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conclusion,” they told Sydne Peesident of the Board of Tra “that the only way that will now be an effect: ive road to peace ix that the companies shall consent to meet us PREMIER ASQUITH WORKED HARD FOR PEACE. At this point Premier Asquith inter vened and offered to appoint Immediate: ly @ foyal commis which should {nvestigate and 16 mente, if any, conciliation plan. Mf. Asquith made th tion to the railroad managers the confident hope that the Kove might rely upon both sides to posalble assistance to the p miaston, When represent tefused the proffer of the Premier Appoint the comimission Mr. Asquith Greased the labor leaders and out that the government wa impartial regarding the merii« o age and added with emphasis “But the government's first consid- @ration must be the public interes's and ‘We cannot allow a general paraiyeic of the raiiway system of the country, ‘Which We will have to take the neces- Gary steps to prevent. Mr. Asquith emphasized the fact that the men would fncur a heavy respon- atbility If they falled to accept the gov- ernment's offer of a most prompt tn vestigation of all their complaints by @ perfectly independent tribuna TROOPS RUSHED TO. MANY POINTS FOR ACTION. Troops are velng entrained at Alder- shot as rapidly as possible and rushed to various strategic points where they can be utlitzed to control the strike situation. ‘Three thousand additional men have reached t y and are be ing held awaiting ord In the House of Commons to-day Home Secretary Churchi!i said that riot- Ing had continued all night long in Liv erpool and that the drastic action of the Government in rushing warships up the Mersey River and taking charge of the situation in the city was due to the inability of the civil authorities to pre- serve order. The Home Secretary also announced that a battalion of infantry had been sent to Sheeld, where many railroad employees are already out on strike, The time imit of twenty-four hours, within which the railway men demand- ed that their employers agree to con: sider their grievances, expired at 8 A M. to-day, but the threatened general strike on the railroads of the United Kingdom falled to materialise at that time, Instead, representatives of the four railway societies involved went into conference with the Board of ‘Trade. TrafMc proceeded as usual. No form- @ orders were given the union men by their leaders, but apparently it ws generally understood that a truce would be observed while negotiations with the Board of Trade continued.’ LOCKOUT MUST BE LIFTED, WAS DEMAMD MADE. OMicials of the railway men's so- cleties arrived in London from Liver- pool early to-day and immediately met at the offices of the Amalgamated So- ciety of Railway Servanta, where they threw down the gauntlet to their ployers by adopting the following resolution: “This joint committee hereby exprose our determination not to settle our present dispute unless the lockout Im- posed upon our fellow-workers because of their support of the rail in Liverpool and elsewhet moved.” Later the union leaders numbering forty met with the Board of Trade oMetals Passenger and freight trains from all London stations were running on theif regular schedules this afternoon. There wae much uneasiness among the men, @ large proportion of whom were re- luctant to strike, but Knew that they woulg be forced to. At Liverpool traffic was also main- tained, but the stations in that city were guarded by soldiers with fixed bayonets, Whe armored cruiser Antrim hae been sent to the Mersey to protect the shtypiag there. The trains to and from Manchester were generally suspended. LUBITANIA CREW Q'/ITS, MAY DELAY BAILING. ‘The Transatlantic shipping companies plan to coal and victugl their 1 at American ports for the round trip, but, as in the case of the Lusitania which {s scheduled to sajl Saturday, but has been ynable to obtain « crew or coal, are Iikejy to have, trou ike ir crews When the vi reach England. ‘Tom Mann, the strike leader, sum- marized the men's demands us follows A general incréase in wages of fifty conte & Week; & work-week of fifty-four hours and cognition of the union, way managers strongly ob- this recognition where 8 dealing on thelr part with lepresentatives of the men other than| thelr own employers. Nukton, er tame pr adding pos ported 5 the unions to ade pointed mutely the Y FAVORED. Ribbon Counter Girl — well, mighty mean of you to brag about ford to oversleep THERE ARE BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES FOR You EVERY DAY, AND nt, Great om- FOR PITTSBURGH TO AWAIT RECOVER Ball Player’s Friends Weep When Hero Boards | the Train. “WE'LL WIN,” HE SAYS, | |Fans Fear Injury to His Leg Will Cost Pirates ihe Pennant. nit of a& taxis) tlon thin at.| Hans Wagner climbed cab at the Pennsylvania #: ternoon and slowly pigked hls Way td the train shed, walkit on crutches and showing great pain, He was surround- ed by sorrowful and mournful-looking | compantons and when he had seated | himself in the Pullman car bound for | Pittsburg) almost shed tears, Wagner was going home co permit his sprained ankle to recover, The Smoky City fans belteves his tnjurtes has od Pitteburgh's penant hopes | The great Roman of ball field, however, Is not looking upon his mis- fortune, sustained ti the game with Brooklyn yesterday, when he went down | in @ heap as he turned second, as a calamity to his ball team. ‘The greatest bateman tie National Laague has had in recent y and the most consistent performer inthe fled, wae full of ra. morse and misery, Not for his team | elther, but for himself, and with ft alt it wis & ene of modesty that made him feet ‘ they | AG | SURE PIRATES WILL WIN F WITHOUT HIM. “My being hurt ain't going to hurt Fred Clark's team one bit,” he said as he fixed his crutches #0 they would not fall on the injured member. “But it is tough on me to have this thing hap-| pen at this time. Of course Pittsburg | hard luck in woing to win the flag, and if I'm out of the mame three weeks it won't hurt their chances at all, but it will make me, feel nore to think they're playing such splendid ball, and I'm not in on It. “But Manager Clark and everybody else connected with the team seems to think your injury wil greatly lessen Pittsburg's chances,” he was reminded. ‘othing of the Kind,” he answered, jamining the gnarled fingers that had been split and torn and injured in many fames, “Why no man out of the game fa going to hurt Pittsburg, We've got Just as good men on the bench as we have in the fleid all the time. We've aot to them or we couldn't win games. Just wateh McCarthy or who- over they put,in the game to teke my Place and you'll seo they'll notmias me. Why my being hurt will be @ good thing maybe for the team, for the others will Just play thet: heads off and make the other teams wish I was back th the game.” “You knew, he continued, “it ts funny how little things will bother you @ lot more than a big thing. Now when I was runing out that hit for ‘ond I Kept saying to myself, ‘You've Kot plenty of time, so you don't have to slide." You know when you allde there's always the danger of something hap- Poning, so I was happy to wee I didn’t have to go into the bag that way. Maybe if T had ‘slid I’ have been killed, tut I've never been hurt that way yet, so now I wish I'd gone into it head first. HANS DIDN'T KP'OW WHAT HAD HAPPENED TO HIM, “Well just am I touched the sack T felt something give way and down In a heap I went. 1 was ashamed of myself because 1 couldn't make out what had happened to me, When Doc Scanian told me I was hurt pretty bad I didn't belleve him, Well they took me to the ethodist Mpiscopal Hospital and took an X-ray picture of it. I've just seen tt and they tell me the ligaments are torn and # ‘couple of pieces have been! chipped off the bone, | “You can't tel about these things, though, and maybe I can t back in the game in a week. how, for if I'm out longer, periape t will keep me out. No ball player Ikes| fo be out of the game I'm hoping #0 any- “IT guess I've been pretty lucky as far as being hurt 1s concerned. T've never been injured #o that I've had to wot out of the game, Of course, I've feen bunged up just Uke everybo: but no real serious Injury has been inflicted upon me, But we've ot 10 expect these things, Yes, Pitts mang will win th and we pennant df there's no get an ever break n duck."* PATIENT GIANT LISTENED MEEKLY TO CLARK'S ADVICE. Before he took his team to Brooklyn for this afternoon's game Manager Clark had a long talk with Wagner, He wave him Instructions about what he ts to do. Wagner 1# to use hit automobile and get out to the ball fleld every day and have the trainer take care of tl ankle Don't be impatient about getting the ankle right again,” the manager caus tloned. Wagner, a giant in a meekly Mae THE WORLD IS THE PLACE IN WHICH TO FIND THEM: : : : Yesterday the Morning World printed 106 "Busi ness Opportunity’ Advts., ALL the other New York newspapers added together printed BUT 35, or less than ONE-THIRD the number in THE WORLD ALONE. You will miss @ good chance if you do not study THE WORLD EVERY morning. tened to the words of advice, and to each tnstruction answered “Yes,” and made ali sorts of promises ‘Of course it 18 going to handicap us to have him out of the ga vn Evening World rep pull through Kxomeho: Iwark of strength #ald to we tn rier, "but Wagner us, and with him in the game there is a wense of certainty that # everybody cour- age and confidence. It may be three Weeks that he will be laid up, but we're al hoping that he ma around sooner.” mausenemmmummanoe |ILLNESS MAY DELAY TRIAL, RICHMOND, Va. Aug. 11.—The sick- Beulah Binford an of th TAFT HAS VETO MESSAGE OF THE WOOL BILL READY nile President Will Not Only Kill That, but Also the Cotton and Famers Free List. WASHINOTON, Aug. 17.—Following @ special meeting of the Cabinet to-day the fourth held this week—the last remaining doubt of President Taft's at- titude on the weol bill was swept away. 1A was stated that Mr. Taft's veto maa- Sage might go the Hor tate to-day. One or two Cabinet onicers, who here- tofore had held to the opinion that it might. be wiser for the President to sign the wool bill, were satd to have been entirely won over to Mt. Taft's views at to-day's nension. It became known after the meeting that the President would not only wield the axe on tho wool bill but that the cotton bill with the proposed amendment revising the fron anu steel schedules and the farmera’ free list bill would suffer the same fate, It indicated that any tariff re-| vision bill at this session would be vetond. ‘The «resident, {t was said, would go before the country in hie message and in speeches on his Western trip this fall and argue against what he would char- acterize ax an unnecensai” upsetting of business through revision of the tariff not based on Info-mation from the Tariff Board. The wool bill was received at the White House shortly before noon and BY JEALCUS phia Court—Prisoner Morris Brine, who is under arrest in Philadelphia, ts believed by the De-| tective Bureau here to know enough to solve the mystery of the “taxicab murder"'—the killing of Adolph Sterne at Jacoby'a jewelry store, Sixth ave- nue and Thirteenth street, at 10 o'clock at night, six weeks ago. When the first reports came to the police here of Brine's arrest by Phila- dolphta detectives they were treated it was expected that the President would respond with his veto before nightfall, os SoMLES ING NNUTES IS SPEED OF FLVERATHOOD (Continued From First Page.) without any trouble,” declared Atwood this morning. "I would like to make about 300 or 400 miles a day on this trip, but engagements made by my nanagers compel me to observe stop signals like a@ loca! ratiroad trata, However, If they haven't dated me at too many towns ahead, I ought to get to York Monday. "Up to this time I haven't let my maciine out, Most of the time I have had the motor throttled down. 1 ex- pect to burn up some alr thia after noon between Toledo and Cleveland and to Ko even faster between Clo land and Buffalo PLANS TO LAND ON SOUTH BEACH OF LONG ISLAND, “Down through the Mohawk Valley of New York State it ought to be easy to just whigx along. From Al. bany to New York it will be all down hill through the Hudson Valley, and unless something happens [ won’: allght from the time I leave Albany until I atrike the wide, sandy stretsh of Atlantic beach on the southerly shore of Long Island, ‘Whether I fly from New York to Boston or not will depend on whether 1 want to go to the trouble of packing | up my machine and sending it by ral to Boston, where 1 aim due on the 2th." Atwood's schedule calle for his arrival |in Buffalo Friday evening and his de- |parture from there Satur: morning, | He expects to spend Saturday night either In Byracuse or Utica and Sunday night i Albany. If ae gets to New York next Monday evening he will have taken only eight days in th " oule by Way of Chiceag start from Elkhart, Ind,, w A.M. yenter 4 was not uniform. he went from Butler, Ind. to Mina, 0. maa Watson may cause a e trial of Henry Clay Beattie jr, alleged wife murderer, set for Monday next at Chesterfield, nine miles, in six minutes; from g ker, 0., to Archbold, ©, aix mii ax minu » four miles, in siz minut Might trom | y The airman For tnmtance, and from Archbold to Pet- with scant attention. None of the In- formation gathered regarding the mur- dor of Sterne seemed to have anything to do with Brine or any man of his description. But to-day It was discovered that on Nov. 4, 190, Brine was arrested with four other men for a murderous hold- up in an east side saloon In which @ taxteab figured. All five suspects were afterward re- leased because the victim of the rob- bery—who admitted that he had been Isited” Wy frends of the prisoners— refused to Identify them witen they were arraigned In court, Following the — disee 'yY of this record, the Philadelphia police were! asked to tell why the had reason to suspect that Brine knew anything about the Sterne, murder. In answer to the| request came the story of an underworld | romance. | JEALOUS WOMAN MAKES DIs-| CLOSURES. A woman companion of Brine, who was with him when he went to Philadelphia | @ week ago and took an apartment at Arch and Eleventh streets, be hysterically Jealous two 4 ago. regarded herself as Brine’s wife and thought firet that he was going about too much in tough resorts in Philadel- phia, and afterward that he was neglecting her for new acquaintances She raved about the house at him so much that the neight heard the rtlculars of the quarrel. Through underground channels the Philadelphia police heard that she had MYSTERIOUS SHOOTER DROPS MAN IN STREET. Victim Said to Have Quartelled evidently to avoid meeting the ny she saw approaching. Suddenly a rang out and G foil in his The giv) caw (ie etranwer tun un. A numbe nt in pu but Gillin's assailant escaped tsrille, O. Some bystanders carried the wounded TRAP TAX] MURDER SUSPECT +2. ;Companion Charges Brine With Part in Sterne Killing, but Retracts Accusation in Philadel- With Assailant Over a Woman, John Gillin, twenty-three years old, a Lithuanian, iv at No, 1% Avenue was shot through the neck to-day on Twelfth street near Avenue © by an Kiiown assailant und taken to Bellevue | Hospital in a eritieal conait The | shooting !* believed to have been the after f » old quarrel, but Gillin told ¢ police he did not know his assailant Mary Germie, the nine-year-old niece of the tvounded man, saw t shooting. She saye Gillin started to J the WOMAN'S AID | | Held for Our Police. screamed at him that his conduct waa! not only an insult to her, but that he was putting himself in danger of the electric chair by going about so freely in circles which were frequented by | scores of police stool pigeons. He never left her at night, she said, but that she expected to hear that detectives from New York had arrested him to take him back for “that murder." The Philadelphia 4 clives made a quiet investigation. While it was still going on, the woman herself in almost insane Jealousy, appeared at Police Headquarters and charged Brine with knowing all about the Sterne murder. He might as well be in prison, she said, 80 far as she was concerned, as leaving her for other women the way he was. WOMAN RETRACTS ACCUSATION IN COURT, Brine was at once arrested. When he was arraigned in court yesterday the THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, AUGUST New York police, not knowing all the ciroumstances, did not appear at the hearing. The woman, repenting of her accusation, was just as vehement in de- nying her frat story as she had been in making the charge. his is all nonsense, “What sort of a country she sald, ia It where a | man 18 arrested because of the talk of a sick and nervous woman? Morris never urt anybody." Nevertheless, Brine was held to awalt the action of the New York police. De- |tectives were sent to Philadelphia to- day to look Into the man’s recent move- ments and to find out who his associates have been ‘The Philadelphia pawnshops will also be searched for the rings which the taxicab burglars took from the Jacoby store. a look at the woman in the case. have a falr description of a myst Woman who was In the shop just b the murderers descended nity whose mn seemed to be to occupy he attention of the proprietor and the clerks, ‘The detectives also want to have They upe mi ib aad ps he name of the man who shot him, At the hospital it Is sald Glin has a good cla to recover, The police are servehing for a countryman of Gillin'a with whom he {# safd to have quarrelled over & woman, Sone eae GIRL DIES OF BURNS. |invatia Starte Fire with O11 and ts ‘Verrtbly Injured, | Mise Lizzie Poland, twenty, dled at her home at Bradley Reach, N. J., yea tertay afternoon from burns, She poured Kerosene on a smouldering wood fire, As shé held a small can at 17 “2 HANSWAGNEROFF DAY TO DAY RECORD OF ATWOOD’S FLIGHT TO NEW YORK 1911 GIANTS BAT OUT LEAD FOR AME oy BATTING ORDER. New York Cineinnas! Devore, If. Bescher, If Doyle, 2b. Bates, cf. Snodgrass, of. Hoblitzel, er, rf. Mitchel, rf Merkle, 1b. Downey, ss Herzog, %b, Fran, 2b. Fletcher, ss. Grant, Moyers, ¢ Clarke, Ames, p. Keefe, p Umpires—Rigier and Finneran. POLO GROUNDS, NEW YORK, Aug. 1i.—In the opening game of the double header with Cincinnat! this afternoon Leon Kalamity Ames drew another hard luck assignment when he was stacked against Bobby Keefe, the man who has beaten the Giant this season with startling regularity, As a hard luck pitcher Ames ran true to form a him in the fir: a run was scored off inning due to a bad error, After Bescher had gone out Bates hit to deep left for two bares and scored on Hoblitzeil’s single, De- vere made a perfect throw to the plate and Meyers had the runner: by the ten fe umpire called him safe, Mitchell hit Into @ double play and retired the side, As the Giants started to bat a shower came up that lasted ten minutes and the game had to be postponed for that ength of tine, When play was re- sumed the Giants were retired in quick cond inning beautiful flelding and Snodgrass prevented the Reds from reaching first base. Devore's catch of drive to left was one of the sensations of the game. In the second inning the Glants be- wan to hit and tied the score. Merkle opened with an infleld single that rolled toward third, but Herzog Ined out to) eae me meen oe TEE ER MEN Fee Revie lett reo mae Wie, Week of Sept. 11. I vote for.... Contest Closes inet See Polo Grounds has seen in many a year. Doyle started tt with a three-bas smash to the right field wall, and then came the funniest play of the day. hit on easy grounder to Keet w threw it to Clarke and Doyle w: aught In a chase, In the mean time Snodgrase ran all the way to third, and as the felder's attention into was turned Doyle also slid safely the bag. Snodgrass then, hiked b: second, with the whole Red infi pursalt, and Doyle then st third for home, only to } another chase. This comedy kept up for five minutes until Doyle and Snodgrass both got back to the bags in safety. While the crowd Was still whooping with e@x- eftement, Becker shot a single into entre that scored them both, Becker going to second on the threw to the plate, Merkle then drove out his third single and Becker scored. Herzog dcove a long fly to Mitchell, Merkle taking second, Fittcher then beat out bunt and Merkle went ito (Wilson batted for Meyers and popped out to Downey, Merkle atd Fletcher worked a double steal, Merkle ‘scoring and Fletch going al! the way to third on Clarke's bad throw, Ame: struck out, though the Reds with none ont In the put one over the pan. hase on balls ov a start i} an dEgan both sin \nases, Grant hit to H Mitchell out at the plate {made a marselous sto |bounder, and by a lightning-like throw |turned {t into a double play wich di the side, After two were out in | of the siath Snodgrass sta: | bagger over Beach taees ait sixih they and Dow- filing th Z0K wht Flet« nalf med a twoe © head, but Becker _ | fled out to Mitchell. WILEY EXPLODES “NEW BOMB; HITS CABNET MEMBERS Declares Adverse Pure Food Ruling Was Changed to a Favorable Opinion when he dropped the ball and the; then} WASHINGTON, Aug. 17.—That three members of the Cabinet took the side of the Corn Products Company against decision of the Board of Food and Drug Inspection and 4 that company {to sel glucose, labelled as corn syrup, was the startling charge made on the witness stand to-day by Dr, Harvey W. istry, 0) . kle took second as Egan ‘ ‘ eh Pristine and scored on| The Corn Produets Company employed Meyers's clean wallop to centre, Ames|thirty chemists to refute Wiley struck out opinion, one of them afterward se: In the third Ames retired the Reds tnjon the Remsen Board. ‘The company x order. He struck out both Keefe Beacher and the next man was Hants jumped into. the ead in their haf of the third when a baiting raly put three runs over the platy after two were put. After Devore had gone according to Dr. Wiley, then succeeded in having the board's order suppressed and replaced !: with one authorizing the sale of glucose in the form desired by them, Dr. Wiley charged that the manufac- out Dosle wot a base on halle and went |turers of this product had afrered to third on the Bit ae rn py me money to prominent chemists of the Peer rot Hacker's grounder and|!Mited States to necure Ipintons sup- threw Doyle out at the plate, but Merkie porting thelr contention that orn ‘ame through with his second single| Sup" was a proper name for glucose. and Snodgrass scored rzcg then|The Board of Food and Drug Inapec- drove a long tworbaxger over Beaoher's head, acoring both Becker and Merkle, but was thrown out trying to make third, Tho Reds falled to score in the fourth, put not until they had given us a scare. After two were out Egan walked and Grant singled, but Doyle made a great stop and threw out Clarke. ‘The Gianta scored another tn their half of the fourth, F er opened with a two-base drive to the fence, but} Meyers lined out Bescher. Ames was thrown out at first and Fletcher e then beat out a hit Devore took third, Dev to second and Fletcher scored, was out stealing. ‘The Reds scored tn the first halt of the fifth, After Keefe was out Rescher racked a beauty for three bases and scored on Bate's long fly to left Hoblitzel was out on a grounder to Merkle. - GIANTS SEWED UP GAME FIFTH INNING. ‘The Giants practically sewed up the game in the last half of the fitth, w they scored 4 and gave the ne a round of as much excitement .as the IN Feet Bor AG rou oven haterds stove the oll flared in her face, dropped the can on the floor, and, Keeking 19 cfeane, upset a five gation can of ol! Watch exploted {nto flames Aad tiew Ler th. sugh a screen door, Leaplte her terrible Injuries, Mies Poland remained conselous until pla tinder morphine, S1e@ had deen Il fo some Months end vas jus \ health A FIFTH AVENUE CARAMELS || Aristocratic In taste and wholesome- ness-—except price. A high class tpecial of peculiar excellence, al a price which will appeal to your purse 40 POUND BOX Pry over Devore's head! Special for Thursday, the 17th|Special for Friday, the 18th isos, sox LOc MABE RAT, BOX 39c fon, indorsing the Bureau of Chemistry, found that “corn syrup" was an iMegal label on glucose. CONTRARY DECISION PUB. LISHED BY CABINET MEMBERS. ‘All the board joined in the deciaion, Dr. Wiley sald, “and the decision wai Japproved by the Secretary, This deot- | slon was sent to the printing office, was | set up and profs taken, but It was never sent out. ‘ater an exactly contrary decision |of the Cabinet vested with the jurie- | @iotion in such matters ae ® pure food | decision under the Food and Drugs act, “In the interval between the prepara- tion of our decision and the publication lof the ruling by t three secretaries |1 know that the Corn Products Com- | pany was very busy. “They tried to get certificates from chemi one of whom later became a |member of the Pure Food Referee a proper term for glucos sea x LOC Peeseae esta Jas? $4 BAR pach ot tm Greater York, whe, om Sept, 11, 1911. a6 the MARDI GRAS FESTIVAL AT CONEY ISLAND . 12 Neo, G, aa third, | fated Mitcheti got! r ! 7 Clarke's high Wiley, Chief of the Bureau of Chem- | |was published by the three members| Board,to show that "corn syrup” waa| Oftical Voting Coupon Lf 4 of the “Carnival of Flowersand Seng’ seceees.. for King , 2081, President, LA P. “py ‘the @ chemist informed me that he Red been offered money for such an opinion, but he refused it When 1 learned thie [ wrote to all the State chemists in the country who are charged with enforcing pure foot laws, and put it up to them to emy whether (his was a proper label “Every one answered In the ngativ and they Were not offered any money by me or any one.” ‘ITCHING ECZEMA ON BOTH HANDS Treated for Months but Grew Worse. | Came on Face. Physician Advised Cuticura Remedies, Began Im- roving after First Treatment, and wes Cure to Cuticura Remedies. 5 nd joint of my thumb on my it hand, Several blisters | Came which soon broke and water oozed from them. Then the tertible itching began, and the ec- rema came in blotches on both Nands, Sometimes the skin would seem to break, and gave the ap- arance of g cut, and lood came out of them It was very bad when I consulted @ physician. 1 was treated for several months, but grew worse all the time, “Then it came In my face. I suffered more | than I could describe from the itching and | burning. I became nearly & wreck physteaily. ‘Then I consulted another physician and was | treated by him for some time when he finally advised the Cutieira Remedies, 1 began improving aftcr the first treatment and was cured after taking the Resolvent end lucing the Cuticure Soap and Ointment | That wae fitteen years ago, and I have never | been troubled with it since, | “Lowe my cure to the Cuticura Remedies and would be thankful to impart any heir | to others, T have juct advised a lady friend who Is suffering with eczema on her face ‘and neck, to try the Cuticura Remedirs {Bho has been treated by &@ physician for ‘aome time without rellef.” (Siened) Mre .C, Warrtnet, Lincoln, Del., Dec. 16, 1910. Although Cuticura Soap and Cutteura re sold by druggists aud dealers 33-page booklet on the akin and hair, il! be sent, post-free, on application to Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Dept. 154, Boston, HAIRDRESSING ING MASSAGING , wicuRING HAIR WEAVING TAU BY | Special Reachers Unlimited Number of Lessons in Every Course WE AK! FR RKING BEMARK ALLY Ley DE ISUON ‘RATES pune RAR K NES, HAF ota Dall and ‘hie bad (paBOy CARD ay wal echtalogne and fa Carpine School 149-161 West ‘Near Broadway, POPULAR ONE-DAY OUTINGS Jergey) \(cntral Lake Hopatoong $1 No tiony Atiantlo Gity NEXT $250 SUNDAY 23rd Street 7. 50 a.m, erty Btreot #00 &. ‘us 'S LOTION cleave hair f erm Baie hiker iiegeman's, Steen pera, Mle ith bt, store, Abraham @ Streee’s, OrMmo. AGNEW.—On Au 2011, DERTHA A AGNEW, belo fe of Sam A, ‘Funeral on Frid A. M. Trom her late roaidencs . thence istopher ey Interment Calvary,