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aba rasobaba eid Sekai ere Tener ee on 5 Tidahont ea ee Plant After De (Special to the PHILADELPHIA, May 27.—The U: city gas plant. ment have won the most notable cf delphia. Of course there is politics in the the gas monopoly, GAS RING | IN PHILADELPHIA WON BY PEOPLE Company Decides to Withdraw Its Bid for an Extension of Its Lease on the City Good Government. focided to withdraw its bid for an extension of the lease it holds on the| 'The machine has backed down, Publicity and public senti- The city is in urgent need of ready money. NEW YORK, FIGHT monstration for Evening World.) nited Gas Improvement Company has vie victory in the history of Phila- latest move of the organisation and | The bor-| rowing power of Philadelphia will not allow her to secure more than/and two milita $15,000,000 to add to her already overwhelming debt, while she needs nearly $50,000,000, fact that the United Gas Improvem | The present lease of the gas works, | hold by the U, G I. Company, is for thirty years and was made jn 18907, Here is where the politics comes tn-—the poll. tics of men whose chief asset ts cun- ning Withdrawal of Offer. ewe withdraw our offer,’ say the ma- ehfne leaders and the gas monopolist We were willing to let the) in effect. tits, have $25,000,000 which 1s sorely needed, We knew what was best for the city, Mayor Weaver and a lot of Jisn business men have Undertaken to run the city, Let them run it, Let John Weaver and Wilhu Root and Judge Gordon and the others who think they know what Philadelphia | nbedy get the mondy that Philadelphia must have.” | ‘That js the way the gas people would talk if they dared talk as. they feel. | Preaident Thomas Dolan, of the U. Q I, Company, !s more diplomatic, His | letter withdrawing the bid of his com- pany is addressed to President Ran- sley, of Select Counall, and President McCurdy, of Common Counell, and reads as follows: | “phe manner in which the fect has been treated Induces ti Gas Improvement Company to believe that the community is opposed to any extension of tne gas leese upon uny terms, This belng #9 this company ia unwilling to accopt the ordinance witch bas been pacsed, or to enter into any qcntract whatever with the city looking to any variation of the terms of the present lease. The United Gas Improvement Com- pany therefore begs respectively to ad- that, for the reasons atat- haul the pending ordinance, become « law, It will not be accepted Dy it” Must Ral Money, ual observer it would appear ghee the machine has put the Mayor in a hole, inasmuch as it is absolutely in Rewary for Philadelphia to raise money without delay. jut the Mayor Tas tade powerful friends, and 4f the Dublic Interest can be kept at fever DYNAMITE preachers and (0 road Structure — Ex from Shore by t ‘A emt: raft found lodgud againat the filing of the lowest of the three Pennsylvania Railroad bridges across ‘Woewark Bay to-day is supposed to have een the inutrument by which dynamite Was floated early to-day againot the new drawbridge which the company |# Dullding, ‘The raft was made of three pieces of dressed timber lashed together with wire rope, One end of the tim- ber was blown off and shattered. The force :¢ the explosive was downwan, mdloating. that it was the result of ayvamite. Previous to the finding of the raft there had been ciroulated a report that the explosion was probably acoldental, Now it appears that some person or persons desirous of blowing up the bridge placed a quentity of dynamite on @ raft, floated it down with the tide and exploded it by means of a wire connection from shore, All that waved the bridge from tota) destruc- tion was the fact that whoever was in- whh the task of setting off the plosive acted too soon, ¢ | though lease, would pay Philadelphia $25,000,000 in cash between now and 1907. jment lease made no provision for any | Rae cao, | competition _ FOUND NEAR BRIDGE Made of Timber and Wire Rope, Show- ing Plot to Blow Up Pennsylvania Rail- The excuse advanced by the gang for the gas steal was the| nearly ent Company, by the terms of the dat there i little doubt of his abilit to steer clear of the mines the machine has strewn in his course. Although the U. G. 1 lease has twen- ty-two years to run, there Is a prove sion which allows the city to take over the plaant at any time upon the reim- bursement of the corporation for the amount spent In improvements. Je Httle doubt that a local ayndicat can be formed that will not only are Tange to tke over the Rag plant, but 1 work to re ee establish the credit of The proposed United Gas Improve- yment to the elty outside of the first As a sop to public resent- ment the ordinance fheorporailine “the lease promised $1 gas—the present rate— to Jon; % cent gas to 1921; 90 cent Libs 0 1s, AS cent gas to 1960 and 80 cent ‘om. fas from, 16 to the termination of the ‘The KE. B, Smith Company, a 43 a a ayndicate | formed to compete with the U. G. E| for control of the gas works, offered not pnly the amount specifled for the DUCA Drofitesharing agreement » the clty should take one-third of the rofite for the firat ten. years and one. alf the profits therentter, as well as for | sheave! ma 1) Gites n e Weht o offer i 1 that the ofty will not tack Tor'k picants wishing to operate the gas p! e called the 1. G. Tn blute, Le at ale Open Competition Li Should he deem it advisable it is in his power to take the gas works off the hands of the United Gas Improvement people and put it up for leage in open taken it is rectors of @uch action should b th ° would crawl to the City hands and knees, if ‘necessary, ad make any concessions asked for rather than sacrifice their hold upon the gas supply of this city. The withdrawal of the U. GI, offer Was “not made public until after the close of the stock market, ¢lse the de- cline in price of the stock and nda int have resembled the fall of ‘ar inn avfe down An alevator sh v tion eG... Co, wa HR Sridevi bette Rot Jan, Israel Durham, the local boss, and hia Heutenants, Seger and MoNichol. ann nituation 9 Green on Page 8,) RAFT IS ploded Prematurely he Conspirators, lodged against the lowest bridge, The timbers are similar to. those used in the construction of bridge false work, and {t 1s believed that the Pennsylvania Railroed private detectives will be able to trace them, ‘There was a rumor after the explo- jalon that President Casait, of the Pennsylvania Railroad, and some of the engineers in charge of the bridi work had received letters threatening them with personal violence and with the destruction of the bridge because it ia being built by the company's men Inatead of the union men who generally }do rallroad bridge work.” This was d nied absolutely by Mr, Cassatt's necre- tary. Ridicule Revenge Theory. While the railroad oMglals would not discuss the story of threatening letters, they did say that there lad been no trouble over the work on the new bridge and that they regarded the iden that the explosion was the work of dia- gruntied Ironworkers as absurd, One phage of the explow'on, the more mention of which made the Pennayl- WARSHIP LOST, CAPTAIN GOES DOWN WITH HER Fate of Crew of Chilian Cruiser Presidente Pinto Not Told. SANTIAGO DE CHILE, May _21.— ‘The Chilean cruiser Presidente Pie | has foundered in the Gulf of Ancud, north of the Island of Chiloe, off the southern part of the coast of Chile, According to one report her com: mander, Capt. Whiteside, committed suicide in despair, Another version says he was drowned, Bhe was a sister ship of the Preal- dente Erraguriz, was ‘ullt of steel, sheathed and coppered, and was of 2,047 tons displacement, with 6,400 horse- power. She was buflt (n France, and was completed In 1892, The Pinto had 3 inches of deck ar- mor and a cellulose velt, and carried | four alx-inch (Canet) guns, and two five-Inch guns, and ten smaller rapid- | fire guna. She had three torpedo tubes, | twas driven by two propellers, had a speed of about nineteen knots, and car- ried 200 tons of coal, The wrecked cruiser had one funnel | masts, with two taps | on each, and was 268 feat 4 inv 8 long, had % feet 9 Inches beam, and drew! 5 feet of water, | “MCARTHY USED FOUL LANGUAGE" McAdoo Tells Why Central Park Policeman Was Transferred —Such Men Not Fit to Be on the Force.” In reference to the transfer of Patrol- man James V. McCarthy, who was taken from the Mounted Squad in Cen- tral Park and put on patrol duty in the Bast One Hundred and Fourth Street Station by uty Commissioner Mc- Ayoy during the ‘absence of Commls- er McAdoo last week, and whose transfer was have been caused by an arrest he had made, Commis- sioner McAdoo issued a “statement through his secretary. He says In part: “TI tind that the direct reagon for Me- arthy's assignment out of the park by Mr. McAvoy was a oharge made by a clilgon of reputation and good aharacter that McCarthy had used toward him ‘nioet foul and Indecent language, under homillating and pilnful conaitiong to the cltien, and without the slightest cause When Mr. McAvoy heard tiis change he assigned hin at once out of the park aubject to my approval. hat Me. MoAvoy om #0 “fam sorry lenient. He ought to have pushed the case harder and got the citizen to press the complaint. 1 will try to, dos» my- self, becnuse, sf McCarthy ts guilty any wise of ‘the conduct charmed he fa Unt to be on the force to have mit MoCorthy out of the park on the Aree complaint, He Is thoroughly ‘unfit to be hore, and T have thit day signed hd nimmneter in ritne. “Ofticers who ehgw rumManly dispoal- tions and use offensive language to alll. nig had better not be brought vetore c FAIRBANKS NOT TO ARBITRATE. CITICAGO, May %,—A commtttee of team owners endeavored to-day to meet Vice-President Fatrbanks to get him to tse his good offices in bringng about a settlement of the big teamsters’ strike, Mr. Fairbanks informed the commit- tee, through his secretary, that he could not be seen during the day, and would leave the clty at 6,90 o'clock to-mght. An armed force of 7,600 men, police and deputy eherifvs—said to be almost as large as the entire Nutional Guard of Illinols—was In command of the atriice situation to-day. ‘There was more riot- Ing, but nobody was seriously Injured. wyer Mayer, counsel for the Em- yer’ Assoolation, jeft hurriedly for ew York presumably to conmult with tor Platt and the heads of other express companies, ‘and If the dynamite had floated paat {t to tho old bridge and struck thero Mt would prohably have shattered a mood part of It. At the very moment ot the explosion a train of sleepers was passing over the bridge, and wha would have happened to It is not hard to imagine, As tt was a number of windowa In the cara were broken, Watchman Beaten by Gang. ‘The new bridge Iw being built on piles, and as soon as it is finished the old one will be removed, Daniel MoNal'y, chief Inspector for the Pennsylvania, keeps a number of men on guard the bridgo every night, ‘This js a cus- tomary precaution, ilways taken whilo a bridge is In course of construction. hres weeks ago one of MvNally' mén, Willlam McBhune, was noen by A gang of roughs and s0 badly injured that he was laid up for a woo. ‘This war sald to have been the work of unton Ironworkers, and there!» ao doubt that a number of tree men havo been hanging around ine new CZAR’S SHI WASHINGTON, May 27. twenty-one Russian vessels, naval engagement has taken TOKIO, May 27 (Noon Togo and Vice-Admiral R in the Corean Straits. Corea. HONGKONG, May 27.—The arrived here to-day from Kuchinotsu in the morning of Wednesday, May and tugs, one hundred and forty Islands, The Russians were stationary colliers were half empty. Subseq The Saddle Islands are a group Admiral Rojcatvensky's fleet arrived ceeded In the direction of the Streits ST, PETERSBURG, May % — After- noon.—The tension in naval circles 1s very great, News of the meeting of the Russtan and Japanese fleets is expected hourly, As a matter of fact, Rojestvensky seems to have mystified his own Ad- miraltty as muoh as the Japanese. Togo Expected Attack. On one hand the apearance of Rus- gla neolllers and oonverted cruisers oft Shanghai is taken as belng contirm- atory of the theory that Rojestvensky # fighting division hi back after circling the Island of Formoga, and on the other the presence of the colliers and converted cruisers off Shanghal ts regarded as a blind to confuse bhe Jap- anese. pure pers go urchased hy the brating Coronation There was no conce: the afternoon the newspa- out extras, which were eagerly holiday crowds cele- AY: alment of the r MAY | All the News. es “ Circulation Books Open to All,’’ | a PRICE ONE CENT. ~ PS CLASH WITH JAP FLEET IN BIG BATTLE Washington Hears Togo and Rojestven-| sky Met in Furious Sea Fight While the Russians Were Heading for Japanese Waters. (By Associated Press.) .—Private advices received here of an entirely authentic nature report more than including three battle-ships and three cruisers, were off Saddle Islands, which are sixty or seventy miles southeast of Shanghal. Additional information reports that It is rumored a} place. ).—It is rumored here the Japanese and Russian fleets under Vice-Admiral ojestvensky have engaged LATER—Vice-Admiral Rojestvensky’s fleet has | been sighted off Tsushina Islands in the Strait of, Tsushina Islands are just southof Masampo, | Corea, Admiral Togo’s naval base. NAGASAKI, May 27—Noon.—It is reported that a Russian fleet is passing Tsu Islands in the Strait of Corea, British steamer Saint Kilda, which , Japan, reports having sighted early 24, forty-five Russian vessels, includ- ing battle-ships, cruisers, torpedo-boat destroyers, colliers, a hospital ship miles south-southeast of the Saddle when first sighted, and most of the! uently the Russian vessels steamed away, heading in a nortiisnorthwesterly direction, of twenty-five small islands situated about sixty miles southest of Shanghai, SAIGON, Cochin-China, May 2?.—Returning colliers report that Vice- off the Saddle Islands May 24 and Pro-, of Corea, ) pleasure, however, which the Admiralty cfMfcers read the definite statement from. Toklo that Rojestvensk: the Tau Telands, An oMoer of the atatt sald: “Rojestvensky thus far has shown himself a master of naval stra ne feo ete arrived, Off the, Tau alands ¢ ‘action Rhust have ween the victor eky London Aroused. LONDON, May 274.30 2, M.—The dramatic appearance of Vice-Admiral Rejestvensky's fleet within the zone of re in the Tar Hast has aroused the Hyvellest Interest, but no news has been recolved here up to late this afternoon rom Tokio ih ne, ty en sighted, Baron Hayashi, Japanese Min- later to Great Britain, has not received Any despatches from ‘his Government. Shipping circles are somewhat die- , turbed and have been sending cable Are little patches despatches broadcast with the object of stopping Vessels for Japan and of Eczema on the in elsewhere in the danger gone Quartermaster Ebson says he doesn't know how little Louls came to be with him, and Recorder Stanton, of Hoboken, before whom Ebson was arraigned to- day, !8 inclined to believe him, The Quartermaster admits he had o few drinks, but that a little thing like that should cause a hiatus in the memory of man who has been a quartermaster on a steamship for sixteen years Is amaz- ing. M Little Louls Atkinson, four years old, was playing yesterday afternoon In front of the home of his father, John Atkinson, a silk merchant, with busi- ness In Manhattan and living at No, 227 Bloomfield street, Hoboken, just before he disappeared, His mother had missed him, when one of Is playmates came to the door and told her that a man had come along and taken Louls away with him, ‘The distracted mother rushed to the ‘police station and a general alarm was sent out to the police to be on the Jookout for a man with a four-year-old IF YOU WANT TO MAKE MONEY Or Secure an Ideal Place to tive SEND POSTAL FOR CIRCULAR AND VIEWS bridge and complaining bitterly avout the Pennsylvania building the bridge with Its own men; When the explosion occurred morning (here were a number around, John Knapp, a i as sandiig in the voller shanty of the pile driver wien faw a fash in the middie of the river, and the next Moment there Was a loud report. this of ne) watohman what mi have happatad Pynaraxdur vonla We turn pale ay, po ale tontay u was |” ie ; Says he went clear through the win f the shan Af bid |" EAST ELMHURST | PICTU! SQUE FLUSHING BAY, Ph" i a Re OR RCTIVE, TOWNBITS N Th ‘ORK CITY, Nearer in Brooklyn. Bankers Land & Mortgage Corp. BAT Manhattan Ay. OY. 'fo-day a man wearing a bewildered” ———_$_— —— INTOXICATED MAN WALKS OFF WITH A LITTLE BOY _————————— alr and leading a small boy by the |Becond Precinct, eyelng bim suspicious- iy, when he approached and in a husky ‘ofmce! tone sa! "Say, oMcer, can you tell me who lthis boy ist f found him sleeping be- side me when I woke up this morning in the Dry Dook Hotel, I don't know how elther he or I got there, and I don't know what to do with him,” Wallace arreated the man, who told him he was Peter Bbson, a ship's quar- termaster, forty-five years old and liv- A Contrast since the Erie was First put in Operation ch. had only thousand millions, outcome century 0 was off | hand walked along Washington strect until he saw Policeman Wallace, of the ling at No, 65 Grand atrost. Recorder Siunton held him till Monday while his wcory Is Investlagted, \ Population Growth Since 1832 HEN the Erie Railroad was was confined to twelve families. tween these two, the greatest cities on the continent, the Erie now maintains unsurpassed passenger service, the Direct route to Buffalo, Cleve- fand, Cincinnati and Chicago TOM O'ROURKE |S. PINCHED AAI ;He Is Rearrested on a Charge Which at One Time Was Thrown Out of Court by a Magistrate. Tom O'Rourke, proprietor of the Dela- van Hotel, at Fortieth street and Broad- way, as arrested to-day on q warrant Issued by Magistrate Olmstead, of the Count of Special Sessions, at tne request of District-Attorney Jerome. He 1s charged with keeping a disorderly house, The arrest of O'Rourke to-day grows out of a raid made on the rathskeller under his hotel on the night of April 26 by a squad under command of Sergt. Egger, of Headquarters, Several wom- en and a fow waiter-vocalists were gath= ered in with O'Rourke, He was dis- charged in Jefferson Market Police ‘Sourt by Magistrate Whitman on May ommisstoner MoAdoo, who instigated the rald, was not pleased with the no- tlon of the Mawistrate when the facta hud been explained o him by Bergt. Kg- ers. He believes that he had a ¢ Uisordorly house case against O'Rourk’ By the provisions of a law which went Into foree last September the Dis- triot-Attorney as power to review all | eases decided in police courts and bring such as he thinks were Improperly passed upon to the Court of Special Sessions by lodging information with that tribunal that the actin of the Max- israte was not absed upon he facts and the evidence. The action was taken In O'Rourke's case at the reques Commissioner, O'Rourke was arraigned before Justice Olmated and held in $500 ball for trial. —— MRS. ROGERS MUST DIE ON GALLOWS. MONTPHLIBR, Vt., May 27.—-The pe- tition of Mrs, Mary H, Rogers, con- vieted of the murder of her husband, tor a new trial, has been denied by the Supreme Court of Vermont | Mrs, Rogers is under sentence to be hanged, A fuprieve granted by Gov. Charles J. Bell, the day before Mrs. Rogers was to have been hanged last February, will expire June 2° Under Vermont laws only commutation by the Goy- ernor can now avert the hanging of the woman on the date named. enter |ODELL ON His WAY TO PARIS. BERLIN. May 21.—Ex,-Goy, Benjamin B. Odell, ir. of New York, and Mrs. Odell left Berlin for Paris to-day: thence they will go to London, The automobile jn which they have touring Southern Buro aural At tired It. rand Mrs, ‘Tower eave a luncheon {n thelr honor ‘Thursday. stlkiddiniss hs SUPT, MORGAN DOING WELL, Superintendent of Blecttons George W. Morgan, who was operated on for ap- pendicitis at Roosevelt Hospital. was re- Ported to be doing well to-day. His nirae said that the patient was resting | comfortably and doing nicely, ITCHING DEVILS skin, scalp, or hands, which are instantly relieved and speedily cured by baths! with CUTICURA SOAP and gentle anointings of CUTICURA OINT- | MENT, the great Skin Cure, KLI- PAPERS | are the finest made. | Sold by good decorators everywhere, | 4d Main Office 95-97 South Fifth St, Brookiyn. Near Williamsburg Bridge Entrance, BURGLARS Mra, Mary Bllnabeth Lease, Soctallet, lecturer, writer, advocate of woman's tights, was held up by two burglars In her apartment on the top floor of No. 64 Bast One Hundred and Twenty-second street, last night. First she was beaten, | then she was almost choked, next a gun Was put at her heard, and one of the | burglars sald he had a notion to blow her brains out, Finally she was thrown Into a comer and told to stay there while the burglars robbed the flat, She stayed and the thieves got away with $112 In money and about $1,000 worth of silverware and jewelry. Mrs, Lease is well known as a leo- turer, She has figured Jn national af- fairx frequently, and Is considered one of the foremost thinkers in the ranks of the advanced women of the day, Mrs, Lease yes with her gon and two daughters, Yesterday afternoon she went to the bank and drew out $100, Bhe put It In her handbag, where she al- ready hud $12 and got home at dinner time, When she reached her apartinent the door was unlocked, She was str- prised, but attributed tt to her own cate. lessness when she went out, First ahe went to a front room and threw off her coat and hat and then started back to the bedroom, stepped in front of her, took her by the throut and proceeded ‘to pummel brutaly, Sue coud net cry out, and the man was #o strong that the resist- al 6 Bile PUL Up Ut first Was of no use. burgiar nally threw her hale ‘com, and pulling out a pis. we Wotid Oia WEL ute ttered A sound, ‘Then the 4a diamond pin trom her @ containing the hand. in his pocket and then . Lease that he had half @ inind to shoot her anywa: By this time Mra, Lause was in a state of complete collapse, and when the man pushed hee to a corner and. tolt her to stay there until he came back she wank to, the floor help von C Collar Chat No. 16 “Finest Made," “(High Grade,” and other ingenious phrases are coined to dodge the linen ques- tion and to mislead the public, ‘Warranted Linen” indelibly stamped on 'H, & I." Collars is your protection, Have a look, Two for twenty-five cents, Four-ply—don't lose their shape, or go to pieces in laundry, r dealer can't supply yo! is namie, asking for boo! erate Coton,” and mF It you Kt HENRY HOLMES Troy, New York SALESROOM { 3 Union Square Weat New York Too many shoes spoil the feet. That's because they have wrong shape—they cause corns, vunions, ingrowing nails and flat arch, And that's why we produce certain special shoes—to cure the jills caused by other makes. Feet bred in the Coward Shoes artered in 1832, New York about half as many hundred inhabitants as it now has and the Chicago directory Be- of nearly three-quarters of a f experience in operation, are perfect in shape and free tron all ailments, For Men, Women and Children, Some of Our Specialties: Arch Supporting Shoes. Buntou Shoes, Low Iustep Shoes. Extra Long Sixes for Mon 11% to13,AAA to F Hiding Boots, Aiding Lewuing, Orthopedic Shoes for Children, SOLD NOWHERE ELSE. JAMES S. COWARD, 268-274 Greenwich St., N, (HRAR WARREN @TREET,) MailOrdersFilled, Send for Catalogue Se ee ee .J, Hoy?, Dentist, MRS. MARY E. LE Noted Woman Lecturer Is Brutally Beaten by Thieves in Her Home— They Get Away with Booty Amount- ing to $1,112.00. As she walked in a man | her | ATTACK I axe Waited agiinute dnd then J and started out to get help. te Weil dgor and Was "abot Tiother man came oom. pistol Ip hand, | Lea up cacned we to run out wh out of the dininy ahd confronted he . Gollas tol tie pylice, ent) he sneer “If you open your mouth, Tl Kill yous and "this inan, ike the ocher, tool Mrs Ledge by the throut and backed her int h the bedroom. Then he closed the. di and went back to the dining-roy Where he Jolned his companton. two men packed up ail the silverware: and valuables in the place and them went back to the bedroom, where thay, bade Mra. Lease farewell nd lett Mrs. Lease walle! until they had chance to get a reasonable ‘disianca , away and then ran out, She went to | nearby grocery store and told her storys! A clerk went and got a policeman, and. the latter went up and Gown the tiers with Mrs, Lense trying to get some track of the men. They had completely disappeared, Mrs. Lease then reported the casa te . te police of the Bast One Hund and ‘Twenty-sixth street station, : Capt. Burns assigned five detectives he case. $5,000 REWARD will te paid for the recovery of the three pear-shaped diamonds weighing 141 the 12i ge and 1%js carats re- spectively, taken from Tif- fany & Co. since April 25, | 1905, and $5,000 Additional Reward for the arrest and conviction of the thief, Send all infor-.| mation to Stephen O’Brien, Chief of Detectives, Police Headquarters, New York City, TIFFANY & Co. Union Souare New York’ | att Her ‘ F cotton collars were as good as our 15¢, Linen Collars, t# ft plausible that the 18a cotton collar makers could rd_to oftor thelr trade handsome showcases and fixtures, {as a bonus for sailing 1 tton collars? Hardly, But when they take tho value out of the goods and sell cotton collars at the Linen price then they can afford to be ene erous a: your expense. : Demand Triangle "LINEN" Collars at your haberdasher, Write for “Information about Collara,!* Gyrnce COLLARS) Let Us Clothe You, Talk may sell bad clothes, but it doesn’t make a customer. make clothes that speak eloquently for themselves and cus- tomers that speak for me. Moe Levy & Co., 119 to 125 Walker St, Three Blocks East of Broadway. Branch at 1457 Broadway. Jayne's Expectorant will stop that cough ‘KIO-EMULSION Lung or Bronchial Troubles, Coughs, Colds, Catarrh or Throat Aife SAMIVAND PAEFAID Una KeGUEST, UNITED STATES MEF ENSARY, All of TES 4