New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 22, 1915, Page 11

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¥ ~ NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, MARCH PRZEMYSL FALLS INTO HANDS OF RUSSIAN BESEICERS (Continued From First Page.) to Win back the position at Ackerkopf resulted in failure. Driver From Memel. = “The Russians were driven yester- day from Memel, on the Baltic sea in East Prussia, after a short engage- ment to the south of the town, fol- lowed by tenacious fighting in the streets. Under the protection of Rus- sian troops, a Russian mob looted the private property of German citizens in Memel,. Carloads of goods were conveyed across the frontier. A spe- }lal report on this looting will be published. orth of Mariampol, Russian at- have been repulsed with heavy Russian lgsses. West of the Orzyc river, near Jadnorosaksi, to the northeast of Prznasynsz and to the northwest of Ciachanow, Russian at- tacks by night and by day have broken down under the German fire. Russian prisoners to the number of 420 were captured.” French Official Report. Paris, March via London p. m.—The official statement Reich tack [ given © out today by the French ¥ar deépart- ment says: *“To the north of Arras, at Notre CHILD GETS SICK CROSS, FEVERISH IF CONSTIPATED = _“California Syrup ‘of Figs” can't harm tender stomach or bowels. A laxative today Saves a sick child tOMOrrow. Children simply will not take the time from play to empty ‘heir bowels, ‘which become clogged up with waste, liver gets .sluggish; stomach sour. | Look at the tongue, mother! it coated, or your child is listless, cross, feverish; breath bad, restless, doesn't eat heartily, full of cold or has sore throat or any other children’s ail- ment, give a teaspoonful of “Cali- rnia Syrup. of Figs,” then don’t Worry, because it is perfectly harm- less, and in a few hours all this con- stipation poison, sour bile and fer- menting waste will gently move out of the bowels, and you have a well, playful child again. A thorough “in. side cleansing” is oftimes all that is necessary. It should. be the first treatment given in any sickness. Beware . of counterfeit flg syrups. Awk yvour druggist for a 50-cent bat- tle of “California Syrup of . Figs,” which 'has full directions for bables, ildren of all ages and for grown- ups” plainly printed on the 'bottle. - Look tarefully and see that it is made by * the "Ca.llgarnio. Fig Syrup Com- pany.’” . {TCHING, BLISTERED SKIN-ERUPTION ALL HIS LIFE, NOW CURED <+ Nov. 10, 1914:—“All my life, until about 8 year ago, I was troubled with blisters and sores over my entire hody. The itching ‘and burning was terrible, and I could hardly slecp. I used many treatments that were unsuccessful and did not give me any relief. I started ing Resinol Ointment and Resinol oap and thcxv%elped me wonderfully. FPWAS RELIEVED AT ONCE,and after about two dozen applications I can sa; that I was free and cured of that awful disease. My skin now is as clear as anybody’s.”— (Signed) Geo. Whitcher, Jr, R. F. D. No. 54, Caledonia, N, Y. Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap are | sold by all druggists. % 1S YOUR TOILET SOAP SAFE? Many toilet soaps contain harsh, in- jurious alkali. Resinol Soap contains absolutely no free alkali, and to it is added the Resinol medication. This glves it soothing, healing properties | which clear the complexion, comfort tender skins and keep the hair healthy. - E:AT LESS AND TAKE SALTS FOR KIDNEYS Take a glass of salts before breakfast if your back hurts or biadder bothers. The American men and women nfust guard constantly against Kidney trouble, because we eat too much and all our food is rich. Our blood is filled with uric acid which the kid- neys strive to filter out, they weaken from overwork, become sluggish; the eliminative tissues clog and the re- sult is kidney trouble, bladder weak- ness and a general decline in health, ‘When your kidneys feel like lumps 04 lead; your back hurts or the urine I& eloudy, full of sediment or you are obliged to seek relief two or three timés during the night; if you suffer with sick headache or dizzy, nervous spells, acid stomach, or you have rheumatism when the weather s ' bad, get from your pharmacist about r ounces of Jad Salts; take a table- zgonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This fa- mous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice,. combined “with lithia, and has been used for " generations to flush and ‘tlogged kidneys; to neutralize #¥tirce of irritation, thus ‘blagder disorders. ' Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot in- re, makes a delightful effervescent thia-water beverage, and beélongs in very home, because nobody can make istake by having a good kidney hing any time.: Y stimulate the ®eids in the urine so it no longer is a ending | | Dame de Lorvette, a German counter attack on Saturday evening, deprived us of some sections of trenches. We recaptured them yesterday. ‘At LaBoisselle, northeast of, Al- bert, mine warfare continues. ,After having blown up one of the enemy's galleries we occupied the greater part of the pit formed. Rheims Bombarded Again. “During Sunday Rheims received about fifty shells. 2 “In’ the Argonne we inflicted two serious reverses on the enemy. Near Bagatelle we blew up three mines and two companies of our troops stormed a German trench, in which they main- tained their positions despite strong counter attacks. Five hundred yards from there the enemy, after exploding two mines and bombarding our trenches, rushed to attack on a front of about 250 yards. After some very hot hand-to-hand fighting our assail- ants were hurled back despite the ar- rival of their reinforcements. Our artillery caught them under its fire as- tillery caught them under its fire as they were falling back and inflicted very heavy losses on them.” Austria Attacks Repulsed. Havre, via Paris, March 22, 8 a. m. —A -despatch from Cettinje says tho Austrians conducted a heavy artillery fire on all the Montenegrin fronts on March 17 and 18. Several Austrian infantry attacks directed at points near Grahovo are said to have been repulsed by the Montenegrins who suffered only slight losses. Fierce Assaults Continue. Petrograd, March 22, 11:15 a. m, Via, London, 1:10 p. m.—On tne whole jalician front, from Gorlitze almost to the Rumanian frontier, there has been for the past four days virtually continuance of fierce assaults and ceunter assaults, during which trenches and small vVillages have changed hands as many as four times, | Although this continued activity has | brought about no changes of real im- portance in the Galician situation. it is interesting as evidence that the, Austrian army is still capable of real registance against the Russian cam- paign in eastern Galicia. The Aus- trian attacks continue with violence and persistence and this in spite of the fact that they apparently have lost the security of their foothold at Stanislau and in the Etry region. A study of the daily recoras of this fighting, as received In Petrograd, shows that despite their’ aggressive activity the Austrians are being forced to the south and closer to the Car- pathian Mountains, through the passes of which two months ago they began | an invasion. the purpose of which was to relieve the garrison at Przesysl and recapture the territory lost at the outset of the war. The effectiveness of the Russian artillery apparently has rlayed a considerable part in the! checking of the Austrian drives In the | direction of Przemysl. These efforts are still being continued, but Russian niilitary observers declare their chances of success are diminishing for the reason that the main German | and Hungarian forces are now too far | from the Przemysl fortress to offer proper support to such a movement. Austrian Attacks. Repeated Austrian attacks wide front near Gorlitze have been stopped by the Russian fire. After apparently abandoning hope of success | in this region the Austrians unex- pectedly brought up reinforcements and dellvered three fresh attacks in quick succession. Each resulted in failure. At the same time a Russian advance 'in the direction of Bvednik sulted in the Russian occupation of a row of villages extending to the south from this town. Attack after attack by the Austrians to the south of. Kosiouvka ended in faflure, with considerable losses. a | a on i CHAMBER OF COMMERCE. The membership committee will be given final orders at a meeting to be held at § o’'clock tonight for the mem- bership campaign to be conducted by the Chamber of Commerce for the rext ten days. The members of the committee and those who are as- sisting ‘them in the canvass will to- morrow - begin their calls upon the five hundred prospective members, i the plan being to raise the member- ship from 600 to 800 in ten days, { | | | i { | | | Warren Slater, formerly assistant 1hysical director of the Y. M. C. A. here, visited friends in Mhe city yes- terday. He is now physical drector of the Farmount, W. Va,, Y. M. C. A. IN FIVE MINUTES NO SICK STOMACH, INDIGESTION, GAS “Pape's Diapepsin” s the and surest Stomach relief. If what vqQu just ate is souring on your stomach or lies like a lump of lead, refusing to digest, or you belch gas and eructate sour, undigested food, or have a feeling of dizziness, heart- burn, fullness, nausea, had taste in mouth and stomach headache. you can surely get relief in five minutes.” Ask your pharmacist to show you the farmula, plainly printed on these fifty-cent cases of Pape's Diapepsin, then you will understand why dys- peptic troubles of all kinds must go, and why it relieves, sour, out-of-order stomachs, or indigestion in five min- utes. “‘Pape’s Diapsin’ is harmless; tastes lifge candy, though each does will digest and prepare for assimila- tion into the blood all the food you eat; Dbesides, it .makes yYou go to the table with a healthy appetite; but what will please you most, is that you will feel that your stomach and intes- tines'are clean and fresh, and you wiil not need to resort to laxatives liver pills for biliousness or constipa- tion. This Diapepsit call them, but you will be enthusi abaut this splendid stomach prepar: tion, too, if you ever take it for indi- gestion, gases, heartburn, sourness, dyspepsla. or any stomach misery. Get some now, this minute, and rid quickest will have i city many vourself of stamach misery and indi- gestion in five minutes. b i ehurch, ape's | " cranks, as some people will | ot s City ltems Dora Golden has filed a bond for a deed to property at 30 street, Hartford, to Max Prchadow sky. Benjamin Solomon and Miss Ruth E. Herschman, both of Hartford, filed their marriage intentions with the city clerk today. Miss Caroline Bartlett of Hartford, the superintendent of the New Britain City Mission, elected to succeed Mrs. B. W. Labaree, will begin her work here Thursday, March 25. S. Rabinovitz, of Rhodes street, bought the stock of John Sicklick, of Park street, for $176. Constable Fred Winkle was auctioneer, Harry Wessels, now a school teach- er at Quincy, Mass., visited at his home, 55 Winthrop street, Saturday and Sunday. Mr. Wessels is a grad- uate of Trinity college. Mrs. Herbert N. Dix, of Hartford, but formerly of this city, was a visitor here today. Mr. Dix, who has been ill for several weeks with blooa poisoning, was able to return to work today. William Latham his mother on Whiting Saturday and Sunday. Mr. Latham was active in Y. M. C. A. work dur- fng his stay here, being chairman of the religious work committee. John F. Burns, Charles J. Burns and Joseph Bennis will be among those who will attend a monster tes- timonial banquet to ex-Congressman Thomas L. Rellly of Meriden in New York an April 4. The banquet will be tendered by postal emploves and it is expected that 10,000 will attend. The affair will be held in the Sev- enty-First regiment armory. DESERTED BY WIFE; DIES IN HOSPITAL Pratt of Detroit visited streot) over Fred Succumbs Heart Trouble—Was Admitted to Hospital Last Night, Deserted by his wife two weeks ago because, she declared, he was drink- ing too hard and she could nor stand his continual debauches and abuse, an Austrian named Fred Pratt, who lived at No. 84 Franklin Square, died today at the New Britain General hos- pital of chronic heart trouble, fos- tered by his alcoholic abuses. Mr. Pratt was forty-three years of age and has been troubled with a weak heart for a long time. He worked all day Saturday in the fac- tery and was stricken yesterday., He was removed to the hospital last night and died several hours later. Although she did not live with her husband, Mrs. Pratt was notified of his death this morning at the factory wiere she is employved. When she was called out a rumor w to the effect tha ther husband committed suicide because she . had left him., Such a report was entirely without foundation. The funeral will be heid tomorrow | morning from J. Curtin's under- taking rooms, M. Mrs., Sarah E. Mrs. Sarah E. Burr, who made her home on Hart street, died at 4:30 o'clock yesterday morning at the New Britain General hospital, where she ‘had been undergoing treatment for three days for double pneumonia, She was sixty-six years of age and was born on March 2, 1849, in Haver- straw, N. Y. Two brothers survive her, John J. Leach of Worcester, Mass., and G. W, Leach, well known Burr, | in this city and employed as a watch- man at P, & F. neral will take place tomorrow ternoon at 1:30 o'clock from Methodist church, Rev. Dr. J. E. Adams officiating. The body Will be taken to Rockville at 2:07 o'clock where interment will take place. Corbin’'s. The fu- af- Gertrude E. Kirk, The funeral of three-years-old Gert- rude, the daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Sidney E. Kirk of 107 Franklin street. who died Saturday, was held this af- ternoon and interment was in TFai view cemetery. Henry Thomas Cleveland. The funeral of Henry Thomas Cleveland, who died suddenly, at his home at No. 464 Myrtle street last ht, will be held Wednesday morn- at 9 o'clock from St. Mary’s Interment will be in the new Catholic cemetery. Mr. Cleveland was sixty-one years of age and was employed as the gate- tender at the Curtis street crossing. He worked all day vester- day and when he came home night at 6 o'clock he complained of 1ainsg in the chest, He retirea at 7:30 o'clock and was found dead hour later. Death was due to fatty degeneration of the heart. T Henry and Charles, and one daugh- ter, Miss Margaret Cleveland, ,survive him, Mrs. Slavia Croll. Slavia Croll, No. 230 dled today at the New hospital, following She was Eim Britain stroke sixty-two Mrs. of street, General a of apoplexy. vears of age and leaves her husband, Jacob Croll, and the foliowing chil- dren: Louis Croll, Mrs, Hyman Horvitz, B. Croll, of Hartford, Mr: i Simons, of New York and another son and daughter in Russia, Mrs. Croll was admitted to the hospital on March 14 and never rallied. will be leth and interment in cemetery. ing Alom Willlam A, Clynes, A large number of friends of the deceased attended the funcral of Wil liam A. Clynes, held at 9 o'clock this morning from St. Mary’s church. numerous were the floral tributes that it required five flower bearers to care for them. Rev, Father Fay officiated Wooster | to Chronic | & circulated | had | the | raflroad | last { an | wo sons, | i The | or{ funcral will be held tomorrow morn- | months. | will { Joseph Lougher: OB G, at the funeral and interment was in the new Catholic cemetery, Those who acted as pall bearers were James Glynn, Joseph Boyle, William Lyon, Edward McCarthy and Thomas Green. The flower bearers Were Harold Byatt, Alfred White, 1oy Stevenson, Joseph Stanton and Card of Thanks. We wish to extend our friends and neighbors and Thusnelda lodge, No. 1, O. D. H. 8, for the sympathy expressed and the beautiful thanks to i floral tributes contributed to our; be- loved mother. Ma wife and Mr. Adolph amily. FOUR DIRECTORS ARE NOMINATED Y. M. C. A. Salesmanship Class Will Have Banquet at New Britain Club Tomorrow Evening, The nominations made for directérs of the Y. M. C. A. to be elected at the annual meeting tomorrow evening are Wetmore, William H. Hart, ¥. Platt and H. H. Pease. The banquet of the salesmanship class will be held at the New Britain Club Tuesday evening at 7 o'clock. A. J. Birdseye, of Hartford, will be the principal spealker. The Men's Bible classes will meet at 6:30 Wednesday evening for the last session of the season. Plans are being made for a banquet to be held a week from Wednesday. Judge T. Meskill will give one of the citizenship lectures Wednesday evening, his subject being “How the Laws Are Made and Executed.” The classes in Spanish will be held tonight and Thursday evening. The boys' Bible class suppen will {he held Friday evening. . The Church Roys' Athletic associa- tion wil play off the tie of its three leading teams next Saturday morning. The South team will play the St. Mark’'s flve and the winner will play the Swedish Lutheran basketball team for first place, LOCAL POLES RAISE $875 FOR SUFFERERS nt to Prof. Paderewski Part cf Sum S for Distribution—Collection Last Night Brought $165. With a collection amounting m’ $165.20 which was taken up last cve- ning at a big meeting held in the Sacred Heart hall, the total of the fund being Polish war sufferers amounted to $875. The entire sum was raisea within a period of three and a half The Polish people are very enthusiastic over the work and it 1s estimated that more than 200 were in attendance at last night's meeting. Rev. Father Bojnowski, who has 2 { charge of the work) has sent a check Polish Central com- I1l., which in turn transmit it to Professor I[gnacz Paderewski, chairman of the reliet committee in Iussane, who will distribute to for $125 to the mittee in Chicago, the needy { Poles in Galicla and northern Poland. « The remainder of the sum will be distributed as the central committee shall advise. CAUGHT BY DECOY LETTER. Hartford, March —Caught by means of a decoy letter containing §t which he’ opened and appropriated contents, Joseph F. O'Brien ,a local letter carrier, was arrested today, tak- en before United States Commissioner R. T, Carroll admitted his guilt in a signed confession and was held for the United States court under $500 bonds. O'Brien was not suspected, trouble having been reported to the post office authorities on another route. rls’ club will have a five-dollar gold piece The Working drawing on a tonight. | USE “TIZ” FOR SORE, TIRED FEET for puffed-up sweaty, calloused feet “TIZ” - aching **TIZ’ makes my feot Good-Bye sore feet, swollen feet, sweaty feet, tired feet. Good-bye corn burning feet, feet, smelling . callouses, bunions and raw spots. No more shoe tight- ness, no more limping with pain or drawing up your face in agony, “TIZ” is magical, acts right off. “TIZ" draws out all the poisonous cxudations ‘which puff up the feet— the only remedy, that does. Use “TIZ" and wear Amaller shocs. An! how comfortable your feet will fecl “TIZ” is a delight. **T17 harm- less, Get a 25 cent box of “TIZ" any druggist or department Don't suffer. Have good fect, feet, feet that mnever uwell, hurt, never get tired. A comfort guaranteed or funded. now at store. glad never vear's foot | money re ised in this city for the | O s Switzerland, | | People Notice It. Off With Dr. Edwards’ > | much_longer if | aid 6 Asraun 83, HARTFORD SUITS FOR STOUT WOMEN A SPECIALTY. A Baseball Mit Free With Every Suit Pm An Automatic Memory ‘Right-Posture” Tucked coat is my name-- away in the back of my is a patent idea, and time that little old man tries to bend you pin—it touches vou every “Sloucih” up like a hair on the shoul- der and whispers—*“Straighten up old top."! T'm the best frend you ever had L1y vour body erect, and Your lungs strong—Dbut that's not keep all— For as a tip-top, slap-bang suit of clothes, you'll look far and wide for my match. Who the facts are on the other side of my door—Step in, wants words, when " 0. P “Right-Posture” Two Pants With Every Suit, $5.00 to $12.50. HEAD NO /5 INSOIDE. .... ... SWEDISH FESTIVAL. To Be Held At Lutheran Church Wed- nesday Evening, S. G. Youngert of Hartford will | be a speaker at a big mission festival | i to be held at the local Swedish Luth- | eran church Wednesday evening for the benefit of Home Missions of the New England conferenc | ew 3 onference. The Luther league will hold a meet- {'ing on Thursday evening and on Fri- | day evening, the church deacons will meet for a brief session. Next { day, Holy will | served and new members received into the church, Sun- | Communion be ob- | CASE FURTHER COMPLICATED. Washington, March —France has conditioned her offer to buy the cat- ton cargo of the American steamer | Dacia, hefore a prize court at Brest, on the establishment of the American citizenship of its owners. The Amer- ican embassy in Paris today so in- formed the state department As that question is now at issue, the case is further complicated. BEFORE COURT MARTIAL. Paris, March 22 11:15 a. m.—Tho case of Francois Descleaux, charged with stealing military supplies, was brought before a court martial in Paris at noon today. With this man | appeared Madame Bechoff, the wifto | of a German, and of the best known dressmakers of Paris, accused of re- ceiving the goods stolen by Des- cleaux. | RATID CAUSES ONE DEATH. Paris, March 5:05 a While no one was killed dir the Zeppelin bombs which were ! dropped in Paris and its environs | early vesterday, they resulted in one | death—that of Madame Charles | Pesson, who lived in the Rue Dames. The aged woman was frightened by the explosion of a bomb in that street that she m.«df soon afterward. | m.—- ctly by Des s0 PEACE TREATY RATIFIED. Washington, March 22.-—Ratifica- tions of the peace commission treaty between the United State and Rus- sla were exchanged today by seretary Bryan and George Bakhmeteff, the Russian ambassador. Fifteen such treaties now are In force. PIMPLY? WELL, DON'T BEI Drive Them Olive Tablets A pimply face will not embarrass you it 3 get a package of Dr. Edwards’' Olfve Tablets. The skin should begin to clear after you have taken the tablets a few nights, Cleanse the blood. the bowels and the liver with Olive Tablets. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets are the successful _substitute for calomel — | there’s never any sickness or pain after | taking_them. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets do that ,“["'T" calomel does, and just as effec vely rafe instead of severs and irritating. No oMe who takes Oliva Tablets s ever cursed Wwith “a dark brown taste, a had hr»afl;‘ a dull, listless, “no good Tecling, con fipation, torpid liver, bad | dpositfon’or pimply face. | Dr, Edwards’ Olive Tablets are a pure!{ | vegetable compound mixed with olive oil, | you will know them by their olive color. | Dr. Bdwards spent years among pa- tients afflicted with liver and Bowel | complaints and OIli bompial ve Tablets are t Take one or two nightl resk. See how much better )Eou ¥enr “ “1"”"‘ 10c and 25¢ per box. Al d The Olive Tablet Compa | P | close and a new high | Corn Products Co | General | Pressed | Southern | Southern Tenn TUtah Copper v U s Westinghouse | Western Union says that popular feeling in Holland, but vessels. ous sailed from | day but their action is gentle and | ISuropean conference when and where on the | TOO LATE FOR Cl, ly effective result. FOR Represcates by E. Wi AMERIC STANLE} LANDERS AMERICA STOC 409-410 NATIONA NEW B DIRECT PRIVATE W IRE; ‘Phone 1621 SPECIALTIES AGAIN CENTER OF INTEREST Former Speculative Favorites Com- paratively: Backward. Wall St., 10:30 a. m.-——Specialties were again the center of interest at the outset of this week's operations on the stock exchange. Bethlehem fteel once more overshagowed all other issues, selling up to 69 3-4, a gain of 3 3-8 from last Saturday's record price. Motor shares came next in promi- nence with gains of 1 to over 3 puints. Local tractions and American Smelting and National Lead resumed | their recent activity at substantial ad- varces, The so-called leaders or former speculative favoriies were comparatively backward. New York Stock Exchange quota- tions furnished by Richter & Co., members of tae New York ¢ change Represented by E. W, Eddy, National Bank building Close—Reading’'s continued weak- ness was the feature of the final hour, the decline exgeding a point, while scure specialties were advanced. The closing was strong. o Close IEEN 58 a2 9% March Low, 43 57 % 418 28 7% D43 [ 101 % High Am Beet Sugar.... 441 Am Copper . 681 Am Car & Foun Co 421 Am Can 2 Am Am Smelting Am Sugar A Am Tel & Tel. Anaconda Copper. . A TS Fe Ry Co.. B Beth Steel Canadian Central Chesa & Chino Copper, . Chi Mil & St Paul 871 Puaci Leather. .. Ohio. Distillers Sec Erie Erie 1st Electric Great Nor pfd Interborough Interborough Lehigh Val Mex Pot Missouri P NYC& Nev Cons NYNH® Northern Pac Norf & West Penn R R Steel Ray Cons Reading pfd Pac Ry Southern Ry Copper Union Pac S Rubber Co Steel Steel pfd DUTCH STEAMER ATTACKED. London, March 22, 5 p Reuter dgspatch from Amsterdar the attack by a German reroplane on the Dutch steamer Zev cnbergen, which arrived at Ymuiden vesterday, has caused an outburst of | has | | tion the movement Fifty-one steamers of vari nationalities have arrived Rotterdam since Satur- had no effect on GERMANY TO l.ondon, March ‘War might have 1 AME, 1:25 p been avoided n.-— by jermany desired,” Foreign Secrotary Sir Edward Grey told an audience in T.ondon this afternoon. At the time he was acting 48 chafrman of a gath- ering which was listening to a lecture strategy of the war d ismvvnox. tig bargain SALE piano Stock Ex- | | plans | 10age FINAL 0 Judge Hun Twenty New Yo Judge Hunt | March 29 1 seding indicty one directors the New Yorl, ford Rallroad violstion of tl law In connect tration of the had been final pl come befi was an motions algo George 0 ited 8 L peared in tHe today, acting He urged thi | made to elect | it purposes to Without ma Mr. Wickes |ant Attorney | Swacker, in cha | government said the defendants trial on the su Among other the case for thi are ex-Judge A B. Parker, J lancey Nicoll. ADVISED I ; ors [ | Ko i | U | to German and A Have Been Tinlia Rome, March m.—German reside in by their the count P who vised leave eible It German Italy that the g obliged t cha because t lieve that some nected with the Parts of the have been detail veilance German entered Ttaly un ered suspicious reported militar: i FATR C14 R. R. Healey Trust company, herg and Herbel judges at the U societies’ drawd place this even Singing by the Austrian Singing Kolus Singing ol by Representative tures on tonight’ WINKLE N a meeting 1. O. K Torah hall yeste was elected as thy tend the I, O, BJ to be held May 14, The Levine At HEAD STUFR CATAR Cream s Air P Instant relief-—§ clogged nostrils o passages of your can breathe freel ing, snuffing, blo ness No stry night: your cold pears Get a small bo Balm from your d a little of this healing eream in etrates through the head, soothes swollen mucous mj Must sell for to buy Player, Heald, cash cheap Address am going Rox 44 3-22-1dx comes Instantly, It's just fine, up with a cold o

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