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WARWICK'S HISTORY IN NOBLE PAGEANT Magnificent Historical Spectacle to Be Given at Famous British Castle. Hew York Herald Special Cable Service. Copy right, 190$, by the New York Herald. London, March 31.All Warwick is at work now in preparing for the great historical pageant .which is to take place at the castle in July and which is to last several days. More than 5,000 seats have already been booked for the spectacle in which lords and ladies, rich and poor, great and small, will take part. Every mail brings inquiries from people at home and abroad, espe cially from America. Tickets in large numbers have been taken by notable families. Lord and Lady Warwick will attend with a party, including the duchess of Sutherland and Lord and Lady Helmsley. An episode, "The Kingmaker," will be in the hands of Lord and Lady Wil loughby de Broke and distinguished amateurs. More than fifty horsemen will appear in the scene galloping into the arena from hidden woodland paths. The pageant will be a continuous panorama of gorgeous scenes, repre senting nineteen centuries of the his tory of Warwick, commencing with Caractacus' resistance to the Koman conquerors in the first century and ex tending thru the stirring story in eleven episodes. The most striking scene will be the trial and execution of Piers Gaveston, and the arrival of Queen Elizabeth in a stage coach drawn by four horses and the departure in a state barge manned by sixteen rowers. The other scenes will deal in a pic turesque fashion with notable incidents in the history of Warwick, winding up with a magnificent tableau in which all the characters will appear, as well as figures representing fourteen young Warwicks in America, Canada and Queensland, grouped around a stately figure impersonating the mother town. The scene of the pageant will be a lawn loping down to the river. The most elaborate stage property is a representation of the head of the dun cow, which, after devastating the country, was slain by Guy of Warwick. It will be brought into view on a trol ley. This monster will breathe fire from its nostrils and huge eyes composed of big red glass plates will be illuminated with electric lights. NEW AIR ENGINE IS TO WORK REVOLUTION New Device, Its Inventor Says, Will Do Away with Use of Gas, Goal, or Oil. Yew York Herald Special Cable Service. Copy right, 1906, by the New York Herald. London, March 31,-^Arrangements ere now being made to test a new type of engine which, if it proves successful, may cause a greater industrial revolu tion than that which resulted from the discovery of the steam engine or of the application of electricity to motive power. The patentee is a Lancashire man, who has already achieved some success as an inventor. This new production he describes as a triple economic air en gine, and if the inventor can justify all his claims, the business of the coal miner will be practically gone, as far as industrial requirements ark con cerned. Summarized, the claims of the engine are as follows: The economic air en gine will save the use of coal and all cost of fuel it will take the place of steam, which will not be required to keep the pressure of air constant it will drive a locomotive, propel a ship, work a mill forge, etc., without using either gas, water, coal, electricity or oil, and it will entirely prevent smoke. LARGER LETTERS, NOT LOWER POSTAL RATE i International Congress Likely to In- crease Weight to Be Sent Under Five- Cent Stamp. JTew York Herald Special Gable Seivice, Copy right, 1906, by the New York Herald. Rome, March 31.Edward Rosewater, American delegate to the international postal congress in Rome, talked today regarding the innovations to be dis cussed, including a proposition for a universal 2-cent letter rate. He thought that the plan that had the best chance of being adopted was that which called for an increase of let ter weight from fifteen to twenty-five grammes at the 5-cent rate. Mr. Rosewater thinks there is no likelihood of the introduction of an in ternational postage stamp, because too many technical difficulties stand in the way. WILD SWANS AT CLINTON Large Flock Alights on Mississippi River, Then Flies Northward, Special to The Journal. Clinton, Iowa, March 31.A flock of thirteen wild swans, the first seen on the Mississippi river for years, alighted in an open place just above the bridge, opposite to this city, yesterday. The birds were a pretty sight, all being pure white in color, with long, arched necks. After spending some hours the water without being disturbed, the flock took up its northward journey. The old river men say the flight of wans northward is an infallible sign of spring weather. TO REDISTRICT IOWA House Passes Bill Allowing for Total of 108 Representatives. Special to The Journal. Des Moines, Iowa March 81.The! gj house today passed the redistricting bill, giving to each county at least one A representative. The measure allows two representatives each to nine coun ties, making a total of 108. The bill' changing congressional districts was de feated. The senate has. refused to consider 11 the house amendments to the anti esBary. & r-r News Section, IT NEW IMPETUS GIVEN TO BROWNING BOOKS Centenary of Mrs. Browning Re awakens Interest in Poetess and Her Husband. Vtrvr York Herald Special Cable Service. Copy right, 1906, by the New York Herald. London, March 31.The centenary of Elizabeth Barrett Browning has not only caused a crop of books on the poetess herself, but has given an im petus to works dealing with her hus band. "Robert Browning and Alfred Dommet" is a volume announced by Smith, Elder & Company. It is edited by Frederic A. Kenyon and contains the correspondence between Robert Browning, Alfred Dommet and Sir Joseph irnould. Dommet was the ^mi^J^^ "Waring" of Browning's poem, "What's Become of Waring?" Also from Smith, Elder & Company comes a book by Percey Lubbock, "Elizabeth Barrett Browning in Her Letters." Given adequate materials, there are perhaps worse ways of writing a biog raphy than that of allowing a man to tell the history of his life in his letters. This method has been chosen by Ed mund Downey, himself a writer of numerous Irish stories, in a forthcom ing "Life of Charles Lever," which Blackwood is to publish. Aug. 31, will be the one hundredth anniversary of Lever's birth and there must be many admirers of his rollicking tales who will be glad to know more about their author. Prizes for Juveniles. As there is a certain something which juvenile literature needs that every writer cannot give, and as pub lishers are often put to their wits end for good books of this sort, the Book man offers three prizes of 100 eaeh for as many stories suited respectively to a boy, a giTl"X a child. The com petition is open, to any author and the interest of the-itale may be historical, adventurous or4 domestic, whichever will make the best story. A further volume in the Cambridge Modern Historyrwill be ready in April. It should be an interesting one, be cause the subject is Napoleon. Some of the best authorities on his day and generation are contributing to the vol ume, which as a whole will be a com prehensive life of the emperor. Chemist Writes Memoirs. Mrs. Clayton Glyn, who began au thorship with the "Merry Letters of Elizabeth," has written a novel, en titled "Beyond the Rocks." Duck worth is to publish it in May. Sir Henry Roscoe, a distinguished chemist, has been setting down the memories of his busy life. MacMillan is to publish the book with photogravure portraits and otherSllustrations. Sir Henry has known many of the dis tinguished Englishmen of the last half century. Sir Herbert Maxwell con tributes the introduction to the book, "I the Days of Dandies," by Alex ander Lord Lamington, which Eve leigh Nash is to issue. NEW WEEKLY TO BE DEVOTED TO NOBILITY London Publication Will Cater Exclu- sively to the Princesses and Duchess- es and Titled Folk. Nw York Herald Special Cable Service. Copy right, 1906, by the New Yo.-k Herald. London. March 81.Society is al ready talking about the new weekly ex clusively for the nobility. Nothing can be more antidemocratic of the tone of the preliminary prospectus, which in forms those privileged to read it that the new production in no sense caters to general popularity. Its price actually is to be half a crown (62 cents) weekly and for its columns princesses and duchesses are to permit descriptions and photographs to be published of their heirlooms and family treasures, the very existence of which is not known to the community at large. Georgeine, Lady Dudley, is to be the editress. CALIFORNIA CONVICT NOW A MILLIONAIRE Man Serves Term for Shooting Wife and Land Investments Increase Heavily in Value. Journal Special Service. Los Angeles, Cal., March 31.Grif- fith J. Griffith is now serving the last months of a two-year sentence in San ti pri80 i sa foV shooting la fc hisn WOrth pass bill and a conference may be nee-j given a two-years sentence. His wife has since procured a divorce. wife, investments in land i Lo leB an made before his impriSOnment,vicinityincreased have in value uc a ias extent that they are now upward of $1,000,000e Griffithe in a quarrel with his wif at Santa Monica three years ago, shot her in the eye with a revolver, causing the loss of her sight, for which he was 1 NE^fPQY* CABEE FRO ^HEliCmE^ LONDON'S GREATNESS SHOWN IN FIGURES Growth of the City Has Been Nearly 5,500,000 within a Century. Kt-w York Heiald Special Cable Seivice. Copy right, 1906, by the New York Herald. London, March 31.The immensity of London is well illustrated in a vol ume just issued by the London county council, entitled A Statistical Ab stract for London, 1905." The book is an amazing compilation, and shows that the British metropolis still holds the first place among the cities of the world. The rapidity of the growth of London during the last century is shown by the fact that while ^6,581,402 i y~* J."% *t**-^Tr r-t^t-4^" y i-^fi^-, j^wrJ* &*. ^^liS^ had risen in 1901 to and thes^ b,500,000 people live ia 9928,080 houses. Nothing is more impressive to the visitor to London than the enormous volume of traffic. The Londoner's pro pensity for cheap locomotion is strik ingly indicated by the vast business of the tramway and omnibus lines. Of course, the tramway and omnibus sta tistics for 1904 do not adequately rep resent the traffic for the present day, as, since the completion of the new tubes, new electric car tracks have been opened, but they are interesting, never theless. There were, 1904, 201 miles of tramway lines open, and during the year 288,965,214 passengers traveled on the two principal omnibus companies. The letters, book packets, etc., deliv ered by the postman amount to l,108,u 091,000, and 28,364,000 telegrams were dispatched.1^'" An' ihterjpsting idea of the different sources of London's wealth* may be gathered from the gross annual assessed value of the income tax iu 1904, houses, etc., amounting to $225,279,255 trades and professions, $374,032,265. The profit of public companies and other interest profits amounted to $717,692,- 775. 80 BARONETS OUT OF 1,111 NOT GENUINE Startling Revelations Likely to Be Made by Committee, to Rid Society of Bogus Baronet. Journal Special Service. London, March 31.Some surprising revelations are likely to result from the investigations of the baronetage com mittee which has just settled down to work, under the chairmanship of the earl of Pembroke. Its main object is to rid the order of spurious claimants to the dignity and establish some form of legal procedure by which such im postures can be prevented in future. Genuine baronets welcome the inves tigation. They want to be sat upon.'' They have been agitating for years for an official inquiry into their status. It is not to be wondered at in view of the amazing fact that there is really nothing to prevent anybody from adopting the style of baronet. According to the officials of the col lege of heraldry it is open to any man to look up an extinct baronetcy of his own nameor make his own name fit a lapsed titleand flaunt his spurious title before an unquestioning world. There are substantial ?dvCTtages to be gained from it. Shopkeepers give longer credit to a name that carries the prefix "Sir than to one unadorned. Snobs do homage to it. The'title will carry a man far even in America and in the matrimonial fishpond where heiresses are angled for it makes excellent bait. In fact, society across the water is just as much interested in the suppression of bogus baronets as society here. Those who have studied the subject assert that on the existing roll of baron etswhich numbers about a thousand there are something like fourscore pretenders, who can easily be spotted. It is probable that there are at least as many more whose claims will not stand investigation. Baronetcies were first established by James I to raise money. To avoid overstocking the market with them and cheapening their price, he under took to limit their number to 200. But_Jris successors did not consider themselves bound by his pledge. It was not originally intended that the dignity should be hereditary and no method was prescribed for the regula tion of descent. The college of arms investigates such claims as are submitted to them, and if everything is found satisfactory, grants the applicant what is tantamount to a certificate that he is a genuine, simon-pure baronet. But they have no power to cempal the bogus variety to submit themselves to such an examina tion, and naturally these give the insti tution a wide berth. It is up to Lord Pembroke's committee to devise some method of settling the question. *"r*fe 5p THE MINNEAPOLIS' JOURNAL: i^QI TO STARVE IN MINE Victims of Disaster in French Colliery Left td Their Fate by Engineers. By Publishers' Press. Paris, March 31.Since the develop ments at the Courrieres mine yesterday, when several victims of the disaster of March 10 were found to be still alive, much indignation"" has been directed against the mme engineers. This feel ing is based unon^the conviction that a rational interpretation of the facts which attend such-accidents would lead to the belief that living men would be found at the bottom of the mine. Instead of pa/nig attention to this view, which was urged in many quarters with insistence, the engineers in charge actually decided to stop attempts at rescue March 17, only keeping up a mild pretense of doing something out of regard for public opinion. It is no longer doubted that hundreds of the miners must have found them selves in the same position of Nemy and his comrades, and could have been saved if a steady progress in clearing away the coal and debris had been kept up. That these other groups could have met with such lucky circumstances as fell to the lot of the men restored to the world yesterday must be a matter of doubt, but the public believes that more of effort and less of panicstricken dog matism would have saved many human lives. This morning's Matin loudly demands the punishment of the engineers, de claring that it proposes to keep up the attack until the guilty men have been chased from Prance. OPENING OF SUMMER CELEBRATED BY TURKS Fete Day in Constantinople Hails the New Season and High and Low Join 'Merrymaking. New York Herald Special Cable Servioe. Copy right, 1906, by the New York Herald. Constantinople, March 31.The first day of the Turkish summer was cele brated in an elaborate manner. From sunrise the Golden Horn was crowded with "boats, a veritable oriental Henley, conveying gaily dressed Turkish people to the green banks of Kiathane. Much merrymaking prevails on these occasions. Gypsies in picturesque cos tumes sell garlands of narcissus and dance to the twang of cymbals, much to the amusement of the Turks. Won derful equipages are also seen, from im perial carriages, with outriders and the savage faces of eunuchs riding behind, to the ordinary daily decorated bullock cart. 1 naUrtlVt FINNISH BAPTISTS NOW IN SESSION AT DULUTH Fifth Annual Convention Attended by Delegates From Four States and Visiting Ministers and Missionaries.. works conjunction with the American! AST THE FRENCH COAL MINER AT WORK. The Miners' Last Good-bye. THE PAINFUL PA8SAGE OF A NARROW GALLERY. Sunday, April i, NEW TIGHT BRACELET CAUSES RED HANDS Doctors Sound Warning Against "Slave Bangle"^New aem Found in Africa. Now Ytrk Herald Special Cable Servioe. Copy right, 1906, by the New York Herald. London, March 31.Fashion's decree, that smart women must wear gloves of elbow length without a wrinkle, has brought into vogue a new pattern of bracelet to hold the glove in position. It is called a slave bangle, and medi cal men prophesy a large increase in diseases of the circulatory system. "I is greatly to be deplored that women are wearing a tight bandage around their arms," a physician said to an Express representative. I have seen patients pull off their gloves and show below the elbow a deep weal where the bangle had bitten in. I have tried to instill into women the fear of varicose veins and their attendant misery, but I find that a hint that the has in many cases proved more effeo tive." New Gem Is Discovered. A new gem has been discovered in Rhodesia. In appearance the stone re sembles a topaz. It is of a very light blue color, and it is this feature which has given experts cause for thought as to whether it is correct to call it a topaz. A yellftw topaz has already been discovered in Rhodesia, but whether the sky-blue stones belong to the topaz class is still doubtfuL The question of value has not yet been decided. This of course will depend upon the favor with which the new stones are received and also on the quantity produced. The stone has been discovered upon the property of a South African option syndicate and reference was made to it the other day at a meeting of the com pany. BEER IN OLD CHURCH DICKENS MADE FAMOUS Crypt to Be a Storage VaultThe Original of Little Dorrit Still Lives, at Southgate. DIES RECITING "FACE ON THE BARROOM FLOOR" Old Actor Speaks Lines as He Stands Duluth, Minn., March 31.Delegates from the states of Massachusetts, Hli nois, Michigan and Minnesota, includ ing several ministers and workers in the mission fields, are attending the fifth annual convention of the Finnish Baptist Mission union of America which is now in session in this city. The dele gates today listened to reports from the committees on education, literature, church buildings and nominations. The union was organized five years ago for the purpose of promoting mis- has written a letter which is creating a sionary work and the spread- of the sensation. He warns Premier Fejervary, gospel among the Finnish emigrants to that unless King Francis Joseph grants this country. The society has 500 mem- at Bar, and Suddenly Falls Dead- Edward Ohressie's Tragic Exit. New York Herald Speoial Service. New York, March 31.When Edward Chressie, an old actor, fallen upon evil days, went into John McNamara's saloon today, and met several acquaint ances. They coaxed him to recite for them. Standing with one elbow on the bar, ChresBie began the lines of "The Face Upon the Barroom Floor." Give me the chalk, bartender, "That you use to mark the score, And I '11 draw you here a picture'' Suddenly he toppled over and died instantly. Heart disease killed him. Chressie was well known on the stage years ago. Latterly he had few engagements and spent much of his time in McNamara's saloon. RANFFY WARNS HUNS Declares Emperor Is About to Break Oath and Precipitate Crisis. By Publishers' Press. (the bers with Rev. Charles E. Fleming,! time limit, the king will break his oath Chicago, president A. M. Wickstrom, I and the whole fabric of state, church Ccicago, vice president and treasurer and society will collapse. If the king H. R. Schultz, secretary._ society 1 wants to break his oath he must be Budapest, March 31.Baron Banffy election writs within the specified ..The i auditor. The total collections amount prevented from doing so, I says Baron Missionary society. Banffy, as nothing can absolve him. receives $39,778.82- 1906.'l'' Copy- New York Herald Special Cable Service, right, 1906, by the New York Herald. London, March 31.The crypt of the interesting old Church of St. George the Martyr, in Southwark, is to be rented and, according to a real estate agent who has the matter in hand, will probably become a storage place for beer and wine. This announcement aroused interest among the lovers of Dickens from the fact that the original of the character of Little Dorrit, with whom the church is associated, is still alive, and has resided for more than half a century at Southgate. Mary Ann Hilton, now Mrs. Cooper, was born at Hatton Gardens and is to day a white-haired little woman more than 90 years old. She is in full pos session of her faculties and in wonder ful health and vigor. She loves nothing better than to talk about her girlhood. When young the novelist used to bring his manuscripts to be criticized by her and her brother before taking them to the publishers. ADVENTUROUS BRITONS BAND IN NEW LEGION new fashion may result in the hands' who are not prepared by reason of tem- becoming as red as a kitchen maid's perament or vocation to submit them 'Frontiersmen,"withRecords on Many Seas, in Many Lands, United. New Yr Herald Special Cable Seivice. Copy right, 1906, by the New York Herald. London, March 31.The Legion of Frontiersmen has now come into exist ence, with head offices in the Adelphi. Probably no organization in the world possesses the elements of romance in so great a degree as- this new legion. Its object is wholly patriotic, and its mem bers are associated for the promotion of imperial interests of peace and for defense in time of war. The official definition of the term "frontiersman" states it "includes men trained and qualified by previous completed military service or by work ing, hunting or fighting in widl coun tries or at sea, who for various rea sons do not or cannot serve in the ex isting military forces of the empire, and selves to the ordinary routine of mili tary discipline except in the time of war.'' Under such conditions the legion has already gathered into its ranks men whose collective adventures in all parts of the world would, if set down on pa per, make more thrilling and absorbing reading than any volume of fact or fiction ever published. The general council consists of experts, financial, military, judicial and representations of all vocations of the wilderness and of the sea. The chairman is the earl of Lonsdale, who himself has had ex periences which fall -to the lot of few men, his collection of hunting trophies at Lowther castle being supposed to be the finest in the kingdom. Some of the Leaders. The chairman of the executive coun cil, Sir Henry Seton Karr, is a famous big game hunter and was one of the pioneers of that sport in Wyoming at a time when he was liable himself to be hunted by redskins. M. H. DeHora's career furnishes one of the most remarkablo stories of the present age. One of his little exploits was the cutting out of the battleship Huascar from Peru, but that is by no uieans the most exciting of his adven tures. Captain Walter Kieton has been a prospector, gold miner, engineer, guidf, scout, hunter, seaman, correspondent and a soldier. The founder of the legion, Roger Pocock, has the extraordinary record of having filled thirty different voca tions in his highly adventurous life, including those of trooper, cowboy, seaman with the Yokohama pirates, captain of a pack train and scout. Morley Roberts, the distinguished novelist, is another member of the coun cil. He was a sailor the greater por tion of his life and left the merchant service as a master mariner. Two of the greatest journeys of re cent times were those made by Captain Harry De Windt and Capttain E. S. Grogan, both of whom are in the legion. From Ends of Earth. R. Bowman Ballantyne is an old cow boy, and a South American explorer, whose name is Colonel S. B. Steel, is known far and wide in Canada. He is the hero of remarkable feats of bluff which tamed the fighting tribes of western Canada without fighting. General Sir Reginald Hart, Sir John Freeh, Sir Edward Hutton, Sir F. Maurice, Sir E. Brabant, Admiral Prince Louis of Battenberg, Admiral Sir Percy Scott, Sir A. Conan Doyle, Rider Haggard and Sir Claude De Crespagny are a few who are aiding the legion. The war office has recognized the value of such an organization to the empire and has given its approval, and already, it is stated, correspondence has elicited the fact that there are good men in different parts of the empire who are ready to enroll themselves in the legion. BROKE UP A HIGH SCHOOL Teacher Dismissed Pupils After Losing Battle With Ants. Suffolk, Va., March 31.The invasion of an army of ants broke up the third grade of Suffolk high school yesterday, and the teacher, Miss Elsie Urquhart, after a losing battle between her pupils and the insects, dismissed school and retreated in pain and confusion and summoned help. Principal Gates, the janitor and oth ers continued the battle, but it was three hours before school opened again. A woman teacher says there were about 200 battalions of the ants, and each with a recognized leader antl each bat talion about 5,000 strong. They came thru the floor. ST. LOUIS COTJNTY SETTLES, St. Louis county yesterday reported its March tax settlement to the state ed to $384,144.64^ of which the state DERELICT MENACE I IN PATH OF LINERS Shipowners Want Cruisers Sent to Destroy Abandoned Steamer on Atlantic. New York Herald Special Cable Service. Copy, right, 1906, by the New York Herald. London, March 31.Shipowners in London are urging that British cruisers be sent to sink the derelict steamship Dunmore, which for ten weeks has been drifting helplessly in. the track of trans-Atlantic liners. When the cap tain and crew abandoned the vessel it was reported she was in a sinking con dition and that the engines were dis abled, but in spite of the tempestuous gales and heavy seas, the Punmore j{|| refused to sink and she is now being ^m carried hither and thither in mid-Atlan- *?3 tic, a floating menace to all ships. As she has withstood the buffetinga EUGENE OABRIERE DEAD. New York Herald Special Cable Service. Copyw^ right, 1906, by the New York Herald. Paris, March 31.The art world has* suffered by the death of Eugene Car-* riere, who, with M. Besnard and M. Renoir, was representative of the new tendencies in contemporary French art. He was both a painter and a philosov pher, his works invoking thought ani^ meditation. He was strong as a, portraitist and loved children. Hef used as models members of his family :M. of the winter storms, it may be taken for granted that with the prospect of3J more moderate weather the Dunmore'aq? will continue to keep afloat, and the' ys shipowners therefore feel a terrible dis- aster will ensue unless the dangerous vagrant is dispatched to the bottom of the sea or salved without further lossf? of time. Since her abandonment, the Dunmore has been sighted by no fewer thanS^ thirteen steamships, always right in tlm^f, direct course between England and^j America. A British cruiser could either salve or sink the obstacle in foura* or five days. %*4 j of all ages. One of his earliest pic tures was called "The Young Mother"^* and was exhibited at the salon of 1879. 4( The Sincerity Clothier" "TT SEEMS an odd name for a clothing store, father but since all these inves tigations of food frauds and insurance grafting have been going on, it has set me to thinking why it is that nearly every suit o* overcoat that you or I have ever bought has wrinkled and shrunk, and gotten all out of shape." ''It seemed to make little difference where we got it or what we paid for it, it has never seemed right." "jOften the highest priced clothes we have bought have given us the same cause for complaint." "That nameSINCERITY CLOTHES attracted my attention it sounded hon est seemed to mean something." I went into the store to investigate, and I am pretty well satisfied that I am on the right track now." In answer to my questions the SINCER- ITY man explained things to me." "It seems that no matter how accurately clothes are cut, the tailors who make up the garments will make mistakes in sewing, and instead of doing it over again, practically all the makers "fix up" the garments by shrink' ing or stretching with the Hot Flat-Iron* until the garment is shaped right." Naturally there is no way for us to tell, without having inside information, and, of course, all this Hot Fiat-Iron work comes out again when the Coat is worn awhile, or gets wet" How is a fellow to know when a Coat is yoked' that way I asked the SINCERITY man." Well!" says he, "here's one test:" Lay the Coat out flat on a table. If it's sincerely made the collar ought to lie in a perfectly straight line along the edge and where it turns over." If it is 'doped' by the Flat-Iron, the line will be wavy and after the 'faked' Coat is worn, the Collar will, of course, stand away from the neck and"lose its shape." "The difference is, that SINCERITY CLOTHES are revised, when necessary, by good old fashioned Hand Needle-Work, in stead of Flat-Iron 'faking,' giving the gar ment permanent shape that requires very little pressing, if any." Now that sounds like good logic to me." fl -*$ There was a great variety of patterns in SINCERITY CLOTHES, and they were the most perfect-fitting garments I ever pat on, besides having the latest style-lines." So I bought a suit, and right glad I am that I did it." Well, my boy, that's the way to figure things out. It's quality that tells in every thing. At my age, style doesn't count so much, but I am mighty glad to know how and where I can get a Suit or Overcoat that is honestly made." To-morrow we will make another call on the SINCERITY CLOTHIER and I will have a suit, too, with this label:" SINCERITY CLOTHESii MADE AND GUARANTEED BY KUH, NATHAN AND FISCHER CO. CHICA80 -"SL 1 .Send 2-eent stamp-for "The Teat" _, rv --For Sale By \jgr Model Clothing Company