The evening world. Newspaper, November 11, 1914, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

oie) Gs) but a similar slight advance for the Germé@us to the south. Diamade has changed hands repeatedly during the fighting marking efforts of the Germans to pierce the allied lines and reach the const, Following is the text of the report: “Om our left wing the fighting was resumed yesterday morning be- Nieuport and the Lys with » very great degree of severity, “Generally speaking our front was maintained in spite of tho violence Gnd the strength of the German attacks directed against cortain of our of support. “To the north of Nieuport we were even able to reoccupy Lombaert- and advance beyond this town, but toward the end of the day the 8 succeeded in taking possession of Dixmude. Wo still hold our 1m the approaches of this town, along the canal from Nieuport to Ypres, which has been firmly occupied. The fighting was very hot at ~ (ese places. oo Tbe British troops, attacked also at several points, succeeded overy- ‘where stopping the enemy. “On the rot of the front the general situation shows no change with the of slight progress by our forces to the north of Soissons and ia the! west of Vailly, on the right bank of the Aisne, Outside of these two Petate the state of the weather permitted only minor engagements, which | \ Pesulted successfully for us, Particularly at Coincourt, three kilometres | orth of the Forest of Parroy, we routed a detachment of the enemy.” * Crown Prince Sent to Fight Czar, = Ie the Report From Petrograd . PARIG, Nov. 11 (Associated Pross)—The Petrograd correspondent td the Matin telegraphs tho followin; q “It fe reported that after a council of war presided over by the 4 . the Crown Prince was appointed Commander-in-Chief of all the and Austrian armies operating against Russ.a, with Gen. von ire commanding the left wing and Gen. Dank! the right.” ‘The German Crown Prince has been in command of the army eperating around Verdun. For two months this army has been attemptiag to capture that French fortress. There have been fre- quent reports from French and British sources that the Crown AISER’S HEIR R wopempe wepkne ap ‘ THE RvExING wortp, wap" ‘RUSSIAN ARMIES SWEEP ON AGAINST KASER'S TROOPS Not a Man to Be Withdrawn in Fight With Turks, Petro- grad Reports, a BIG FIGHT LYCK REGION, German Reinforcements Re- ported Hurrying Toward Posen and Thorn. PETROGRAD, Nov. 11 (United Preas).—Tho task of doaling with Turkey in the Hast will in no way cause « slnckening of the pressure belng exerted along the Ge..nan frontier. Everywhere the advance of the Russians into Kast Prussia @nd Poron Province continues, it is declared here, and the momentum of the eaormous forces of the Cesar having once been gained, it will 1. ¢ Prince's army had been defeated. There have also been reports ja Movements toward Mets, which fe tho base of the Crown Prince's A week or two ago it was stated that the Kaiser's hoir was operating in Russian Poland. If he has been put in command of the armies Sghting against Russia it may mean that the advance @f the Cear’s armios is at last giving Germany real concern and that @ supreme effort is to be made to halt ite progress on Ger- ‘wan sotl GERMAN GENERALS RAPTURED BY RUSSIANS, | SAYS BRITISH WRITER DOM, Mov.‘ ‘Th: Dally Tele- \orresonder* wires from UNITED STATES ASKS TURKEY IF IT BACKS THREATS OF EXECUTIONS WASHINGTON, Nov. ‘The State Department made efforts to-day to loarn whether the Turkish Government is of- fictally represented in the reported threat of the Turkish commander at Betrut that he would order the execu- tion of three Brit or French subjects for every Mussulman killed in the bom- it of any unfortified port. The Apatignn Government ts actii for the British moh at tinople, Pt Deon ‘requested. to the ‘furkish Government. eabetcenellebecsinisiins ENGLAND SCARED BY DASH OF AIRSHIP HIGH ABOVE TOWNS, LONDON, Nov. 11.—An airship has been reported as having passed over Sheerness and later was sighted above Harwich, according’ te a despatch to te Bveoing News SEs ovary ue “En o fivht near ..erads, on the river the Russians captured the to @ Lods telegram tho Rue- troops captured at Ijerads Gen. “Mathioce and hie stat’ —> POUR GERMAN WARSHIPS SEEN STEAMING NORTH OFF COAST OF CHILI. Peru, Nov, 11—A telegram ‘Taltal, Chill, says that a steamer there reports that when off Chili, she sighted four Ger- ‘Warships steaming north. Coquimbo ts about 300 miles south ‘@f Taltal, and, allowing tor the time the steamer's passage between two ports, the warships may fe 4 —_——__—_ TOKIO CELEBRATES FALL OF TSINGTAU; ALLIES’ ENVOYS TALK. TOKIO, Nov. Tokio to-day Sean as terday’ to th i] rman forti e jemonat he tur eo. and it Kea position of ‘aing: tho"altea pow: Tho atrects are decorated with flags 4 ¢ people, hii processions, show reat entiusfonee : ol PEACE MOVE BY POPE, GERMANS SAY, WILL RAISE TEMPORAL POWER QUESTION, LONDON, Nov. 11 (Associated Prose), —Telegraphing from Copenh respondent of the Central News saya; “A Geapatch here from Cologne af- ome by the Pope shortly will on- vor feover,t ©, initiag egotiations “The German Addresses were olive! matio representatives ers. the Music Master Spend Less.for Records letting of - Musician Sales: quest! wer and Rititae ~memaneatiieeseese JAP TORPEDO BOAT SUNK BY A MINE IN THE BAY AT KIAOCHOW. TOKIO, Nov. 11 (Associated Preas).— OMctal announcement is made that tor- edo boat No, 33 of the Japanese navy Was sunk to-day by mine at the mouth of Kiaochow Hay while dragati ‘e force, italy into, taking am rescued. bd Other torpedo boats made an at- tempt to tow No. 33 into shallow wa- t but failed. Six men on board No. jere killed or wounded and three are soissing. —————— NEWSPAPER MEN ARE EXPELLED FROM ZEELAND PROVINCE, AMSTERDAM (via London), Nov. 11. —The Netherlands military have issued orders that all fo1 “| wits Monday, but the batteries were er, ——ee— aiog LOSS OF OFFICERS for mines. A majority of the crew were| tf be checked, even though a portion of the army should be withdrawn for « movement against the Turks. It te the belief in Petrograd that the great Russian army will fight ite way through Bast Prussia, Galicia and Posen by force of its own weight of numbers. Reports from the front declare it is evident that the Kalser is rushing reinforcement to his Kast- orn front from Helgium. Men uf commands reported a week ago to be fighting in Flanders have been taken prisoners in East Prussia, it in declared. An oficial statement from the War Office declares the German right flank in East Prussia, after stubborn resistance in the region of Lyck, has been pushed back toward the Ma- sour Lakes, Russians have also reached Mickow in an adi ward Cracow. In Gallet crossed the Wisloka and ococupied Rsheshow, Bynow and Lisko, Reports to the War Office deciare the Germans are rushing reinforce- ments toward Thorn and Posen, All railroad lines are given over to the transportation of troops, which are being concentrated in the line of the Russian advance, LONDON, Nov. 11 (United Press). —The Governor of Sierra Leomie, the British possession on the Weat Coast of Africa, has transmitted to the Colonial OMice letters from various Mohammedan chieftains, all of whom declare the loyalty of their people, “We are incessantly praying that Allah grant victory to England,” LONDON, Nov, 11.—The Times that Germany’s official list of kil! men gives a total of 609,000, One list alone, from October. alone, from wouni diseases, death German less of 509,000 dose not, of returned to the front. AS SPY INLONDON TOWER GAME TO THE LAST First Execution in Historic Building Since 1747—Body Buried There. LONDON,. Nov. 11—Saying only “Bentence was duly confirmed,” of- ficial announcement ts made of the execution of Carl Hans Lody, alias Charles A. Inglis, -*ho was found guilty by « court-martial of a charge of espionage on Nov. 3. A Gring equad of eight men “con- firmed the sentence” just as dawn was breaking last Friday morning. Beaped in a chair against a wall of the miniature rife range of London Tower, Lody folded his arme and crossed his legs, looking squarely at the sergeant in command of the equad. He refused to be blindfolded and to the last he preserved the im- perturbable silence that marked his Comportment throughout the three Gays of bis trial. There had been no previous execu- tion at the Tower since 1747, when Lord Lovat was beheaded for his part in the rebellion ‘which was crushed the previous year at Culloden, Boot- land, Lody, died not far from the spot where Anne Boleyn was be- headed. His body subsequently was buried within the precincts of the Tower. Lody was twenty-eight years old and a Lieutenant in the reserve of the German navy. Last year he served aboard the Kaiser's racing yacht Meteor, and the espionage of which he was convicted embraced the keep- ing track of the movements -f the British flect in the North Sea, He testified that while he was to Jo this he bad been warned not to “spy.” a SEALED UP IN BOX CAR 21 DAYS WITHOUT FOOD \ LONDON, Nov. 11.—A despatch to the Exchange Telegraph Company from Athens says: “It 1s learned that a congpiracy has broken out at Constantinople against the Germans and Young Turks. Tho chief conspirators were arrested and shot. “Tho population of the Ottoman apital, becoming excited as a result {of the Turkish defeats on Sunday, Vibited roseatment on a number of German non-commissioned officers, BERLIN (via wireless to Bayville, L, L), Nov. 11 (United Press].—Re- porta from Csernowits to-day de- Glared an important movement of Russian troops is in progress in Bessarabian and Bast Galicia, The movement is apparently directed against Turkey, it ls declared, From Vienna it is reported that Russians threw shells into Cserno- soon sitenced. An advance guard action before the cy resulted in the retreat of the Russians, BY GERMANS IS NOW PUT AT 70 PER CENT. 4 Prose), PARI, Nov. 11 (A! the recent fighting in ry the Germana lost 70 per cent. of their officers, From Oct. 23 to Nov. 6 the total Russian captures amounted to 21,750 soldiers, 4 mor- quantity of provision: pi wisble Ho NORTH CAROLINA SAFE, SECRETARY DANIELS SAYS HE BELIEVES. WABHINGTON, Nov. 11.—Secretary Daniels, replying to-day to inquiries from relatives of the officers and men of the crulser North Carolina, which, it was rumored, had met with a mishap fn the Mediterranean, sald that while he had no official word from the cruiser, he felt positive she had not been ave the province! harmed, He explained that if she had encountered” an” accident the Depart: | nds province ta directiy| mint WOuld bave been adv fore ™ ‘hrough it flows the m Ant //@) FIFTH AVE., AT 36TH ST. VTHAVE., COR. yp NEAR Man Alive When Found, but Hair Turned White by Sufferings . on Railroad Journey. NORTH TONAWANDA, N. Y.,, Nov. 11,—After an involuntary fast of twenty-one days in a sealed box car, R. H. Gardner, a machinist of Cle land, was released here to-day. He was unconscious and his hair had turned white. Gurdner was accompanying & cure load of machinery from Vrosburg, Md., to Harrison, Pa,, the destination of which was later ehanged to this city. —— CATTLE PLAGUE SPREADS AMONG $2,500,000 HERD. CHICAGO, Nov. 11.—Spread of foot and mouth disease among the 836 prize dairy cattle under quarantine at the Chicago Union Stock Yards as- sumed such alarming proportions to- day that it was feared the infection could not be prevented from spread- ing to every animal in the herd. The cattle are valued at $2,600,000. Dr. 8. E, Bennett of the Federal Bureau of Animal Industry said that forty new cases have been discov- ered among th The newly in- feoted cows separated from the teolated herd and taken to the veter- inary hospital, where fifty-two other cases from the Dairy Show stock are under treatment, Dr, Bennett sald that consent would not be given to destroy the animale until there is no hope of saving them, peta aera SHOT HIS WIFE NINE TIMES, Atter Husband Ki Own He: ST, LOUIS, Mo., Nov. 11.—George H. Neeley of Richmond, Ind. a travel- ling agent, shot and killed his wife, Mra, Estelle B. Neeley, and committed suicide in the Terminal Motel here early to-day. Two letters in the woman's travelling bag indicated that she planned to divorce her hus- band and wed « Tulsa, Okla. man, ened his lett Q ley wan shot nine times, hots striking near her h in her right arm. Neo ai led from a@ bullet he fired into his head. were in Ti Judge Seabury Spent Noi ae. ALBANY, Nov, 11.—Samuel Seabury, iota oe aint wages eh N ioe bla gadis German Losses, Up Reached Terribie Total ot 509,000. says, contains date from September, some thousands from August and only a few In the course of the entire civil war the Federal looses, in dead losses, from a partial list, reached 183,621, for many are prisenere and thousands of ‘| Corporation, incorporating the con- to October, . correspondent at Copenhagen says led, Wounded and missing officers 981 hames, Most of the losses totalled 349,944. The Confederate @ total of 488,766, The mean that many have died, the slightly wounded have course, BANKER TELLS HOW SIEGEL GOT $100,000 THROUGH STATEMENT (Continued from First Page.) _—_. marked by the care with which he went into check and ledger trans- actions, The question he asked the Jurymen to anawer wa: “Can a man lose $4, 00) and not know it?" and he had chart after chart unrolled before the jury in Graphic inquiry, Thare was nothing ccatorical about Mr. Trali ddress, He seemed, rather, to take the jury beside his kneo to explain in the simplest, clearest language the Points he will eventually seek to prove by his witnesses, Often he dropped into the vernacular of the farmer to emphasize a statement. Tho jurymen listened to him with every Indication of interest and at- tention. In closing Mr. Train sald: “Whon Henry Siegel at last found himself in such a predicament that he could not have an honorable fall- ure without his false pretenses to the bank becoming known he called into his office his private secretary, Mc- Meekin, an old man, loyal to his em- ployet nd said to him: MADE INQUIRY ABOUT EXTRA. DITION TREATIES, “‘MeMeekin, go over to the public Ubrary and find out what cotintries there aro in the world where I can go and where I can’t be brought back to this country; find out what coun. tries have no extradition treaty with the United States.’ “And McMeekin said in reply: ‘Mc, Blegel. you'd better get your lawyer to do that.’ Oscar A. Prall, Treasurer of the Fourteenth Street Store ani Henry Siegel's right-hand man in the finan- operations in which,the Siegel entesprises became so involved that they came crashing down in a ruin of millions, has turned State's evi- dence. Prail wid take the witness stand and make a clean breast of all the transactions of the Siegel stores in which he had @ part, according to Mr. Train. He will tell of the manufacture of a complete set Street Store and of the falsitications of accounts and inventories of m;-:- chandise extending over many ):are. The annoMmcement of Prall’s test mony in the people's behalf was made to-day by Assistant District- Attorney Train in his address to the jury. In this address Mr. Train re- lated the entire story of the Siegel “high finance,” and told of Henry Sie- gel's now realized fear that he would tind bimeelf wt the bar of justice, “if B® did not borrow money and keep gung," wit, ‘rain said, “State the jury to-@ay, He said: = “The charge against Siegel is that he and Vogel induced the Nationa: Bank Commerce to era of the bank that the store was @ prosperous concern, that it was making mo! and that ite assets exceeded its lia- bilities, when in point of fact it had lost over $1,600,000 and was losing a Quarter of @ million dollars each year, it waa busted—bankrupt. And with. in eight months after receiving the money, Biegel and Vogel asked for a receivership for the store; it was sold out and its creditors will not fifteen cents on the dollar. In other words, Siegel and Vogel got from the bank $100,000 and gambled it away in @ bankrupt business, while they rep- resented that business to be as solv- ent as the Bank of England, and th id themselves $100,000 in sala or doing it. They put their names to false statements, and by means of those false statements they cheated the bank out of its money. Such statements are the gold bricks of high finance, which we shall invite your particular attention in the proof are these: “First—Did Siegel and Vogel lie to the oMcers of the National Bank of Commerce? “Second — Did they get the bank's money by means of these lies? * “Third—Did they know they were will answer those three Mirmative with incon- teatible mat! “In 1909 Siegel that they had one goo @ doubtful one and one questions in amalgami them in one concern to be known as the Siegel Stores cern for @ large amount and getting capital by the sale of stock to float these three stores and incidentally to ee Rebels’ Bomb Kills 18 in China, CANTON, China, Nov. 11,—Another bomb outrage committed by Chinese ps etnias es of false books for the Fourteenth | &°. “The three features of the case to! A, change for thelr holdings in the three stores, “Tho only, way thése stores could have been kept afloat was through money fd m the of Ay | money, com) their depositors, Boge Steer ited to the three stores. And the stores lent It to each other and to bd and Vi who in turn loaned the money back and in and out and this and that vay ‘until finally in one pea fore: CHART USED “0 SHOW FINAN- CIAL OPERATIONS, When Mr, Train came to his elucidation of tho alleged conspiracy into which Siegel and Vogel entered to obtain money to keep the enter- Prises afloat, he had a great chart arranged of a sort of shade roller, hung on a high rack at t the jury box. It Pore lege! Vogel as two discs at th® top of the chart with the en’ is connected up to them in other as old- fashioned family bills were once charted. Mr. Stanchfield objected to the display of the chart, but wae not by ¥ — by lerbert 1. Powell, Vice-President of the National Bank of Commerce of New York City, was the first wit- ness called by the people. After Mr. Howell had taken his place on the witness stand, John B. Stanghfield, Siegel's counsel, objected to Mr. ved Tral it out; aloo he again mov .d to atri - for the dismiasal of the indictment of Bid client. Both motions were de- nied. Mr. Howell then told of the ° ing in 1904 or 1905 of the checking account of the Fourteenth Street Store. He said that his bank bad been accustomed to discount the notes of the store. His first meeting with Slogel, he said, was on April 9, 1913. At that time. the witness said, he had a talk with Siegel upon a letter and @ statement of the financial con- dition of the Fourteenth Street Store aa of Fob, 1, 1918, which he had re- ceived on Feb. 14 ‘The witness then told of financial statements from the Simonson Craw- ford Company and the Boston store submitted by Slewel to the bani. These statements claimed that the stores were doing a business of $5,000,000 a year and that their capi- tal was intact. ed that Mr. ‘The witness thi Vogel at that time asked for “Vogel said that the Fourte Street Store had decided to take over the Rothenberg store and that the good will of both stores should be suf- ficient to guarantee a loan of consid- erable amount. i lexander, the president of the ban nd myself looked over their finanolal statement for 1912, as we had heard rumors of money trouble in the Siegel store. As a result of our examination of these statements the bank’ made a loan of $100,000 to Biegel and NG ant ‘The loan was in the form of four notes for $26,000 each.’ HORSES MUTILATED; SUSPECT GERMAN SPY Steamer Rembrandt, Which Was Afire at Sea, Is Now Guarded at Norfolk. (Sopectal to The Evening Workd,) NORFOLK, Va., Nov. 11.—With a guard of armed men around the vés- eel, the British steamer Rembrandt, which was on fire at sea for twenty hours, is tied up at @ pler of the Chesapeake and Ohio Ratlway at Newport Ne’ No one is allowed to ‘on board or leave the ship. Capt. Edlin, who suspects German spies of having fired his vessel, de- clines to make a state: . Some of the 800 hor the Rem- brandt carried for the French Gov- ‘nment are still alive, but many re mutilated. A number of dead horses—150, members of the crew say --were thrown overboard off the Vir- ginia Capes. These were also mutl- lated. A German on board is sus- pected of Maving fired the ship and mutilated the horses. He is not un- der arrest, but is not permitted to leave the ship. Held on White Slave Charge. The attention of agents of the United States Government was called to-day to the case of Henry Balerno, who was held in $5,000 bail in Coney Island police court on a rge of i it . gvidence Dodd to: irl in Richmond and ia homne at No. 878: of Braves le Married. SPRINGFIELD, Mass, Nov. 11.— Walter J. (Rabbit) Maranville, short- atop of the wor! champion Boston tional League baseball team, and a eg er ra Bacred foart by Rev, Patrick F. Boy! Gifts wer Stallings, Caj members of pli Ut STEAMSHIPS DUE TO-DAY. Mani C*Schnny Evers and other e Braves. FYose CEYLON TEA Chicago store and the two Uew York ores amounted & trey but they capitalined $10,000,000 and sold quantities of ry stock to a abroad etook i et en White Rese Coffee, Nene Better ——————— jh00T FOUND AND REWARRE. Se ere od to|suard. Then warning Mr. Ruhlender he | Window and disappeargd. So stunned 2p NRO MRI 5 ilar SEER, igi EPORTED TO BE LEADING ARMY AGAINST CZAR CHILD MURDER DONE | HERE WITH IMPUNITY, WITNESS DECLARES Prof. Ewing, Pathologist, | Scores Work of Coroners at Inquiry. Dr. William H. Guilfoy, Registrar of Records in the Health Department, and Prof. James Ewing, noted path- ologist of Cornell testified to-day to inadequate meth- ods in the Board of Coroners at the inquiry into the operations of that body. Dr. Guilfoy charged the Cor- oners’ physicians with keeping inac- curate records of deaths reported to the Health Department. “In the majority of cases of acci- dent, suicide and homicide the cause alan University, both | Pe of death is nét reported,” Dr. Gullfoy Geath the cause is often guessed at.” Prof. Ewing explained the present medico-legal work. less impunity?” asked Commissioner Wallatein. *“E most certainly do,” was Prof. Ewing's reply. BURGLARS FLEECE RICH BACHELORS AT PISTOL'S POINT (Continued from First Page.) @ sound until five mnutes after he had disappeared. Then he went out the window and down the fire escape. Mr. Jewett discovered that $15 in mone$ was all the burglar taken. Mr. Jewett visited the West Side Prison yesterday and was shown Jo- aeph Doone, or Dunoff, of No. 245 Six. teenth street, Brooklyn, ‘one of the two highwaymen captured after the shooting and robbery of jeweller Max Ernest at Columbus avenue and Bighty-seventh street on Nov. 5. Mr. Jewett positively identified Doone as bie midnight visitor. Though detectives kept a clos. watch on the Speyer apartm tol- lowing the reporting of the first burglary last Friday m ‘ning at about 3 o'clock, Henry Ruhlender, a partner of James Speyer, whose roo are on the sixth floor of the building, was aroused by the nolse of some one moving . oun! in b's room, He switched on the light above his bed, which disc:.sed three masked men in the room. The instant th; appeared they whirled on him, two presenting rev: vers at his head. “Turn off t:.2: Me>t or we'll shoot!" o1¢ growled and the light went off. While one of the three burglars Lf ered with a revolver, the other two hurriedly explored his clothes. They took from them $170 in cash, but, as if by design, overlooked a gold watch, some diamond studded cu links and other Jewels on the dresser top. ‘When they had finished the man who was keeping the victim covered allowed the other two to get out via the fire eaqgpe while he continued on} | not to make @ move, he backed to the was he by his experience that Mr, Rublender did not even telephone to the police for several mii his visitors had departed. nim ater MONMOUTH, Warrender and his wit 1d. ing on @ motorcyole, re killed by a urlington switch engine. here to-day. Advertised S; swore, “while in cases of natural ont, Coroners’ system is inadequate chiefly | ous the world over for its case, certaii because the member so fthe board | and And its staff are men untrained in| ° “Do you consider that child, murder | ce is done with any degree of, frequency | # in New York City, and with more or | fefunded, goes opt Mr. RuNlender constantly cov-| Wale Are on Sale at All Our Stores 1A) TEM MIE! ry) 2 wil sorte a kinds, comprisin, Checolate Eerste | Sweets, lly Gums, French Creams, Nouga' focoanut uares, iT Menthes, Bon Bons and many other nily le t iby a4 ‘ Mes. Flower to Serve Stx Daya, Mrs. Lillian Fiower, the wife of Dr. Richard C. Flower, who recently pleaded gully to extensive swindling operations, was sentenced to-day in the Court of teeworkhouse, On" Oet re tempted jiggle 1,000 rains pine to her husband, who was the ‘Tombs. Quickest, Surest Cough Remedy Ie Home- Meade Easily Prepared in a Few Min- utes. Cheap but Unequalled. Some people are constantly anno; from one year's end to the other wit reistent bronchial cough, whic! wholly unnecessary. Here is a bhome- made remedy that gets right at the cause and will make you wonder what became it. 2 Wi Get 4 ounces Piner 4 bail Bytes from any druggist, pour into a pint bottle acd fil the bole with plan granulated sugar syrup. Start taking it at once, fF inex and Sugar Syrup mixture makes a full pint—enough to last a family a long time—at a cost of only 54 cents, Keeps perfectly and tastes lly prepared. 4 pine extract, rich in guaiacol, and is iy Ppromptness in overcoming bad ughs, chest and throat colds, Get the . Ask your druggist for “234 ounces Pinex,” and do not ac- nything else. ‘The Pinex Co More in QUANTITY at the same cost—hut quality of the highest. A sterling appeal to thrifty house- wives who prac- tise economy yet demand the best. Quality Condiments In purity and flavor the Waw-Waw Products are unrivaled. Severe Headaches Are Caused by Eyestrai Sales ae es RIGHT ne for safe. guarding it. Eyes Examined Without Charge by Registered Eye Physicians, Established 52 Years. New York: 184 B’way,at John St, ork aa Sisth Av. tbeh Be 2pecial or 1 nurse AMORTED | Nur Cathe ith the advent of fall, Nut Confections com pele or ia thie awees ones

Other pages from this issue: