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+ “ ro “USINCOMETAX DECLARED VALID BY HIGHEST CURT Decision in Case of Union Paci- fic Railroad Stockholder Sweeps Aside Objections. AFFECTS OTHER CASES. Collection of Levy at Us Source One of the Issues Involved in Ruling. WASHINGTON, — Jan 24—The United States Supreme Court to-day upheld the constitutionality of the In- come Tax Law. Five te suits to test the con- s{ ution. lity of the tax were brought in the Federal throughout the country soon after the law be- came effective, Oct. 3, 1914, and all found their way to the Supreme Court of the United att These cases were Frank R. Brushaber the Union Pacific Courts soon stockholder of ilroad Company, seeking in. the w York Federal Courts to enjoin the company from paying the tax Jobn F. Dodge and Horace ¥, Dodge, manufacturegs of — Detre Mich, in the Michigon Federal Con to enjoin the internal r venue collec tor from collecting the tax, largely on the ground that it discriminated #Gainst co-partnerships in favor of corporatior John R. Stanton, stockholder of the Baltic Minir mpany, in the Mas sachusetts Federal Courts, to enjo the company and others from p: the tax, largely bec cent. annual deductic allowed mining com pletion, Tyee Re ng © of the 5 per n from 4 income nies for ore de- the New Company, in York Federal Court, to enjoin the col lection of 1 revenu Edwin ne, in the New York Federal Court, to enjoin the collector largely on the ground that the addi tional or »..rtax imposed on incomes over $20,06 wa unconstitutional, In each instance the lower cot held the tax constitutional fase was brought to the Supreme Court on appeal. The cases wero ad vancea for early hearing and were WHEN YOU WAKE UP DRINK GLASS OF HOT WATER, Wash the polsons and toxins from system before putting more \ food Into stomach, Says Inside-bathing makes any- one look and feel clean, | @weet and refreshed, | Wash yourself on the inside be breakfast like you do on the outsi¢ This is vastly more int, becaus: the skin pores do n rb impuri ties into the blood, « ing illness, whil: the bowel pores do Yor ¢ of fo nd drink taken into the stomach nearly ay ounce of waste material must be car. ried out of the body. If this wast material is not eliminated day by day it quickly ferments and ‘ge 7 poisons, gases and toxins whi absorbed or sucked into the stream, through the lymph duc should’ suck only nourishment to sus- tain the bod: A ‘splendid bealth measure is drink before breakfast each day a glass of real hot water with a tea- spoonful of limestone phosphate in it which is a harmless way to wash these poisons, und toxins from the stomach, kidneys und bowel thus cleansing, sweetening and freshen ing the entire alimentary canal be. fore putting more food into the stom- ach, A quarter pound of limestone phos- phate costs but very little at the drug store, but is sufficient to make anyone an enthusiast on inside bathing. Men and women who are accustomed to wake up with « dull, aching head or have furred tongue, bad taste, nasty breath, sallow complexion; others who have bilious attacks, acid stomach or constipation, assured of prono’ d improvement in both health and ap- pearance shortly. —Advt. —_—. ECTO To Stop Cold in the Head Get Ahead of the Cold All lost or found articles ad~ Yertised in The World will be Vsted at he World's Informa- thon Bu 1 Pallteer Bi Arcade, Vark Row: Uptown Offic orth weat - ner ith St, roadway; World's West 1 Brooklyn Office, 202 Wi ton St., Brooklyn, for following the printing of advertisement, the submit! : on Oct The decision to-day was made in the case of Brushaber versus the Union Pacific, brought because the ; law collected taxes prior to the date on which it went into effect, because | it collected taxes at the source and because, it was charged, it Is disoriin- inatory and taxes property without due process of law. | The great powers of legislative bodies to levy taxes was pointed out by Chief Justice White in the deci-/ sion when he said: | | “te is of course superfluous to say | that arguments as to thé expediency | of levying such taxos or of the econ- omic mistake or wrong involved in| | thelr imposition are beyond judicial | cognizance.” | | Referring to the constitutional ob- |Jections brought against the tax in this case, Chief Justice White said: “So far as these numerous and | minute, not to say In many respects | hypothetical, contentions are based upon an assumed violation of the unt- | formity clause, their want of legal | merit is at once apparent, since it ts settled that cause exacts only a geo- graphical uniformity and there is not @ semblance of ground in any of the propositions for assuming that a vio- lation of such uniformity is com- plained of. So far as the due process clause | of the Fifth Amendment is relied | upon, it suffices to say that there! is no basis for such reliance, since it is equally well settled that such clause is not a limitation upon the taxing power conferred upon Con- ss by the Constitution; in other words that the Constitution does not | conflict with itself by conferring upon the one hand a taxing power and tak- ing the same power away on the other hand by the limitations of the; due process clause. | And no change in the situation here | would arise even if it be conceded, as| court for decision we think it must be, that this doctrine would have no application in a case where, although there was a seeming exercise of the taxing power, the act complained of was so arbitrary ad to constrain to the conclusion that it was hot the exertion of taxation but a con- fixcation of property; that is, a,taking of the same in violation of the afth amendment this because none of the ied upon in the re- sent such questions. | is true, as It is elaborately in-| 1, that although there be no ex- press legisiational provision prohibit- ns the progressive feature of the ax ses it to transcend the con- ception of all taxation and to be a pitrary abuse of power which treated as wanting in due must process, Sut the proposition disregards the fact th the ¢ wea tin the very rly history of ernment on progressive tax imposed by Congress, and that Such uuthority was exerted in some, if ne © various income taxes en 1 prior to 18 Bosides this Jemonstration of th nt of merit n t contention, the error in the thers is equally well established. In fuet, comprehensiv surveying all the contentious relied upon, we can- ‘t escape the conclusion that they all rest upon mistaken theory.” — THE KESSLER INSOLVENT. Actor Manager Says His Partner Owes Him #20,000, David Kessler, a well known aotor- r of the east side, to-day fled ition in insolveney,* both indi- and as a partner in the man- ment of the Kessler Theatre, No. 3: 1 Avenue. Max R. Wilner, his , failed several months ago. The actor claims that his partner owes than $30,000, ‘The firm Hatili- fixed at $69,000 and the assets martne 0,000, ‘The latter com- ine property in the theatre and the ueing 1 of fifteen plays. Among ‘The Truth,” “The Hebrew “His IMrst Bride,” “The Mirror "The Husband of My Wife" Man and the Devil.” s individual Mabilities are und assets $50,000, which include ms against his’ partner, ————_—_ HAT STORE HAS SPY CLUE. Manager Thinks 1 in Was Mau Who Flashed $50 BILL, Manager William Mahiman and sales- man Edward A. Cree of @ hat store in the Fifth Avenue Building, belleve I. T. T. Lincoln, fugitive from justice on a swindling charge and self-styled interna- tional sps, bought a hat from the store this morning. customer looked like Lincoin and spoke with a decided accent. He bought a green velour hat and tendered a ken from a fat wallet In payme was not enough money in the tli make change, He said he. had ashed {t to show his importance” and the latter a Saphe, Lord and Lady Aberd Coming, Lord Aberdeen, former Governor Gen- eral of Canada and later Viceroy of Ire- land, with Lady Aberdeen, will arrive in the city to-day to begin a campaign for funds with which to continue an infants’ welfare movement in Ireland. They will 5 at the Hall meeting | Wednesday evening under the direction of the Civic Forum of New York, >—- | Syena to Partly Unload, The Norwegian steamship Sygna, which returned to port Saturday morn- ing with a fire in one of her holds after she had sailed for Viadivostock with cargo of steel railroad cars, moved down to Ntapleton yesterday afternoon, where | she anchored. A lighter will ‘remot the cargo from the burned hold this morning. For | Constipation EX:LAX Ine Lesicious Laxative Chocolat, kx Lax relieves constipation, regulates | the stomach end bowels, stimulates the | liver and promotes digestion, Good for | young and old, 10e, 16¢ aud 600, at | j all druggists, 1 Seem ae ate NN mI G 0 D a el a nc on Child Labor Slavery a Worse Feudalism Than Negro Bondage of Half Century Ago iS New Battle Cry of Free- dom for the Abolition of Child Labor Is ‘‘Who Made What You Buy?” and Twenty New York Pulpits Thunder in Plea for Better Conditions. Mary Phagan’s Case More Important Than Leo Frank’s—Case of Rose! Peccara, Right Here, Brings Woman Face to Face With the Great ELEVEN YEARS OLD Problem. MAKING FLOWERS in N.Y. TENEMENT... By Nixola Greeley-Smith. Yesterday was called Child Labor Sunday in New York. From pulpits of twenty churches in the greater city ministers addressed their congrega- tions with the same text: “Who Made What You Buy The object of this general discussion of the child labor problem was to quicken public interest in the Keating-Owen ‘bill, which Congress, by unanimous con- sent, will discuss day after to-morrow. The purpose of this measure is to prohibit inter- state commerce in all goods in the production of which clildren under fourteen have worked in mills, factories, canneries or workshops; in which children under six- teen have worked in mines or quarries; in which chil dren between fourteen and sixteen have worked more than eight hours a day or have worked at night. The National Child Labor Committee belioves that Ryeeneite it is only by the adoption of this programme that any man or woman will be able to answer satisfactorily to his or her conscience the que: tion asked “Who Made What You Buy?” ES in twenty New York pulpits: ‘ THE CASE OF ROSE PECCARRA RK. where it should on the broad shoul- : Pil blenlea ld ee thousands 2°78 of the community rather than on d j the bent backs of little children, of men and women who pondered this) “The Child Labor Committee has question asked yesterday by’ your|bcen accused of a special animus pastor it is very probable that the | toward the cotton manufacturers, ‘This cigar you smoked before starting or My far from being true. Conditions in the artificial flowers on the hat you |New York and Newark, N. J., teno- wore to church were made by children |™¢Pts are as bad as anywhere In the anywhere from three to twelve years ft nited States, although the law for. Old in New York tenements, Rose Yds such child labor. Peccarra, an eleven-year-old girl who lives in New York, puts the yellow| centres in forget.me-nots at 3 cents) @ gross (a gross you know ig twelve dozen). So Rose, working before and after school, receives 3 cents for the | work she does on 144 forget-me-nots. I wish some of Rose's forget-me-nots could be sent to Congress. Rose Peecarra helps ulso with the housework and in the care of her eightcen-months-old brother, who is now learning to put Sowers together, and whose mother believes that by the time he is two years old he will be able to earn his board at artificial flower making. In New York, children under twelve stitch gloves, crochet Irish lace and | ®° country they work in canneries and’ young girl like Mary Ph. knitting mills and handle evory | have | variety of cotton goods, Boys toll at | story canes night in glass factories, and children’ facturers,” [ suggested to aE peeled under sixteen are employed in mining Joy, “that the factory offers educs Rey * all occupa. ticnal advantages to the child work- the most dangerous of all occupae ooh), they would never ‘receive in employed in the South, Alabama has more than 150,000 child workers, Georgia more than 160,000, Heodaled PHAGAN'S CASE, NOT LEO FRANK'S, “More smvortant than the Leo Frank whicn convulsed the country, was the Mary Phagan case, which preceded it. If there had been No Mary Phagan caso there would have beea no Leo Frank case. Mary Phagan went to the National Pencil Factory, where she was murdered, when she was twelve year Io 1911 the Child Labor Law 6f Geo: gia permitted her to go to work that age. It was not until e 1914—a was @ month less th, he died)—that the law was change: no tions. | their homes; that conditions of health | daughter of Peter Cosfol, a grocer, of |! Should do.” said the mother, | “Then Just a few children, you think? Ac- | and morals are better there JNo. 615 South Highth Street, was}! decided that I could care for the cording to the United States Census | Ber poi lrae| ld ehal at a) es have | brought to the hospital on Dec, 31 lust, igh better thus 3 couia for u Bis of Occupations taken in 1910 there la oniid to'doing any one thing for| suffering from pnoumonta, Hy last{ A boy is rhe ede were 895,976 child workers between | cleven hours a day? Would you| Thursday, Jun. 20, she had apparently fr ere ide en ech - Lael kok the ages of ten and thirteen, und] care to do any one thing yourself recovered. In fact, arrangements us that the girl wou al Aot Tiare : lor eleve 3? e people proper home when she got b 1.084.248 between. the ‘axes foureea | tn tate in tne Union belles being made for Hor. return hams, ty 4 her: » 1 took the girl and and fifteen—nearly 2,000,000, many | chia tabor why they can go right|Then the physician noticed a sudden Stead <y Feaniesie Ie e of whom work eleven hours # day. | along buying and using its products. |bad change ee ‘ nt These facts and others relating to| The Keating bill merely forbids In-| ‘Dp Martin, who was assisted by Dr. |Streets, stepped into an alley and . ore| terstate traMfe in such’ articles, It ¢-SEASt, WHO WAS Ae “ldropped the baby on the steps of a yhild labor in the United States were . . : e - R.| MMs to protect the citizens of a|S. M. Moorehead, junior surgeon a I knew somebody would care given to me on Saturday Ga iba Stato ‘where children's health andthe hospital, and Dr. F. J. Pessolano, Lovejoy, General Secretary © © Na-| morals are safeguarded from com- aaa niavatol decided that the . tlonal Child Labor Committee, who] Plicity in the crimes committed | resident physician, deci young mother’s faith In the ight in the Labor Forum| inst childen in other States. As |{nfant was too near death to risk the | kindness of strangers proved to be Spoke last night in the La things are to-day you don't know—| operation, Its condition Was eX-|woet grounded because the infant was of Washington Irving High School|I’ don't. know—wheretiirr the very | tuined. to the father. ie was told |e ended iiee tbe Intant Wa with Edward Keating, member of|things we have on not made eft at the home of Mra, May 0 5 4 hor of the Child| bY underpaid, over ked children | that a transfusion of blood mightlo¢ No, 2136 Oxford Strect, who adopt. Congress and author 4! nee ey of ten and twelve. ‘Vifty years ago|save her. At once Cosfol volunteered |oq it, Labor Bill now before that body. this country was torn by a gigantic) ag much of his blood as necessary, The child's mother was held in struggle which resulted in the over- throw of negro slavery, » feudal sys- tem having adults for its victims, To-day we are compelled to fight a worse feudalism be ts victims CHILD EMPLOYERS CONVICTED OUT OF THEIR OWN MOUTHS. “Last week three days were given use to hearings before the House Lubor| are little children, Our weapons are|!kely she would dic within a few = Committee,” Mr. Lovejoy told me, “on| different to be sure, for we hope to| hours. The blood was taken from a HUSBAND 4 GET ‘ solve the child lat the merits of the Keating bill. A score diffusion of intelligence and humane paid with a $5 dill from his pocket, “He ;of Southern cotton manufacturers aP- | principl But engaged showed it railroad Licket, saying he was | peared to argue against the measure, | nevertheless in the t righteous of | toing. to Los Angeles, ‘He left. his old causea—a children's war. ter ot No. 7 size In the. store. Ms old | As 1 believe that the best arguments |all cause chi! w at ¢ —_—_———_ ars for a social reform are generally sup- plied by its opponents—witness the enormous number of converts to Woman Suffrage made by the Antis— 1am going to tell you about some of the objections to the Keating bill made by its enemies and let the pub- EXECUTION OF DURANS TO STOP CATTLE RAIDS American and Mexican Officials See “The majority of child workers are CHILDREN SIX,NINE and { | ‘3 of abe.) at)old baby had almost entirely turned year after Mary Phagan's death (ane| (0 Water within two days, and her n fourteen when | father of) ine Kan should {15 said to be ‘e been permitted to work In that ‘ation. problem by the] yein in the left arm of tl | acide atl lie form its own opinion of them, Good iffect of Death | t was stated by a doctor employed ett | by a cotton mill corporation that a Pena girl of twelve may be employed] BL PASO, ‘Tex. Jan. 24.—Cattle ELEVEN hours a day ina cotton mill| stealing, which has flourished ex-{ without injury to her health, Don't} tensively on the border since the) you think we can let that statement! geries, of revolutions began In| go without comment? To work eleven| Mexico in 1910, has received # check, hours a day is excessive and exhaust-|in the opinion of officials on both ing even to an adult man. It 18 un-|sides of the boundary, by the exe- necessary to discpss the injury of such] cution of the Duran brothers for the long hours to a girl approaching the|murder of Hanchinan \kers, Ameri- ier Bs meat Ableanande cans here deciige the shooting of the critical period of adolescence, cana bore de ine shooting Of the "One of the arguments urged against the Keating bill was that the ma- chines had been built especially for very amall children, and that’ if you put a grown man (to work on these ied from a border sec- time, Car- other exe- s cattle criminal, as distingul political offender, in the thon of Mexico for s¢ ranga officials say that cutions will follow un! stealing is stopped machines built for babies he would! Manuel Medir-vitea, who was Ge have to work in a crouching position, yiis's met of Staff at fuera bes ture I ; ‘ore the latter's army surrenderec One manutacturcr observed sagely at | ¢) “Carrangu to appear before im- this hearing that you cannot fix an| migration officials here to-day with age Umit for chill labor any iuore}a request to be allowed to return to than you can tell when a pix becomes | the Uniti i+ He is to be ques " so urged th © mij | UOned concerning reports that he was @ hog, 1t was aiso urged that the mill) Connected with’ the. disafpearance children are the only support of Wid-| some weeks ago of Voter Keane, an owed mothers, It does not seem to} employes of the abricora Ranch So far, it is said, neithgr the death of Keane nor Medinavitea’s. connec tion with his disappearance has been definitely established, have occurred to these gentlemea if the burden of the support of impover- lehed widowes is to be placed any- , SANUERY 24, i9ie. BABY HAS. SPLEEN CUT-OUT FOLLOWING BLOOD TRANSFUSION Two-Year-Old Girl Recovering * After Two Operations Rare for a Child. , PHILADELPHIA, Jan, 24.—After the blood of a twonty-three-months? PHILADELPHIA, Ja both of them. had given a quantity of his| «irl. blood to keep her alive, surgeons at Howard Hospital performed what n exceedingly rare oper- Believing an infection of the the cause of the strange organ was removed, The |chance in life, This was the Irene twenty-two y when she was arrested, eha having abandonow her thr old baby girl on Dee, 21, spleen to b malady, (hi infant is The expected to recover. Rubini Cosfol, the ehila, The transfusion of blood took place} court last Saturday merning. The infant's |donm condition was such that it seemed | Wheres nt, She declined to bouts of the father. sacle fa her and injected the of child, Only one-third pint healthy blood was taken, but the provement was wopderful, may diately the child, which was uncon- scious during the transfusion, showed signs of lite Within two Dr. Martin de- \e spleen should be removed at little girl was wheeled into the of thigh of a into lett to Keep What She hours tion in Jersey ¢ once, The motion of Lawye the o in and for|order Mra. Ja Doneley to turn near! urgeons worked|over to ber husband half of the over } A brief examination of thelamount she laid saved out of the orkan showed them the source of the et pee repoaaty: Petbie Had it been allowed to res pmoney he had given her since thetr main in her another day it is said|Marriage in 1879. amount i the father's blood in her system would | somewhere about $12,000, Ukewise have change d tate water, The Vice Chancellor stipulated that When the detalls of the operation diviaion thine das became known yesterday it ‘ca said before th HVIRIOR are must be de by medical men that its success would|4u. d= from the total of Mra go far toward the settlement of a] Doneley's savings bank accounts all dispute that hus lasted for many| moneys carned by her own efforts. years. Leading medical authorities | 'T atter will go before him for have long been divided as to whether | final settlement Wednesday the spleen, which is known to be) boneley, who its a Pennsylvania connected with the circulation of the | Railroad engineer, set forth that he whether it de- | It was said | d Hospital blood, is an atd or stroys the red vorpusc yesterday the Hows that this operation furnished proof |saved for him. L that the spleen was undoubtedly “the |from his duughter that burying ground of the blood cells.” | had accounts in twenty banks and the ae total was a small fortune men Dance, Flames Also, HARTFORD, Conn, Jan. 24.-—-While|the money, Hven the Joint account nost of the residenis of West Redding | With whieh they began had been most of tho dente of W odding | vanaferred to another bunk, and al were attending @ dance given by the|;ransfarred to unormer bulk local company at the Mark Twain|poneley had ne been all Lie at Redding, Conn. early yes-| qualify to draw any of it terduy, & Lungaiow near the West Red- = ‘ ilroad Bat nt fire ane Fortity the Sratem Against Grip, ion Halon & te and) ee ony uw Uterine LASRUYE BAUD Was destroyed ULMINE shoud” be taken, “aa nis comunauon a Quinine ita ier wigredienta dsstrore acts as a Tonio and Laxative y Smit & Company eee She. arettm fy” cundition ta or so Jan Cave Boot, DOFFER jin CAROLINA MILL... ABANDONS GIL BABY, KFPS BOY, AS BES WAY OT OF PSH Mother of Twins Tells Police She Had to Let One Go, but Had Hard Time Choosing. "TL loved my twin babies, but I could not keep 1 had to choose whoth- er I should abandon my boy or my At lust I decided that if I gave |Up the girl she would get the better explanation given by re co we a week I tried to decide what ssterday on a charge of aban- tell PART | OF MONEY WIFE SAVED But Mrs. Doneley Will Be Allowed Earned Through Her Own Efforts, Vice Chancellor Stevenson on a mo- ty to-day granted the Andrew Steelman had left all is business affairs to his wife and thought a small account in one bank wis all that his wife had st spring he learned Mra, Doneley Mrs. with Don- leley refused to let him have @ cent of old, eke! the ade tink. - 5 BORNEO WILD MEN |e ou | THE WILDS OF BORNEO “DISCOVERED” BY EXPLORER COOK’ _——>— : Doctor Says They Greeted ; Him Kindly After Britons 4 Turned Him Down, FORD PARTY ARRIVALS. Russian Government Agent Comes on a Secret Mission to Washington. Dr. Frederick A, Cook of Brooklyn, who bobbed into the limelight a fow years ago with a Orat mortgage claim on the North Pole, arrived in town to- day aboard the steamship Kristiania fjord of tho Norwegian-Amertcan line. Just as soon as old Doc Cook caught sight of the ship news reporters ne announced another discovery. | Doe Cook has discovered the wild men of Borneo, He said nothing of! PT. Barnum's previous claims to| Bszeo their discovery half a century ago,| but he did speak kindly of the wild! folk, Not one of them disputed his} ~ ERR! claim to the “Big Nail." ONLY MAN IN CLASS OF 80, With Dr. Cook was Dr. F. | Thompson, a naturalist. Seven months | SU the Heat Are Girls In New Jere ago the two, with BE. 8, Brooke, a! Mab ata deac iti 8 MON LAL J, Jan, ward photographer, left this country tol) govern of Lukeview will stand out climb Mount Everest, the highest! conspicuously at the commen peak in the world. They did not suc-|erciges of tho ‘orital Soh ceed in even reaching the shadow of week, for among s of eighty’ atu. the great mountain. Brooke was on ls le is the only one of iis sex. the pler to greet Dr. Cook, having | =" - returned from the Orient by way of] Mitte Girls to Accuse Prisoners, San Francisco, A | oretta Brown, fifteen years old, of Upon the arrival of the party at |No. 138 Miltuers Bireet. Bole ae Calcutta they asked permission of | 944 Metropolitan Avenue, were conwnite the British authorities to mako the! iq to the Children's Society by Justice After several [wrkin in the Chiliren's Court to-day weks’ delay they were refused. No/they are held at material witnesses explinations were tuade. Dr, Cook, reter in the however, does not believe that per- |. and Joseph sonal animus against him had any-/ Wetter. a 100 Troutman thing to do with the refusal, He str rT" ne told thinks the British Government is just Judge Wilkin that when the men are ar- kencyally, suspicious of everything |riigned Wednenlay there will be. three these days. j othe nave fourteen ctoreeetamenae llowever, Dr, Cook just had to dis- \Oneath” eee eh ae cover something, so he decided to; - _ ™ — discover the wild men of Horneo, Unable to get @ steamer from Binga, POSLAM RIGHT pore to the isie of head hunters, he obtained passage on a twenty-clght- foot boat bound for Borneo by way of the Philippines. Altogether he | ENT journeyed 2,000 miles to reach the mysterious island, “L did not find the wild men of | Efficient, Quick-Acting and Harm- Borneo to be of the P. T. Barnum | less Under All Conditions varioty,” suid Dr. Cook. found } them to be w rage of tall, well built! Poslam, the quick-acting skin feme- "4 folk of fair complexion. Their only | dy, when spread gently over irritated wild traits consist of h--d hunting| skin, penetrates and relieves itching at and polygamy. The Dutch Govern- | once. . The trouble responds to thi ment 1¥ rapidly putting a atop to the /Recded antiseptic treatment, eases to hoad business. Polygamy still flour- SM Deathne n't hese aes ishes, however. id whaneves the “The wild men show hatred for | skin is disordered, brokeu-out, itching, their enemies, but they were very | inflamed or irritated. , friendly toward us. In fact we had) One month’s trial of Poslam Soap— a lovely visit with thems’ Dr, Cook | the soap of soaps for tender, sensitive returned by way of the Trans-Siber- an sually leads to its continued Jan Railway. In Copenhagen he met | “yor samples, send 4 stamps to Emer- with a Kindly reception gency, Laboratories, ‘Any reports which may have been| New York City. Sold by all Druggi sent out from Denmark that I was|—-Advt. rot kindly received,” said Dr, Cook, |* Faro absolutely false. The poople re- gard me as the discoverer of the North Pole, nd J still have the; medals and honors conferred on me | by their king. : | a ed PILL “I have returned to the United | An Eff States because there are five bills in Efective Lanative before Congress leading up to an tn- Purely Vegetable vestigation of my claims as dis- 2 tion will clear and vindicate me. It a ’ has been shown that most ot Peary'’s|# Indigestion, Biliousness, eto discoveries Crocker Land, for in- stance-have been disproved, 1 Qor °) © » Nite * f | unti: relieved think Poary's North Pole will also Ghansineraence tial be disproved jE Wouldn't Join Union, hot. Alexander Yermosewics, longshore- n, of Ni MaMison Street, told the B LL- police he was approached at Fifty-sixth E AN Ss Street and orth River this afternoon | Rudettl"or thetkongaroanen toss Absolutely Removes Organization the man_shot nine in_ toe LNdigestion. One package ina" serious condition atthe Poly: | roves it. 25c at all druggists, dinto Howat Lo fs bide’ iggis' N_cold or blizzard these Hub-Mark Four Buckle Overshoes keep the feet dry and warm. Both heavy and light weight, warm fleece-lined snow excluders with tough wear resisting soles and heels Famous for long wear and comfort. Hub-Mark Rubber Footwear is made in a wide vy: ty of kinds and styles to cover the stormy weather needs of men, women, beys and girls in town or country. The Hub-Mirk is your value mark. HUB-MARK RUBBERS The World's Standard Rubber Footwear Watthtca Rebiar Pocrwost "They are depsodable merckantas” "et | i i