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16 CUEIOXJSo 5. 4 'k *5 'Pi-* With the Long Bow ^"Bye Nature's walks, shoot tolly as it Mas. -Tall Earthquake Stories Beginning to Told by Peo ple Who Felt the Slight Ja of Last MonthOne Man Saw a House Pass His Window Three Times, and odd earthquake stories are begin ning come in from California, showing that the American intellect soars superior to earth quakes as it does to cyclones. A man who was in Oakland at the time of the stir writes: Where we live the street faces on 'Borax* Smith 's place. Yo probably have heard of him. His house is the finest in Oakland. A young fellow who rooms a few doors abqye us said that he looked out of the window and saw the Smith house go past three times, and concluded it was time to get out." A Los Angeles paper has this story: One woman who went to Montague by train after the tremblor says she had as fellow passengers a woman and a daughter who had saved a half-grown black cat. They told me that before the quake the cat had not a white hair,' she writes to her brother. 'Now its hair is so mixed with white as to give it a strango appearance.' It is a little too early, but we may soon begin to look for the story of the rooster that laid an egg owing to excitement. Editor Pease of Anoka thinks that a man ought not to wear himself all out saving the world or filling a place that cannot otherwise be filled. says: "Sometimes when I note a man wearing out all that is in him, acting as tho he thought the world couldn't get along without him, then chronicle his demise, and realize how soon his place is filled, and how soon he is forgotten, I think that he played the fool, and that it is better to be living than dead. How can we be sure that it is better to be living than dead when there are so many more dead people than living ones? People in England value their dogs so highly that whenever the pups are off their feed they run for a dog doctor. A a result, a regular canine materia medica has grown up, and pup physicians are regularly educated and enrolled among the polite professions. Side by side with these eminently respectable practi tioners has arisen a school of charlatans, who not being skilled in dog ailments, occasionally cause tha demise of some adored poodle by mistaken diagnosis and unethical "dope." A fellow of the Eoyal College of Veterinary Sur geons states that, "The growth of quack dog doctors and bogus dog medicines during the last few years has been simply appalling. These 'dog specialists,' as they call themselves, are especially prevalent in the west end of London. The profession is now out after the quacks and there is a dog doctor war on in London that threatens to get into politics. Frank Drew, an old-timer in the museum line in Cleveland, has been giving some reminiscences of the freak business. One of the startling exhibits he has had in charge, and one not generally known in this part of the country, was "The Camel Girl." From her thighs down this actress' limbs were turned the wrong way and if she stooped her knees would stick out behind like a camel's. The result was that when she walked she appeared to be walking away from herself, altho she was of course, keeping up with herself. The appearance on the public streets of the camel girl was always a cause of excitement and "rounders" seeing her moving apparently in two directions at once often hurried away somewhere to take the pledge. Lizzie Mills, the big footed girl, probably obtained more free adveitising than any other freak in the circuit. With her went a standing offer of $5,000 to anyone who would marry her. I is thought that Lizzie would have made good, but no one ever ap peared who was willing to throw himself at her feet. If her feet were concealed Miss Mills was really a nice-looking girl. She had had an attack of elephan tiasis, leaving the extremities in an unnatural exten sion that proved to be to her a source of wealth. Ivanovitch, the Siberian exile, was one of the most versatile exhibits. was a hideous little fellow, nearly covered with hair. One day he would be the' exile. Next day he might go into a cage and be 4 wild man. I didn't ma ke much difference to him which he was. I anything he would rather play the exile, because the wild man had to eat raw meat Ivanovit ch didn't like that. Myrtle Corbm, a woman with four lower limbs was a good drawing card until she was married, A Kentucki an came along one day who did not mind this wealth vof extremities and she married him. Myrtle was really an attractive girl of lovable nature and the Kentuckian made no mistake, except possibly his shoe bill is a little larger than ordinary. Now she has three or four children. They live in the Ken tucky mountain region, and the family is a perfectly happy one. Many people tried to break into the freak business, To serve asparagus with pimentoes bind four or five asparagus tips to- gether with a strip cut from a pim- ento. Stand the bundle on a curled leaf of lettuce and cover it with French dressing. A delicious salad is made by filling the pimentoes with cream cheese beat en very light and adding chopped nuts. The filled pepper will stand like a little cup. Serve with a French dress ing. For toasted jam sandwiches, cut bread into very thin slices and spread with butter and jam. Press slices closely together and toast quickly. Cheese may be used instead of jam. Sour oranges may be utilized in a delicious salad. Slice the oranges not too thin, and remove the skin, leaving the pulp in small triangular pieces. Serve on lettuce or crisped watercress with French dressing, or white mayon naise. The little oranges called cum quats are very good indeed served in exactly the same way Blanched Eng lish walnuts combined with such sal ads are a great addition. The green salads, especially water cress, need careful washing. Cress often grows in streams that are viti- THE PRICE OF FAME "Making a reputation is easy enough," sighed a girl who knew. "It's practically luck. The nerve wrecking part is keeping it made. Oh, the botheration of living up to your self, when by some fluke you've gotten on a pedestal and haven't the nerve to Step down. "Perhaps a sporadic run on Miss Brown at some summer place prompts people to say, 'There's a girl born to belledom she is always surrounded by men.' Then her trials begin. "She must keep herself surrounded "even efforts heroic or she'll be branded a failure. A reputation for wit or repartee is often a millstone around a girl's neck and she longs for the privilege of being unmitigatedly commonplace just once in a while without forfeiting her prestige. But she hasn't the nerve to let go. 4t 'Mary is so original,' 'Mary is al- ways so ready with a clever answer,' trumpet her friends and Mary abject kee ps up the farce, half the time envying the 'ordinary girls' who can ated drainage or other impurities. While all modern authorities and up to-date persons agree that too contin ual attention to the avoidance of dis ease invites what it seeks to avert, such precautions are in the line of com mon sense. For eggs a a Soubise, which are great favorites among the French peo ple, boil onions and rub thru a sieve until you have one cup of onion puree. Melt two tablespoons butter, add one and a half teaspoons flour and the puree. A soon as heated add one third cup milk and the yolk of two eggs. Season with salt and paprika. Add five hard-boiled eggs, cut in slices. Just before serving, sprinkle with finely chopped parsley. The roe is often served as a sauce with planked or broiled shad. To make it prepare the roe of one fish and cook it in water below the boiling point for about half an hour. Then drain, re move the membrane, put into a double boiler and mix with three tablespoon fuls of butter, half a teaspoonful of onion juice, salt to taste and a scant half cupful of Madeira wine. Stir the sauce over hot water until it is thoroly heated. Some persons add a little maceabout a saltspoonful. br just simple, happy themselves with out any standards to maintain. "To the young woman famous as be ing always the life of a party an even ing's gaiety is frequently less a festiv ity than to the little quiet mouse of a thing who has nothing to do but enjoy. "The quiet mouse isn't tantalized and beset in moments of rare relaxation with 'Why, what's happened so sud denly to subdue Miss Blank I I am afraid you are not feeling well today, my dear girL' "The woman with a record for un broken amiability or cheerfulness will often go blocks out of her way to avoid an imminent meeting with friends when the mood is not on her to keep up her role. "It isn't, I think, vanity so much that goads a girl to keep up her part as it is the loyalty to neighbors who are good enough to expect things of her. I hurts her to come down in their esti mation. Betwe en 800 and 900 British towns and villages have namesakes in the Unit ed States. PUZZLE PICTURE. What is the man saying? but failed. There was usually a plethora of living skeletons, fat and bearded ladies and armless wonders. After a time th ey became drugs on the market. A. J. B. BRIDGE TALKS No. 5The Opening Lead Against a N Trump. Written Expressly for The Journal by Miss Bessie Allen of Milwaukee. Against a no trump ma ke your best defense is to lead your longest suit, hoping to find that the weak spot in the maker's hand. Any suit of five cards is better than a suit of but four, even tho the four suit may be headed by higher cards. Thus, with 8 5 IO A 4- the club suit should be opened. I your partner has one good club to help you, then, with the aid of your ace and ki ng of diamonds, you may eventually make one or two small clubs. A any rate, you can scarcely lose your ace and king. open the hand with diamonds would insure its being returned to you by your partner should he gain the lead, and having played the ace and ki ng your hand is deadyou will never make another trick. The science of the game lies in making tricks with small cards which do not ordinarily win Aces and kings generally win tricks without" thought or skilf. If the opponents have high cards of your long suit, th ey must make tricks and your suit is' good for noth ing until these high cards are forced from their handB. The only way to force them to be played is to lead your suitthey surely will not lead it for you/ Holding two suits of equal length, lead from the stronger (the one headed by the highest cards), and if equal in strength, choose to lead a red suit rather than a blackhearts in preference to diamonds, for if the dealer had a very strong heart hand he would have declared hearts instead of no trump. In leading your longest suit, remember the third trick is the important one to winfor, if you are long, the third trick will usually exhaust every/one save yourself, and being in the lead, you can then make the small cards. So, if you would be obliged to lose the third trick in your suit, should you open it with a high card, open it fourth best. Thus, when opening from ace, king and three small cards, should you lead off your king and ace, you must lose the third trick,'and unless you have a re-entry you will never make the remaining small cards. Three tricks will exhaust all your partner's cards in your suit, and if he later gains WHEN SCOLDING ROSIE Good Housekeeping. A southern woman who has enviable success in managing her colored serv ants, makes it a point never to repri mand a servant when she is plainly dressed. She waits until she is going to a function, and then, attired in a beautiful costume, she calls the servants to account for whatever has displeased her. Negroes have a great respect for the wearers of handsome clothes. I corrected by their mistress when she as wearing a shirtwaist and walking skirt they might be impertinent, or "give notice," but not when she is stunningly arrayed. A CREEPING APRON There is no more attractive stage the development of a child than when he is learning to migrate for himself and strengthen little by little the small limbs which are ^g^ven him* for that purpose. Every child must have its days of rolling about on the floof, push i ng to and fro by means of hands and f^-i%^ Saturda Evening,' THE MINNEAPOLIS JOURNAL. "-Ma la 1906 -t the lead he has nothing with which to put you in. I you open with a low card from hce, ki ng and three small ones, your partner may 1 PONE. tf 9. 6. 3. A 5, 2. 0 A, 10. 8, 6. 10. 7, 6.2. Dealer declares no trump. TRICKS be able to win the first trick-or, even if he is unable to help you on the first trick, he probably will have at least one more in your suit which he can return to you when he gains the lead, whereupon you have a good chance to make all the rest of your cards. The worse you are in other either a suit must be cleared or a finesse risked which wi}J give your partner the lead. Should you have ace, king and queen at the head of your suit, you are sure of three tricks, so lead the high cards. Holding ace, king, jack and others you may lead the king and ace, hoping to catch the queen, thereby making your jack good for the third trick. Or, when holding a suit of seven cards, ace, king and five small ones, you may open it High, for if the re mainder of the suit is evenly distributed two tricks will exhaust every one and establish your remaining flve. Holding: Ace, king and five smafo lead king, then ace Ace, ki ng and three or four small, lead fourth best, unless holding another ace? then lead king. Ace, ki ng anan two small, lead fourth best. 5J & 9 Ave small, lead king. uee King, queen and less than five small, lead fourth best. When, at the head of fdit long suit, you hold three honors, two of which are in sequence (except ace, ki ng ten), lead one of the two touching honors, gen erally the higher. With suits containing: Ace, king, queen and others, lead king, then queen. Ace, king, jack and others, lead king, then ace. King, queen, jack and others, lead king. King, queen, ten and others, lead king. Ace, queen, jack and others, with another ace, lead ac,e, then queen. Ace, queen, jack and others, with no re-entry, lead queen, then ace. Queen, jack, ten and others, lead queen. Queen, jack, nine and others, lead queen. Ace, jack, ten and others, lead jack. Jack, ten, nine and others, lead jack. King, jack, ten and others, i Zsfc suits the better chance your partner has of winning really important national events, we feel bound to sup- a trick and being able to put you in. I is a rare ply the lacking information. I anyone knows the thing for the dealer to be able to take enough tricks tq make game without any interruption. Usually 6 ea ten. Hand No. 4 1 DEALER. Ar J, 7. *K,6. 0 Q, J. 7. 8. LEADER. K. Q. 10.8. 5. 8.7. 3. 0 6,2. A. Q, 8. N. w. E. S. 0 4. 2.* *A.,J 10,9,4. 0 K. 9. 4. 9,5. DUMMY. East South West Pone. 3 tf 6 BO IOO 2 5 9 2 6 8 0 7 IO Leader. North Dealer. 7 2 7 3 0 O Dummy. 2 Ktf 8 2 0 6 O 3 7 8 8 5 lOtf 2. 8. 4. 5. 6. 7. i KO 'ITo" 4 9 A %Q 9 10.......... 6 3 4 tK 7 0 QO AW 9 12 13, A i ,4 JA^ ii_ North and Squtji 'score ten tricks. Comment. Trick 1.Dealer refuses to win ki ng of hearts, wishing the suit led again up to his ace, jack. Trick S.The dealer must consider -that if he starts the clubs immediately he will have ftrar discards in his own hand and must either unguard two suits, or let an entire suft go. It will be^better to .establish a trick in diamonds first, and then discard all the,spades. Trick 3.Pone refuse* to win the diamond, know ing there is nothing to .be gained by playing his ace and continuing hearts a dealer must hearts and he would theft make all his diamonds and spades. Trick 5.Dealer sees, there is no use continuing diamonds. Pone is sure to hold over him. Trick 7.Dealer must keep his diamonds, having second best once guarded and Dum my holding one to lead. Trick 11.Dummy, seeing East (the leader), dis card the ten of hearts, knows he has but one more heart, the queen, therefore he must have two spades, probably high ones. Dummy leads spades, hoping East will win the trick and be obliged eventually to lead the queen of hearts. knees, and consequently wearing out e^ery sort of garment put upon him. For this purpose the creeping No. Street. Town State..., Mearorement-'-Walst Bust. Age (If child's or mlsa' pattern)..,........ CAUTIONBe dareful to give correct iftunber and size of pattern wanted. When the pattern is-bust measure you need only mark 82, 84 or whatever It may be. When In waist measure, 22, 24, 26 or whatever it may be. When miss' or child's pattern write only the figure representing the age. It Is not necessary to write "Inches" or "years." have ace of TA rapron here shown is the best thing, and every beginner in life, should have one. I may be made gingham or outing flannel and buttons closely down the back so that no ""dress or underwear need become soiled during the progress over the floor. Mothers have found it a most convenient and necessary article and no difficulties will be found in its construction. Thr.ee yards of 36-inch material are needed for the making. No. 4788-One size. & PATTERN NO. 4788. UPON RECEIPT OF 10c. THE PATTERN DEPT. OP THE MINNEAPOLIS JOURNAL wfll send the above-mentioned pattern, aa per directions given below. (Write tie name carefully.) Name -$ WORKS WITH GLOVES I hope," said the woman who was ordering a pair of slippers made of flowered satin, "that you will tell your workman to wash his hands before he begins to make these up." 'Wash his hands?" repeated the clerk. "Why, madam, he never will touch these with his bare hands." Then the clerk explained that all workmen employed in making slippers of light colors worked with white gloves on. vj. ,j "Try to keep them clean," he con tinued. I should say they did. They try so hard that they change their white gloves ^fctorfee times day." Which is not So" fantastic as it may seem, f6r if a shoemaker soils mate rial of this kind the expense to him of replacing the material, to say noth i ng 6 the loss df his time, makes it worth his while to-'work in gloves and keep them clean at that. E circumstances preceding and attendingbut chiefly precedingthe marriage of Moccasin Charley, at Skunk Point, Okla., have not been fully understood. A a conscientious chronicler of whole story, he has not yet told it so, rather than connive at a suppression of vital facts, we propose to Bpeak out. Moccasin Charley had been circulating about Skunk Point rather more fluently than seemed advisable in the opinion of the veteran inhabitants. was known as the "Cowboy Pianist," and had made~"TBuccessful tours in Kansas, Iowa and Nebraska, returning to Skunk Point with considerable money, wild west clothesmade in Cincinnatiand several six-shooters that were much too shiny for the popular philosophy. Furthermore, he had taken to wearing about his neck a kind of handkerchief, sort of delicate, and spotted witAh blue or red, which madre thes crowd at Beasley's mount saloon finger thei gun somewhat too anx TH1SN THE/ WERE MARRIED iously for any good. Naturally, he wore his hair very long, like Buffalo Bill and Cherokee Jake and the rest of the swells. Likewise, he cultivated a bfg drooping mustache, which always made the female seminaries up north break out in spots. On the occasion referred to Moccasin Charley had just returned from a melodious raid on Kansas. was wadded all over with money he hadn't anything else except his usual harnessand he flashed the long green at the Catamount until It amounted to a sin for anyone to keep even half-way sober. I guess," said Charley, after the eleventh round of Pike's Magnolia, "that I'm about the most des perate and fearless thing in the whole chapparral belt. I'll tackle anything that wears fur, hair, horns, or hoofs, and glad of the chance. Sometimes I-wonder I 'm alive at all, after the terrors I 've met and handled. It seems plum unaccountable." Then he sat down at the pianner, and played and sang "Lorena," while the gang wept noisily. Then there was another songa low, hollow moan, about "mother," and the cradle and the grav that must ever be kept greenuntil the very toughest rounders in the house began to bawl. I seemed a monstrous long time between drinks, as they figured it. Moccasin Charley threw back his hair, or dered "pisen" all around, and then broke out into "Where is Wandering Love Tonight?" An just about that time the Widow Kelly bulged into the arena, with eyes aflame and hair in fine frenzy rolling, and she jerked Moccasin Charley off the piano stool and sat upon his heaving chest. There were some inci dental remarks on her part relative to liars, betrayers, serpents and tarantulas. Moreover, she fished from the deep Charybdis of her petticoat a pair of shears and took hyi hair off till he looked like Eockefeller. Then they were married out of hand by a red-nosed gentleman in black who had kept quiet and consoled himself with heel-taps during the excitement. And this is the true and full history of Moccasin Charley's untimely nuptials.Washington Post. NUTSHELLS OF KNOWLEDGE. XES in Fiji are paid in cocoanuts. There are ladies' smoking cars on English rail ways. I Austria chess-playing is taught in the public schools. ABOUT ABBIE Abble Ben Adams, may her life be. spared, Awoke one night, and felt a trifle scared For on her (shirtwaist box, cross-legged sate A Vision writing on a little slate. Exceeding nervousness made Abble quake And to the Vision timfdly she spake "What writest thou?" The Vision looked appalled At her presumption, and quite coldly drawled: "The list of Our Best People who depart For watering places sumptuous and smart." "And am I In it?" asked Miss Abble. "No!" The scornful Vision said. "You're poor, you knew "I know," said Abble "I go where it's cheap. I can't afford mountains or prices steep, But, ere you leave, Just Jot this item down, i I never leave my cats to starve in town." The Vision wrote, and vanished. Next night, late", He came again and brought his little slate, And showed 'the names of people really best, And lo! Miss Abbie's name led all the rest! Carolyn Wells, in Life. PRINCESS SELLS OATS "Her Boyal Highness Princess Vic toria has for sale several very hand some chinchilla kittens sire Puck III ex-Chela, also Chela splendid mother lovely green eyeB blue Persian female cheap to good homes must sell. Mrs. Amor, Cumberland Lodge, Windsor Great Park." This advertisement in a London weekly furnished gossip at many a tea table, for while more than one noble woman has gone into trade to redeem her fortunes, royalty has held aloof. Everyone knows by this time that Queen Alexandra is a cat lover, but it has come somewhat as a surprise to a number of English women that her daughter, Princess Victoria, is not only a lover of cats, but an ,energetic and enthusiastic breeder as well. Th princess does not breed cats, it ap pears, merely to increase the number of her feline pets. The "catteries" are worked on a solid commercial basis, and apparently with considerable profit to her private pocket. All the hospitals and almshouses in Berlin are regularly supplied with flowers from the, city. SE son. A-^ylBy A Stririg'of Good Stories "l cannot tall how tha truth may bat Iaay the tale aa 'twas told to mm" AMUSING THE UABY. OSCOE C. SUTCLIFFE, who has fought child labor so successfully for sixteen years, said recently in Dallas: "These employers of child labor seem to me to be lunatics. They fatten on tender little children, work ing them eleven or twelve hours a day, stunting alike their bodies and their minds yet in nine cases out of ten th ey are pious, church-going aeoDle. and the? assure you calmly that their work benefits an a glad dens the, children instead of harming and saddening them. "They remind one in their perfect assurance 0 1 my wife's niece, a child of 9. "My wife's niece was once left in charge of her baby brother for some hours. "When her mother returned home, the first sound she heard was the loud yelling and squalling of the baby. She ran upstairs at once. 'What is the baby crying fort' she said. "And the baby's juvenile monitress answered calmly: 'He's cross with me, mamma. I was trying to make him smile with the glove stretcher.' LEGISLATORS THAT MUST GO. didn't youf Your best friend is your blood. Don't starve it. Give it nourishment, otherwise you will never have tros cheeks and abundant vitality. Apitezo is the only cereal that supplies the vegetable iron your system requires. It gives you new life, new energy, builds up your body in every part, keeps you well and makes you strong. a crisp, delicious foodthe iron it supplies is the same as found in peas, beans and spinachjust the light amount of it to balance your food properly and to feed the red blood corpuscles. Apitezo meets the need of the trained athlete as well as the most delicate child or invalidnourishing old and young. Eat Apitezo for a single month and see for yourself how it will sparpen your appe tite*, make your digestion better and give you more vital energy. Your children will enjoy Apitezo, and it will do them good. It is exactly the cereal they need to build up health and strength and rosy cheeks. Apitezo Biscuits. 15c the package. Apitew Grains, 10c the package. Sold by grocers everywhere. TEXAS "Thegarden ot tha Lord.'"Roosevelt. Have you been reading the Vander hoof letters on Texas in this newspa per! They point to opportunities in a new field. W can give you information which will be worth dollars and cents to you. r, WBTTE Business Men's Club, SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS. Journal want axis are reaa by peo ple who are buyers. That's why The Journal carries the most classi fied advertising. NATOR TILLMAN, in an address on legislators' duties, referred to the famous Lord Melbourne. "Here is an illustration," he said, "of the way legislators looked on the people in the past. Some legislators still look on the people in that old-fashioned way. Bu their day is done. They are disappearing. They have been found out. They are not wanted. Well, -Lord Melbourne sat in his great, fine office in Dublin Castle when a boy, Sir William Gregory, was brought in to see him by a relative. "The' boy was much impressed by the many fine things that lay on the desks and tables in the sumptu ous office. Yo know how a lot of free stationery appeals to all of us, and here were dozens of the finest pens, sticks of brilliant sealing-wax, blotters without number, erasing knives, tablets, notebooks, calendars. "And Lord Melbourne, seeing how greedily the oy was looking at the appointments of the great public office, said: ""Do you see anything here you want!' The boy said he would like to have a stick of red sealing-wax. 'That is right, my lad. Begin early,' said Lord Melbourne, thrusting into the lad's hand a box con taining a dozen sticks of assorted wax 'Al these things belong to the public, and our business must always be to get as muh out of the public as we can. I N THE WEDDING MONTH. DISHOP OLMSTE D, of Colorado, was talking at & dinner party in Denver about June weddings. "June is a lovely month," he said, "and that it should be the month of all months for weddings is a fact easily understood. I was amused by the remark a jeweler made the other day. "The jeweler said that at this season it is a very common thing to see a well-dressed, handsome, intelli gent looking young man come into his shop, and say, in a painfully nervous way: 'Um, ah, ererah, erah, um* "In this contingency the jeweler simply calls to his clerk: 'Ge out that tray of engagement rings, Jack- THE CLEVER VALET. CENATOR BEVERIDGE was discussing a bill (Ion? *J since defeated) that seemed to have been framed for the protection of dishonesty. "Whenever I think of that bill," he said, I am reminded of a certain rich man's valet. "The valet, one morning, was brushing his master's clothes. introduced into this procedure a startling innovation. made a careful search of all th$ pockets. "In the pocket of a new waistcoat the valet found a silver dollar. Thereupon he took out his penknife, sighed, and said: For the waistcoat's sake it's a thousand pities, but there's nothing else to be done. I must make a hole this pocket large enough for the dollar to slip thru.' A SPECULATOR, OF COURSE. ECRETARY OF AGRICULTURE WILSO N, in an address to a delegation of farmers, wo hearty applause with the following observation: I overheard a dialogue between two well-dressed men at lunch the other day. ''The first man, as he helped himselfw to asparagus,, sai i^e 7 yo 'Good gracious, no!' returned the other man. I said he made his fortune out of wheat.' Edison and Victor TALKING MACHINES n Easy Payments Minnesota Phonograph Co. ^J" ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. ALWAYS OPEN. On the Beach. Fireproof. Send for Literature. THE LEEDS COMPANY The best place to store your furs Albrechfs, 61 2 Nicollet] TeJeptioae(both phoees)and we wW calf. a I Joauso as a farmer 4 Ay Bend (or Edison and Victor Catalog. Store Open Evenings. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. CHALFONTE,