im- paired his reputation. HIS GREATNESS aNP SMALLNESS WELFARE DEPARTMENT na to be the man who does not think, either from choice or lack of ability, and does what he is told to do re- gardless of consequences. tion to this, so I have been told by those who enjoy his special one must maintain an ward the employees that makes t ear and hate you fortunate man in this because everyone despises me,” ts the one of them put it to me. heory seems to be A college apped in the Ford on that account, provided he does not place too much emphasis on the fact. Mr, Ford has his own theory of edu- I have never heard him ex- 8 any regret over his own limited opportunities. It is possible that an untrained man, in attempting that which ation, in where angels fear to tread are at least in possession of some experienc £ not some facts, to the angels. A man may be man from the college student's point of vie It is not that @ man is ignorant of the taught in the schools id still be hings that are hat counts aguinst acl kne wo n > him ont, His but he reads—-not of histor science, and the the want of call the life me a volume in scribed his name, me, he said, {t one of the grea ever read. It “Greatest Thing in Sunday afternoon I up on the sofa “How do you asked, “Ob,” chuckle, “Emerson Why a pup?” “Well,” he said, es dislike you, you must be a whale of an executive. trained man is not handi- hese th: philo: like, a better books. which because he reading like FORD SUNUIN® In addi- favor to- m am the most organization, attitude oT The that because the Motor Company a trained entirely unknown a very ignorant a very wise man, him, but r he soni his lack her count of his own limitations. w his limitations uld not have at- all alike | shallows in which are the more pro- and of a size that would fit not the} nounced because of the Tend It does not follow because a man of people but the] depths which lie between. without training has made import- of pocketbooks. Keep] Mr, Ford has limitations which|®"t Sclentifte and mechanical dis- he aver pecketbook. | stand out the m piciously be- [Coveres that he has the last we slogan. Only a few peo- cause of the far reaches of his mind} {? S*¥ on religion and philoso what they want. Thelin other directions, He has alto. {M". Ford now and then enters fi buy whet they can} gether a most unusual mind—in- some eden for which has not the le to shake} respects the most remarkabe mind 1]9Pectal fitness that distinguishes him his decision to make one car, | have ever known, Cal! it insight, in-4/9 his own particular fleld. But it s kind that can be made] tutition, vision. or what you is luman to.desire a wider scope for suited to the bankroll] he has a supernormal perceptive] th? exercise of our faculties number of people, | faculty along certain lines in bus!-|. Mr. Ford is not the illiterate men so as to admit of quan-| ness aft that some have maliciously tried to reading is Nmited, the heavy tomes ophy, political it what for name I would He once gave be had in- gave it to considered books he had vas Drummond's the World.” One found him curled erson he was with He him replied is a pup." a “T just get com- fortably settled down to the reading of him when he uses a derstand, and that and look for a dicti “The law of coms he got the idea fr day bebeveus, word J do not un- makes me get up onary pensation—whether mn Emerson or not, 1 do not know a favorite theme with him, Fait and optimism ar also favorite subjects, He frequently ts St. Paul's definition of taith And faith and optimism in business have certainly figured in his success. I would not leave the impression that Henry is a diligent read- er of Holy Scripture, or a student ot Emerson, He is neithe As a manufacturer he is naturally im mersed in a sea of practical affairs to the surface of which there rises once in a while bubbles of mystic- ism, haunting suggestions of ‘The Plan,’ a shadowy, Calvinistic belief in fate or forcordination, the seren- ities of one conscious of being a child of destiny, But his vast material Interests are tirst. He is more in- terested in things than in thoughts. character furnished by his every- 1922." WHO'S WHO AND WHATS 5 HAPPENED. HEN the whaler Good Luck, out of New Bedford, was wrecked at the Fire Mountain, a volcanic island in the North Pacific, in 1889, one of the two survivors was JOHN WINTERS, who wrote down in his log of the finding of vast quantities of ambergris, the substance so valuable because of the demand for it as a perfume base, and of the storing of the precious stuff in one of the innumerable caves in the island. His log goes on to tell of the strange fate of his companion, who believed that the weird noise coming out of a myste- rious hole in the island was the voice of a man he had murdered calling him and, finally crazed, had jumped into the pit. Winters, according to the fearing the same fate for himself, abandoned the island in a small boat. He jotted down the position of the cave where the ambergris was stored in code on a piece of skin and inserted it in the binding of his log book. Demented, he ts picked up and brought to Homolulu. There he leaving his log, with the cipher message of such tremendous value, in the hands of the keeper of a Chinese resort. In this place, many years later, LITTLE BILLY CORCORAN, hunchback steward of the brig Cohasset, fecovering from a spree, accidently finds the log among the Chinaman’s col- lection of odds and ends. He judges from the description that the Fire Moun- tain, with its many caves and queer lava formations, including one that looks like an elephant’s head, is the one which gave refuge not long before to the Cohasset’s crew when chased by a Russian gunboat for violating the rule against trading for seal skins with the Siberian natives. SQUARE JIM DABNEY is the blind captain of the Cohasset. tractive granddaughter, RUTH LE MOYNE is mate of the brig. They are told of the log and the hunchback’s opinion that their island was the one where the great store of ambergris was hidden. They are afl in the dark as to the location of the cave, but Ruth suddenly discovers the skin within the binding and the following cipher message is revealed: 433445442361533146121511 11323624336] 5311535231 | 3344623151 11464643441 13212334 1142146522433314546131151156263534424461 131342 1446344244 236133442331 54261441 vay ICHI, a Japanese, had been shipped as cook by the Cohasset and feignilg almost complete ignorance of English, is regarded as the Cohas- set's officers talk over the Giscovery. Ichi ‘steals the cipher and in San Fran- cisco becomes associated with WILD BOB CAREW, a splendid locking but unscrupulous sea captain. Ichi employs JOSIAH SMATT, a sharp lawyer, to decipher the message. brings us to MARTIN BLAKE, our hero, who, conveying the decoded message and the latitude and longitude of Fire Mountain to Carew at the command of Smatt, his employer, meets Billy. Feigning intoxica’ Billy itutes blank sheets of paper for the matter in Martin’s pocket. The ution, when it is revealed to Carew at the Black Cruiser saloon, results in Martin’s being st upor by Carew’s underlings and imprisoned in a room. Carew's gang also seize and imprison Ruth, but Little Billy and THE BOSUN, Thomas Henry, his devoted and gigantic friend, His And this rescue both the girl and young Blake. As they flee a | battle follows in which| He got upon his knees and hunched} Martin heaved a surfeited sigh. 4 Martiniahocts 5 himself along upon his knees to the] “Oh, I didn't think I'd ever cof : . y= __, {stanchion, enough,” he raid. "Why, T was sq SPULVEDO, keeper of the dive, and is shot himself by Carew. Martin's} piink—ary—vater,”” ie gabbled}¢ry I couldn't talk And om wound is not serious and he is welcomed as a partner in the Cohasset’s enter- painfully, Bs ee throat’ — rise—the salvage of the ambergris. The brig is well on her way out of San} “«ararty — Marty, lad, I’m glad I know," interrupted the boutd j Francisco when Ruth, the hunchback and Dabney tell him the story. Partly | yourre ‘ere!’ came the heartfelt whis-|S8Wain, sitting down beside hind by reading Poe’s “Gold Bug” Little Billy says he solved the cipher and shows] per from the boatswain. ‘Ll “And now, Martin, let's figure it out! Martin the key. je Ma Bhoked the life Gut o° ¥ Ow, swig! me, what'll we do? The As they sailed northward toward their goal, hoping to reach it ahead of Carew (who is in love with Ruth), Martin, overwhelmed by her beauty andpmuch my back’s| ‘Tho boatawatn ewore deep 4 under the influence of a starry night, kisses her. He tov has fatlen under her | bloomin’ 7 eee “Ruth, his Ruth, was atone) spell. Martin, a tier of| helpi at the mercy of those ® The Cohasset reaches Fire Mountain in such a fog that Dabney decides} poxes, was the Loatswata| lusts! And he was sittipg here ins not to attempt to land and search for the ambergris until it clears more clearly. He t the big) #etive! Tt was unendurable! MACLEAN, a superstitious member of the crew, tells Martin that some-|man was in his underwear. The boat- He scrambled Goat) feet, with the thing evil is to happen to Little Billy. He curses the gloomy mountain, which | swain w sented on the floor, and wild ic of mounting the ladder te he calls the “De'il’s Kirk. That night he awakens Martin to tell him that} his arms 4 ned, encircled] the in ar battering his way the hunchback has disappeared. As he and Martin search the fog-enveloped | the stan through the trap-door. He must sue deck, he later hears McLean call for aid in a curiously strangled voice and an and, Martin? ‘Ave they| Cor Ruth: i then hears the sound of a falling body. froned you, t , le boatswain reached up a } Behind! Hick— hand.” Martin mane and pulied him down ay OR a second Martin was anchoredyHe could feel his eyeballs starting,|oeeq to gulp out. * rtin struggled for a moment, “ 5 eapet | his tongue swelling. The flame con-| const S on clouded by his hot fear. F by horsor Phen he) leaped Fore |e ced tis qian; ettawas Hela ipein | oon a But, bosun—Ruth!"” he ward, giving voice as he did to a] in sharpest agony Martin had Be'ind your back Ri eet Ghia eee great, arou wordless bellow. eean hie: sf pon las in these yellow men haye Ruth!" And even as he ran blindly ahead] He was upon his back or floor os awful swim- a heavy | The to| pain conti fingers were gone. but t da. His wits were heard supplement ho shouted those few p voice give his cal ming. A pair of soft arms were about The darkness was suddenly alive} him. His reeling head wax cushioned with rushing fer A body hurled | ag: loved and fragrant breast; itself against him, an arm struck a pice spoke his name anxiously eping blow, and he felt a knife rtin, Martin! W the through 4 flannel sh aud}done? Oh, Martin, sp me his shoulder near his neck. He tried to speak, His foot tripped on a ring-bolt and] ‘Then the loved prese s gone foree A face bent ove It waa a well face of a littie and he was alone him—a yellow face. remembered face, Dr, Ichi. It seemed to dering in a vast his head struck with stunning against a bulwark stanchion, The collision scattered his wits, and Martin lay in the seuppers, blinking at the dancing lights before his eyes. In his ears was a great humming. the rtin he was wan- d thirsty desert. Then, after a moment, the humming] To the very core of his being he broke into parts and became a babel] was dry. Drink! Drink! h of shouts whole life he lusted drink He heard a hard chatter—voices] Something my, } crying out in a toreign tongue, Hefover his face , : cet locked him into reality heard a great booming voice that | shoe i stirred memory. He heard a pistol] He tried to move und sat up. He shot heard a d squeaking and a light 7 er! o WOK he knew Fie heard Ruth's voice, raised in a Scampering on wood, and Pe w sharp, terror-stricken cry: yy) a r at had run ey ve s ies Martin__Billy—-Martin! Oh, hetptt? | All the sensations of cons ness The scream galvanized Martin to} 8sailed him abruptly He knew wher action. She was calling him! he was instantly—the jumble of casks s Dore h h was He struggled to arise, got upon his [2d Kegs and boxes told him in the ship's lazaret. knees, reached upward and graspod a belaying pin in the rail above,| Next, he became aware that some- Clutching the pin, he drew himself | thing was the matter with his arms erect and quite without reasor They ached cruelly. After a moment's drew It ov nd, grasping it clublike, [experimenting and reflection the truth shed aft t ted aor came to fo hia tna aia a s&s were d ind him and his In the cabin, one whirling glanoe | Wrists were ther, The that took in the scattered company-— | Shock of that discovery dissipated the the bedraggled Japanese, Capt. Dab- | fos over his mind, ney lying face down across the] The sum of his memories was clear, threhhold of his room, his white hair {and for the moment it erushed and bloodied, Wild Bob Carew lifting fled him, For it was evident that startled face » brig was in Carew's hands. Th And Carew was holding « squirm- |had been surprised in the fog, 4 Di ing, fighting Ruth in his arms! acy vurred, murder had been Martin haidly checked the stride of }done and Wild Bob and his yellow his entrance. He flung himself to- | followers had taken the sbip. ward the man who held his woman,}| Mact was dead! And Little and his club cracked upon a skul Billy was dead! Capt, Dabney was A man hurtled against him and|dead! The crew—God knew, perhaps drove him against the wall, He saw |—were slaughtered too! ‘ Carew fall and Ruth spill free of the} And Ruth—Ruth was alive, in Ca encircling arms. rew's hands, at the mercy of the Ruth was aliv = A Tale se 3) Apuacy, Theahve Lew and she St be’ine the high Rosen 0 “HE FLUNG HIMSELF TOWARDS THE MAN WHO HELO HI8 WOMAN AND HIS CLUB CRACKED UPON A SKULL.” by hi “AIL right dry, Los swollen tongue. dry—come."’ in the top their thi nd both partly quen Copyright, 1 To-morrow's by the instalment Ine. that stand, the end of to-day’s promi your } you're anin® geods—tomatoes a GRAND RAPIDS | But Martin h more, He d to and began to investigate. A vision of himself quaf- . fing deeply of contents URNITURE of th 8 mind to OUR NEW CREDIT TERMS The breast- » Martin leaned over and explored with his chin, The fourth box rewarded him. The cover had been broken, He rubbed his jawbone over the cold, smooth, round s of cans. The boatswain ng his prog- ress with eye and ear comm ed him bend over an’ reach 3 Well, try and get on top o the pi nd flop over.’ It required repeated attempts, but i iach eked one can out a Piece Hedroom Suite . at last he plue d on an vut nd ype Sere ri cticces tie stanchion Dining Room Suite Room Suite (eather) ‘bair . eve Liviny ain slid his arms down] {Pitre ty He perhaps reads a blue print moro] Then hand % him by the] prute she so fed readily and more understandingly | thre ke upple, muscular flngers | to suffer what than he reads Tolstoy, Darwin, Mae-] stopp wind. He saw a And loved aa: terlinck and Eme nm. There are hun-jupraised to a apressionle ained dreds of men figuring prominently in] yellow face, with glittering anid the business world of no greater erudi-Jeyes. He drew up his club for they, ox tion than ho, & on tters with} plow. The slender ting prob ensatt whieh they are not familiar they hav?}ing upward behind me, and Martin, 4 you com the gift ler respont a) chokin around ap. O v ingly low visibility it seemed te t a stream tele me, lac ; a juid fire flooded his veins, searing| F m the ludd Ete statin cena eee bie enting tb The ying-pin | figure beline yn in a husky, of he next install nt afferd “| dropped froiw his nerveless han h beseeching rumble. new “insight to Henry Ford®} corms dropr knees sagged Wonls tore barbed through Martin's The terrible fogers squeamed tighter. ease throat and ware bard/y man- felt of the treasure os % got he commented THING Fy “But 'ow'll we m the thing? Stri me a blushin’ pink, what rotten luck! | 1034 St. Subway Station 2 blocks away An’ we f erishin’ with thirst!"’ t st) mumbled Martin. “Kr ! ’ m ic clothes let alone my knife Av in| COLUMBUS AVE sharp? Martin suddenly Time! BET. 103% & 104" ST thing —_ - si ys v croaked “Keys belong—Little Billy—save Teeth Without Pla. The hoatswain exploded an oat I Save Decaye: “What! Billy's keys? God ‘elp us Faas. Tanta lad, did ye say you ‘ad Little Billy's Koos Tooth Toe Koya? i | Badly Decayed Teeth and Roots Car His fingers dove into tle pocket fyily Extracted. Teeth Thoroughly Cleaned with redoubled ener gra « “ SETS OF TE ETH keys and drew thet And then ain Crowne, h ‘ ae u at we ‘ t a over for Fillings end Inlays She Dog ew eb Te Silver and Porcelain, moment "Ov e spoke right he - 2 gly “By ‘eave vil BROKEN PLATES REPAIRED id al t WHILE YOU WAIT sh 2 sk g ch + ‘iB 103 E. 125th St., cor. Park Av his y (Over Loft’s Candy Store). h 740 Lexington | Av.,cor. 59th St. The Ain expluine t muir (Over gett's rug Store), hor : t 9 E. 34th St., cor, 3d Avy, ‘ F Ere, turn me loose} HN pauy...... A moment later Martin's fum’ ling fingers comple task, the b postewain cut © small, sagged opening

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