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om FORD SHP FULL WHEN IT SALS TO CORK UP THE WAR Volunteer Pacifists Rush to, Join Hopeful Multi-Million- aire’s Peace Mission. | | | | i} DR, JORDAN WILL SAIL. | Clarence Darrow Declines to) Enlist, but Extends Dubious | Wishes for Success of Plan. ‘When the Ford peace forces as- sembled at the Biltmore Hotel head- quarters they were confronted by breagtworks of letters and telegrams from volunteer pacifists who want to sail for Burope on the steamship Oscar TI. on Saturday and atop tho war. ‘There was also a squadron of men abd women who appeared in person to enlist in the cause of peace. They all wanted to eee Mr. Ford, to lay be- fore him their respective plans of campaign, and each was certain that his om her scheme wna the only one to stop the European slaughter. ‘They were fiformed that Mr. Ford would not retuan to headquarters until to- morrow. Then there were several squads of men who had things to sell. One man had a new-fangied |ife-preserver Mich he wanted Mr. Ford to pur- Chae for exch of Wie guests on the shop of paace. The salesman for this Nfe-pre- eerver told Mr. Ford's secretary that bead the passengers on the Titanic and Lusitania been provided with his device there would not have been a woul lost, Another salesman wanted to furniah guide books. Others want- 0d to be official photographers. They stormed the Ford ramparts in vain, They returned in disorder to the lobby and avowed the expedition would be * certain failure, Among those who accepted Mr. Ford's invitation was Dr. and Mrs. David Starr Jordan. They wired they are on their way to New York, pre- pared to eail. Clarence Darrow, the noted labor attorney, declined to par- tfotpate in the campaign. In his re- ply he eald: “I fully appreciate the compliment Mr. Ford has paid me and I have the highest regard for him and al! his good works, but I cannot believe that it is @tther wise or right for us to in- terfere in the matter, Still, I hope I am wrong and that good will come of it.” | Spirit of Woman Woman Under 30 Cannot Keep Man’s Love; At 40 He Finds Her a Pertect Companion \N CENTRAL PARK “The young girl is a bud, charming, | Yvette Guilbert, Whose Song Express the “From tifies love, of All Ages, Says: By Nixola Gr “The mentality of a nation may be judged by the admire: “The young girl ie a bud—charm perfume, and forty. and the toy steam! the one he left in “The man who loves the woman the mother heart, the sister soul.” Yvette Gutlbert, frankly beyond all the ages she had mentioned, faced me across a table in her sults at the Hotel Knickerbocker—a euite swarm- ing with Amertoan Beauties, orchids and chrysanthemums—all the in- signia of the success as an artist which she has enjoyed for a quarter of a century, She has just arrived in Yew York to begin an engagement at the Lyceum Theatre next Tuesday where she will give a series of #on| which will express the spirit of the women of all ages or, aa Mme. Guil- bert said, “from the Bible to the great war.” RIPE APRICOTS AND WOMAN'S ATTRACTIVE AGE. We discussed the age at which woman ia most attractive, because years and years ago, when I was « very young persdh and thought and wondered how women more than twenty-five years old managed to pre- serve their hair and teeth, my horrible green equilibrium was much disturbed by one Line of a aong Mme. Guilbert had brought to America on her first met Yvette for the first time I wanted | te Jearn from her just exactly when) apricots ere ripe. ‘With her wonderful red hair, ber glowing eyes, the look so warm and) ripe that met mine, she seemed ke a} very Inscious apricot herself. but without perfume. her warmest, most resplendent hours; she has learned the science of loving. “It is not the Sacrament which sanc- “A woman will smile at a man across the tomb of her illusions, her sensations, | even; that is the love of angels. “It is only the love of women which | is real love.” “The flowering season for women | between thirty “Before thirty women « of men—now, you will pardon me for using a coarse expreesion—merely females. “A man’s choice between one girl of twenty and! another ie the small boy's choice between the (oy engine “But the man who loves the woman of thirty | chooses the loveliest among 600 flowers. i | Newspapers, no more men—no more | love? Hurrah!” And yet she said to me: “T shall talk to you like an old woman, for I am an old woma) At forty woman begins to fade. I have| been fading for some time. So, you soe, I apeak without personal vanity when I say to you that no woman le worth loving until she ts thirty. The bud ts pretty, of course, but It has no charm. Woman crosses the meridian From thirty to forty she General Manager Jacobson of the Seandanavian-American Line called Yor a definite estimate as to how many Passengers might be expected for the Qgoar IT, He was told a list would bégiven him to-morrow. Mr, Jacob- won was asked if the peace liner would carry munitions of war and gave as- murence it would not It is expected the ship will be filled to capacity. It is anid that 125 of Mr, |at thirty. Ford's invitations will be accepted |enjoys ber warmest, most resplend- ‘and in addition to this number therejent hours. She has learned the are 100 or more volunteers ready to|science of thinking, the ascience of Mving, the eclence—for it 19 4 acience—of loving. To be loved by such a woman is the crown of a man’s life. Thie is mot my opinion only. 1 am an artist, I have been the friend of many men of great intellect and they have told me whet they think about women and about love. 1T@ NOT THE SACRAMENT THAT) SANCTIFIES LOVE. H “No woman of less than thirty ha: anything with which to keep a man lov Mme. Guilbert added, “because step into vacant places in the ranks, Louts P, Lochner, whe !s managing the peace campaign, is in Philadelphia te-day striving to get John Wana- maker's consent to join the expedition. == QUIT MEAT WHE BACK HURTS OR | thirty to forty woman enjoys, | but the woman's love. ‘eeley-Smith. we of the women It ing, yes, Dut hard and without much , from the point of rin | boat. If he takes one home he wants} the sbop. | of forty finds the perfect companion, walks away an empty pla ‘Why waste time thinking about breakfast when dinner is abou! to be announced,’ he thinks." “But it is only that love of woman, which f# real love,” Mme. Guilbert| said, “that love #o pure, so rare, which | ia made of pity, of anguish, of distl- fusion and of tears.” | “And the love of lovers?’ tioned, AND CRASH WENT THE CLASSI. CAL AND LEGENDARY LOVES. “The love of lovers,” repeated the Incomparable Yvette with a shrug And tt seemed to me that Paolo and Francesca, Tristan and Isolde and all the other lovers of the great legends were dismissed by that cynical ges- ture, “Bab! guch love ino disease, an tn fluensa. You have It and you get over it as quickly as posible, if necessary, you take a pill. Such love, after you ave had it a few times, is a nuisance; to the ordinary woman, a bore. An artiat is never bored. I have never been bored in mv life! I have often said that if I should be sentenced to ten years’ solitary confinement in prison 1 should clap my hands any say: ‘What, no more telephones, no more from T qu And Yvette executed a three cl in expressive pantomime and a ¢: ful flourish of a lace-clad arm. “You have said that youth ts uot| necessary to love. Is beauty neces- sary?” T asked ‘Beauty? But at all. One} thing only ts invincible in the art of 8. not 7 Site et hi ter he had the theatre and the art of lfe—that | Judge to Punish New oan Real Hatate Company. ‘The plot ia| Ms employer fe bisodice eprers| Mme, ‘Gultbert. proclaimed ‘bravely, | York Lawye 485x105, opposite Delmonico’a and|Central ‘Terminal, and then started “I am ugly and I really cannot remem: | Cre aw yes Sherry’s, the building rising eleven | for Rivermae Drive, WHR Holt in the locked vouNET DCL ena Witkin stories. It was bullt ten years 8601 An the auto tore wildly up the exotiein that t havea lone, yaaa fipectal to The Rrentng World.) and was known as the Night and Day | W eat Bday we asl ae career as an artist behind me. A| WHITE PLAINS, N. ¥., Nov, 30,--| Bank Building before that Institution | whished Sn aniioate tee ee in. Woman may be ugly, she may not be lhe Westchester County Grand Jury, | fell into the control of the Harriman crenaing the speed of the car and | YOUnK, and yet she may be very much | which ts conducting an inquiry into |eatate, The rent roll ts $172,000 « year. | narrowly missed colliding with a few the other hand, the perfect courtesan, the woman with every physteal per- fection, may be loved by a hundred men for a day, yet be unablo to keep one, In love, as in art, it is talent that wins the permanent victories.” WHY MEN AND WOMEN MISUN- DERSTAND EACH OTHER. The conversation turned, 1 don’t know how, to the different moral tan of men and women. “But how can mea and women un- derstand each other about morals,” Mme. Guilbert asked, “when a father gays to his son, ‘You are a man, now muse yourself,’ but the mother must say to her daughter, ‘Be pure, though under that age all women are very muoh alike, They have beauty, yes-- what we call the beauty of the devil, but without charm, without intelli. gence, It is the woman of thisty who keeps her husband. Mme, Guilbert shrugged ber rather heavy shoulders, decked with white lace. “Who keeps her MAN, I should say. Why should I epeak to you of husbands? It is not the sacrament which sanctifies love but the woman's woul.” “T have ALWAYS wanted to protest when any one epoke of keeping man's love as woman's duty. This time [ aid it, “Do women always want to KHEP love?’ I asked Mme, Guilbert. “Do you realy believe in our ghastly fidel- ity? Ism’t it rather one of our un- natural vices—one of the traite man base imposed upon us? Do you thialk KIDNEYS BOTHER Says Uric Acid in meat clogs Kidneys and irritates Bladd ier. A glass of Salts is harmleas way to flush Kidneys, says authority. must have your meat every day, ean td Gat Brash yorr Ekdweys with colts stoasionally, says a noted authority who tells us that meat forms uric acid which most paralyzes the kidneys in their ef- forts to expel it from the blood. They become sluggish and weaken, then you suffer with a dull misery in the kidne: Salts from any pharmacy , i 8 tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your of ler iusions, ber emotions, hi scunations even. And that is the real ains in or sick| the natural womun is any more con- Pie sg tll posed our stomach sours, | stant than the natural man? \ m conten when the weather) «Not much more,” Mme. Quilbert is bad you have scent et eedinen answered, “but where can you find urine gets sonia, See of comiret e me a naturel woman? The love of obliging you to geek relief two Nee woman is supernatural. Man fe times seo, hg night. nothing like it, A woman will ollng To neutralize these lnvltating acide, te to @ man who crucifies her—worns cl the kidneys and flush off the} yet, to a man who dores her, She will | \ arinous waste get four ounces of | sraije at him tenderly across the tomb kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts ie mede from the acid of gr and lemon juice, combined with lit! and has been used for generations to flush and stimulate slug wh kidns also to yutralize the Is im urine, so it no tes, thus ending bladder longer irr weakness. . a; Salts a lnexpen rey comnos in- fur and makes a delig! jerves- cant lithia-water drink,—Advt. love, the love of angels and of wom- en—the love man knows nothing about, For did you ever know of a | man who kept a vigil beside bis dead love~a lifelong vigil, as so many women dot” “Indeed I have not,” I replied, “A man would consider that very stupid. That advice the father Mine, Guilbert added, # responsibie for nearly all the un- happiness in the world. Think of all the ilinens, the fear, the anguish it causes to women. And that advice is unnecessary, Physicians have told me so. Let the mother instruct her fon as @he instructa her daughter. When he tells her that he feels the call of passion let her say to him with @ fine audacity: ‘Yes, dear, and when you were younger you had a tooth- ache Don't worry put it. Plo football, take walks and cold bath Surely, 20 woman dares say to h daughter as every father says to his sou: ‘Go forth and embrace the first He walks away from his old love as naturally, as heartiessly as a dog LETTER WRITER - TRIES TO SWERVE: Mile. YVETTE GUILBERT $2,225,000 FOR | BUILDING ON FIFTH AVE, Dula Buys Structure in Which Har- riman National Bank Is THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1915. | ~ENDS I TRAGEDY Man Using Employer's Auto! ' Overturns Machine and @ Friend Is Killed. , HOMICIDE CHARGED. Evidence in Auto of Women} Companions Who Had | Recently Left It. | Swaying drunkenly in the chauffeur arat |Charies Peterson, for | down burying Clifford Holt, a hotel- keeper of Corona, L 1, under tt. Leaving Holt dying Peterson was staggering away unhurt when he was arrested, It was the end of a wild night Joy ride. In the tonneau of the car were sev- eral salt shakers, a few spoons, woman's handbag and a lace handker- chief, The women members of the party which had made « round of all the white light restaurants had left the automobile ten minutes before the scctdent, and Peterson hi told ¢ Police he does not know who they were. Peterson was )ater in the day taken to the District Attornay’a office, where Assistant District Attorney Murphy sald he recognized him aa one of the gang of auto thieves who were rounded up a year ago. Peter- son, he said, had heen allowed to on @ muspended sentence by Judge Nott in the Court of General Sessions, having given valuable Information to the District Attorney's office. Ha | vas held for the Coroner on a charge of homicide, ‘The joy ride started soon after Poteraon left Mr. Carey at his home in the Peter Stuyvesant Apartment, at No, 268 Riverside Drive, early last evening. He was told to take the car to the garage and return early thia morning. Instead, he took the auto downtown, where he met his friend ' i Holt, the owner of Holt's Flushing | Housed. Bay Hotel, at Corona, ‘They went off | RB. Dula, the tobacco capitalist, together and sometime during the =e Se Wesichesier Body Calls on} the general management of Sing Sing | prison and felonies committed by eon- vieta under the wardenship of Thomas | M. Osborne, went before the Supreme Court this morning and asked Justice Joneph Morachaauer for instructions regarding @ letter which had been written to one of the members, wan asserted by District Attorney Frederick BE, Weeks that the writer had tried to influence the Grand Jury in the interest of Warden Osborne. ‘The letter, which the District Attorney refused to make public, is #aid to have been written by a New York lawyer. After reading the letter the Justice anid: "The law te simple in regard to & letter of this kind. of Section 376 of the Penal Code, which provides among other things that when a person tries to influence @ juror in the discharge of his duty It, It ts a vtolation | | night met thelr women friends, About 7 o'clock this morning Peter- son remembered that Mr, Carey want- #1 him at the Peter Stuyvesant at § o'clock, He arranged to bave the paid $2,225,000 to-day for the Harri- man National Bank Bullding on the southeast corner of Fifth Avenue and Forty-fourth Street | ‘The property was sold by the Amerl- Mr. Dula has invested many of his the way, At the corporation security profits in the beat Fifth Avenue realty during the few years, He gave in part payment twelve ots on Northern Avenue, near One Hundred and Righty-firat Stroet and part of his country estate at Tare rytown, The brokers were Townsend Hornor and L. J. Phillips & Company naa = DIAMOND LOST LUSTRE | IN RUBBING, SHE SAYS other cars iene Seventy-second Street turn into Ce: tral Park West Patrolman Gould was regulating traffic. He whistled and warned Peterson to stop, but tl chauffeur headed for him and he dodged out of the way. Without reducing speed for an tn- stant Peterson tried to make the turn, ‘The car crunched against the road- way, the rear right wheel struck the curb, snapped and then the car went on its double revolution in the air, Peterson waa thrown clear and land- ed in the grassy embankment. Ile was without a scrateh, Holt was taken to the Roosevelt Hospital in an auto which Gould hated, “Tis skull was fractured and nes were broken, and he xeveral Wanted Masseusse to Relieve Her| le there « few houre later of Pain, Not Ring and Watch, AUTO HIT POLICEMAN. Court Is Told. Young Baudoulne Held on Assault Blanche Metan« twenty- en for Benalng Down Cop. be is guilty of @ mledeameanor, h yours old, of Grahnus Street) ies A. Heudoulue Jr “Of courme, It must be entablished |and Fifth Avenue, Astoria, 1. 1, Pill tober se ge ebay by legal evidence that this man, who | 1 in $1,800 bail by Magiatrate 1 $500 bail to-day by Magistrate Breen in & lawyer, wrote thia letter. ‘The |!" the Morrisania Court to-day in the Weat Farms Court on » charge essence of the thing fe that t: fs an{extmination Dec, 2 on a of nasault. He will be tried in Spe attempt to Induer ind larceny, Mra, Metzner's former|otal Sessions for running down @ Grand Jury. er the Mutual Wellare Leegus, video, Uruguay, | the goods awa, nw “ NGS sake Anal e fay vey Markowltz, of No, | Mounted Policeman Murphy of the ing you meet on the strect| “YOU Notire he saym somothing | friend, Mra. Anne “is Westchester Preciuct in an automo- about crimes belng committed in the|10!7 Intervale Avenue, the ironx, vile on Pelham Parkw qroranah, YoU ere convinced thet the) Atate Prison are being taken cere of |charses Mra. Metsner (ook # $200 ring) cheater Husa, | tne i rality is right?" | by ei fecona’ s her fini and mubst saudouine vot yo Lasked Mme, Guilbert. i by @ selfvconatituted ‘body in the| trom her fir mit me) nan and two Kira, bad Been ton “L am," she replied, “absolutely,| Per 7 1akes no difference. A} im n diamond theatre in Manhattan nine aight, of And 1 tell you further that the] crime is «a crime, whether it ts com-| Maasage treatment for rheumatism) Oe oR ant we *Patlesman woman's Vv! is will win.| mitted In a State prison or net. It is Markowits's lands gave M turpl ‘an be et Woman owns the future. This hor-| just as much of a crime in a pri ¢ the opportunity ¢ e}ham Parkwe rible war attests the failure, the cul. |? mM & prison as! et the ORD He ¥ lapse of man, 1am a feminist. You,| outside 1 no solf-conatituted body | » alleged. Severa Fd I ere are a feminist, The | hada righ! lo pass such crimes.” Mrs Markowitx wiveg ure belongs to Let us change! It is reported that the letter write: tf Mra. Met ’ Laat ported thi er writer treatment from Mra, Metzner sheltiey had been ty Bo uae ias ta tree ‘hina bs chones in| wil be in d immediately and| noticed her diamond had apparentiy |'e have beer and sandwich To trust him ts ridiculous.” brought here on a benoh warrant lomt ite lustre, Investixation showed, | a At, his moment a man, a friend of] Tt was reported that the Grand] sho said, that not only lad tho rings MRS. CLARK IS HELD. | Msse, Grulbert's, wha had be m iinieas Jury was about to report additional] yeen exchanged, but 0 #60 watch bad through the room, turned and mane | indictments against convicta charged | poen stolen Most Pace Kings County Granal ber an ironic bow, with assaulting other inmates with| Mrs. Metzner was arrested last! yury ou Charge of Burglary “Merci,” he said, ax though thank-|inives and other weapons night by Detectives McCarthy and ji * " ing her for the entire sex. Th ty sald CHA Kefita Hart who say she admitted! Mra Mary Clark of No. 4¥8 Hancock at I say is true,” Mme, Guilbert e sald that hefore Wanien Os: ing the rings. ‘They wliege she street, Brooklyn, sister-in-law of the | asseverates borne goes » the Grand Jury room she pawned the Jewelry and jey, Charles ark, pastor | ‘Of course it is true." I seconded.| he will be asked to #ign a watver | ne proceeds in living in regal | ¢ ge's Presbyterian Mptacopal Church | But the man only smiled that strange, Y oy : { tor four daya a Hotet) 1 nd J * Banks, « negro, 1 1 6° lot Immun Mis may make hin of Brooklyn, and * masouline amile, compounded of ten- balk, although he has often aaid that |? kerbo ker. . were held for the Grand Ju $1.60" derness, of cynicism, of tolerance, and ype tt the G ‘ . -_ \bail each on a charge of burglary tn the just the tiniest atom of contempt, It| h® urtPapth tthe Grand Jury shalt) soit Liner Caught Fire at Sra, tes Aver oe to-day | Is that smile which we will have to/ hear Nis alle ed Prigon return) A cable trom Bahia, by of eanel i Femovn samt 5 Wade lit Msn | completed ‘ \ don, was receiv 3 at the « of the x; 1 | Wheapver Quinine ty Needed. Deve |, /)% ',,'" ee NAS fe rey fore C. Wixein: | Fivetbitoao Quintin wil be Wound batter | fits oe d pt etn forth ev tday with A fire inher cargo, Which [she thoukht the Koods had been ‘abu wy “Wor any purpose for which | Axity) of dis he easy manner | ea been extiguished. ‘The cargo was |doned by a former tenant as worthlens ne se eet das | 8 Which five convicta escaped and |ronsiderably damaged, the Captaln said. | She deciated ahe had no intention of onies committed by me ° w ave falta to-day for Mantes ling when she hired Ranks to take | Nes oa ag Re | the felonies committed by members of |e was to loave [ali ” Mon ng Bank | PREMIER ASQUITH’S FATHER’S SECRETARY.| DAUGHTER VIOLET WED | | Is Bride of Bonham Carter, Secre- | lary to her Father—Many Not- | ables at Ceremony in London. | LONDON, 00.—Premier Ass |quith's daughter Violet and his #ec- | retary, Bonham Carter, were married [at St. Margaret's, Westminster, this afternoon ttend- DAUGHTER OF BRITISH PEPHOS FOTHPOSS SFPOSOS SOF STOSSOOS Nov The wedding was ed by most of the members of the | diplomatic corps, representatives of royalty and many society leaders. Exeept for the brilliance of the gath- affair was a quiet one, bride wore an ivory satin gowa of mediaeval pattern, The brides. mails, Miss Elizabeth Asquith, the bride's half sister, and Miss Kathleen | Tennant, her niece, were in Russian costumes of apricé. chiffon, full- skirted and fur-edged, with velvet coats and drowhky driver bats | Misa Asquith who is sometimes al~ | luded to ay the “Power Behind the Throne,” Is the daughter of the Brit | inh Premier by his first wife, who be- fore ber marriage in 1877 was Mise Jamea A. Carey, mechanical engineer ‘Helen Melland, ‘The first Mrs, Asquith of the New York Central, drove Mr |died in 1881, When her father mar- Carey's new high-powered touring | ried again Miss Asquith end her etep- enr ata fifty-mile an hour pace up her beoame close friends. The ie Wit Dive te Gevcal wank two women resembled one another hoth physically and mentally—a re- shortly before # o'clock this morning. 4044064644684 MeNbiance that was frequently com- At Seventy-necond Street he tried | 46 4.4.40044.4404) Mented upon by guests at the Asquith to turn, the oar struck the curb, ASQ Lasonic turned twice in the alr, aod came Mega VILEN, UIT H | eee _ INDUSTRIAL HEADS ARE INCOMPETENT, DECLARES JURY > | | Commission Is Also Neglect-} ful Is Finding in Factory ' Fire Inquiry. Chareor of “ineiiicieney anu negiact of duty” are made against the Sta Industrial Commission in a report handed to Coroner Ernest C, Wagner in Brooklyn to-day by the Coroner's Jury that has been Investigating the Diamond Candy Company fire Nov. @ last, in which twelve Itven were lot. ‘The jury yesterday held Edward L. Diamond and hia wife, Celia, owners of the factory, and two othera on the chargo of criminal neglect, and, after ‘Twas just @ few years ago returning the verdict, proceeded to that ellk stockings were the review the work of the Industrial moet unsatisfactory sort of Commission. It remained in session stockings you could wear, until 7 o'clock last evening and pre- New they're the best and most durable beocaw we pared « long report censuring the make them from chemically commission which Coroner Wagner received to-day, ‘The first part of the report has this to aay: “We find “loaded,” “weighted.” “dyn: mited” or “adulterated” etik. Bilk that’s loaded with “tin na“ te bound te crack and aplit. The public didn't know this. They didn't know the “rustle” In silk stock!) meant adulterated silk. You can stitt buy this kind of stocking, but why should you, when for the same price you can get hat the Industrial Com- mission are inefficient and guilty of neglect because of thelr failure to en- act proper rule# and regulations to safeguard the people who are em- ployed in factories.” Commissioners Loula Wiard of Ratavia, ond James M. Lyneh, of Syracuse are twice censured—onee for lack of know rding fire pre- vention laws and again for going on pleasure trips in automobiles tur- pished by the State, Ward, says the Jury, went from Syracuse to Batavie in 4 State-owned inachine and Lyneb from Byracuse Providence and again to New York Chief Inspector Jeremiah J | Gate Strive ya K STOCKINGS SIL Flood ts called “ignor- ex und unfit to hold hia of the Commission ant of his dut position.” John Mitchell, of the “being away ‘4 On private bus in is no record of his having obtained a leave of absence,” Mitchell testified be was absent from Nov, 4 to Nov. 35. Chairman clued for #8 when there Gotham Hosiery Shops Conveniently Lecated Y ot /) \ Other charges brought against the 504 Fifth Ave., near 42nd Industrial bouy are 27 West 34th St. That the work of inspectors Waa not That out of 900 factury PATRERNS What out of 4,58 Violations brouxh to rhe nition of the commission in t year only 246 were remedied ing sioutensenoet & lemporary ton! aes n: That the spending by the commis: and because Itie © food medicine It gion of $24,000 a year for meals anid BUILDS YOU bi 4 “Unwarranted and UP Phat the $24,000 should be apent f oe BELLANS bere: ‘ Absolutely Removes Wa * Indigestion. One package proves it. 25c at all druggists, prohibited Anding man, Coro end suid bi puld see ernor got a copy w