The evening world. Newspaper, January 25, 1913, Page 3

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~ RUMORS OF PEACE. Ty INGARMENT STRIKE: Outburst of Disorder Under Windows of Rich Residents at Washington Square. FOUR WOME Announcement Made That 138 Independent Manufacturers Signed Peace Agreement. ARRES Peace rumors were numerous to-day fa the district frequented shirt waiet, white goods ment workers strikers. them was outburst under the win by the and gar- of disord Washington Square. Anna Perleatiro of No. 179 Madison street, Emily Lhe- vine of No, 2% Rose street, Angelia Stuppalo of No. 46 Mo: Fannte Fournberg of No. atreet, alieged, walted behind 11 Forsyth way to shops off Fifth avenue. Rafacla Spino of No. 1 Macdougall street refused to turn back when they | apreng out at her. ‘They are accused | of throwing her down, pulling her hair, her and tearing a wide J out of her skirt before Policem: Boeiger and Abelson, reinforced by the reserves of the Mercer street station, rescued her. The four strikers wero arrested and taken to Jefferson Market Court. The shirtwaist workers announced to- @uy that the 188 independent manufac- cerere who had refused to sign the tem- porary agreement between the union wow signified their willingness to join in arbitration, The activity of the strikers im this branch of the olothing tr ie practically closed, for the present any rate. PARADE OF GIRLS SCHEDULED FOR MONDAY 16 ABANOONED. 4 im Resenberg, leader of the White goode workers, said that his ‘auton had cancetied all its plans for a monster parade of girl workers Mon- Coumniestoner Waldo had signi- bts rey pad to tmeue a permit, hed e@vieed Mr. Rosenderg of the reaidents of Fifth Sled objections to jJabor Che ground that they cre- G@leorder and caused congestion of gees i i] jevertheless, Mr. Waldo sald, White goods workers, in their or- gantved demonstrations, had been or- @nd were entitled to use the wtroete Sf they felt dnctined to insist on it. ‘The strikers sald they had been 7 img thousands of girls through the atreets, and gave up the !d Mies Gertrude & college woman who has recently become grand marshal of the white goods strikers, arranged to-day for a demonstration toemerrow in Union Square to appeal t ied sympathies of churchgoer The will be girls from the factory pr Held, at Sixth avenue and Twentieth strect, where, acconing to Miss Corliss, hired thugs have fre quently attacked strike pickets, —_———— Ms AUTO’S FASCINATION LURED MISS BOPEEP | FROM HOME. So Thinks “Her | Mistress, Who Wants Auto Owners to See If Her Poodle Is in Their Cars. “Bopeop,” said Mrs. Thomas J. Vivian over the telephone to-day, “simply adores motoring. 1 wish The Evening World would ask automobile owners to look In their tonneauy—Bopcep has suih a delicipusly foolish habit of crawling under a rug—and see !f they can‘t find r for us." Bopeep, who hasn't a thing in the world to do with the sheep industry, but ls a French poodie, missed the motor yesterday when Mrs. George E. Gordon, his inistress, started to take a constitutional with her down Fifth ave- pue from her home a 0. 17 East Nine- tysfifth atreet. Mrs, Gordon is Mra, Vivian's deughter. The machine was to pick up Mrs. Gordon at Thirty- fourth street, but Bopeep, of course, had no way of knowing thi second street d, sing aus her pas ec the best of her, She had been home alone in the Gordon motor and teft at the door of the house. Instead of entering, she chased the machine, and it was a day before she came bark ——e-- I$ HELEN GOULD SHEPARD. ‘Thus Will the Bride Sign Her Nniae —Con m Auto Aide, Mre. Finley J. Shepard will In future sign her name Helen Gould Shepard, ‘This fact became known yesterday. Mr, and Mrs, Shepard spen: the day at Lyndhurst, Mra, Soepard's country home near Tarrytown, They went for an auto ride fn the afternoon, but the roads were so heavy that they were gone only about an hour, While on the trip Mr, Shepard stopped at @ cigar store in Tarrytown and ordered $35 worth of cigars sent to Lyndhurst, Detectives will remain on guard at Lyndhura: uuti! My, and Mra. Shepard go abroad GHARL EST steamer Quilt line, w Outlook on Weduescas diay und by (ne revenue cutter Androscoggin. In‘the midst of lows of the homes of the Wealthy who live on the north side of street and! striking garment workers, it !s/ the statue of Gartbaidi in the middie of the square to; Intercept non-union workers ‘on their ‘and the manufacturers’ association had | THE EVENING WORLD, 9 an ee i tog of a Series. 4 | | SOME MEN ARG OLD AT 25 ‘ALFONSO WILL VISIT THE UNITED STATES IF Finds There Is No Animosity Toward Spain in This Country. LONDON, Jan. %.—King Alfonso of @pain t» likely to pay @ visit to the United States some time this coming | summer, The Spanish Government is now con- sidering a proposal which emanated trom the King himsetf, who has long de- sired to visit America. He has several times made similar proposals which have deen rejected by the Government under the mistaken notion that the animos- itles created by the war between Spain and the United States are still warm, but since last year King Alfonso has been combatting this idea end has been reinforced in his opinion by the pers ne! MINISTERS CONSENT Coprright, 1918, ty The Press Publishing Co, (The Now York World), GIRL BA ATTACKED, Some Men Are Old at the Age of 25, OHNO! m™ Too O10 TO TRY ALL THESE NEW ' FANGLEO THINGS’ — COME On AND TRY “Very Early Marriage Is a Serious Evil,” “Joseph W.”—“We See Boys and Girls at the Head of Families to Love Begins the Opinion What is the ideal age to marry? Though Prof. Sharpe of Boston h: Who Lack Discretion to Direct Themselves,” He Adds. to Die Out,’ Is of “J. S.” BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. jas fixed twenty-five as the golden age of matrimony, the readers of The Evening World indicate by their letters a preference for greater maturity and a lesa definite limit, “Anywhere from twenty-five to forty,” is one version of the ideal age for assuming the marriage yoke. This wide parenthesis of years takes in men and women, though the writer adds, truthfully enough: “Some men are older in every way at twenty-five than others are at forty, and so of, the women, some are young at any age and others are always fearfully and wonderfully old maid.” This interesting writer then pro ceeds to set forth certain rules for matrimony, one of which, ff followed, would be sure to add to the number of the old maids he deplores, this: “No woman should marry a man who fs not a intellectually. ‘We may assume therefore that from experience of Capt. Vicens, the Spanish! this point of view the ideal age fcr a woman to marry is that at which Attache at Londgn, and another Spanish oMcer who visited the United States last summet When Alfonso was in England in Aug- ust he sent for Capt. Vicens and ques- tioned him about his trip to the United Btates. ‘The Spanish King insisted upon get- ting from the Attache every minute de- tall in regard to the United States. He was particularly anxious to find out whether any ill feeling remained in America over the Spanish-American war. Capt. Vicens assuged him that there was not the slightest animosity. On the contrary, he found everywhere feelings of the utmost cordiality, King Alfonso sighed and said: “How fortunate you are to be a simple officer and not @ Kin You have visited a country that I am most anxious to see. It has been my wish for years, but the Government will not permit me to do it, thinking that perhapa there is still some Ill feeling over the war. But your ac- count agrees with my own opinion, and what you have told me of the wonders of the country simply adds zest to my desire to visit it.” Since then King Alfonso has been peg- ging away at his ministers to allow him to make the trip. During the last three or four days the matter has been taken into serious consideration, but no decl- sion has yet been reached. The young Kmg would like to go to the United States eany in the summer when the Spanish Parliament is not in session, —__ > NEW AIR SPEED RECORD. MILAN, Jan, %--The aviator Slavo- 1orsoff yesterday broke the world's speed record by flying with a passenger 200 kilometers in th., 56m, and %0s., and 200 Kilometers in 2hs, 2 and | We. bind es |Don’t Miss One of These In Sunday World To-Morrow. Coupon good for three famous pic- tures, printed in colors ot ty paper, all ready for framing A 16: e Joke Book oes from jJesta, funny p humorous ekite, cover to cover with lures, riddles, pura! x 34-page Magazine, presenting more thas wore of interesting articles, stetkinly illustrated—16 pages in cole Mpends Her Afternvons what she do &e ‘Teil your newa: Jax. ou a copy of the Sunday | morrow. envy qual: | to suve | orld tor she encounters the first man who is sign shall she know him Granted there are women—as ‘there are likewise men—who could mot round « street corner without encountoring some being of greater mental endowment. But given & Girl of fair intelligence and oulti- vation, must she really languish unwed <1 some magico mome! Fevesig to her a supernal being defore whom heart and soul and mind bow down, saying with one accord, “Mail! Master’? The American woman has never been accused of a lack of appreciation of her own qualities. Perhaps she might have to wait a long time before meeting what she considered her “intellectual superior.” And the age of marriage would grow later even than It is now. WHAT A BRAIN MAP MIGHT DE- VELOP. Seriously, this question of menial su- periority is a very difficult ona to settle Decause of the unevenness with which brains are developed. be made Indicating by line the actual brain development of the most gifted man or woian, It would snow the sharp rise and fall of a fever chaft. Here, perhaps, there would be a high peak indicating artistic achievement, there a declivity showing the total ab- sence of the scientific or mainematical | mind, Another brain map would show high development of the Inventive fac- | ulty and a vacuum where appreciation of art or music or poetry should be. S80, too, a chart could be made of the composite masculine mind, and an- | other of the composite feminine mind, ‘at would be very diMoult to institute a fair compaiison, | Certainly the masculine chert would show eral intellectual Mount MoKinleys as yst unscaled by feminine genius, but it is only recently that feminine genius has | Been encouraged to climb at all. | Mothing is gained for women by the many petticoated Dr. Cooks who go about claiming records on "Words and music of “In #unny| which they can’t make good. Spain” 9 late Sam Hernard song hit: || The whole point in the difference of Fea ae ee ean de” | the mental records of men and women by," by Steintxans; “Buddy,” by Gene! {s that man has always been encouraged Carr; » the most of Dis intellect, and ° 0 | to make the 1 | find’ Vitae ripe or the “Moctolémical | woman until the last fifty years could | Surve: 1 ey A ay Ng Yorerce! N,, 13 | only cultivate ideas at the certain ex- Eventful Night in New York, by Police A a th Chief Kohler of “Cleveland: ' Where pense of her Heppiness en (nent peril of her bread and butt fore proceeding to the letter of the man who tells women not to marry til! they bave found their intellectus superiors, ‘ her “intellectual superior.” By what I want to urge upon him that he Is Placing a premium on feminine inferl- ority, and that the race needs all the Drains it can get, whether contributed | by fathers or mothers. Perhaps the point at which full men- | tal development 1s attained may have something to do with the idea! age at which to marry. But if a woman must choose only her superior as a husband, Why should she be mentally develope or why even educated? Rorant, the more deficient she remains in every way, the more superiors, con- Bequently the more possible ideal hus- bands she would be sure to have. ‘The views of Evening World readers follow: TWENTY TOO YOUNG FOR A MAN TO MARRY. Dear Madam: Some men are older, every way, at twenty-five than oth- ers at forty, and so of the women; some are young at any age, and others are always fearfully and wonderfully old maid. Twenty for a man !s certainly too young, for he is still an Infant in the eyes of the ‘aw. Not pretending to be dogmatic, but merely as an expression of per- opinion, I should say: First, @ man should be older than his wife, but not old enough to be her father, Second, he should be old enough to ern a fair salary, but not so old that the ability to love begins to die out, and this secoad condition ap- plies equally to the woman, ‘Third, do not marry for any other reason than love; matrimony should never be & matter o’ money. Fourth, no woman should marry a man who !s not a little her superior intellectu- ily, because it breds bossism and contempt, notwithstanding your late question seems to show that “there | @re no sich person." These rules are mainly based on personal perlence and have no philosophical value. I was twenty-six and my wife was twenty-three when I mar- rled. She was educated and brought up in a convent, which was an ad- | vantage In many respects. I myself was ® Protestant, but It never made | any difference, for I held then, and still hold, that every religion ts only a working lypothosis, and is true only so far as tt works, In fact, £ was an unconscious Pragmatist be- | fore ¢ word was invented, 1 do not believe in long engagements, and ming was lets than a year, [ j made one mistake at the start: I forgot to settle the matter of ex- penditures, but we had a little talk, and tiny wife reelf fixed what was absolutely necessary for household | expenses, clothing tor herself, &e., | consistent with my income, and to Uttle her superior The more ig- | Writes “A Man Should Be Old Enough to Earn a Fair “335 ARG TOO Salary, but Not So Old That the Ability It is} Too YOUNG AT 40 this I added quite a little , margin for pin money, and that matter was settled once for all. If there was & surplus it was banked under both names, This experiment worked sat- \sfactorily for elghteen years, until amy wife died. As for the foolish young won who want a husband with $10,000 a year, I should say that they are making @ very exaggerated estimate of the value of their charms. They should at least give an itemized list of what they have to offer for sale. Personally 1 should never care to marry a woman who offered heracif at a fixed price, not even if sho offered to furnish the $10,000 also, J. 8. VERY A SERIOUS EVIL. Dear Madam: It is impossible to fix the {deal age for marriag cauge there {s 80 great a di in the growth of individu being more develope t eighteen or twenty than othdes at twenty- five, Very early; marriage ts, in my opinion, a serious evil, Acting under the impulse of headstrong passions, or caprice, or dissatisfaction, young Persons too often prematurely ru thoughtiessly and blindly, into en- wagements which, In after Ife, be- come matters of deep and painful regret. The fairy visions of love's Paradise now vanish; and the sober realities of Ife, its cares, tts dim- culties, and its posttive evils soon lead to discontent, heartless repin- ings and, worse than all, to a grow- ing mutual indifference, We see boys and girls at the head of families who lack discretion to direct them- selves, No wonder that familtes are {11 governed, children {Il-man- aged, and their affairs 111-directed, when the helm is intrusted to un- skilful and tnexportenced hands. Ta {t possible that wives of sixteen or eighteen years of age should possess that discretion, prudence and wisdom so essential to enable them to govern households, rear children, and form their tempers, and thelr principles? On the con- trary, I believe that such marriages xeldom realize the anticlpations which are formed of them. The time for marriage depends upon circum- stances and condition, When men d women are in the full vigor of thelr energies, yet have mode acquaintance with the world—that 1s the {deal age for marriage. JOSEPH w, VIEWS REGARDING MEN DIFFERENT AGES. Dear Ma@am:, Persona differ trom each other in respect to marriage Tv as in mort others, There undoudt- edly! are persons who should never marry at all, In my own case the men who looked good to ma us matrimonial possibilities In my \eeni I regarded as matrimonial timpor bilities In my early twenties. Like: wise when J ponder upon the man I did marry at twenty-three I wonder if I was not suffering from temporary insanity, Now at twenty-five L have hopes that I am begiuning to cut my wis- dom teeth, One of the greatest ca\ses of matrimontal mistakes is the fact that most of us expect the magic words of the marriage cero- mony to work suc wondrous changes. Thus the human bear will cease to growl, The born sport will be transformed into @ fireside com- panion, He who looks too linger- {ingly upon the wine when it ts red will take the pledge-and keep !t, etc., etc, We expect marriage to change the one we marry and to change us, but It doesn’t, as @ rule. I know of one splendid man who made a most preposterous misa! lance at thirty @nd @ second moat really happy marriage at forty. On the other band I know of a young man not yet twenty-one who would make some an ellent hus | band _BL UR GRABS wipow, | Red Cross > Cough Drops. | Lattio Sweetumeats, &. Sou etfecure, EARLY MARRIAGES ARE ene aia tinea ee SATURDAY, JANUARY 25, 1913. What Is the Ideal Age to Marry? TRIPLE RAKE-OFF FOR MORGAN IN SUBMAY PLAN While Others Are e 1oo Young At 40 sitions in Bond Dea Only a “Starter” for Banker's Profits, TAKES SHARE OF ALL. Digging Contractor Must Di- vide With “Backer” and “Sup- ply Man”—That’s Morgan. J. P. Morgan & Co.'s second tig rake- Off in the construction of the city’s new eubways te financing the subway con- tractors, which profit has been esti- mated at upwards of $25,000,000 constd- ered by iteeif. This particular branch of the financing hme already been aa signed to Harry P. Davigon, the clever young member of the firm who not « Great while geo financed the contract- | Ing family of Bradleys, variously known fn the world of flying dirt as “Willlam Brad! “Bradley Contracting Com- pany” and the “Dradley-Gaffney-Steers Company.” streets only begins to make money from the vate purchase of $170,000,000 of 6 per cent. able at 110. This might be considered and the Board of Estimate. ‘Then there ts the third great harvest of indirect profit accruing to J. Plerpont Morgan & Co. from the vast quantities of cement and steel used in the con- struction of the underground tubes, and the steel bought for rails and trains. No contractor will be able to buy etesl and cement whose credit ts not satisfactory to the United States Stee! Corporation and its cement subsidiaries, It loka Uke a Morgan job, these new subways, from sub-cellar to roof. CONTRACTOR MUST HAVE CON- FIDENCE OF MORGAN. In conatering the amount of gain J. P. Morman & Co, will draw down through {ta chain of local trust com- Danler, state and national banks fron financing the aubway contractors there must first be considered the amount of money that goes into tne actual con- struction of the new @ubways. Accord. ing to the last abridged edition of the MoAneny report bearing date of May 2, 1912, which heathen doubters are told to look upon as Holy Writ, the eati- mated cost of the construction of the new subways la $42,868,200, or a quarter of a billion dollars, This figure does not Include $7,000,000, which ta the estt- mated cost of equipment. To get into speaking acquaintance with thin 242,858,200, of which §152,853,200 ie lodged in the city’s strong box, and ($90,000,000, being a portion of the rem- nants in the coffers of the two traation companies after J. P, Morgan & Co. has subtracted its banking profit previously referred to, the subway contractors have to be financed while they are carry- ing the load of cost of labor and mater- fal, Wisdom business would counsel these contrac tors to find a financial harbor where young Mr. Davison or one of his aaso- ‘The banking houre et Broad and Wall qubways with the $28,060,000 clean-up in banking profits from the pri- Imerborough bonda, backed by the city’s credit, at the exceedingly low price of $31.2, which same bonds will be redeem: thie losses. Tt te freely etated &re mere dummies covering agreements with bankers. For instance, John B. MeDonald, who built the prerent subway, bite financed by August Belmont, the we emueT BE ABLE TO REACH MILLIONS. Subway contractors either must buy jal. rent See tone wagons, trucks, tools, matic power and machinery before they can begin work. Then they must provide money for their payrolls, bond, supplies of coal and other materiais such es lumber for beams, derricks and barges to carry off the dirt and rovk excavate’. If they cannot make ar- rangements for power with an electric own, are required to make @ deposit on atee! ‘and cemtnt supplies unless they are known to the persons dealing in those commodities, and if they are not known the ates! and coment interests can make the terme quite hard. It will be aeen that financing the con- tractors 1s a most important part of the subway outlook for the bank Just now the most active and energetic subway digging contractors tn the city are the Bradieye. Here are the con- tracts they have: POURTH AVENUE, hebben IM 624. 10 DIDN'T ASK FOR CHANGE IN THE BIDS. The Bradleys were exceedingly for- tunate in their bids for vontracts in the Broadway-Lexington section. Their original figures were for the construc. | tlon of a subway 16 feet high. Naturally tor shoring Then the material upon that basis. Pubile Service Commission reduced the heights of the subway to 13.3 feet. New | bids could have been demanded, but there was such @ pressure ores the Commission the foundation for the pyramid of prof- |? ite to follow if the big grab goes through the Public Service Commiasion | of the ed financed but does as great bankiny the All of Morgan way made pu in the ways of modern | clates is Collector of the Port, as auch a | connection would carry with It, provided | such @ connection could be made, the necessary credit to obtain the very ma- tert which enter so largely into the building of eubways—stee! and cement. Mt will be recalled that J. Pienpont Morgan er. testified before the Gon- greastonal Committee investigating the Money Trust: “Z have known & man to come iato my office and I have given him @ check for @ million dollars ‘when I knew he had not a cent in the world. The first thing to con- sider im commercial credite is character and then money or prop- erty. A man I Go not trust could mot get money from me on all the bonds i= Christendom.” HOW BANKERS FINANCE 8UCH BIG CONTRACTS, An Evening World reporter seeking bedrock information as to how contrac- tors are financed by private bankers to- day Viskted one of the latter and frankly put the question, “Before any contractor can embark upon his contract he must see 4 clear financial rom out to the turning of the last spadeful of dirt," was the reply “We money lenders remove the obstruc- tlon and do so by two methods, One method is to make @ straightout loan and take a mortgage from phe contract or demand giit-edge security covering the accommodation. The other method Js to enter {nto financial arrangementts | with the contractor whereby the very contract itself 1s hypothecated as secur- ity for the loan. ‘This latter course of financing includes | the formation of a corporation, usually around the name of @ contractor or & group of contractors. Shares of stock in this corporation are taken outright by ¢he money lender aa a bonus, ant the shares of the contractor are put uD as seourity for the amount of actual cash needed to swing the actual work, ‘The amounts to sharing with the con- tractor im his profite, and he cannot complain for he is getting all the funds | neoded at an exceedingly liberal rate of intereat™ DY be | In a nutshell, the contractor can get the money he needa tf he will split nis profits with the bunker, ‘This 's good bustneas, But the banker will see to it that the contractor is going to come out ahead, If his bid is @ poor one froin the standpoint of profit, he hae no op- tion in the matter, He must put up se: curtty for the working capita! needed end there are no bankers clamoring to |i (Ain't ‘Twas rushed—at | old bids were allowed to stand upon Comptroller allowing for the were upon the unit price. leys have bonds filed with the olty g- gregting $2,000,000, Another powerful contracting concern fs the Degnon Contracting Mocw ger dl Wall streets. financtal luminary directorate of the contractl contractors co! f “promotion profits,” eel of the Pujo committee says ought to be made public under law, but Jacob H. Schiff of Kuhn, Loeb & Co., whose firm will handle the B. R. T. output of bonds, says should not be Adventure 2 1 was feeling very lonesome and a-wonder- that the size of the tubes, as the bids The Brad- by the people at Broad ‘t le capitalized at 960,000, & business many, many times in volume, Myron i. Herric! circle, who served as « trustee re-Morganised Knickerbocker ‘Trust Company and ts now Ambassador to France, je one of the directors of idom that the hand ot feen 80 openly In the these estimated profits to @ Co. from financing eagee4 hich bile Lecause *E hav Twenty times You will say-"Good ing what to do — 't it awful when the sun don't shine and everything seems blue?) — then fe thought occurred to me that if I had some pet-— A dp 5 05 or. parrot my troubles This Cave it in mind, | ordered a “Pet fanted”’ World Want Ad, The answers came by dozens and before sunset | had A parrot, dog, some goldfish and a purr- ing little cat— \t Goth rang ttly Mid usta a! Use a “Dogs and Birds’’ te in Sunday World To-Morrow STEAMSHIP ATS20A President of Insular Says He Knows Nothing of Concem and Holds No Stock, ACTS JUST TO “OBLIGE” “Ship Trust” Committee Has Been Told Company Is in the “Coastwise Combine.” WASHINGTON, Jan, %,—H. H. Harvi- son, President of the Insular Line, op- erating between New York and Porte Rico, said by other witnesses to be one Of the steamship companies in the coast- wise “combine,” to-day told the House Shipping Trust Committee that he had no financial interest in the company, knew nothing about its management end drew only a nominal salary. Harrison said he became president, at ® nominal salary of $0 @ month, be- cause a friend, F, Kingsburg Curtis, im- vited him. The witness said he owned none of the stock, knew nothing about its busl- ness and did not know where it oper- ated or was incorporated, Mr, Curtis, auditor of the line, sata Harrison's presidential ignorance was excusable, as the company acts merely @@ @ chartéring concern and shippers’ He eaid it leased steamers and ineular line ts @ member oj ral American coastwise ‘ship trust,” operating with the Mallery, Clyde and Porto Rico lines. oo DOCTOR CAN SPEED AUTO IF ON EMERGENCY CALL. Magistrate Refuses to Fine Ply- sician Who Proves He Was Hurry- ing to Bedside of Patient. ‘When the case is urgent a physician cam send his automobile at top epecd through the streets and Magistrate Butts wilt not punish him for it if he fe arrested and happens to be brought into his court. The Magistrate said 90 himself to-day. Then he discharged Dr. Joachim Prennglass of No. 2 West One Hundred and Twentieth street, who was | accused of having crossed the busy cor- ner at Third avenue and One Hundred and Forty-ninth street at @ apeed esti- mated at twenty two and « half miles an hour, Bicycle Patrolman Haggerty served @ summons on Dr. Prennglass and sald in the Morrisania Court that the doctor had not told him the case on which he had been called was an urgent one Dr. Prenngiass told Magistrate Butts that he had considered it urgent end pleaded guiky to the speeding charge But the Court refused to hold @im You make sure of pure;| good topacge when smoke Fatima— Mid, "Turkish - blend igarettes. Moresold by any other in this country. “Distinctively Individual”,

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