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g i j } . NILTARY HONORS AS MORAN’ BODY BORNEO SHP Throngs Watch Transfer of Financier’s Casket to La France’s Deck. i 3 A ii : #2 it il § 5 ! t “ ts ee e3s8 Hi E il | to be WOULD CLOSE ALL DANCE HALLS AT 1A. M. “The third bill fe an amendment of Section 1490 of the City Charter prescrib- ing hours during which public dance halls may be open. The amendment is that they must close at 1 A, M., and not open again before th® following noon, “No doubt it is necessary that people should be permitted to dance for amus sent: and health, and places should provided for the purpose and licensed | TROOPS AT GANGPLANK. Legion of Honor Salute Fired amd supervised by the authorities, But and the Bands Play Na- to allow them to be open all night 1s detrimental to health and morals, It tional Airs. seems strange that when this bill for) the licensing of dance halle was passed no hours were prescribed for them. HAVRE, April 4—With all the mili- tary honore due © Commander of the Lesion of Honor, the body of J. Pier- pont Morgan arrived here by train to- day from Paris and was immediately transferred to the #t->mship La France which in scheduled to sall to~morrow for New York. The Paris express arrived at Havre shortly after 6 o'clock, and as soon as Ponsible the fun car bearing Mor- fan's body and the private cars of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert L. Gatterles and their party, were switched to a belt line and placed alongside the France's quay an hour later. At 10.90 A. M, the casket Wwas trans- ferred from the car to the liner, being Placed in an especially prepared mor- tuary on “KE” deck, hung all in black velvet, with silver trimmings, A battalion of the One Hundred and Twenty-ninth French Infantry was drawn up at the grangplank, and as ten stout men carried the massive box con- the four caskets the “tango tead” to-day, when he iasued orders to Chief Wallace of the Bureau of Licenses to stop af atest and Broadway, and the Taverne Louis in the Flatiron Building, These three places are restaurants in which afternoon “tea dances” are held by virtue of permission granted by the Bureau of Licenses. None of the three is connected with @ hotel. The order to Chief Wallace directs him to see that no dancing is done in either place this afternoon or any other afternoon. ‘The Chef of the Bureau of TAcenses, on receipt of the Mayor's order, assigned inspectors to visit the places mentioned and tell the proprietors that the dances advertised for this afternoon must not take place. ‘The whote Tenderloin was ative with rumors of “something doing,” but the “agmething” was rather intangiti At George Rector's, where the time tango" has been a popular after- . commanders of the Legion was fired, and the massed military bands played Chapin's “Marche Funebre." The funeral march was followed by several Ameri- * riers bn Vo eaatge” ‘The'ceremony wae a most impressive one, More than 2,000 people crowded the quays to eee the transfer of Mor- gan’s body from train to ship, and as the casket went over the side and the bands played every head was uncovered, ‘The Morgan party was met by the Prefect of the Department of the Seine, in which Havre ia located, and M. Benoit represented the French Government. Gen. Caplomont: commanded the soldiers, and John Ball Osborne, the American Consul «at Havre, was on hand to render all possible assistance. Many mgmbers of the American colony from Waris, as well as American residents of Havre, ‘were at the quay. ‘The body was accompanied to Havre by the Batterlees, Miss Helen Morgan Hamilton, granddaughter of J. P. More gan; De, Dickinson and H. H. Harjes. MULRANEY TELLS JUDGE IN PRISON STORY OF MURDER (Continued from First Page.) * temporarily. We may start again, some time, but I don't know when. Just fay We've stopped. We haven't @ hotel livente, you know.” The jer of the Follies Bergere Restaurant @enied tea-time dancers had ever Canced in his place. “There's mo money in it, They'd only spend about 9 centso or @o for drifks, all the time they danced,” he eabt, dis. misving the subject as uninteresting to him. SEEKS TO STOP DANCING IN _ FALL DINING ROOMS. It fs the plan of the Mayor to forbid, ansolutely, dancing in any of these pub- Ne places after 1 o'clock in the morning. He Also plans to prohibit, absolutely, dancing in any room where liquor ts sold, This would bar all dining rooms, and it i# in the dining rooms of the hotels and restaurants that the dancing the Mayor dislikes has been going on. A equed sew to Police Headquarters, to Detective’ Barber for cor- tion of some statement. TALKED TO DETECTIVES AS ‘WELL AS JUDGE, Detectives Barber and it. Kier stood behind Judge Rosalsky’s ohair, ©0 that as he spoke Mulraney always was facing the steady gaze of the de- tectives, and it was to them as much ae to the Judge that the condemned man looked as he talked “You remember that,” the burst out now and then. “You can swear I'm telling the truth about that, can't you, Barber?” But the detective never responded, and after waiting an instant for @ reply, which he soon learned would never come, Mulraney plunged along with A double purpose may be served by the new equad. Beyond justification for the Mayor's bill it 19 hoped that it may do evidence to sustain complaints these cafes of the new order are ‘was reported to-day that « list of places having public dance has been given the Mayor, and ‘will revoke thelr licenses in a Ho faltered fre- quently and passed his hand over his eyes and forehead. Then he would look up at Judge Rosalsky as thopsh to as sure him that he was not trying to in- Vent @ story, but merély to recall true ta, and once he explained: for me to remember every- had @ hard time, I don't y. Mr, Shay prompted him, but it never took more than @ suggestion to recall to Mulraney's mind tne train of thought which he had lost for an ins stant, and he would go on again. He began his story with his release from Auburn Prison @ short time be- Dher 23 ets, Clactt, Peabody & Co., Ine, Makers of Arrow Shirts Wil, and told how he had come to this clty Intending, he confesse}, to take up forgery gor a living, He became quite engrossed in his explanation of tais, Rosalsky: watched with evi- No Excuse for ignorance eenetteath The Vations Bitten, THE WORLOS FAVORITE REFRESHMENT Or any one of the Other Important Subjects tm the s.s0b TEA SUSTAINS AND CHEERS oe aA eh Hanan ren peters mind 1s a blank from 10 o'clock the night before.” murder was committed. fore the murder of McBreen on Oct. 3,| 4% THE BV HALF MILLION SPENT IN LAST ILLNESS AND DEATH OF MORGAN. —Tie inst til- J. Plerpont i Morgan, aboard the steam in the harbor portation to lens than half a million dollars, according to estimates published in newspapers this afternoon. His sulte at the Grand Hotel, Rome, cont §0 per day, and his total hotel and the special train bill was nearly $100,009, Rumor has it that the three physicians who at- tended him, P: Bastianelll, Dr. Dickson and Starr, received $40,000 each. Nurses and attend- ants received liberal pay for ervices, and the mortuary the La France was fitted vish expenditure. pleces of paper into the shape of checks and showed how signatures were traced by forgers. He told ali about his acquaintance with John J. Dowling and Martin Fay, how they had planned a robbery the night before the murder and how he had been with them @rinking until about 10 o'clock. Then iquor got the better of him, “I don't remember another thing, Your Honor,” he said to Judge Rosal- sky, “until I awoke the next morning about 9 o'clock in bed at home. MY ‘This time covers that in which the a TRAILED FOR MONTHS. Woman Detective, Hid in Ad- N. J, ing Lakewood Woman, on Verge of Breakdown, joining Room, Heard Con- versation With Machine. William J. Laehan, trapped last night in Fort Lee, N. J., by detectives who had been following him like per- latent shadows for nearly two years, stood before Judge Andrew J. Searing in the Sheriff's Office at Toms River, thia afternoon and heard the harge against him of having mur- ‘The morning after the murder Dowl-| dered Mrs. Charles L, Turnér in Lake- home, eaid Mulraney, and it wae then fhe learned that Fay had committed the| religious confession to a priest sum: moned to hii murder, “Dowling said to m raney, night.’ ” declared Mul- ately, not, as he took pains to explain | hi to Judge Rosalsky, because he feared | Leehan lifted hie shouliers, as if drop- arrest, but merely because he hed no| ping @ heavy welght. money and had to have work, He went to New Haven and Springfield and| Church visited the accused man in his afterward to Albany, looking for «| cell and heard his confession. job as railroad brakeman and after-| the first time si ‘ome | Turner, on April here on Oct. & Five days later he was| had fulfilled thi It was in connection with|cant of the church, He ward returned to his mother’s arrested. his arrest that Mulraney appealed fre- | © quently to Barber. “They took me to the West Forty- seventh street police station,” said Mulraney, “and right away they gave me whiskey and morphine and two sréffe of coke. I was pretty full of dope when they took me into Capt. Day's room. Inspector Hughes put me through the third degree. He told me | County that Dowling hed confessed end that bapa now it was up to me. DENIES ABSOLUTELY THAT HE CONFESSED. I told him everything that I am tell-| Agency, ing you and Inspector Hughes said that| confidence of ‘the detectives could take it down as|ago and who was well as I could write it out. Go I told| his arrest «came the whole story about why I went|ealoon last night, is still posing as the best friend of the prisoner. apectur Hughes read to me what the| Leshan dose not yet know that he has away and what I did, and then In- Fay paid him « viet in his| wood on Apeil 20, 1911. “Fay plugged a guy last] eyes roved wildly about the little office room; his fingers Grummed a constant But Mulraney didn’t inquire further/ tattoo on the desk before which he into the matter and left home immedl-| stood. When Judge Searing announced but this the priest denied him until to-morrow. hearing the prieoner’s confession, clined to eive tim communion until to-morrow, coupled with Leehan’s ex- ‘The prisoner, who had just made hi WORLD, “PRIOR ET) APRIL, (9028: WITH TAG, GR TRAPS TURNER ~ MURDER SUSPEE ‘William Lechan, Held for Kill- MURDERED WOMAN | AND GIRL WHO AIDED | IN TRAILING SUSPECT. F ver. bec the at the ito tres cell upon his urgent r eet, was shaken and dishevelied. 1! 18 case would go over to Thursday Father Linane of St. Joseph's It was the murder of Mra. }, 1911, that Leehan office of @ communi- yed that ommunion be administered to him, ‘The fact that Father Linane, a Prosecutor Harry N. Newman jy to expect a full confession, jegal sense, from the man whom the detectives have been trailing for nearly two years, Detective Jamieson of the Schindler the man who gained the in the Fort Lee detectives had written. It seemed to| been betrayed by the detective, and ‘be just what I had seid, but before I/ several times to-day he called for was asked to sign it Dowling was| Jamieson to come to his cell and con- eult with him about ¢! “He came close to me and cailed| ation he found himeelf in. MRE. LEEHAN DECLARES HUS- brought in, me a Rasty name and I struck him. ‘Then I was taken back to my cell, and if I signed any paper at all I can't remember now, The only paper I knew about, however, was no con- desperate situ- BAND CAN PROVE ALIBI. ral admissions the prisoi h made since his arrest will be strong feasion, but a true story of what I had | evidence against him, it is said, if he te ma more} t done in the last fow days.” Back tn his cell Mulraney fails to confess and goes to trial on he murder charge. When a detective whiskey was given to him on Hughes’s| showed him a copy of a Yonkers news- shouted order to Detective Fitspatric:| paper which had been printed particu- “Give that fellow some more boose."” larly for the occasion and which con- Mulraney's declaration that he had| tained an account of the impending no recollestion of having signed a con-| arrest of Mrs, Turner's murderer, Lee- fession and no knowledge even of any|han suddenly wént white and became written paper other than his own a1 of his movements in the days foll introduced into the evidence, could be produced at the hearing. y| v' we | the murder, led judge Rotaleky to sua-|n pend the hearing until the confession, as| having done so. y ill, As soon as he recovered outed: “I didn’t mumer Mra. Tur- 1” before he had been accused of Later, while being transported to Toms River by euto, he told Detective QMulraney eaid he had never seen this| Bohannon, who was riding with him, confession either before or in the course | ¢ hat he did not even know Mre. Turner, of his trial. A telephoned order started |Nor did he know what she looked like. a wf@isenger trom the Criminal Conrts| When the detective sald “She was & Butiding to Ossining with the confes- sion, but he will not errive until late|1¥ corrected him ar brunette, was she not?’ Leshan instant. eaid the murdered this afternoon, and it is posstble that | woman was a dionde, Then he shrewdly Judwe Rosalsky may postpone the re-| asked if the detectives could prove any sumption of the hearing until to-mor-| motive for the crime charged against row. he WALL STREET a Plains, N. im. ‘Mrs. Leehan, in her home in White . first learned to-~day of er husband's arrest through an &0- count of it in The World, Almost penniless, bereft of all friends except the woman detective who, for months past, had sedulously cultivated her confidence that she might the better ‘Trading was extremely active at the opening of the market to-day, buying ordera coming from the dest of sources and carried etocks to « polmt higher than yesterday's closing. In the late afternoon more aggres- sive buying orders, thought to be for the foreign account, caused an advance and activity which continued to the closing. Awalg, Copper. ‘Am Tica Bia Aum. Faesetee + $ttel ttt votton comotir SESE SEE rs ao af Bees *t ie so5ee pao oo Ma BR. BS ah Col, Poel & Troe, Gonioh “Gia oto eee o wa H tele ttteseel tel tetete ttt ltt F FES the dark roads to Tom's River, day the man is in jail there on the HOPES | World thie morning,” Mrs. Leehan cried | T and my boy, Brad jout of our rap the husband, Mrs, Leehan screamed hysterically her belief in her husband's innocence and called upon her fourteen- year-old son, Bradley, to swear before God to facts upon which the charged man will attempt to bulld an alibi, Yesterday William J. Leehan, some- times known as Joseph Moriarity, set out ¢rom his home in White Plains to be a whiskey salesman, after having drunk all the samples entrusted to him. The “samples were as spurious as the Job; Doth were artifices of the detec- tives, twho last night arrested Leehan in Fort Lee, N. J., put him in an auto- ht of the shorift hed him over To- verge of collapse, due to alcohol and fright. TO PROVE ALIBI THROUGH SON'S TESTIMONY, “All I know about the charges against my husband is what I read in The as she paced the floor. “He left me at 8 o'clock yesterday morning to take his new Job aa a canvasser for whiskey and the next I heard of him was when 1 saw in the paper that he was charged with the murder of Mrs, Turner, “God knows he ts Innocent. wht during all the af noon Turner was = murder Bradley e called to the handsom boy, who was sitting on the edj almost the day Mrs. Turner was murdered,’ Chi to ~ 218" SorinDven: MISS 01 of April 7, two years ago—so drunk |6u and overbearing that his mother had told him to call the police station on the telephone and ask that the father be crrested. ly father heard me telephone,” said “and he left the house and neighbor's house alt the rest of the ternoon, afraid the police would come and get him. He was not out of our sight all afternoon, and until jeard the story about how Mra. Turner was murdered.” WOMAN WAS LONELY PATH. Mrs. Turner, the wife of one of the thi v’clock on the afternoon of April 26 to| sl LOWDUTYON SUGAR Measure Practically Agreed On A Committee report on the new Tariff vill, estimating like amount, to be derived this Incomes of %,000 to $20,000, 1 per cent Eight trated with al! ribed pt Leader employees on the estate of George| hour workout that Gould at Lakewood, left her home at 3) practice, ARIFF BILL CALLS OR FREE WUOL AND | Iso Taxes All Incomes From $4,000 and Over, WASHINGTON, April 4—With Presi- dent Wilson and Congressional leaders practically agreed upon free wool and @ y low duty on sugar, eventually to come free, the Ways and Means to-day began drawing its loms of revenue from the new rates $80,000,000 a year. The revenue from income tax will be estimated 0 to $60,000, 2 per cent.; $00,000 to $100,000, 3 per cent.; all over $100,000, 4 per cent, per cent. ‘The exemption will be on all incomes under 4,000. The inaome tax provision now stands this way and !s not expected Flat tax on corporations, 1 be changed. Among the numerous additions to the ¢ Niet will be steel rails, Cuts will be made all along the line on the metal achedule. Committee reviewed the bill today a sub-committee went into conference with After the Senate Finance airman Underwood of the Ways and Means Committee. When the conference ended it was announced that a complete agreement was hoped for, although there might be some delay on the bill. Committee will meet again Sunday prior The Finance a further conference with President Wilson. APRIL FASEION MAGASINE. section in colors, Illue- 1 the latest styles. De- y May Manton. Free with inday’s World. Extra supplement. Order from newedealer in advance. ad CHANCE’S HIGHLANDERS LOOK GOOD IN PRACTICE. and eat on the stoop of a/All Hands Snow Tiptop Condition in Three-Hour Polo Ground Workout. Frank Chance and Manager the Highlanders had their first practice on 10 Polo Grounds this afternoon. With MURDERED ON | president Farrell and a group of newa- men as rooters the Pi put his men through a three- included batting fielding, base running a: The work substantiated the iding. carry some shirtwaists she had mado|repofts from Bermuda recently that to the home of the woman who had|Chance, Wolter and Chase were fit to commissioned her to do the needlework. | pl: She did not return to her home, and/| toi when @ search was organized she was| With McConnell, Keating found lying through the pines’ known as Pine Needle | thi lay and that every player was in tip- P- condition. and Ford face down on a@ path| taking turns in the box, Chance drilled e regulars In two-hour batting. Later lane. Her head had been crushed by a| Chance played first, Chase went to sec- heavy pole, which lay near her. Leehan's house was about 30 yards | th eway from the place where Turner’s body had beén found, Superficial inquiry murder, served to blunt suspicion and the man moved away from with his famély shortly after the trag- edy. Sixteen months ago suspicion against him was renewed and Schindler detective agency set all of its force on the trail of the man. ‘DICTAGRAPH TRAPS MAN AC- CUSED OF MURDER. leased, his every move was followed | washington, Johnson and and operatives of the detective agenc; Wires various rooms he occupied in White Plains. Throughout the dic- tagraph operations, Miss Helen Schind- agency, maintained gupervision over | Gi the work of the little listener, pete FOUR-YEAR-OLD BOY DASHES TO DEATH UNDER AUTO. Walking along Newark avenue, Jer- wey City, to-day with his left hand clasped in the right hand of his seven- year-old alster, Angeline, four-year-old Alexander Fenski saw something across the street that aroused his curiosity, Wrenching from his eister’s grip the boy dashed for the opposite curb. A touring car owned by! George L. Hardford of Bloomfield, N. J., and driven by Gaylord E, Day, was running on the street. The boy dashed directly in front of the was knocked down, run over and instantly killed. Mr, Hardford jumped from the car and picked up the body. A threatening crowd gathered, but Policeman Shat who had seen the accident, said the chauffeur was not to blame, as the boy had Lterally thrown himself in front r. However, Day was lockod charge of manslaughter. into Leehan's|any of the youn, movements, made at the time of the/aching to burn thin; Fotlowi ond Derrick to short and Hartzell to ird and this combination worked for Mra, | 80 hour perfecting team play. Chance the meantime worked as hard as rs, who were just up. oft the field, the ‘the | Dodgers to-morrow. oo EXHIBITION GAMES. At Washington: Last August, the detectives located | Boston (Nat.) 0 0 0 ‘| their man; he was in jal in Newark for wife beating. When he was re-| Hatt.—Boston, oo0000 Washington... 30202000 Hess and Rariden. Anismith, Philadelphia (Am.). At Richmond ler, @ sister of the head of the detective | Richmond ante Beauty Proverbs uty th can ry woman ter of introduction.” VELOGEN “Beeuty's Guardian” the dewy, fragrant emollient, yr cleanses the pores, as ne oa . at comes from piexion By ‘a “let- ne improvem: tematio ut wena toes ] BATTER THAN COLD CREAM Beauty Doctor Tells Secret Detroit Beauty Doctor Gives Simple Recipe to Darken Gray Hair ap Promote Its Growth, Miss Alice Whitney, & well-known beauty doctor of Detroit, Mich., ree cently gave out the following state- | ment; “Anyone can prepare a sim-| ple mixture at home, at very little that will Apply to the hair twice a week until id de is chtained, This will make a gray haired person look twenty years younger. It is also fine to promote the growth of the hair, relieve itching and scalp diseases, ‘Then the boy tald, falteringly, father bad bees drunk on the af excellent for dand and \ falling bair,”—Advt, me oimmemmentee | J. P. MORGAN'S LAST TRIP FROM Alexandria to Naples ON THE ADRIATIC Story Full of Pathetic Incidents, By a Fellow-Passenger SOPHIE IRENE LOEB With Last Photographs of the Financier Taken on the Ship. IN SATURDAY’S EVENING RESINOL CURED‘), AWFUL ERUPTION, Her Face So Red and Itchy She Could Not Stand It. “I suffered awfully with skin trouble of the worst kind for about three months. My face was 90 red‘ and itchy that it impossible to stand it any longer. I wasn’t able to even rest at night, it used to get me so nervous that I wasn't able to speak to anybody. | lies in vain, until 1 of Resinol , 4 Women with Weak Ankles 4 or Falling Arch Should wear shoes that give firm, helpful support to the failing muscles, and hold them in correct position. The COWARD sirar SHOE With Coward Extension Heel observes the anatomical Jawa of footestructure. and is readily ade jasted to the heel and arch elevae tion required, without restricting the action of the foot mus-les. The remedial character of this, shoe is never inevidence. It may be worn without embarrassmemt, Coward Arch Support Shoe and Cowardfixtensioatioe! madeby James hie Custom Dept. for over 30 years, BROKERS MUST NOTIFY CLIENTS OF INTENT TO SELL STOCK COLLATERAL Court Decides That Even in Time of Panic They Must Hold Securities Until Released. ALBANY, April 4.—Where a customer cf @ stock broker has placed in the hands of the broker securities as col- lateral for stock held on margin, the stock broker cannot sell the curities without a reasonable notice to the cus- tomer of intention to sell, although at the time the market {s fluctuating at rapidity due to a panic. was held by the Court of Ap- to-day in the case of Ida Small inst Housman and Compay of New York. During the panic of 1907 the plaintiff had an account with the defendants. She was in Kurope at the time and her affairs were in the hands of an agent. The brokers notified the agent to pro- duce more margin and upon his failure to do so the brokers with but short notice and due to the panic condition of the market sold the collateral. In an opinion by Jud, Werner the Court of Appeals held that the case should have been submitted to the jury Upon the question whether the notice was sufficient. ee Fifth Race at Marlboro. FIFTH RACE.—Three-year-olds and upward; Purse $900; selling; four aud a half furlongs.—Neughty Rone, 109 (A. ews), 2 to 1, 4 to 5, and 2 to 3, 5 to 2, even and 1 to 2, second; Capt. > son, 111 (J. Dwyer), 8 to 1, 4 to 1 and 2 to 1, third, Time—87 1-6. Kerran, La 5a Jo, Spring Up and Black Silk also ran. CASES COUNTED INCURABLE ARE SOON RELIEVED Most of the Users of Tona Vita Are People Who Have Lost Faith in Medicine. STILL TONIC SUCCEEDS Mrs. Anna Lynott Feels Fifty Per Cent. Better Since Using Tona Vita. Most medical discoveries are tried out on cases that are suffering from only a mild form of the that the remedy is supposed to relieve. The statements published from users of Tona Vita who have been relieved from nervous debility are in nearly Nal case those of people who have tried every other remedy without success until they had almost deemed themselves incurable. This has put Tons Vita under an additional handi- cap, since the patient has been sceptical to start off with, Mrs, Anna F, Lynott of 830 W. 15th St., New York City, stated:— “For years I have suffered from that tired out feeling and while I slept soundly I did not feel rested when I arose. I saw Tona Vita advertised, and while I was rather sceptical as to its doing all that was claimed 1 thought I would try it. Now I am very glad I did so “because I feel fifty per cent. better after taking only one bottle. , My sleep is now much more refresh- ing I shall certainly continue taking this wonderful remedy, and will truth- fully recommend Tona Vita to all my friends.” Nervous debility, the ailment which Tona Vita is relieving with such great success, is indicated by any of the ledarina avaondicteee eh) eslait: Poor memory; tiring casi havin, no energy or vim; pains the baci and that general run-down condition. Tona Vita can be obtsined st any of the first-class drug stores in New York City.—Advt. 2 SOLD NOWHERE LSB JAMES S. COWARD 264-274 Greenwich St., N. £, (UmRan WARBAM STRAST) Malt Orders Hilled | Send tor Letalegue Oculists’ Opticians Hal a Century in Bunn’ The Ehrlich eyeé»* service assures this: Each case is carefully considered. Each eye is scientifically ex- amined. Each patient gets >: theearnest interest of” aregistered physician just if a profes- sional feewascharged. Eyes Examined Without Charge by Registered Eye Physici Perfect Fitting Glasses, $2.50 to $ 217 Broadway, Astor House 1 223 Sixth Ave., 15th St. 350 Sixth Ave., 22d St, 101 Nassau, Ann St. 17 West 42d—New York 498 Fulton St., Cor. Bond Si So OPPORTUNITIES. IT; QUICK SALE, le ‘ot etcertiondl merit.” Snail ¢ i ati, Gall Recas 410, 100 rani April Fashion Magazine. Special 8-page insert. Illustrated in colors. Spring Fashions edited by May Manton, Free with next Sun- day's World. Order from newa- dealer in advance. World Wants Work Wonders. FALSE ECONOMY ve @ little om confections carelcesnete might preve than lew York to vam Special for Friday, April special for Saturday, April Sth. ASSORTED NUT BLOSSOMS/CHOCOLATE COVERED ICE ¢ arate st Oe] Ses, ND 'BOX. quality. SPECIAL FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY CHOCOLATE COVERED PEANUT|CHOCOLATE MOLASSES BUT. “RUSK” — cere, 1s WONDER- CRIS: FU 1, tastefulness tat a ot a ite new. pounp pox _ Ae ic elsewhere. 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