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V ' _.______________._________--_____-_-?-__ Wonder What the Statue of Liberty Thinks About - - b. briggs ^iVTIU JUST f.GCErV)TLYj i Get Awf^ULiY Tired j STANDING H?=R? YEAR J APTCR YtAR. MY ARM I IS NEARLY KILL 1.0 <$ MF.Jj 3l _-. ST?ll- th.s Lire HAS ITS COMPENSATION. S. I'll 8?t Tve FLlRTeX? WITH MORE SOLDIER BoY-S Tham amy oTnena W?MAM "W. AMERICA S?? -'They Alway-S Waue ! To (ME AK?!) 5EEiM GLAt) ? To SEC: ME. The Y _.V_E|0 ThRO-O KiS-.es AT ME ! But i>arm it i camt RETURw 'EtM - BCCAUSE WCLL MY HAMDj. ARE FULL And Those Av.aTors* They arb ?setting Just AWFUL Bold. I Ga^E OruE A NASTY LOOK TAe OTHER DAY. HC CAME A LITTLE Too (NJEAR Acu.^ U.AS Too FRESW ?' '?"what ARE THE \fJOrAEtJ WEARING THtS YEAR '. ?>Q VOU KNoW . tOEver ; Yet have felt out or I '.STYLE . Thank g'ood N/?fSSit 350M'T HAVE I PRESS. TO tW?RflY. ABOUT i _B?flCS? -LOTS OF PEOPLQ Come ! To SES ME SO I MEUEU CCT LONESOME, AMD t HAVE A VtfOMPERF\_t_. VIEW OF' "pRCSi-DEMT WILSON VAJHEN HE GOES BACK AM? ?FORTH- ISN'T HE THE f-7> REGULAR LITTLE j?%y Gad-a-bout'Tho'? -_i_-J_-j ? HEPt COMES ANOTHER LOAD OF SOUDiERS. Th?Y ?TARTED 5HOUTIMC. AND SinGinG To ?ME /MILES AMD? MILES OUT AT SPA MANY A WOMAN \AJOUl_T. ha^e kad he. head Turned if so m/v-V J\ ??> Fing looking l> FELLOV/J-S MADE k*7y?/ SUCH A Fu5_ efch. ?..R. Them, IT'S A CnRC-AT IfFci Love for Negro ( Only Motherly, Says Mrs. Mott i Defendant in $50,000 Suit Brought by Chauffeur'? Wife Says His Heart Was White, as His Skin Blark Mrs. Augusta L. Mott. of Far Rock- , ?way, sixty-four-year-old defcndanl in : the $50,000 alienation suit which Mrs. , Julia King, a negreas, has brought, tes- ; tifiod yesterday In the Supreme Courl that her interest in Albert King, her negro chauffeur, ntul husband of the plaintiff? was motherly and nothing inore. Ex-Senator Edgar T. Brackctt, of counsel for Mrs. King, crosi oxatnincd Mrs. Mott at length, laying particular ???tress on a letter which the defendant admitted she wrote King, At the time - she wrote she was undergoing trcal men! at the beauty parlor of one Mm Shearer and because of a Bkin-peeling proce ihe remained with Mrs. Sheai er, Kuif: wan al Far Rockaway, where Mrs, Mott lived with her husband, ?leur;.-.?' K, Mott, a retirod lawyer, The letter nddror.sed to "My dearesl good hoy" and subscribed "I!. !>.," which ' was admitted by the. defence fcood for "Baby Doll," was read into the record in full yesterday. It read in [?art : "To answer your question about Mrs. Shearer, i don't th : '-. il . . some ?ays a bad idea, althoug! it might have a peculiar look to hor unless it only occurred a few times. I am afraid she might wonder and you could not tell her too much. However, I can ex? plain better when I see you neN. week. _ hope to be fit to see you by that time. I am a fright just now. Would not see my grandmother. Heart With Him, She Writes "I think when you come in town you ran make a few inquiries at the garage. Well, dear King, my heart is with you every minute of the day, and I mu t tell you that I am ?nd and lonely. So now I think I had better close and ge: this? mailed. I have said as much as ', dare. Hope you fei 1 bett. r and not t? i lonely. With love and wishing i to you. h. D." Mrs. Mott. also mentioned in I ? l< I ter a woman -he met at the beauty parlor. She said yesterday the woman was a Mrs. ?%:?. Also in her letter the writer referred to Olga, Carrie. Louise and other girls who had tried to "?ear me to pieces." Mr. Brackcti asked Mr.. Mott what Bhe meant when she ?--aid she had written as much .-. ?? she dared. "I had written as fully and freely as posi ible about King's troubles and didn't care to say," she replied. Only Motherly Affection Mrs- Mott said she ami her husband had a genuine affection for Kin^-, who was regarded as almost a member of the family. He was a sort of major domo ?~?r head servant about the house. "I had a motherly affection for him," said the defendant. Counsel made ref? erence to her manner of addressing the negro servant in the letter. "Yes, and ho was a good hoy," she explalnod, "Why did sou so address him'.'" "Because his heart was as white as hi? nkin was dark. He served us faith? fully for many years and he Was in trouble." Mrs. Mott said she saw her husband while undergoing the skin peeling treatment, adding "I didn't mind him." .She had refused to see King al the time. Hex sadness, about which sin wrote, was due to the ill health of her husband who had lost the ?gl I of an *ye, and she, too, was ill. They had derided to leave the country and found it necessary to dispense with the serv? ie*! of King. She made it her ?!uty to try to procure ? new fob for him. Anxious for King% Future "I was very fond of Kiri^^ml I don't d?-ny It and I was i?r,?^y|s for }n. future, which looked very dark," said Mr?. Mott. Aa to the term "Baby Doll," she, ?aid I? win merely a pi Hfitry Asked whether she addressed her other servants that way Mrs, Motl .aid she sometimes called Jlmmlo, h"r Italian gardener, "deal boy " "Il wti," she said, "the > xpression of e lady Of over sixty yeSI i to ? colorir) ltd, Who though ? man in y?<ir w*x a boy." Mr?. Mott VM asked about lOflfK of the expressions In hei lettei to King. ;,he taldi "l eonfoaa It was foolishly TPITK Fast Side received astounding -*? news yesterday, not from Russia, but from Liberty, N. V. A telegram came saying "All employes of Work? men's Circle Sanatorium on strike." The importance of that announcement becomes apparent when it is staled that the Workmen's Circle is a Socialist or? ganization of 75,000 workmen banded together for mutual benefits, including the sanitorium at Liberty. Telephone connections were promptly mude. Then it was learned that, the strike was due to the determination of the the employes to have herring for dinner instead of tin- bologna offered by the matron, Miss 1!. Hreger. Everybody- thirty, to be exact walked out, including the pig tender. PigH are kept at the sanitorium, it was explained, only for salo, The Workmen'? Circle's headquarters ;.' 175 RjUhI Broadway was informed that the striker;;, although hungry, would remain out until Dr, Leo H?bsch, who was dismissed, according to the strikers, for sympathizing with them, Is reinstated. b'or the benefit of relativen of the sanitorium patients it was stated that they aro not missing a meal. ^?W VORK airmen who may try hunting ducks from airplanes may pursue the elusive mallard, Leal and poulet doux in or over the Jersey marshes without official hindrance. Gov ernor Edge gave it. as his opinion yes? terday thai ducks are in no danger from aerial sportsmen. An aeroplane's noise will be ample protection for the birds, he thinks. So he vetoed the Hyland bill prohibiting hunting with aeroplanes, holding it to be unnecessary and a use les:; burden to the statute books. WHEN asked by a Long Island City magistrate yesterday whether he ' had carried dangerous weapons while charges of insubordination against him were being tried, John 1-'. Murray, who had been a Queens Borough official in ; the Bureau of Sewers for twenty years, replied : '1 <i-d not, T brought nothing to Borough. Hal!, not oven my pocketbook, because nothing is safe from the vam ' pires who inhabit that building." Murray was committed to the Kings County Hospital for observation. Ur. worded but that [.here was anything wrong or impure n -,' I never will confess." The word "dare" in the epistle, she admitted also was "fool .. hlj used." Mr. Mot' testified that he liked King, who, he said, had a pleasing disposition, I'h? appreciated the servant's loyalty to Mrs. Molt. Mr. Mott said he some played cards with King in the garage. In summing up last evening Grant C. I-'o.x, counsel lor the defend? ant, said there wa.; no allegation made i of anything improper in connection with the preposterous charge of ali?n? ation. No evidence was adduced, ho said, to support the insinuation:) made against Mrs, Mott. Mr. Brackett asked lor a verdict for Mrs. Kinjr, telling the jury they should not be influenced by the fact that "the plaintiff is a black woman and the defendant has white skin." Justice Wagner will charge the ? jury this morning. Sound Boat Owners Offer New Plan to Strikers Men Are A^ke?! to Aerept More Wages and (??ir Up Their K-Hotir Day Demand The Marine Workers' Affilintion will , vote this morning on the acceptance of a compromise offer made by the Long Island Sound Barge Owner;.' A? sociation for work on tug?, barges and other equipment plying between Now and New England ports. The offer contemplates abandonment of tha eight-hour day In return for higher Members of the affiliation said last i , ;:' that while it was possible the offer m its present form would bo re lectod, It at least offered a basis for negotiation on which a settlement might be built, 'flu- Round liimis now carry double crews, the trips requiring several days ?., complete. On the eight hour sys : 'em three crews would be required ?'in i the owners Insist is Itnnractioa? ble, but they ?oncede that the work Can '"' '/ higher wage? than It now the ! rule. In tin' harbor situation generally 1 there was HO change. A. C. Combes testified that he was suf? fering from paranoia. CINDERELLA lost her slipper, and * the chariot of gold became once more a pumpkin. Delphine Harriett, a Brooklyn girl, lost her slippi r, and n I $3,500 ' damage verdict against the | Brooklyn Heights Railroad Company ?may become a scrap of paper. Last January Miss Harriett was in? jured. Her fool was caught in n ear door. She instituted a suit. A white buckskin shoe was ?m important piece of evidence. After the verdict was ren? dered 11"- Rhoe wii ? i ' :?' .1 ihoc hop ? I to bo kepi overnight, The store was robbed, and no.V the company has ap? pealed, insisting that tho shoe again on 1 placed m evidence, The Appellato Di? vision of tho Brooklyn Supremo Court has reserved decision, Soldier? <,r the American Rxpedlllonary l-'i,r,-r-. Hlill m l-'is. ;???? In receive 111 i ? i uctlon In loin nali m Ml Hi ?am 'I eirh nor, n newspaper w i ?1er, w ill '?-]?? up thl. ..,,,1, for [hi Ji v.i li VS. Ifnrii Hi - I Mcml.ei?? of ?lie 'I l'.el.-i <'!n ri :f<. . nlty will hold Iheir hixl '-third annual ? rmvi ntion in lho 11..', ; .\ li.i , April I I ai d Dr, Maxwell Knufman, of " '. 1 South Third Street, William I iirif, -.-..- I - ill in ??ii ??> hail l.y Magistrate Dalo In Lho William bur? Cmirt on a charco i f "pn .-;i>:: r. heroin in excess of a reasonable amount and not in good faith. ' French y !d medals have been conferred on Mrs. George A Ki .1er and Mrs. li. Val? entine Webster, in recognition of their ef? forts on behalf of blinded French Boldiers, Edward Levy, five, of f>. Alien Street, was instantly Killed by an automobile truck. Columbia University's 'varsity show, "Take a Chance," will be presented at the Hotel Plaza April 2S-S0 and on May I and Mav 3. This i- the fir ' piay presented oft the campus since lho beginning of the war. Henrv Heide, chairmsn of the ndvi.ory committee of the New York Foundling Asy? lum announced thai It).100 was sub cribed during the tir?t. day of the ho pital's cam? paign 1<> raise $250,000. Tale of ._? Prowlers May Aid \>r. Wilkins ; Lawyer Says Society Woman Will Toll of Seeing Strangers ? Night of Murder M1NELOA, L, T., April 8.- -Charles Wvsontr, counsel ror Dr. Walter K. .' . ! Wilkins, who is accused nr the murder ! of his wife at their Long Beach home on the night of February _!7, to-day re? vealed how ho hones to prove that the ; physician's story of what happened that nicht was true. II" slated that a prominent, society woman of Long Beach had come u.r ward with a detailed description of three mysterious strangers who were at the seaside resort on the day of the murder. This witness -ays that three hours before Mrs. Wilkins wns killed three men knocked at her back door. One of them asked her where there was a three-family house. When she de? clined to open the ?loor they departed. Shi? gave a good di .crip! on of one of them, which may itrengthen the story lold by New York chauffeurs that a man told them on the night of tho mur? der thai they would hear aboul Mrs. Wilkins's death. Dr. Wilkins, who is awaiting trial in the Mine?la jail, - ays hi iti r of v. hal happened on the night of the murder is true, ami thai il will be hi ; % ci ci . The physician has frequently asserted ? that, three men attacki d him and hi ?? wife, One called "Dick" by hi i com panions kill? ?I Mrs. Wilkins, according to the fill', lician, House's Secretary Dieu Donald Prary, twentj live, rrutu to Colonel K. M. House and an au? thority on Internal ional (fairs, cud m Paris, He wu I orn in ( hai lomont, M ? and ws n gi uduate of Vale Unlvorsily, Mr, Prary was an In I rui : tor m history nt Vale when he received j an nppoinl moni In t he Stale I >? pai I ' nient. Ile gponl a year ?n ' lima oil nii-. [on - '? hooi win i?. nnd wroti i i /me i? rl lelo on miei nal Ional ? (Tali ?, [ jiiii'iicuiin ly tho no of Bulgaria, Automobile Tossed j Against a Train by Streetcar; I Dead! _, Ford Runabout Struck at! 42d Street Crossing ant! INew Jersey Contractor Is Killed; Many Are Injured speeding toward the Forty-second Street ferry last night with a load of N'cw Jersey commuters crashed into n Ford runabout halted at the Eleventh Avenuo grade crossing to await the passing of a New York Central freight train. Charlen Olsen, a l?idgelield Park, X. J,, contractor, one of the oc? cupants of the automobile, was thrown out of the machine and dashed against the sido of a freight car. lie died lllmosl m Ian! ly, II is son, Ralph, ?god nili'-toen, who was at the wheel 0 iho runabout, ivas only slight ly hurt, Burton Tuttln, aged forty, tin- motor man in charge of the car, was arrested, i-iiargeil technically with homicide. He declared dut he was unable to .top 1 i ear owing to a defectivo brake mei han ism. Hi- re fused i o make a ? i. it hi i' ; tatement. Passengers Cut by (?lass. All the occupants of the street, car were severely .shaken. A number were eut. by flying fragments of shattered window.-, and windshields. Among them were John Sleet, an engineer, of 91 Amsterdam Avenue; Samuel German, a piuml er, of Dumont, X. .1., and Hamley B( sco, of llil Fifteenth Street, \\ ? ;'t New York. May Ward, aged twenty-nine, of 200 West Sixty-eighth Street,, the street car conductor, also was cut and bruised iuit was aide to go home, while Tuttlc was taken to the West Forty-seventh Street station and locked up. Ambulances wen- called from the Xew York am! Roosevelt hospitals by policemen summoned to the scene. 01 ;-i ii was picked up and taken to Roosevelt Hospital, where Dr. George Mills said he had died almost instantly. Ambulance surgeons attended the cai passengers, all of wh.orn afterward went home, Ralph Olson, i.". a statement to the police, said that lie was stopped by th? lowering of the gates guarding tin railroad crossing. The crosstown cai was immediately behind. Tried to Escape Crash "I looked behind," hi- continued ? "and saw i*. coming at a surprising rali ? of speed. 1 realized something wai wrong anil put on my power to tun oui of the track and get out of thi way, toward the nicht, hut; before could <!<> so we were struck. "My father was hurled out. of th. c>ti\ ami his body struck one of th. freight ears about a foot, it seemed j below 1 In' root".'' The runabout was driven partly be math a truck of one of tie fr< igh cars and completely wrecked. Hyde Sues for $3,250,00< Alleged Slayer '?!' Col. Swop? Asks Damages of Newspaper KANSAS i ITY, April 8, Suit for $2, 500,000 againsl "The Kansas City Star to day was filed by Dr. B. Clark Hyd< three times tried on the charge of mur | dering Colonel Thomas H. Swop, bachelor and millionaire, uncle of Mr; ! Hyde! The suit Is based on an allega tion of damage growing from the pul lical on in "The Star" of an allege quotation of a conversation betwec ursi a in the Swope home and Dr. G. '1 Twyman, Colonel Swope's physiciai following the death of Colonel Swopi 1 Dr, 'I'--, man died while n jury to tr I Dr, Hyde ens being empanelled, an ! effort of the state to have the allege i i-'invi i lation ontered In I ho record < the i ,-'?'? failed. Tin- charges against Dr. Hyde wet n cil i fter Ris I h Ird trial, whic resulted in a disagreement by the j 11 r ? Dr. Hyde asks $600,000 actual an' $2,000,000 punil ivo damagoB. Dr, Hyde also brought unit again; "The Kansas City Journal" for i'iVto nun, of which the petition stfttOS $260 000 is asked Tor actual and $110(1,1100 t, punitive damages, Tha null again: ?The Journal" I? basad upon an ad tin ml which upyi-aiad in tulO, JOHN W?NA A. T. STEWART 1823 COMBINED IN NEW YORK 1896 JOHN WANAMAKER ig61 New York, April 9, 1919. Good morning! The weather today will probably be unsettled; rain. As the Pictures of the "Movie" throw upon the screen the mar? velous events happening on both sides of the sea, so does this carefully organized piece of ma? chinery, constituting a Store of magnitude and ability, reflect the forms and colors as though it were a huge old-fashioned magic lantern, made on purpose to show the newest and best things now being manufactured, that the people who buy may see them side by sido and thus be enabled to make the best choice. [Signed'] U April 9, 1919. Piano Recital In the Auditorium Today at 2.30 p. m. by COLLETTE JACKSON assisted by J. Thurston Noe, Organ First (.allory, New lluililinir. Store Your i Heavy Furs! Every day you keep them in your warm wardrobe or closet at home, you are running the risk of moths?-and theft. Send them to us. We have safe accommodation in oui Fur Storage Vaults (on the premises) for 25,000 scarfs and muffs and 16,000 fur coats, rugs, etc. Trnth floor, New liinlilmir. Easter Don't forget to choose Easter cards now to send to far-away friends. Greeting cards, 3c to 50c each ; novel? ties, 25c, to 50c; post, cards, Lc each, 10c dozen to 5c each, 50c dozen. I)o?a nnlniri More, New (luilillnu. ! "A Parisienne^ \ Selection of P?tris Spring Modes'" The hats in the collection being presented in Coin dr. Paris are the models which Paris herself has adopted. We have every assurance that these models are exclu? sive with us. Coin de Paris will build hats to express one's indi? viduality?as well as copy Paris models?at conserva? tive prices. Fourth floor, Old Building;. Dinner Sets Gold-hand?$25 D7 only; L07-pieco sets of .American porcelain; the same quality as sets m our regular stocks at $32.50. Each set has all the important pieces. All handles are covered with solid gold. Fach piece lias a gold band. It is a rare thing to get such good dinner sets, in such taste, for $25. Second (?nll.ry, Old Buildin*. Whoever Makes Snapshots has an interest In this. There is now on sale in the Camera Store a camera which folds; makes pictures 2'4 x !1% inches; uses an Eastman roll film; and costs only .$9.50. Similar cameras made here since the war cost twice as much. Main floor, Old Rulldin?. Fashions for \ Small Young Women For hundreds of young ? women who have matured lines, but who are very small in stature, we are specializ? ing these fashions. This new, specialized col? lection is in the Young Women's Salon, Second floor. Old Building, Tenth Street side. Prices are moderate. Suits, $39.75 to $52.50. Coats, $25 to $52.50. Capes, $15 to $52.50. Dresses, $31.50 to $55. Skirts of worsted plaids, $14.50. Second floor, Old Building. Tailored Suits of Tricotine and Poiret Tivill They are the most desired this Spring?and usually the most expensive. That is why we are particularly enthusi? astic about offering you six models that include both fabrics at $69.50. One model, a semi-box coat, is absolutely new, and has patch pockets, covered entirely with black silk braid put on diagon? ally. You can imagine how smart that is. Then, a model of Poiret twill has a becoming roll collar anc semi-fitted slim little coat. The other four suits are all or this type. Second floor, Old Building:. I Women 's j Frocks; $25?Clearatvay! \ -v \ A readjustment of stocks in the Women's Dress Salons brings our own $34.50 to $47.50 grades for $25. An interesting sale because of many models there are onlv i one or a tew dresses. Sizes | are incomplete?but sizes 34 I to 44 are included. Taffeta, satin, foulard, Berge. j georgette crepe. Second floor. Old Bulldln? At Bridge of I'rogresi. ' After J. V. Darling, A. Y. Tribune Uncle Sam Expects Every Victory Garden to Do Its Duty John Wanamaker, New York, Victory Garden Headquarters for Tested Vegetable Seeds Fascinating Flower Seeds Holland (irown Shrubs Evergreen Trees THREE years the Wana maker Garden Store has been co-operating with the Government. Now it is bet? ter prepared than ever be? fore (o furnish information and supply the best seeds and most helpful tools. Vic? tory Gardens are as impor? tant as last year's war gar? dens. Newly reopened sec? tions of Belgium, France and Servia loudly call for food. Only if gardens are planted by every family hav? ing garden space can we as a nation bo able to supply ? these hungry peoples who i have suffered so fearfully. But with the spring feeling in the air, the crows cawing, the good brown earth coaxing one out, the newly budding bushes, the first sight of green things 1 shooting up from last year's fur? rows, who doesn't desire to ? garden? SEED Is all important. The thing to do is to get ; seed that you may be sure | will grow. All seed looks alike. A good many plants look alike. The testing time is when the vegetables ripen and the flowers bloom. Customers told us last year that the extra early peas they bought here matured a month : earlier than those in their | neighbors' gardens. That's al? most a record. Extra sweet peas, !?Oc pound. Other customers told us that the Country (ientleman corn they got here raised beautiful, long, sweet ears, bigger and better than any they had had in their expe? rience. 1.0c pound. Limas of the finest strain. 45c pound for pole beans, 50c pound for dwarf bush beans. Onion sets, red, white and yel? low, ought to be planted right away. 30c quart. * * * For small city and sub? urban gardens almost end? less variety of vegetable seeds at 10c packet ; 0* pack? ets, 50c; in packets, $1. It miil-en one hungry to read the list: Crimson (.lobe beets, Perennial Rhododendron* Prize Dahlias Raspberry Bushes Strawberry Plants A PLANTING TABLE j in great detail is contained in I the Victory Edition 1919 of War Gardening and Home Storage of Vegetables. This very practical booklet is pub? lished by the National Wnr Garden Commimioi) and will be given to Victory Gardens upon request. In addition to i?-l?ii'" ?nit when to plant, it offers helpful suggestion* as lo soil, fertilizers, hot beds, tool?, transplanting, ?ucces sion of crops, and surfRests how to guard against diseases and insects. Also it gives the quantity of seed needed for certain length rows. Brussels sprouts, Chinese pe Tsai cabbages, green pod beans, half scarlet long carrots, early Paris cauliflower, golden heart celery, red seeded Citron, golden bantam corn, curled Karden i cress, lonp: green cucumbers, green curled endive, sweet mar joram, French romaine, Rocky I Ford muskmelons, Hollo w Crown parsnips-, extra early and late peas, sweet heil pepper?, ! large cheese pumpkins, black Spanish and long scarlet rad? ishes, Sandwich Island salsify. Dixie watermelons, all Kinds of line tomatoes and many, many ! others. Thrifty folk who want the pleasure of picking their own ra?pberries or eut ting ; their ovni rhubarb or aspara? gus or picking strawberries j from their own patches will i make sure of having the right kind to pick or to cut if they get their plants and ? bushes at Wanamaker's. * * * ENCHANTING Old fashioned flotcer garden can be grown for a total ex penditure of 56c. Fourteen different sorts of seeds are contained in one packet. These flowers will continue blooming from early sum- i mer until frost time. In- ' eluded are aster.;, balsam, candytuft, carnations, cos? mos, dwarf nasturtiums. mignonette, petunias, pop? pies, sweet alyssum, sweet peas, zinnia. Other flower seeds of many ! fine strain!*, including new and old-fashioned flowers, Gc packet; G packet- 25c; 13 packets 60c. if you w?nh to cover a summer ' house or porch or trellis wilh climbing vines yon can gel seeds for nine different rapid growing I vines at fie packet, ('? packets '?.r>c, j 1 ?I packets hoc. Khubarb Knots Asparagus Roots Helpful Tools Fertilizers TOOLS For tlotlt Mvn and II omrn Helpful tools, designed for gardeners who desire thn maximum of results wilh a limited amount of work. Tools for i he man who setn his clock an hour ahead of 1 ime and plants pea., or corn or a flower bod before going to his office; tools for women which prevent stooping and which are not so heavy thai they blister her hands. Gard n gloves are the first thing needed; they save manya blister and callus. 25c to 70c pair. First, break up the earth in your garden. If it is small you can do it with a spading fork at $1.10 to $2.25 or a spade at $1.65 to $2.25. If you have an exl a lot next to your garden it is well to have a hand plow and cultivator to make the work easier. One with single wheel is $6.50. A very practical style which most gar? den?, rs like is $10.50. A seeder which makes the fur row, drops the right quantity of seed and partly covers it with earth so that birds won't spy it is $10.50. Kneeling pads, covered with oilcloth, are fitted with weeder. trowel and transplanting trowel at $1.25. Double magic vveeders are no* to rout plantain, dock ami other weeds. 45c. Women's hedge shears have 6.?-inch blades at $1.60. Men's regulation hedge shears. $2 to $3.75. Rakes, sprinklers, hoe?, jrr?*8 hooks, garden hose, .\ i:eelbar rows, sprayers, turf edgers, etc. etc., the best of their i ' I. m * * Dibbles make transplant?? easy and save the hands. <0f and 50c. Men's pruning shears i?r grape vines, branches, sbubbfl?f" even small trees. 50c to $2.78. Women's small pruning shears. for rose bushes, lilac Imshe?. etc. $1. Long-handled trowels, which, make stooping unnecessary? 4"f,| Weeders, small or large, bo?6 almost big enough for small cuw tivators. LOc to 60c. Hoys' Bpades, big enough ^ most small gardens, are not too heavy for the feminine ?ardener who loves to take entire care ol her Rowers. $1.85. i.ii\vn rollers, lawn mow** lawn sprinklers, und every ntMJ bur and little help of prov? quality. .. . .itntli (.?Un., tit* Bull.?.?*