The evening world. Newspaper, July 21, 1913, Page 2

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jt Shuldhan of No. 13 place, directly in the rear of ard, looked down out of window when she arose to fant at 6 o'clock this morning he tl jceman. fan and woke her husband, Vic- Who slipped into his clothes t for a een He found denn nied Dim to churchyard. J, Gillen, who accom: ihe MEDIATORS HERE TRYING TO AVERT RAILROAD STRIKE her and Po- As be eaw a gaping hole in Cant mend Gillen rushed to summon an am- ‘Dr. Hamtiton arrived from 's Hoopital he said Cahill had bees for two hours of more. An exam- showed that Cahill had been bbed im the right temple and « Conference With the Man- agers Followed by Meeting With Heads of Unions, fm the breast, once in the heart “Gnd once in the right ai s 3 owed police believe saw the Gashlight of th the prised them at work g went of the Sisters of <¢ and neareat jurch soon after they en- Gister Teresa Augusta, Mother sev. n other sisters there t Persons to the church.| tise having conferred all the morning ‘Aa examination of the site door of |RAILROADS ARE FIRM. that it was open ‘were jimmy mari. on it that Policeman Have Not Yet Withdrawn the Demands to Which Em- ployees Objected. are wis Church is in the rear st heard no sounds during the early The next nearest ‘are! With the Conference Committee of Rall- itving in Lincoln place, 200 feet Way Managers the Federal Board of cannot see the part of body was found. jureh is in the midst of several) there by which the merdecrers might have from Utica avenue, the Place and the oth Biways open, from Bt Johi through an im. that way. OBLIEVES BURGLARS Live ~~ NEIGHBORHOOD. Tee Rev. Father John F. O'Hara, ‘et Bt. Matthew's, made an ‘of the church wnea noti that toe persons who broke into Me pharch live in tho neighborhood or gles wefe fam‘liar with the church. 7! ‘@aly asticles of value they could hai the altar vevwis. There ‘me boxes with smi Door but the other collections were baben away yesterday. that had been jimmied ts of the church. It leads to ee are but there @ Dfanch passag ~ into which ey feeodl m Cabill hea described as a He ‘often assigned it confidential work and re- he and another politeman were the disorderly im the neighborhood. They out to clean are investigating this phase BAHILL'’S PATROL POST WAS . LONG ONE. t's post was along Utica avenue Atlantic avenue to Eastern Park- alley. Or & pers climb one of the fences end| been attached to the At- Svenue station since 1908 and juliet, courageous the Mediation and Cmelliation te holding Ite second conference of the day, this time with the Committee of One Huns dred representing the Order of Railway Conductors and the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen at the Broadway Central Hotgl. None of the conferees would say any- | thing about the result of the morning but It 1s understoud that the are had been expocted. of the managers be- saging an attempt by the mediators to Dersuade the roads to withdraw their demand that eight grievances held by them to be arbitrated also at this time The men have issued the ultimatum that they will go into no arbitration at which ¢) demands are to be consid- ground that the required notice of thelr submission to arbitration was not given. THE RAILROADS MAY WITH. DRAW THEIR DEMANDS. Elisha Lee, Chairman of the Mana- gers, went into the hearing with his arma laden with documents not all of which probably had to do solely with | the correspondence which has passed between the men and the roads since the dontroversy began. If the managers shall withdraw their demands for arbitration of thelr own grievances, the Federal Board—Judge William Lea Chambers, Judge Marin A, Knapp and G@. W. W. Tanger—will ad up articles of agreement embodying th @emands of the men and will supervise the signing of this document. If the arbitration agreement ie signed it will mean @ truce until the of the arbitrators are made known. The find): of the arbitrators will be final for both . It @ under. stood that Messrs, Garretaon and Les, the Brotherhood presidents, will be the men selected to represent the empieyees on the board of arbitration. The brother- hood men are keeping thelr forces in jorder eo that if anything goes wrong they can call out thelr men at an hour's notice, all to ie) a ew Sbload from where he was lena the fast that a etiletta wae MEN TO OFFER EVIDENCE THEY by his assailants caused a swarm otectives to invade the foreign ts “to-day. ARE UNDERPAID. In appearing to-day before the Fed- eral board the employees will try to show THU EVENING WORLD, MUNDAY, JULY NEW REVOLUTION, \HURRES PARDON HU arose TPOLICEMAN SAVES Jona ror Ra HUERTA'S FALL IN| FOR EX-INANGIER |e | THREE MEDIATORS HERE TO-DAY TO PREVENT BIG RAILROAD STRIKE. GW. HANGER WALL STREET Market Closing—In the last hour stocks sold off on realising sales shortly after 2 o'clock, but buying orders again on @ large scale soon changed to re- cession into a rally, and the highest ‘prices for the day were recorded. Amal, Copper rose to 68%, Utah Copper 6%, B. R. T. to &%. While the American Can stocka were heavily traded in the ¢ommon sold at 33—a rise of 2% points, and the preferred ®Wh—a gain of 1% points, The market closed active at the Nigh level. Total sales, 336,700 #hares, Moat interest during the first few minutes was concentrated in the cop- per stocks, which were active and Strong because of the Improvement in the copper metal trade. Amalgamated Copper ad tional gains were made in Anaconda and Utah. U. 8, Steel opened up 6-8, at &, / Gabill was forty-one years mar. | by documentary evidence and otherwise| Atchison up 1-2 at 97, and Lehigh Val- 4 has several email pte ‘and | that they are entitled to the 20 per cent. | ley 1-2 at 148. at Ma 183 Chestnut pe out on duty sportly a _ He | increase in wages, amounting to $17,000,- t, | 900, they have demanded. They will American Can was very active, ad- vancing to 52, a gain of 1 3-4 points Wal saw him vA 2 p'clock | testify that on the roads upon whion|over Saturday's close, and before the was pete hare seen him| they work—those lying east of Chicago| first half hour had passed Canadian Rot fing him,|@4 north of the Ohio River—the men | Pacific yained 3-4, Steel 1-2, Roading 3-4 post, It would] Tecelve less was , EXTON FAILS TO GET Dourt Denies Plea of Rear-Admiral's “Widow in Her Effort to Force Prosecution’s Hand. charged with havi ‘Qusband, Rear-Admira! Joseph has failed in an effort to force than are paid by ‘to| Pailroads in tho West and South. They will ask for @ country-wide standardiza- tion of wages and make effort to Drove that the Has: ema financially able to pay as much as other the United Bites, United Btates, (VER 300 BARBERS WALKOUT, AD HOE EXPETED 1 FLL Shops Affected Mainly on East Fuly Mire, Jennie May Side, but Pickets Are Posted Throughout Town. it to show its hand before ‘¢rial in October. Justice Aiken, it mi to-day, has denied the most motions made by her coun Were to compel the Distric ade| More thin 3,000 barbers went out oa im-|etrike again to-day in response te the ed call for @ general walkout issued at y to furnish the defense with a|™8# meetings last night, The shops pt of the Grand Jury testimony | affected are le.ated mainly on the Mra, Haton was indicted:| side, but pickets are scattered throu whicy ‘access to all exhibits to be ¥ the Government at th trlal walsh @ vill of particulars as to of poison was used t and how it was Mies etna, out Manhattan and the Bronx, and by t| Bight @ large proportion of the 10,000 jeged | barbers in the 1, W. W. uniom are ex-|} intatered. | pected to join the strike, = ‘The decision to strike came as the re- |} sult of a fifteen-day armistice granted the boss barbers in which to formulate thelr reply to the union demands. The bosses sent their reply Saturday amd it was not satisfactory. ‘The barbers are atriking for @ full day pple ies Paper tga eotly ae ells and for a junday shift from 7 A. M, to willing to con- off, @ daily ehift from 7 A. M. to 890 P, M., and Sunday v from 7 to 1 P, M, The old hours were 7 to 9 P, M, dally, 7 to 10 on Saturday and 7 to 1 on Sunday, with no day off and only half ¢. hour for lunch. Joseph G. Bttor, the 1. W. W. organ- ‘ser, and Vincent Majorino, Financia) Beoretary of the union, sald to-day that the entire industry/ will be paralysed egein unless the boss barbers meet and St, Paul 7-8. Increased activity and strength were shown in the first hour, with numer- ous issues showing gain ‘rom 1 to 2 points, The heaviest trading was in Urion Pacific and Steel, London being an important factor, Inter-Met. issues were strong, the preferred advancing to 1-8, @ gain of 11-8 points, and Third the cause of a slight rec the latter part of the forenoon, but the market lapsed into @ very dull period lating until 1 o'clock, when 1; buy- ing orders appeared and the market be- “am number of # vancing toa higher level. Lehigh sold at 149 3-4, U, 8, Bteel preferved at 107, and U. & Rubver at ol Quot a ‘The following were the highest, Foyer 9 TT “3* 5 = Het + Ett trttt +t te) 5 diets PEEBLES FEO EF FEEF idl Sesees presegis eas ae - ees SsSSe% Cul See Ly rag Journal, ‘it took my laundry toket to « {tendly Chinama: he translated it for me," “Whet did it aay?” Little uaa! te wick nese eT, ‘ tees and, after some hesitation, MEXICO CERTAIN Provisional President, Sharing Fate of Predecessors, Must Fight or Take Flight. WILSON READY TO ACT. President Is Getting ali the Facts as to Condition Be- low Rio .Grande. By Samuel M. Williams. (nae oe, of The Bvening wamumnaton, Sal 21.—The Huerta Government in Mexico is on the verge 0° collapse, ‘The same disaster that over- took the reigns of Dias and Madero is now rapidly approaching the provisional rnment of the new dictator. It = & question of comparatively few days when Huerta will have to get m.up on the special train in walt~ ing for flight of deposed Presidents and take the Vera Crus route for Paris. speculation, however, whether Huerta will run as did Dias or stand de- ‘fantly as did Madero until killed. Advices received to-day in Washing- ton and credited in highest circles give the news that the Huerta Government cannot last long. The conditions of chaos and anarchy existing in unfor- tuna Mexico are centring rapidly toward another catastrophe, What will, happen when Huerta falls no o! tures to predict. It may mean of even worse confusion, if such @ thing Is possible. ‘There seems to be no epecially strong man to eelse the reins of Government in Mexico City. No one individual stands out as leader of united opposition to the dictator. Huerta’s fall, when it does come, will be the result not of one revolution, but of dozens of revolutions wcattered throughout the country. WILGON GETTING REAL FACTS ON CONDITIONS, “If there is any one stronger than the others in the uprisings it is Gov. Carransa of Chibuahua, the richest and most powerful of the northern states he} was supposed to ha' there are others in the central and southern states of whom comparatively ttle tim heard in the United States, but whose power is atrong locally. President Wilson is holding the United States Government in firm restraint dur- ing these critical days. He will avold any declaration or permitting htest change in existing attitude the arrival of Ambassador Henry Lane Wilson from Mexico, who ia due hi ‘Thuraday. The one thing that the President is doing 1a to put into active service all the secret chan and services of in- formation to gather undisputed fects about conditions in Mexico, There has been such a confusion of contradictory reports from ordinary diplomatic and consular services that no dependence could be placed upon them. Now there is active searching out of real news by trained men and atrict sifting of alleged facts to a reliable basis. What aation the United States Gov- ernment will take when explosion comes is atill a problem for speculation. President Wilson declines to outline in advance his policy, But it ts possible to deduct from the trend of events certain very clearly defined tendencies. Firet—The United States Government will take care of affairs on this ede of the ocean without necessity of inter- ference from European governments, The Monroe Doctrinn still exists. Becond—President Wilson is strongly opposed to intervention by the United States in the internal affairs of Mexico and will not tolerate eny aggressive or hostile action of that character, ‘Third—Peaceful and friendly good of- fices to bring about amicable settlement are more favored than force of arms. Fourth—The battleship Friendship will get its guns loaded with brotherly tov into action before any leaden bullets are fired, ‘ Fiftth—There is a possible diplomatic move of recognising a state of belliger- ency to exist in Mexico, so that both Federals and Constitutionalists wili be placed on au eq@Al footing. This would be equivalent to giving standing to the revolting northern States so tbat they could anport arms and ammunition to fight out the internal disputes on a fair field. The constitutional rev lutionists under Gov. Carransa Lave beon clamor- ing for this recognition, asserting that they could then overthrow Huerta and bring bout peace in Mexico, ——aemane AMBASSADOR WILSON DELAYED ON VOYAGE. HAVANA, July %1.—The arrival of Henry Lane Wilson, United States Am- bassador to Mexico, was awaited at sunrise to-day, but the steamer Mexico was delayed on ite voyage from Vera Crus and is not expected to reach here till late this afternoon, sp MELLEN ON HIS FUTURE. After He Retires Will Bat and Sleep Well ™ Own Basinces. NEW HAVEN, Conn,, July %1.—-When Charles 3, Mellen lays down the dut! of President of the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad, in ac- gordance with his recently accepted resignation, he intends to “sleep well, eat three meals a day and attend strict- ly to his own business." ‘This was his anawer given to-day in Say). 08 wt DYING IN PRISON Gov. Foss Acts by ” Acts by Telephone in Case of Cardento F. King, But Finds Law a Bar. MIDDLEBORO, Maes, July 1.—Car- dento ¥. King, the former financier and Dubtisher of Boston. who is serving a Semtence of from ten to fourteen years for larceny and embeasiement, is in a critical condition at the State Farm, to which he was transferred from the State Prison two yeare ago because of fl health. An intestinal trouble from ‘which de has suffered for years became acute during the night. Mre, King, her three sons and two Boston surgvone arrived at the farm this forenoon. King was convicted of defrauding persons who had intrusted him with funds for investment of $2200. He was committed to State Prison in J wary, 1908, BOSTON, July 21.—Upon learning to- day of the critical illness of Cardenio F. King, who is @ prisoner at the State Farm, Gov. Foss at once obtained the @pproval by telephone of seven of the eight members of the Executive Coun- cll for an unconditional pardon for the former financier, The question of the legality of granting a pardon by tele- Phone was then referred to Attorney- Generaf Swift, who promised a decision later in the day. Later Attorney-General Gwift ruled that individual members of the Council could not give their assent to a pardon by telephone, because the constitutional requirement contemplates that the as- sent shall be of the council, in meeting assembled, Immediately he had re- ceived this rulin Governor issued call for a sp meeting of th Council at 10 o'clock to-morrow mor: ing to take up the pardon matter, GIRL KILLS HERSELF WITH POLICEMAN'S GUN Shooting Takes Place in Fort Lee and Young Woman Had Quar- relled With Married Man. A girl, known as Natalie Smith, who come from New York, and who, since the beginning of the summer had been lodging tn Ander- fon avenue, Fort Lee, N. J., shot and Ieilled herself to-day in the woods near her lodging house. She used a revolver ‘belonging to Andrew Casine, a special Policeman in an amusement park nearby. Other lodgers heard the report of the @hot and ran out and found the git Ainong them was Casine, who, though ho lives elsewhere and has a wife and four children, had visited the Smith girl last night and had quarrelied with her. Several letters were found in her room and these were turned over to Prosecutor Wright of Hackensack. The girl was not more than twenty-one years ‘old, Casine surren‘ered to the police | ™ and Js under eurvelllance, though he wag not arrested, one: ee WANAMAKER TALKS. 7 Daily Va tien Sehool Association, John Wana er, who is a Vice- President of the Daily Vacation School Association, addressed a meeting of the teachers of the organization at a lunch- eon given at the St. Denis Hotel this afternoon, Teache! superintendents and students met at Grace Church and Mstened to a brief outline of the work, Dr. Robert G, Boville, national supe: intendent, talking from the outdoor pulpit on street, Dr. Boville made the keynote of his address two questions directed at the many May- oralty candidates whose nar.os are being considered. He insisted that to beautify Riverside Drive was very pretty, but he wished the candidates to go on record as to their intention in regard to providing breathing spaces for poor youngsters, playgrounds for their games and a settlement of the question of congrestion. When the adjourned for luncheon at oss the street Mr, Wana- jhowed @ sympa- done, marvelled at the records in the annual statement and spoke of some of hie own experiences in Y. M. C. A. work years ago. ——>—— STOLE HER WEDDING FINERY. 4 for Taking Bride- te-Be’s Gomes. ‘Miss Caroline Blumenthal of ‘No, 83 East One Hundred and Sixty-seventh treet, the Bronx, was an indignant complainant ¢o-day before Magistrate Butts in the Morrisania Court against eighteen-year-old William Lucas and Rudolph Ritter, eon of the janitor in the Blumenthal apartment. The lodt stolen; from the Blumenthal home on last Thureday wae Mies Carolin finery and jewelry which collecting for three years. married in the fell to David Cohen, a Highway Inspector in Brooklyn who ives at No. 68 East One Hundred and Twenty-third etreet, ‘The jewelry, which ét is charged the’ Twe Boys fo Court by Associated Press, but Case Will Go to Grand Jury. Beven associate efitors of “The Masaes," a Bocialist publication, ap- *| peared defore Magistrate Breen in the Jefferson Market Police Court this ef- ternoon in response to summonses ie- @ued on the complaint of Jackson 8. Elliot, auperintendent of the Eastern division of the Associated Preas, in a “John Doe” proceeding. Mr. EWijot alleged that the Socialist Publication, in an issue circulated this month, libelled the Associated Press and Frank B. Noyes, its President. The ifbel, he complained, waa contained in an editorial and a cartoon. Wildam Rand jr., formerly an Ae atetant District-Attorney, appearing for the Associated Frees, explained that the seven associate editors were sum- moned for the purpose of determining who was responsible fo. and cartoon. William Kerlin, an e- torney, appearing for the associate editors, objected to the questioning of thle oli by Magistrate Breen, deciar- ing thy would be jeopardined by the Giving of testimony The Court declared that jie could not compel the associate editors to testify and fecommended that the matter te laid before the Grand Jury. Mr. Rand withdrew tis complaint, eaying he would place the facts before District-Attorney Charles 8, Whitman. GIRL ENDS HER LIFE IN WOMEN’S HOTEL Miss Hitner of*Pottstown Found Dead at the Martaa Washington. Margaret Hitner, twenty-seven y old, until recently a resident of Potte- town, Pa., committed suicide last night in her room in the Martha Washington Hotel for women, im East Twenty-ninth street. She had been a victim of melan- chol since the death of her parents last spring. M!.s Hitner, her brother, George W. Hitner, and a sister leased ¢ house in Hastings-on-the-Hudeon a few weeks ego. It was the hope of the brother and sister that the change of scene/would beneSt Mise Margaret and thet result was apparently obtained. But the young woman thought she woukl feel better mentally and physically were she en- gaged in some active work. settlement worker, and with that object in view came to New York from Has- tings yesterday and registered at the Martha Washington. Her brother was to have met her at 11 o'clock to-day at & meeting place appointed yesterday. ‘When she did not appear he telephoned the hotel and Miss Hitner'’s body was found in her room. She had taken car- bolic acid, po ES WITH AMERICAN METALS CO. Would-Be Suicide Not With Con- cern of ilar Name. George Elmo Weller, who attempted suicide in Binghamton, N. ¥., by swallowing bichloride of mercury tab- was connected with the American Company. He is not associated with the American Metal Company, Ltd. of No. 58 Broadway, though officials of thkt company knew of him because letters for Weller frequently were re- ceived at their office through similarity of the corporation names. An official of the American Metal Company, Ltd., sald to-day he under- stood Weller organised the American Metals Company and maintained offices the editorial | | Bane tryimg to carry ounce of af Run and at Gettysburg. in the City Investing Bullding, No, 16 Broadway. At the City Investing Bullding it was learned that Weiler had no offices there and was not known to the superintendent of the building. eget eae FAMILY UPSET IN BAY. a Waves Capsised Boat at Night, All Are Rescued. Albert Stand, fifty years old, of No. 1% Holy street, Flushing, was rowing across Flushing Bay to his home after a day spent on # beach with bis thr chikiren, when the wave of a passing steam craft caught him unawares and the boat capsized, It was nearly mid- night and the bay was nearly deserted, but the cries of the party were heard by John Nessbaum of No. % Eleventh street, College Point, who was out in a motor boat, and he managed to reach and dangered. After being attended by @ surgeon from the Flush- ing Hospital they went to their home, sy children were John, eleven years Wilhelmina, nine years, and Rose, ight years, boye took after getting into the flat by hauling each other up in ¢he dumb- walter when Miss Blumenthal and her father were out, was worth between $1,800 and $2,000, the girl ald, and about 9000 of dt ie @till missing, The ree handed over , the police, they tickets of i for 91,20 worth it, | —apcnnREEEE SENET he has gained eight John's Medicine, and that he {s feeling fine. He recommends Father John's Med. 1 150 AT FIRE: FANTS WHEN ALL ARE OUT eee Carries Aged Invalid and Young Girl Out of Flames, Then Collapses, After he had twice returned into o burning building at No. 110 Bighth ave- nue to rescue a woman of eighty-six and @ girl of sixteen early to-day, Po- Neeman Thomas G. Egan fell uncon- eclous on the roof. He had previously waved 160 by urrying them from their beds. Began was passing the grocery_store of ‘Willlam Braun when he saw smoke com- ing from the basement. Having rapped for assistance, he ran throug? the tene- | Ment waking all the residents and got them to the roof and down through the house next door. ‘He then learned that @ family on the fourth floor was missing. He went back and found James Bernie and his wife their aunt, Bridget Flynn, « paralytic, eighty-six years of age, who had not been out of her room for four years. While carrying Mrs. Flynn to the roof, Egan thought he heard a faint cry on the floor below. He made hurried in- iries among the fugitives and found Miss Rose Sasoretti missing. handkerchief in his mouth and his coat over his head Egan again returned. He found the girl fallen overcome in the hall on the third floor. Mise Sasoretti had stopped to see her father and mother reach safety and then had lost her way in the smoke. Though only sixteen, the girl weighs 165 pounds, and it took Egan's last th to get her to the roof. As others took her from him he fell, overcome himself, The blase gutted the grocery store and burned through into the first floor, doing $3,000 damage before Battalion Chief Rose had it under control. pretense “LAST MAN’S BANQUET.” it War Veterans at 1s Final A@air. 8T. PAUL, July 21.—The “Last Man's Table Banquet" was held at Stillwater, Minn., to-day. Eight men attended and twer ty-three vacant chairs, draped in black, were placed at the table, on which rested a cedar chest containing a bot- tle of champagne. death has depleted the veterane of Company B, man, thia survivor wi attend the an- banquet and, after calling the roll, | ‘iret Minnesota, to one he will drink to the memory of his thirgy-one gallant comrades who fought shoulder to shoulder with him at Bull The senti- mental custom began in 18%, when Louls Hoepes, father of one of “The Boys" presented the wine on condition that the bottle remain unopened until the “last man's banquet.” “That last banquet is going to be far more heart-rending than any of our battlefield scenes,” one of the veterans, “and none cf us hopes to hear the cork pop.” ea DOG TERRIFIES CHILDREN. Netghbors Water on Ball Pup, Thea Policeman Shoots It. A small Boston bull pup, owned by Mrs, Henry Gentles of No, 219 East One Hundred and Twenty-second street, frightened a score of children in the ‘Throw rear yard of that address to-day when it was seized with a ft and held adult neighbors at bay until it was éhot and killed by Patrolman Menke of the East One Hundred and Twenty-sixth street atation. with the dog when it suddenly snarled and jumped for one of them, The children had been playing Tenants in the house threw water from the window on the dog, but were unable to quiet it. finally shot it. ~ PERSONAL Patrolman Menke W. L. Webster of Laon N. H, says unds using Father vexed to those who are weak and run Me. Roswell H. Lewls of Gloversville, N. Y., says: “I have gained twenty-one pounds taking Father John’s Medicine, |favor to soups, and believe that it saved me from con- and sumption.”—Advt. With dis | Total for the Year Is $32,622,185, or 15.06 Per Cent. on Com- mon Stock. The preliminary annual report of the fi: aolal condition of the Union Pacific Rallroad ond its auxiliary companies for the year ending June %, was .iven out to-day, It shows that the company has @ aurp!us of $32,622,185, which Is equivalent to 15.08 per cent. on the $210,633,900 com- mon stock of the Union Pacific Ratl- road. Last year it was 1887 per cent, an increase this year cf 1.19 per cent. The operating expenses and taxes thie year amounted to $58,690,771; last year it wae $4,708,198, The gross operating revenues were $96,696,457 while last year they were $85,977,600. The total net income was $62,006,838 oF $2,760,421 better than last year. The only decrease for the year was in the income from investments end other sources which was 907,062 less than in 1913 when the report showed ¢hie ttem to be $18,896,504, ‘The total surplus this year ts $23,622.10 vnd last year it was $90,068,%0. In divi- dends the company pald out 63,961,760 The total gain in surplus was $2,563,008 RESINOL SOAP PROTECTS YOUR COMPLEXION A complexion protected by the regu- lar use Hy Resinol Soap is "almost al- ways a complexion to be proud of—fres from pimples, blackheads, redness and roughness, and glowing with natural health and beauty. This is 2 Resinol Soap is an_ extrei toilet soap, without. trace of i iagous has made alkrli, and containing the if P Meecha w call intment « stan for skin troubles for Sit eighteen years. ferinol Soap is deli i igetreied to use, its odor is wholesome an 5 its distinctive ric) brown Solan is due ly to the Resinol balsams and not jal_ colori: F nfs s < vent chafing, irritation and Soy tions so common in infancy Sold 4 all i rete (dl Dept= 6-1 Resinol, Baltimore, Md. “Storm Hero Umbrella YOU SIMPLY PULL IT BACK if the wind tarns it inside out. A New One If the Wind Breake It. Cost $1.00 Upward ON SALE EVERYWHERE, 362 Broadway, New York. {t your dealer does no} show them, write QU English uce makes a good meal taste bet- ter. It gives an appetizin; meats, fish At Grocers 10¢ Made by E. Pritchard, 331 Spring St., N.Y, Goods Carefully Packed fw bg were od va ‘including sated Vacation ies Resorts Post “Wear choc gm ae ee 10¢ GBR M8 a aR . ‘ena.

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