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~ Fi hh ik i kal lll ta ll ne : JEWS FLOC IN THOUSANDS TO AMERICA Refugees from All Parts of _ Europe Spurred to Emi- \ grate Owing to the Fear of Renewal of Massacres that Disgraced Kishineff. ADVANCE GUARD ARRIVES. Troops and Artillery Displayed on Public Streets in Russia to { Prevent Any More Outbreaks \ of the Lawless Element. ‘The terror put into the hearts of the Jews throughout the countries of the) Old World by the Kishnie& massacres | phas’ started an army of refugees to- ‘ward this country, and to-day the van- wuerd of the persecuted people, num- bering 1,500, arrived in this port on the steamship Staatendam. Thousands are waiting in the big emigrant cities on the other side to take ship for America. It {s estimated that at present the total headed for the United States alone is 115,000, and that another week wiil see them all on thelr way. Ellis Island's accommodations are pressed to the limit. officials have anticipated the coming of great numbers of Jews as a result of that has begun. The Board of Aldermen to-day adopted two resolutions introduced re- spectively by Alderman Leopold Har- | furger_and Robert 8. Downing, calling President Roosevelt afd Secre- Hay to protest against the anti- jewish outrages in Russia. — —— STEPS ARE TAKEN TO PREVENT MASSACRES. , BT. PETERSBURG, May 19. — The Gear's dismissal of Licut. Gen. Von| Raaben, Governor of Kishineff,: for ne-| electing to take proper measures toj vert the massacre of the Jews, has @roused great military activity among the governors in the southwestern provinces. Stringent precautions have been taken to allay popular feeling and avert a-re- mewal of the outbreaks on May 29, when fthere will be a universal celebration @ommemorating the two hundredth an- Miversary of the founding of St. Petera- -o These military safeguarda.slons_pre- ‘vented the horrors of Kishineft being imitated in dozens of towns on the Russian Labor Day, May 1 or May 14, @ccording to the Gregorian calender. | & despatch from Tiraspol, seven miles ymorth of Kishienff, which was held up ‘by the censor, says that the authorities learned that massacres were contem- plated at Tiraspol, Odessa, Nicolaloft, | Bltzabetgrad and Kleft on Labor Di nd prevented them by -comprehensive military precautions. The despatch says that the streets of Tiraspol were pa- trolled by Cossacks, infantry and mounted gendarmes, while abundant re- serves were kept under arms in the bapracks, ii Cannon in Streets. { At Nicolaieft the Governor, Rear-Ad- miral Enkvist, was so impressed by the popular anger at the Jews that he had cannon posted in the chief thore oughfares yesterday in order to deter the riotously inclined elements from an open outbreak. All manner of monstrous, maliciously \eonconted reports were disseminated }among the people against the Hebrews. One report. which was industriously spread, was that the Jewish bakers were supplying poisoned bread to their Chris- Uan customers and scattering poisoned aweetmeats among the Christian chil- ren. To prevent an outbreak on May 2, {the Governor of the province of Sara- ‘toft has prohibited all public a: semblages under pain of heavy penil- ‘tes. In his proclamation, posted In all towns and villages and published tn all mewspapers, the people are forbidden from assembling in public places, and warned from interfering with the poll fn the performance of their duties, Crowds are to disperse at the first order from the police, the penalty for dis- j obedience being a fine of $250 or three months’ imprisonment. Shown Authorities’ Attitade, ‘This stringent order 1s typical of the attitude of the authorities brought aoout by the fate of Gen, Von Raaben, A powerful clique at court, headed by sev- eral Grand Dukes and the all powerful M. Pobiedonotseff, Procurator of the Holy Synod, tried hard to save Gen. Von Raaben, claiming it was a pity to mac-) <Fiflce so, prominent an official on ac- count of the Jew: put the Czar was m incensed at the reports of the atrocities and the supineness of the au- thorities, who had ample warning, that he would not be influenced. Father John ef Cronstad has written a biting article in the Novost! on the Kishineff barbarities, He says: “The heart of the Czar, wno |s con- cerned for the general weal of tho pe ple, has been filled with great sadness by the awful atrocities and cruelties com- mitted at Kishinert. “Russian brethren, why do you tn form yourselves into murderera? Why did you perperate such slaughter? You have thereby red your connection with Christianity.’ According to the Moscow newspapers, Count Tolstol has sent $260 to assist in Telieving the destitution among the Jews at Kishine! el {ton, that ATIE of Jews at month ago. Placed about double official Russian report. facts did not The immigration | pubitshed. Lord Cranborne adde “According formation the disturbances arose from the Russian horrors, but not the influx/ the murcer of a Christian lad, which was wrongly The ants ‘and the the Jews by and Baeter Monday in which, it is be-} leved, about lives and many more were injured.” ‘The official Petersburg May 11 said that forty-five persons were jured during the massacre at Kishineff. The Jews of London are very Indig- nant at the assertion of Count Cassini, the Russian Ambassador at Washing- the troubles at Kischineff were the outcome of the usury of the lenders, ish World offers to give American charitable institution named mone; by Count Casi siantiate his tion of three the United States. —_—>— FOUR THOUSAND FAMILIES SUFFERED. PARI! Presid. 4,000 and the millions of francs. AUTO CRUSHED BETWEEN CARS Accident to Fournier’s Racing Machine Hysterical Fright and Fills: Broadway with Crowd. Several women were hurt, a score were thrown into a panic, Broadway traffic was blocked for half an hour, the re- serves of the Thirty-seventh street called out and a $10,000 Mors automobile belonging to French chauffeur, was smashed into a tangled mass ternoon tempt of one drivers to tow the big machine between two cars coming from different direc- “ Max Bachman, thirty-eight years ol, an ertlst and scuuptor ving at No. 108 Last Seventeenth street, was a prisoner before Magiatrate Breen in the York- ville Court to-day charg: It Inst aim was tons. Last night Fournter's machine broke down in Long Island and H. A, Leroy and Scott! Camile were ordered to tow it to the automobile barns at No, 139 eighth street to-day for re- West Thirty pairs, They twenty foot hawser attached to a/small- er machine, and turned into Broadway from Thirty-fourth street with a flour- ish, As they evblently forgot ail about their tow, for as they reached the corner elghth street machine they two Columbus avenue cars that rapidly approaching from opposite direc- They made the dodge beautifully, but che big red devil in tow was caught between the cars like a aut in a gag: ) W2S seated, at a table in the cafe list when Bachman came up to lin, od in bls face and nickel-plated jackass."* Hanley sald that Bachman had a part- ly emptied bottle of ginger ale in the was afrald Bechman kept up his insults, Hanley said, and finally he lost his te per hnd struck Bachman with his walk- Bachman then, tt is alleged, ink w uone, and exer, could be heard for blocks, Hoth cars were fila with women and the foree of the impact sent the stand- ers wring in a huddled mass to the e fronts of t and their ser ‘orty-second street. a hurry call serves. When the t charge of motormen Joseph Hughes and) hurled Thomas Rooney, smashed. auto, the machine w, to pieces and sévera were showered about the street, Th women in the led with the gasoline and the fear that an explosion was about to occur added COMMONS HEARS THE MASSACRE STORY. LONDON, May 1%.—The Under For- Secretary, Lord Cranborne, was gn asked in the House of Commons to- to the general pante, Bachman, in At first the police endeavored to @isen- eda tangle the shattered auto from the cars, | Saulted, him before but the iron work was so wedged in| Weil. He showed under the trucks that a wrecking crew| face, whlel A he was een for and a half hour ‘passed| %ns struck by before the cars were able to start again. | Mist aot atte: According to the two chauffeurs the $10,000 machine is a total loss. Are you reading the story on th Home Page of today’s Evening @ay for information on the massacre} World? - —, : have been EXPELLED., the total number of killed at latter retaliated on May 19.—Narcisse Leven, 8t the Alliance Ieraciite, has, received letters from Russia which say that the number of familles which have suffered by the anti- Semitic outbreak is as a result of a foolish at- sruwd that bloc! et, 80 great was the press that the policemen at the’ various crossings sent urhere O7O0O CLM Kishineff, Bessarabia, a The Secretary, in reply. the number given in the Otherwise the differ from those already to the Government's in-} attributed to the Jews. their assall- result was an attack on @ mod on Easter Sunday a hundred Jews lost their announcement from St. killed and 424 were in- The editor of the Jew- $25,000 to any; ini if the latter can sub-j sertion to the satisfac-, Americans of standing in| property loss over seven PO TT LL NTT IT TT Throws Women Into! West Thirtieth and West stations were Fournier, the famous of steel and fron tais af- of the Frenchman's auto towed it by means of a don Hotel. Mr. owns one of sailed up Broadway they | Point Comfort. of Thirty- they essayed to send the were in skimming between were | avenue. there was a crash that) Ka cars. Many wer: NB HOON collected a great hand ved the thorougafare from street to Thirty-fourt and he to thelr precincts for re-| ing cane. | picked which in| and fro} wo cars, were Into the big! in the practically ‘ground’ which he ons 0 ! cece The tured his: skull Walters oars were liberally sprink- would entertain to @how This was. allo held in $600 Ron | to-morrow ‘ Bhi aes abril Bids al Hl MR. HANLEY SAYS HE WAS PATIENT He Restrained Himself When Bachman Called Him Nickel-Plated Jackass,” but at Last Lost His Temper. ured merchant, stopping at the Claren- Hanley ts we the large Both men bore marks of the alterca- tion, Walch took place about 10.30 o'clock! last night in the cafe In the Clarendon Hotel, Eighteenth street and Fourth! +forema: Bachman's face was brulsel) an‘ Hanley had « large black and ot spot on bis forehead Hanley told Magistrate Breen that } of avout elght feet It struck Han pressed surprise that {t had not frac- arated point and Bachman was arrested on a charge of assault, preferr Court that Hanley had insulted and as- he said woman, r any evidence. trate Breen said Bachman asked that the ca Journed untll he could bring that he was assaulted fret. | is involved In the M jer examina- the | fore aia der. Fraudulent cave has bi | indicated that the gan it was being trailed, yet io} ase, but, If anything, | bolder. countorfelt FOR FORCING CITIZEN PAPERS, I nightfall And 15,00 oF waica are sald Lo have be insued, all purport to have been signe not The "by occupation, deral officers say, will occur be- ‘The investigation of the completed and all the Secret Service Agents Arrest a Man Suspected of Issuing Certificates Naturalization to Italians. p The characier of the crooks mac In iis pocket the police found a note haaty ction by the detectives Inad-| advromed to his two sons in whi visable and they had to leave the scent TEEN baited for a time In order not to scare’ tie | a! Don't think anything wro! gang, to cover, your father; I have done nothing wrong It js sald that the plates from which} ail my life the bogus certificates have been printed and the court seal are the work of the Morello Mafia counterfeiting outfit which jonlo barrel gnu. Benoro will be arraigned to-day be- fore, United Sates Commiasioner eve More arrests, Was aware Chat rations be ame | then H xeal of the| fo Federal Court which {ssues naturaliza- tion papers wax as perfect in Its mark- ings as the genuine one. THE WORLD: TUESDAY EVENING, MAY 19, 1903. SCENES OF THE ANTI-JEWISH RIOTS IN’ RUSSIA AND ai a TWO RABBIS WHO ARE PROMINENT ¥IGURES THERE. AMBITIOUS BOY MASKED MEN ROG AWOMAN Tear from Her the Sav- ings of 25 Years. t (Special to The Brening World.) WHITE PLAINS, May 19.-Masked robbcrs broke Into the home of Mra. Marie Durando, near the Kansico Ceme- tery, to-day and after beating her al- most to death stole $85 she carired strapped to her body, Mrs. Durando was alone in the houge and at the mezcy of the man, as her humsand hed gone to New York on business, When he returned he found her lying Unconsciowis in a pool of blood on the kitchen tloor, Mrs. Durand said thet she was sitting In the house when two men wearing masks sprang upon her and pointing a revol t her head de- | manded her money, She told them she/ had nono and then they knocked her down and beat her until she was insen- siple. After ransacking tht house and not finding any hidden wealth they tore oft part of her clothes and found the wal- let containing $515 in small dills strapped around her waist. | The stolen money represented the sav-| ings of the couple for a quarter of @ century, ‘They intended to go to Europes to live as soon an they had accumulated , $',00, They had never belleved in banki and for that reason the woman carrie the money strapped around her wy ist. Mr. Durando reported the robbery to} District-Attorney Young at White) Plains, and the county detectives have been put on the trail of the robbers. | They were seen running toward Pleas- antville on the Harlem Ratlroad. EES TO DE, Young Schwartz Had Studied Hard te Pass His Examina- tion, but Despair Came When He Was Not Among Fortunate Unable to realize the dream of his life and obtain a college education, Henry Schwartz, of No. 77 Cook street, Brooklyn, aged seventeen years, at- tempted suicide to-day. The boy is dying in St, Catherine's Hospital. The family of the lad had shared in his plans to give him a good education and the little confectionery business which they conduct in the heart of the Jewish settlement in Williamsburg it was hoped would grow to proportions that would make this dream a certainty. ‘pat the business did not grow rapidly, The money that was taken from it to drain on It. than the boy himself. | In his hours of study at home he fre- quently referred to the great drag he | was upon the income of the family and | promised many times that when he was hrough school and able to get into a profession the reward that would be his | would be shared with them, At such times the mother would come to him and stroke his head. She did not understand the Latin and Greek he was | studying and the geometry was to her a puzzle, but #he knew that it was ‘all to fit him for something that was better, Sometimes when there was not all there might have been In the way of com- forts, when the pennies did not come as they might for the articles that were sold in the little shop, they talked over the hard times, and the hardships seemed as nothing because the future was rich in promise. ‘A few days ago the boy went up for his examinations. ‘They were anxious days of waiting for the result. He would know whether he had passed and was to go ahcal with his class of stay behind for another year. The percent- ages wert annmrced, The names of those to go ahead were read. off. Henry’s name was not among them. There was the heartache of the tell- ing. Worst of ail was the knowledge that pinch as the family might {t was Of | well-nigh impossible to send him back to senool for another year. In the despair of the boy the mother 1 family shared. This morning when his mother went to call him she found The Government belleves that {t has| him unconecious. On a tadle was a at last got its hands on the head of the} note, It read: |wang that for more than a year has| “Dear Mother: I have taken bi- }beel engaged in the wholesale forgery |ohloride of mercury, Do not let a and {gsuance to itallun Immigrants of | chemist examine the poison, Good-bye naturalization certificates. to all. HENRY.” Secret. Service Agents Flynn and| An ambulance was called. The sur- Peeke arrested the suspect eariy|geon sald there was no hope of saving to-day and locked him up at Police] his Iie, but he wou:d take him to the | Headquarters, where he gave his/ noepttal, name as Robert Benero, and de- scribed himself as thirty-two years uf age, residing at No. Mulberry | HOLTSWORTH LOOPS treet. He sald aso that he was a THE LOOP TO SUICIDE. Bastern Parkway Two years ago Holtsworth yiatted a uy Unked, Stated Commissioner Ales] summer reqort with « friend and was ander, ‘hey were raced to the to ss place’ where’ they were printed, Gut| bersuaded to ride in a “loop-the-loop’ the plant was spirited away a day be-|car, After making the trip he lost his fure lk Was to have been seized. This} speech and his mind became unbatanced. This strange attack lasted a year, and oltsworti apparently regained his ulties, During the recent hot sjwil he had again shown symptoms of weak- mindedness. Are you reading the story on the Home Page of today’s Eve World? Ir keep the lad In clothing and car fare while he attended college was a sad No one realized It better nina | It was only a couple of woeks ago j that two robbers anawering the de- scription of the men who visited Ken-| rico robbed Mrs. Mary Caladuno, of | Mount Vernon, of $3,600, which also rep-| | resented the savings of a lifetime. Sho | was beaten In a similar manner and her money, which was hidden tn her waist, was found after nearly all her clothing had been torn off. HUSBAND CONE: A WOMAN, TOD. Mrs. Scott Discovers at Last that Her Other Half Disap- peared Simultaneously with Another Man’s Wife. Tt was not untt: her husband had left her that Mrs, Walter J, Scott, the wife |of a prominent buflder in the Bronx, [eared from Peter Thompson, a @eigh- bor, that his wife was missing and that the disappearance of the pair on the same day had followed Thompson's as- sauit on Scott for being in company with Mrs. Thompson at midnight the day before. ‘The whole was such a shock to Mrs. Scott that she has been in bed ever ince, while tho neighbors have been calling and telling her more about Scott than she ever dreamed of. She now knows that for the past three months her husband aod Mrs. Thompson have been having a pleawant time in each other's poclety, Bcott ts a builder. With his wife and three children he lived at No. 490 Co- |lumbus avenue, Van Ness. Thompson {4s in the empioy of the Government in the oustoms service and Hved. wit his wie in a cottage in Union street, Westchester. A Prosperous Builder. Scott was one of the most prominent builders in the section where he lived, |doing most of the school work and hav- ‘ing large contracts for real estate men. He ‘was thought to be worth about 000, On last Wednesday night Mrs, |Phompson said whe was going to the jtheatre and went out. She came home on the last train from One Hundred and Twenty-ninth street. With her |w ott. ‘Thompson ¢ell upon Scott and punoh- ed him. Then he took M homp- json home. ‘The next day sae let tue | house. Hoe has not seen her since. Sac wrote him a note, saying she had gone | for good and that he would find their | six-year-old adopted child in an asylum jin. Paterson. | He called on Mra. Scot and found her distracted over the absence of her hus- |band. He told her that Scott had taken |his wife, and soon afterward Mrs. Scott jot a letter from her husoand, it sald he had decided (0 go away for good. It acekd her to eell everything and pay his debts Keop he, reat as hers and the children’s, The levter wae filled With praise for Mrs. Scott and grati- tude for the love she bad laviehed upon him for fifteen years. Since that time Mra. Scott has heard nothing and Thompson has not recetved any more wtters from Mrs. ‘Thompson. At her home to-day Mra, Scott eld: "Thave fo word jwainst Mr. Seott, For Att treated me vidence be d to be necessary to} Lost Mind and Speech, After Trying! and my children aa well as he could. wecuie A conviction has been secured. the Popular Diversion, and at 1 have no conpiaint to make. Ther Flynn and Peeke have been casty- tee! Crateebeal never was a better huadand. Tn the ing on an investigation for many act Takes Felsen: Reg OOF Fe Nere nay chrom Gomes months, At first the matter appeared] Thompson Holtsworth, fifty-two wears |yreil he left It for good. to them as the work of one man, but} » prietor 0! otto: Yo ¢ the ramitications disclosed, and it/>>* dd knee ber Ahan p “Three months ago he went to the} Ol vecame apparent t the trauu | tet sulci sah AL a, NE carbolic /pysmpson house to look at some wor! Was the work of # combination of! ucid, Two ‘* found his body ir Qithat was to be done there. That was | Clever sorcoks, vacant jot newr Bedford avenue andthe beginning. 1 did not know It taen, The fuged certificates, between 10,X\) but Pknow it now. He began to new: He sald the doctor HATTIE SNYDER, BABY ELEPHANT ‘so well and strong we had no furtner |nothing FOR WHOM BABY ELEPHANT IS NAMED. NOW 15 “HATTIE” She Is a Little German Fraulein and Doesn’t Know English Yet, but Keeper Snyder’s: Daughter Is Her Sponsor. ‘The three-year-old baby elephant which arrived in New York yesterday on the Hamburg-American liner Arcadia from the Hagenbeck menagerie was formally! christened Hattle In her new quarters in| Central Park to-day, The tiny pachy derm was named after keeper Billy Gny- der's Httle daughter, who bids fair to be) an even greater master of elephant's (EEE Solid Gold Eye Glasses, $1.00 a Pair. These are the same kind of are sold gencially at 00. pair, Fuk IMIS WEE! i will give you the chanee to buy 3 you ‘can ‘get thems a th fits of perfect eyesight. more thousands, My ee specialists examine your without any chal whether you buy Glasses or not, Ev pair of these Glasses T Ruarantes to be ahantntely correct. or money refunded, L.Alawapule, 106 E. 234St., New Yorks near 4tn ay. 541 Fulton St., BKIYM, near Dekalb Ay. 192 Fulton St., BVM, near orange #, In aclass by itself. The Coward Oxford. A pleasure to wear because of the perfect ease, which comes from perfect fit. The low shoe’ which fits from the first—no “ breaking in. In up-to-date shapes for men and women. SOLD NOWHERE ELSE, JAMES S COWAR 268-274 Greenwich St., ncarWarren St..Nw Mail Orders Filled. ~~ 4 SEND FOR CATALOGUE, Credit to AIL MichaelsBros, th Ave.& 9th St., Brookl Noted for Fair Dealing. Ladies’, Men's & Children’s than her father, Hattte Snyder 1s only thirteen years old, but she can do almost anything she wants with elephants In Central Park. In fact she J# the only one who dare at- temper and often takes sudden dislikes. Billy Snyder ts the only keeper in the Park who cares to go within easy reach of her trunk and even he watches her! eyes closely to see the mood she is in. Hattle, however, will walk right In! under the big elephant’s trunk and pat It catessingly, Whenever she enters the elephant house Jewel salutes her with 4 ruff snort. ‘This little girl is just as fearloss with the other animals in the) Zoo as with the elephants, and even the | big Bengal tigers allow ‘her to stroke} their bristling whiske: Hattle, the baby elepnant, seemel| rather ‘restless in her new quar- era to-day, and as Jewel, who is in ¢ ouidoor Inclosure, was in a bad temper and did not take kindly to the young- eter, she was placed in the elephant houso. When she first saw her youth- ful sponsor she immediately stood on her head and snorted. She has a trick of standing on her head when she wants to work off her exuberance. When she retumed to all fours the little girl went |up to her and stroked ner trunk. Then |ehe went to the store house and secured jsix loaves of bread for the Infant. which were disposed of with soft grunts of | plensure, An the iast loaf disappeared the elephant stood on her head again. It will be some days before Keeper Snyder will be able to make the baby elephant respond to his will, as she {3 yet unfamiliar with the English langu- age. She knows German well and can Understand gutterals. of eighteen | syll-| take the task of tutoring her in the vernacular. SURPRISED HIM. Doctor’s Test of Food. A doctor in Kansas experimented with his boy In a test of food, and| gives the particulars, He says |naturally watch the effect of differ- ent foods on patients. ‘My own little son, a lad of four, had been ill with lung fever, and during his convalesence did not seem to care for any kind of food, “I knew something of Grape-Nuts and its rather fascinating flavor, and particularly of its nourishing and nerve-building powers; so I started the boy on Grape-Nuts, and found from the first dish that he liked it. “His mother gave it to him stead- fly, and he began to Improve at once. In less than a month he had gained about eight pounds, and soon became | anxiety about him. “An old patient of mine, 73 years old, came down with serious stom- ach trouble, and before I was called! he got so weak he could eat almost) d was in a serious condi-' tion, He had himself tried almost) every kind of food for the sick with-| his business. escrived long drives for him. have the horse hitched up lect had p used |drive near jWeather was fn driving with 3 He | or a} All this eo he was / hompson | | he latest he ever stayed away was on last Wednesday ent; it was after midnight. He came in with a black eye hd his clothes torn. He told me he 1d been fet upon by rodbers and | t T bathed his head for him and! pained about the house all of the day. Kyety time I lett the upper | ini | “In'all he gathered up $5,000 in Jewelry | lana $00 In cash. He raid he really had | to wet out to keep an appointment. When | he did not come back that night I fait | that something dreadful had happened. ‘the ‘next day Mr every afternoon when the |jjttle pinch of sugar. | I never ate anything so good or that out avail. | “I immediately put him on Grape-| Nuts with good, rich milk and just a} He exclaimed when T came next day, ‘Why, doctor, | | made me feel 80 much stronger!’ I am pleased to say that Grape. cured him, but he had to stick to it for two or three weeks; then he be- gan to branch ont a little with rice} or an egg or two. He got entirely well in spite of his almost: hopeless condition. He gained 22 pounds in two months, which at his age is re- markable. “I could quote a list of cases wher: Thompson called Grape-Nuts has worked wonders, and told me where my husoand got his phis doctor’s name will be given by he drives his have prescribed,’ ctor wae 8 . ancatals ine a Ockwer® black eye. and I learned where he took V upposed to the Postum Co,, Battle Creek, Mich., i + on application, tempt any familiarity with Jewel, the 50 Per Week 0c; big clephant. Jewel has not an even Ce opens Account ables. Little Miss Snyder will under-| si! ‘Rolle Liquors atter Tidersed by Members of Wecen Us CLOTHING.. Furniture, Carpets, Stoves, Bedding, &. ~ We Will Furnish Yo Home for $1 per week $1 DRINK Cured by White Ribbon Remedy. Can be given in wi tee Without er, for any one to have Mca. Moore, press superinten leut of Wouldne Chrincian Temperance Union, Ventre, . fornia, write: "I bave Lested White very obstinate drun\ards, end! been ioany. “In many, sanve (he Lees C secretly. I cheactally reco.umeng indorse White Ribbon Itemedy, Mi Union are delighted to hea Dr iste or by mal 1, PAR ei ta ecre ZeATS ite reinperance Unlony, S18 cllaus »° " “ghoitt : foot” Use uu