The evening world. Newspaper, April 14, 1913, Page 2

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‘McClellan, succeeding Alfred J. Talley, a law partner of former Cor- poration Counse) Delaney, who resigned @t the Mayor's request. Mr. Polk e001 became known as the watchdog of.t! Civil service because of his disciplinary methods in oversesing’ efaminations, and he served tm the commission until ‘the expiration of Mr. MeCiellag’s term, tendering his resignation Dec. 31, 19 One of Mayor McClellan's last acts in fice was to accept this resignation and immediately eppdint Mr. Polk to ef which he treasurer and director. He also ts in- terested tm several charities, principal i in time to act Wedding. Or, Polk FROM OVERWORK ON TARIFF BILL Congressman, in Danger of a Break Down, Is Ordered to Bed by His Doctor. WASHINGTON, April 14—Congress- man Underwood, chairman of the House Waye and Menns Committee, was or- ered to bed to-day by hie physicians, ‘whe declared he had a slight fever ané ‘wee in danger of a breakdown from hard work on the Tarif bill. He may be copfineé for several days. kage e8 however, 414 not interfere House tariff caucus to-day, Piso e work on. Chairman Underwood's friends were of the “ppeyee Democrats standing be- hing administration tariff bill, was considered of such importance that tt could not be dismiosed lightly. Representative Francie Bur- ten Harrigon of New York, one of Mr. @ eligibility of the Japanese raligation. So far all decisions on mostly in ‘we ern courts, . id that the Japanese were not eligfthe because no such white person or yas of African descent as are meationed in naturalization lawe as be- fing alone eligible to aémiasion senghip. The issue has never been test- ed before the Supreme Court of tho United @tates in @ direct form. ee eS ageneneee AOW.OVER HEARST LETTER. Democrats Object iting Crit- i fotem of Wilson: ‘WASHINGTON, April 14-—<Represen- _ tative. Willis, Republican, to-day asked the House to print in the Congressional Record a published er by Wiliam BR. Hearst condemning President Wii- son's personal appearance before Co' sgreas in joint session on April § to read hile address. Several Democrats sprang to their feet and objected and the better founced Republican Leader Mann, sha’ ing a forefinger at the Democratic side ‘The harbor police were sent to drag the river at the foot of Kast Thirty-fret @reet this afternoon after W. C, Galt of No, 326 West Fifty-elghth etrest, had told Patrolman Kiernan of the East ‘Thirty-Afth street station he had seen an aged man hisaatid ta the water at that WILSON {$ FIRM AGAINST CHANGES | IN TARIFF BILL); Listens to cians of Sugar, o Cotton and ‘Wool Interests, but That Is All. SURE OF HIS POLICY. Protection and. Privilege Must} ¢ Give Way—Steady Cut in High Cost of Living. BY S. M. Lda htt ok 2S Bolt ning World) WASHINGTON, April 14.—Ambassa- Gore of the three great Sahl toni sugar, cotton and wool—appet the President of the United gary to- | aay and used all the of diplomacy to induce him to change the echedules Of the pending tariff bill that strip these commercial powera of thelr privilexe and protection. They found President Wilaon polite, attentive, but ‘The Evening World is able to outline on highest authority the attitude of the Administration on this absorbing subject. The Tariff bill has been before the country just one week to-day. From re- ports received the President believe the bill meets with the approval of thi a8 possible despite the protests of spece fal Interests that may be affected. PREE COMPETITION WILL BRING MORE PRO! RITY. of free and open competition pected to follow will produce 4 more widenpread prosperity than the country has enjoyed hereto- fore. No legitimate induatry has any rea- fon tocry out againet the tariff reduc- tons. But industries that have grown under the shelter of apecial protec- ten must readjust themsciven to the Rew conditions. ‘Tne President ts not alarmed over Predictions of business depression and halting of trade and manufacture. Some factories may close more for effect than from necessity, but they will soon be foreed to start again to meet the do- poet competition. ident reiterated to-day . warning which he has uttered frequently before in his epeeches. Reduction of the tarift will not bring ‘an immediate reduction in the cost of living. anticipations built expect that the day the tariff bi comes a law there will be radical cuts in market prices of specific commod!- thes. READJUSTMENT WILL STEADILY ‘The readjustment to lower levels ot} cost will come gradually, spreading slowly but steadily through the main arteries of trade, There will be one exception. Reduction in thi sugar are expected immodia' the low juties become effective. Confident that the great mase of the public is in favor of bresking down the highest parts of the protective tariff barrier, the Administration in tends to press forcibly on te enact the pending bill into law. ‘There may Be some slight changes in eohedules, whe: threugh misapprehension, but main the rates of duty as now set forth are to de carried through. —.———_ “THE LORT MILLION" io the latest and bes Ce Serta «aon Tt te ful of pL Del ENGLISH ACTOR RAN AWAY FROM HIS LONDON PLAY. Friend Was Going to Sail, So Maude Went From Dressing Room to Ship. Victor Maude, an Kngtish actor of Irish deacent, a eon of Admiral Maude of the English navy and « grandson on the qmother's side of Jenny Lind, the famous singer, was an arrival to-day on the Atlantic Transport liner Minneapolis from Gouthampton. On the day the steamer sailed Mr, Maude played at 4 matinee in the Alhambra Theatre in “The Face in the Window,” a little sketch of his own, When he returned to his dressing room he found there an old Crtend, Capt. Charies A. R. Bertun, Both were “delighted” at the meeting. But the captain wae in a bit of @ hurry, and the actor washed off his makeup and hurried with his friend to the White Club. He didn't wait to ehany nis attire, In the middle of a sea yarn Capt. Bertun recalied that he wae sall- ing that afternoon for America, suggested that Mr. Maude go with him, Why not? ¥ why mot? And the actor thought #0, too, and flipped a eoversign to Gecide whether he should sal. America won. He had time to telephone to his understudy ¢o take his place; and therf there was a rush for the train and eoon both were apecding to Gouthampton. Mr. Maude mhown the Aquarium, where his grandmother made her initial appearance in this country, Capt. Ber- tun, who ran awey with him, is the com- mander of the yact Ivlanda, formerly owned by Morton F, Plant and now the property of Countess Terestchenko of Russia. The yacht is at Monaco and the ekipper ts having a vacation, THE EV ENING WORLD, MONDAY, APRIL 1 Crowd on Street Watching Hearse Carrying Morgan’s Body to Church BOANGAA ADA YEEDA BELG AAADROERIOE DOD 140994449444 09494444404 OF 04 44.06-444406 : 4 + 4 PITS BBE HO H Seeee $004040406U04040004 & = STRIKE AGAINST DISMANTLING Bla | HARVESTER PLANT! 400 Re cbdniny: Ainiee Announcing It Will Quit Because of Mill Tie-Up, Meets New Difficulty. AUBURN, N. Y., April it--Intimida- tion by 100 strikers of the International Hervester Company twine will caused four or five hundred 0 who were desirous of returning to work to go away from the mill eariv to-day when the whistle blew for the first time sine the strike began. After sixty-elght employers had passed through the Hines of militia and police and entered the mill a con- Asnistant General Manager of the ternational Harvester Company; B. A. Kennedy, Division Manager; A. F. McKinstry, Manager the order wa try, Mr, Less sald: “You may say that we have shut down permanently here. The machinery will be shipped at once. They are now taking it apart and you can see them it you wish.” “Have you any plans for the build. ings at Pp 0; they wilh probably be used for storage of International machines.” ‘The strikers, evidently regarding the company’s threat to move away as a continued to jeer after the whis- bluft, tle blew and marched away laughing. A force of seventy-five machinists put to work by the company five minutes after the order was {ssued to dismantle the mill and ship the machinery abroad struck at noon, refusing to lend their services in removing an industry that) had been. here twenty years, Many of the machines had already been taken apart and no effort was made to per- de the men to continue the work, ‘Two dox fused to enter the mill D.A.R. CONGRESS SPURNS PEACE PLEA, OPENS WITH FIGHT) Rival Presidential Have First Clash Over Committee Report. WASHINGTON, April 14.~The Con- tinental Congress of the Daughters of the American Revolution opened to-day with a fight almost as soon as Pres!- dent-Gei 1 Scott had finished her ade dress of welcome tor “ mony.” Tho reading of the report of the Cre- dentials Committee aroused a storm and many objections to rulings the chair, A substitute motion for a ‘peace and har- went back, but the rest re- Factions Ne 40 ROUT POLICE. IN REVOLVER RIOT; ONE MAN KILLED (Continued from First Page.) the approach of the mob and Chief joill led his little aquad out to a emall field at the junction of Railroad and Barry avenues, This field is di- vided* by a low stone wall which of- fered a protective barrier behind which the policemen took up t Position. At aight of the bristling row of re- volvers peeping over the wall the riote: halted. O'Neill harangued them, order- ing them to disperse. “There are twelve of us here and a of the Kastern|hundred more on the way te join us,” works and the local oMicers, after which | he said. “Every one of you will suffer jssued to close the mill|!f you do not disband and return peace- permanently and tell the machinists to/ ably to Ha: dismantle the machinery and pack it for shipment to Neuss, Germany, In reply to a question for a positive atate- ment as to the future of the big indus- on. of flame came from the mob in answer. It was the signal for an irregular volley. Bullets flattened against the wall and James Cody, a special oMficer, keeled over, wounded in the head. The policemen lied to thi whjle the mob ewept forward over the few hundred feet which lay PTT them and the wi The police revolvers A spl were emptied O'Neill yelled to his men to retreat. Covered by a rear guard, the knot of| officers had atubbornly yielded ground for two blooks before the absence’ of Cody was noticed. Then it was too! late to go back for him. ‘The roar of battle had sounded through the town, and members of the Fire De- partment hastened to the scene in thelr patrol wagon, They met the retreating policemen three blocks from tl of the first encounter, winded and Ag most out of ammunition. The policemen climbed on the wagon, which was swung around and driven rapidly away. The mob streamed behind in pursuit. A few dlocks further down the the patrol was stopped and hitched to @ hydrant, The strikers, pressing on triumphantly, were greeted with @ shower in which cold lead and cold water were mixed. The combina- tion was too much for their determina- and the leaders withdrew to hold a council of war while the defenders stood thelr ground, Finally the strikers went back the | way they had come. They stopped io the fleld and stabbed Cody in the back ed rocks upon him, But they left be- eled back toward the camp at hase WALL STREE LL STREET. After an irregular seat this morn- ing, in which prices were Inclined to decline, large buying of Canadian Pact. fic and Reading steadied the balance of the market, until they all nad fair ad- Vances over Saturday's closing, Most of the stocks deciined after the first hour of trading, Union Pacitic and Amalgamated Copper being the leade: in the lost of price, which was from a half to @ point in most all of the active lasies, Near the close aggressive selling was of} apparent and the whole list clowed at the lowest prices of the day, new committee on which each of the! A Nt iy three contending candidates for Presi- dent-General should ntatives met The report finally was adopted Supporters of Mrs. William G, finally won a victory have Amal, Cove Aus, ‘I two repre- | Au. with little recognition, Story, | by forcing to a) favorable vote a motion providing that committe, of representatives of each | the threp candidates for president: general should act with the credentials committee in passing upon contested nt of the day, out of a routing as President Wilson's address me to the delegation tate in th afternoon, President apeech since his inauguration w the Daughters, ‘The Pres! that the D. A. Wilson tn his first pubile ymed declared | had been organized to maintain the tradition of the Revolu- Norra York Central fi Uon—a struggle devoted entirely to the i “4 oatabiisnment of human liberty special privilege, he said he added, title of Americant 5 ous As the only It's a stern doc: pi The B » people had cut away at that . — “who stands | of any sort forfeits the | uid 4 ndard of gentility | } itis: ; ‘Tenn. h pet is 3 Pitan Pacific it ae ie & when the rioters swarmed over the wall! *| the offices of J. P. Morgan & Co. were 4 |robbery they were taken to Headquar- a tO) the shure TMORGAN AT REST sumevos| BESIDE HIS FATHER IN HARTFORD TOMB (Continued from First Page.) fens of New York, grave of face and silent, filled every pew in St. George's when the casket containing the body of ‘Mr, Morgan was borne down the aisle, and ¢ simple but beautiful funeral service began with the ehent of a vested choir at 10 o'clock, No pomp marked that ceremonial, of such interest to the mighty of many lands, There was no eulogy from the pulpit, no laudation of the dead in studied oratorical periods—but only sad- ness in the eyes of the great men Present, and solemn music and atill more solemn prayer, and the faint, sweet incense of tne few rich floral offerings, selected out of many, to be taken with the casket to the Morgan mausoleum at Hartford. Thomas E, Calvert, John and John F. Scott, as- sistant minister of St. George's; the Rev. Carl Relland, rector of st. George's Church; Rt Rev. William Law- rence, D.D., bishop of Boston; the Rt. Rev. Chauncey B. Brewster, D.D., bishop of Connecticut, and the Rt. Rev. David H. Greer, D. D., bish of New York, were the officiating clergy. After the clergymen oame the hon- orary pallbearers, then the casket, and ‘then the family, “I am the resurrection and the life, aith the Lord," read Bishop Brewster the coffin was carried into the hat believeth in m | though he were dead, yet shall he live; | and whosoever liveth and believeth in | me shall never die. | And after one more excerpt he read the sentence which is read at the bier of the humblest and poorest of men, j but which had an espec Mr, Morgan: out. The Lord taken Lord.” The New York Stock Exchange and closed this morning. But they of at noon and resumed t tlon of routine tvsiness while t! celal train was whirling on its Hartford, the birthplace of the dead. ——.—_- KING REPRESENTED AT MORGAN FUNERAL SERVICES IN LONDON. LONDON, April 14.—-The congrega- tlon which attended the memorial ser- vice for the late J. Pierpont Morgan in Westminster Abbey to-day was remark- able for its cosmopolitan: and for the range of diverse interests it repre- wented, King George was represented by Capt. Sir Walter Campbell, Groom- in-Waiting, and Queen Mother Alexan- dra by the Hon, John Ward, Equerry to the King, OMcial, diplomatic, financial, art and church circles were present in force, while large numbers of Americans, both resident and transient, attended, the) United Btates Embassy and Consulat: General being represented by Irwin B. Laughlin, cht and Mra. Laughlin, M. tary attach William P. Cresson, sec- L, Grimths, The Dean of Westminster officiated, asisted by # number of clergy and 1 service was fully choral, duplicating funeral service at New York. Dien late Mr, Morgan's favorite hymn, “Lead Kindly Light." At the conclusion Sir Frederick Bridge played the “Dead March” on the great organ, the whole congregation meanwhile standing, The chief mourners were distant rela- tives of the late J. Plerpont Morgan and representatives of his London bank- ing house. ‘Among those present were Lewis Har- court, Secretary of State for the Colo- nd Mra, Lewis Harcourt (formerly ‘Mary: Burns of New York), Juntia Morgan, Mr. and Mra, Jobn Ridgely Carte yyivine Smith and Lady Sybil | Smith, K, C. Grenfell and Lady Clinton | Dawkins. In the general |Premler and Mrs. | Ambassador, a representative of tie |German Ambassador, the Argentine Minister, the Earl and Countess of Gos | ford, Viscountess Acheson (formerly Miss Mildred Carter, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Post, Mr. and Mrs. Price Col- Her, Leopold de Rothschild and Lord | Charles Beresford, The Archbishop of Canterbury was to have assisted in offictating, but was prevented from doing so by an attack of influenza, He was represented at by his wife, Mre, Randall videon. congregation were uith, the Italian | $300,000 1 touch for those who stood before the coffin of “We brought nothing into this world, and it fs certain we can carry nothing! e and the Lord hath d be the name of the ond secretary, and Consul-General John | tf ¥ striking feature Was the singing of the BURGLARS BUILD SCAFFOLD IN OPEN TO CUT INTO SAFE Calmly Work Under Tenants’ Windows and Cut Hole in Pawnshop Wall. IN VAULT. Elaborate Kit of Safe-Cracking Tools Found at Home of Four Prisoners. In the four men arrested on muspicion of having put up @ scaffold and broken through @ wall in the rear of John| Simpson's pawn ehop, No. 14 Bowery, last night to reach the pawnbroker's eafe, Deputy Police Commissioner Dougherty believes he has a gang of @afe robbers who, provably, can account for a dozen or more recent safe bur- glartes. ‘This afternoon Acting Captain | McKenney and Detectives Caravetta, Shevlin and Kelly eearohed a flat on the ground floor of No. 150 Elizabeth street, Lagatutta, one of the prisoners. Beneath the bed they found a plece of | planking exactly like that used in the scaffold and in the cellar a kit of bui glars’ tools, which Dougherty sald w: one of the finest he had ever seen. There were two electric drills so pow erful that one tested dit through the} head of a sledge hammer. There were two sledges, more than fifty drills and chisels, a bottle of nitro-glycerine, lock- | picks, heavy blankets to dull the sound of an explosion, an automatic revolver and an ordinary revolver of heavy call bre as well as a gasoline torch. Several windows of tenements over- look the spot where the burglars worked with ohisels, hammers and other tools, but the would-be safe blowers, seemingly, thought their very sang frold and assurance would cloak them. The police believe that the ate tempt to break into the vault would have deen made last night, as candies and a kit of burglar tools to be used in that enterprise were found along- sido the vault. These artictes had been taken in through the hole battered In mpson says there is jewelry and other valuables worth $200,000 in the vault, but that it would have been tm- possible to steal this on account of the vault being covered with a web of burglar alarm wires. Teni of No, 48 Elizabeth street Jooked through their rear windows and eaw the saw too a scaffold, such as pain’ suspended from the roof and about twelve feet from the ground. This, with the hole in front of the scaffolding, ex- cited their suspicions, and they notified the police. Capt. Willlam H. Kinsler, with a force of detectives and patrolmen from the Mulberry street station, surrounded the block and investigated. a,|n information they @ revolver hid in o The four men were unable to give a eatistactory account of themselves, and on picion of having attempted the ters. There the prisoners said they were Joseph Massere, a tailor, of No. 217 For- syth street; Petro Lagattuta, a laborer, of No, Houston street; Salvatore Ruffino, a plasterer, of No. 25 North Sixth street, Brooklyn, and Giuseppe Ruffino, of No, 237 North Fifth street, Brooklyn. The police say that Massere was arrested in 107 on a charge of bur, lary, and later in the same year on @ charge of extortion. ——<—<—<——— “THE LOST MILLION" le the latest and beet of the thrilling storles of adventure, It ts full of love interest and deep mystery, Every page is breathlessly turned to the next to see what vew surprieo or thrill awaite the reader, ‘This really wonderful plece of Fiction will be printed complete and wnsbridged in the Sunday World Magasine beginging wat Bunda: Ta SHIPPING NEWS. LMANAC FOR TO-DAY. bericht vets, 0.87) oon aeta., 1,59 YORK, Sun rises, vORT OF NEW auler, mill | 2 ole, New Orleans Murgermeister Hetersen, leds, ‘ior Cristobal Princess | Anne, A Rigo. Chicago, ‘Norfolk, KORRES a New CO. EERO HIGH ‘IN. AAT eR. eee a Mahors Three men |were arrested as they came out of the hallway at No. 150 Elizabeth street, and fourth man was found in @ small room on the FOUR INSPECTORS INDICTED FOR PART IN SIPP BRIBERY District- Attorney Announces That They Will Be Tried Together in Two Weeks. Former ‘Inspectore Dennis Sweeney and John J. Murtha, Indicted by the Grand Jury to-day with ex-Inepectors James E. Hussey and James I, Thomp- son for conspiracy in the alleged spirit- ing of George A. Sipp out of the jurte- diction of the court, surrendered them- selves at the District-Attorney's office this afternoon. Sweeney and Murtha appeared before Justice Seabury, who set bail in each case at $1,000. They both provided an acceptable bond and were released. Warrants had been issued for Hussey and Thompson, as well as for the two police officers who surrendered them- | selves. There is every likelihood that the four | indicted officials will go to trial within the next two weeks. As the indictment charges only a mislemeanor, they cannot demand separate trials, as they mixgiit in the event the indictment charged @ | felony. which was rented on April 9 by Pietro | The District-Attorney will ask Justice Seabury to summon a special panel of 200 talesmen from which to select the, | fury to try the four men. Two days notice must be given of this demand, and at the same time It t the District-Attorney will ask Justice Seabury to set the date for trial. The indictment, found on the testl- mony of George A. 8tpp, Policeman | Eugene F. Fox, Police Captain Thomas W. Walsh and Attorney Edward J. | Newell, charges the four inspectors with conspiring, in violation of the law, to Induce Sipp to flee to New Jersey when he was so vitally necessary as a wit- nena at the police court trial of Poll man Fox and at the Grand Jury in- vestigation into the charges that he had paid protection money to the police for conducting his illegal hotel, the Baltic, in Harlem. Fox, a confessed graft collector, swore before the Grand Jury that bribe fund Taised by the inspectors wai handed to him in the Tombs poli jeourt by Jonn J. Hartigan, Sweeney's police messenger, who went to Sing Sing for perjury for his connection in the affair, Fox swore he handed this money to Jacob Rouss, his attorney, who had been retained by the inspectors them- selves to represent Fox. Newell, before the Grand Jury, swore Rouss had ‘given him the bribe fund and ¢hat he, in turn, delivered it to Bipp in Newark, N. J. Both Sipp and Newell told of phone conversations between Newell’ and Inspector Hussey and between ewell and Rouss, in which the question of inducing Sipp to flee was thoroughly threshed out. It was on these conversations that the men ‘@ charged with criminal con- spiracy to induce Sipp to flee. The only witneas before the Grand Jury to-day in the graft investigation was William Stein, better known in Har- lem as “The Senator.” Stein was a cons companion of Policeman Thomas F. Robinson in the latter's trips through Harlem when Robinson was charged with having been collecting money for Inspector Sweeney. He be used as a State witness at the tri. of Robinson, which begins Thursday be- fore Justice Seabury. SS Se Senator Lewis Of to Wi ston. CHICAGO, April 14.—Col. J. Hamilton Lewis, United States Senator-elect, left jay to take the oath “th M insures ® ski of Fag cia white and Bs: your aruce reac, SaaRt'h probable, house of the sive ‘the State tts fret tion there since the ungsating fam Lorimer. _—— KILLS WOMAN, SHOOTS SI Mera Attempted Suteiad @ North Carolina Hospital. NORFOLK, Va., April 14—@fre, May D. Carter Lomax of Goldeboro, N, C+ was shot and killed there to-day by; Cleveland Prince, a young man, who then shot himself, No la entertained for his recovery. shooting was at the Goldsboro Mra, Lomax was. No NEW DISCOVERY NOT ENVELOPED. IN ANY SECRECY Tona Vita Is One Discov That Has Been Put Plainly Before the Public. ACCOMPLISHES WONDER Miss H. M. Miller Felt Just Badly as Possible Till She Used Tonic. The trouble with m medical discoveries is that usually in the hands of onl tors and their nature is shrouded | \ |mystery, This is not the ca |‘Tona Vita, the new tonic, which Bit | lieving so many cases of nervous debility. T s put on the open market, scovery and was i has accomplished and not o | what it ought to accomplish theoreti- cally. Nearly every day different statements’ from users of Tona Vita are published in their home city, in this way allowing the pas to do all the investigating for ~ themsel be, Miss H. M. Miller of 128 Van Buren Street, Brooklyn, recently stated: Having read so much about Tona Vita I decided to try a bottle. I bad been feeling so nervous for some time and it was ver: Less for me to exert my- self at al wuffered constantly with headaches ad aired and my. fingers, especially during the the night were cold and numb. Altogether, I felt just about as badly se I could teal jeel and still t around, bout finished my rat bottle of Tona Vita and can truth- fully say that I feel much better and in- tend to continue hapa it Tight along until I am com; cured.” Nervous debility, ‘hich Miss Miller was Lapifwlegy- penal can be indicated by ny other different symptoms such as: —leoss of pein and appetite; ot vigor and ambition; poor circulation of he blood; a torpid liver; attacks of biliousness; broken and restless run-down condition. ba the first class drug stores in N: a es City.—Advt. QUIT CALOMEL! Thousands Are Are Turning from This Dangerous Drug. A Safe Vegetable Substitute Te Olive b Tablets for the Liver. physician of Ohio, has discovered a new lazative and , liver toner in a combination of seman materials, mixed with olive oil, which ie in effect almost exactly like the old and untrust- worthy calomel, escent that are none of the bad after effects of calomel. Dr. Edwards has long been a foe of calomel, ” heh he recognized ite value along with its langer oe Cpt td the uncertain drug eventu- start um re jo towal - me UU reve tieetana ata tute, and he is to-day in pessserien « of the sought-for combination, whic! if a little sugar-coated, olive-oil colored The results of 17 years’ experience and ctice are em in these marvellous little tablets, They, re called Dr. eel peg Tab- lets, their effect ry oil t con the liver has been ip es relief to many of Dr, Edwards's regular patients, as well as to thousands of others who have suffered end were afraid of calomel, They ore et Me their action, effective. spirit, a aes | buoyancy which should be enjoyed by everyone, by toning up the * Ae ind clearing the system of harmful im- 10c and 25c per box. mthe Olive Tablet Company, Columbus, 0. (Trade Mark.) The Call of the Eagle pay ana rl te lor money le ton i fae § oR maT Be MOLASSES At ‘Monday fea eee ent ae 16c|" Monday’ vs (Tioga gee Dn we whe se CINE | Port Row, Coriiands ond 125th, Lo 64 BARCLAY STREET 35 CORTLANDT aT. Cy. Gane Sve Cea A a rst City Hall Park seregh why oo sea Imes te candy te mea ah reet stores open farday evening Ui » Beekman & Spruce Ste 266 W. 125th STREET Just East of Sth Ave. s/

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