The evening world. Newspaper, February 3, 1916, Page 2

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ciimtitacaecns BERLIN IN HIGH GLEE .) » TAKE SALTS 10 OVER WORK OF RAIDER “a > FLUSH KIDNEYS AND SEIZURE OF APPAM BERLIN (vin London), Web. 1.— News of the arrival of the Appam at Norfolk and of the daring raids of a German cruisor in the main line of soa trafflc between South Africa and Europe has aroused a new out- buret of enthusiasm for the navy. The cruiser Moewe--in English, the Seagull—was enrolled immediately on the honor list with the Emden. Pring Eitel Friedrich Karisrube. Her feats afte characterized as daring, il- lustrative of the fact that the spirit which anjmated the men on the Em- den in ati alive, A vessel named Moewe ts given in the German navy list as a surveying abip. It may have been th larger steamer, assuming e is sure sign Sede ave been eating too much meat. Uric Acid in meat chien Kid- neys and irritates the bladder. Moat folks forget that the kidneys, like the been ne ot and need « 1 occasionally, ele we Tettache and dull misery in the the name Moewe when converted into an aux- Kidney ‘region, severe headaches, rheu- | tinty® cruisor, slipped through the matic twinges, torpid liver, acid) pritisn linos. A precedent of thls nas stomach, sleeplessness and all sorts of | ture oxinte in the caso of the German bladder disorders. . merchantman which was converted You ter 0 eg must brs your kidneys|/into the auxiliary cruiser Meteor, active and clean, and the moment you| which sank the Jiritish patrol boat ache or pain in the kidney seat fous ounces of Jad od eed ave meee beg, ‘ae f tablepoont ina ginss of w fore breaktast for « few days, and your will then act fine. This temo its ie made from the acid of lemon juice, ita lo rat ine to flush clog Ineys normal acti ulate them to Reutralizes the acids no | irritates, thus ending Salts is harmless; inexpensive; a delightful effervescent lithia- drink which tants peo Hs should now and then to kee; kidneys y cee avoiding jous complica- ‘ A well-known local bly says he gells lots of Jad Salts t ks who be- ,, Hevei in crercoening pee trouble while * it ty only troubl dvt. WATCH SORE THROATS because swollen glands or inflamed | membranes often affect other tissues | and lung trouble easily follows. ‘Tocorrect throat troubles the pure _tod liver oil in Segtt’s Emulsion is | Speedily convertectInto germ-resist- | ing tissue; its glycerine is curative apd healing, while this wholesome gmulsion promptly upbuilds the forces to resist tubercular germs and avert the weakening influence which usually follows, If any member of your family has a tender throat, get Scott's Emul- ‘sion today. Physicians prescribe it to avert Viroat troubles, overcome sbronchial disorders and strengthen the lungs. No alcohol or harmful ‘drugs. Always insist on Scott’s. A Scott & Bowne, Bioomfield, No J.—Advt, 15.02 BELL-ANS ~ sAbsolutely, Removes ‘Indigestion. One package proves it, 25cat all druggists, (EPL ae” hg ay woe ‘Yon can relish your meale without | fear of spotting 7 yout liver or stomach if will tyour th in Rameey and other Britiqh ships in the North Sea last summer and sub- sequently was destroyed —_—_——-- VON SANDERS NOW HEADS OF TURKS IN CAUCASUS BUCHAREST, Roumania, Feb. 3 (via London).~-Pield Marshal Liman von Sanders has been appointed com- mander-tn-chief of the Turkish forces on the Caucasian front. He was commander of the Firet Turkixh Army, and directed the fortification of Gallipolt Peninsula, = ay ih a 4 5 z Hy Put Ht It was reported last month that Field Marshal Baron von der Goltz had been appointed commander of the Turkish forces in the Caucasus. A dispatch from Rome on Tuesday said that the Field Marshal, with 80,000 men, had been locked up in Erzerum by the Russians, today, Poul eccumu- fationsthat poison the blood! ere expelled from the bowels aud head ache, dizzinéss and sallow skin gu. Smal} Pill—Small Dose-~Small Price GENUINE must bear signature All lost or fonnd articles ad- Yertised in The World will be listed at The Worl For sale at Riker-Hegemar and at all Greater New Y display this sign — © PLS. There is a Vinol dr town wherever you live Huriem West 125th st. Brookiyn Office, 2 Weshings ton Si, Brovkiyn, for 30 days following the printing of the adveriisoment, rt Office, w Tae They sunk or captured a score of =| raider was further deepened by tne Rriteh vearels off the South | faet that somo of the € ns of the} American const in the Atlantic.) — | Apnams way ce = Capt. Harrison of the Appam has that the { afvined the Britien Embassy at cew was marshalled tr | Washington of the rumor regarding German merchant shi the Roon, but said tho report was|, Sit Edward Merewether and 5 ‘ British Colonial officers, with Without substantial confirmation. | Guantities of bagwage have att Capt, Harrison to-day expressed be-| to place their property in customs . Met that other Gern ships were|bond here and proceed directly to near the Appam when she was cap- aie P og a ee = tured, iy Brition veasete | yic’bts Gaunt, assisted by dhe Britian Sealine Captains of four British vei onwul, 1# managing the removal | | se transferred to the Appam strenuously | of English subjects, ‘Witness Swes 4 . de Insieted to-day that the raider is the], Plans wore made for sending a river | V itne - years | He Heard +® converted fruit liner Ponga and not | (yume Monamide the Aptiam to take! Doctor's Wife Urge Young @* the Moewe. Lécut. Berge, command: |onda seamen and carry them to Nor- si i Seine the German prize crew which| folk to board an Old Dominion linet Girl to Shoot Him. ©) wrodeht the Appam here; I’rince von ae w Ba:he — ocemeaee embe 5 arranger was conti “ 7 ‘ % Natsteldt, German Embassy Coun-| upon ine weather conditions, how-|EVIDENCE IS ALL «JN, ef) Mellor, and the other Germans, poml-| iver, for it was realized uniowa the — & vvely insisted the raider is the! stiff’ nor y breeze ruffling thef «th Moe hee ape i puth bhie! a ia py ah L awyers for Defense Sum U P| aie SW Britian capiaine to-day 1014 iifon omortee Then” west Re a how, while prisoners on the raiders| ten women, Including Lady Mer: —Plea for Brown Is e° they discovered name pilates labelled children Heard First So Pomga;” and declared she af op herd: alte 0 Wines tb an iner, * was shortly after 9 o’olock this “eaitipped as a fruit liner, a new morning when the Appam got up| (Special From a Staff Correspondent fon, steam vesso!, built in 1914 at) nehor and ate: 1 way ions on Bremerhaven. Point Comfort, : Bowly of The Evening World.) "FH myst nding the sea| tp Hampton f ff sever] PROVIDENCE, R. 1, Feb, &—Mat British morchantmen, sud cheers} contradiction of some of the testi- fraautacs a god by, the Z of tae many of Elizabeth Tiffany Mohr was rolehters and the Englishmen on the 1 fo = Appam.. ‘The freighters saluted with | #¥en to-day at hor trial for the mur thr resounding binaste of their] der of her husband, Dr, C. Franklin ehistles, ut, Berg, on the bridge, Mohr. Called by the prosecution tn [ie ete response with the whistle of} rebuttal, John McAndrews, #uperine iis prize, : tendent of “Montpelier,” Dr. Mohr's Newport home, said that he heard Mra. Mohr #ay to Mary MeConville, Yo and whoot the doctor.” Mary McConville ia the girl who brought 0 charge of assquit against Dr, Mohr, Q. (By Deputy Attorney General Phillips). Did you see Mary McCon- ville in the Providence house with @ pistol In her hand on Feb. 1914? MRS. H.S. KNOX, DIVORCED FROM SON OF FORMER SECRETARY OF STAT: MRS. HS. KNOX © Shs | about Newport on Aug. 30 last with Miss Burger paying a number of the Mohr household bills? A. Yes, I did, Fi ne Ormsby, the “office girl,” redalled, stated that all the Mohr em- A. Yor, Paid. Q. Was it a toy pistol? AL No; a alibre regular revolver. Q. What did you heay Mrs, Mone way to the girl? A. She said and shoot the doctor.” Q. (By Mr. Fitzgerald). Did you tell Dr. Mohr about this? A. Yes Q. Did he complain to the police? A. You, a week later. Q. Did they come and s#rarch Mary's room? A. 1 don't know; I was in the stable. Julia Duffy, one time cook in the Mohr home, reiterated her previous testimony that Mrs. Mohr had told rand the other servants that Mary McConville was goigg to kill Dr Mohr and that she (Mra, Mohr) had just seen him for the last time. Q. (By Mr. Pitagerald)—Did you bid goodby to the doctor or warn him that Mary was after him? AI didn't The witness explained that Dr Mohr had called his home several mes that evening and when Mrs. Mobr came tn she refused to speak with her husband, saying, “I called him up from Fall River to say good- by; Mary McConville is going to ahoot him; I'll never see hun again.” Myre. Mohr sald she had not matried tho doctor. Testimony corroborating thia whs given by Ella Hamm, another servant in tha Mohr houswhold. Q. (by Mr. Fitzgerald) Wasn't Dr Mohr on a little spree just th A Yeu, | think #0. Q. (By Mr. Phillips) Didn't you go Carataira Rye had beard thet top notch”’ of perfection. This same lection—so much maloved | ua “‘good old times’’—is "Good Botte’ to Keep Good ttle to Kee; Whiskey Good," ? ottle The Grippe TAKE Vinol | Restores Strength 1 and Liggett stores ork drug stores that scene ug store in your own Look for the sign. ployees had been paid a day or two! before the murder. ‘This was to show | where some of Dr. Mohr's money went just before his death, and to off. “Go | set the contention of the defense that| moon her husband accused her of go- robbery was the motive for the mur-| der. ew m unimportant wit-| were called in. rebuttal and sur-rebuttal William A. Lewis began summing up for Cecil Victor Brown, the negro, who first confessed to the police that he had shot the doctor | and then on the witness stand yesturs | day repudiated the c feasion ' BRANDEIS LETTERS SWAMP SENATORS, Committee ssing on Appoint| ment Gets Many Notes of Pro- | test_ and Commendation, WASHINGTON, Feb. —Almost swamped by a mass of telegrams and letters, the Senate sub-coynmittee named to pass on the fitness of Louis D. Brandeis for the Supreme Bench adjourned this afternoon without ac- tion, The messages poured in from all parts of the country and ~anged rom violent protests agdinst con- firmation of “such a wild radical” to protests against even hesitating in the confirmation of such “a friend of the people Chairman Chilton announced that it 18 possible open hearings may sup- plant the closed sessions first agreed Upon. SS cnnIEEnn cena ITEMS FOR INVESTORS . New Haven System nths KOSS earnings incre used #4: 2 net after any—Extra div- m common stock tax increase Bastman Ko Idend of 10 Year ended profits $4,385,723; surp equal tol 6 per cent stock compared with 4 11-100 previous year, ‘There remo nt. of unpaid dividends ferred stor! that the were oversubscribed “tor ploveos er SS ESS CHICAGO WHEAT AND CORN MARKET. ration it announced HON KtOCK moby om= Withar, Hig uk i ral ‘‘ Slowe Open qhae May... at BA ue! eg = Threatened 8 fe and She Did, Emily C. Singer, fe a resident of Homer Loe A Jamaica, ki herseit to-day home with + tring one Into her and two into breast. with whom ® authorities t) ACKER, MERRALL & CONDIT Est. COMPANY 1820 Eggs 39C daz. Mapilehurst Brand Fancy Roasting | go to the clubs for it. ” WEE ave DWORCE ~FROMP.C. KNOX'S SON, SAYS HE WAS CRUEL Husband Fell From Bus After Drinking off Honeymoon, She Declares. PITTSBL RON, Fob, 8.—Mra, Kath. arine MeCook Knox, daughter of Mrs. Huttle By McCook, of 33 Weat Fifty-fourth Street, New: York, was here yesterday rom Hugh Smith Knox, son of Phil- ander ©, Knox, former Secretary o! Mrs, Knox testified that dur. inr married life her husband | frequently became intoxicated and| treated her cruelly, Her mother cor- | roborated her. ‘ ‘The two were married In Pittsburgh | Dec. 14, 1911, and according to the! divorcee evidence trouble began on their honeymoon. Tbe youthful Mrs. Knox said that once when she left the train at Atlantic City to join her husband whe found him in the midst of a crowd “in a frightful conditio Mrs. Knox said her husband fell! out of an omnibus and several men had to pick him up and carry him to| the hotel. At another time she sald| her Lusband had locked himself in the | bathroom. “The whiskey ran from underneath the door, and I thought something dreadful had happened,” she said, adding that her husband was found lying in a puddle of liquor when she got the door open. Mrs. Knox said that on thetr honey- granted a divorce State, their ing “out walking with some one, which Was preposterous, When un- able to get liquor in his father’s Washington oome, she said, he would WALL STREET Market was active at opening and higher prices were the rule, After holding steady during first half hour prices advanced on considerable vol- ume of trading. Industrial issues and oil stocks were the leaders. Erie showed strength. Marine preferred common were weak, Cuban- Sugar sold at 2043-4, a 0 841-4, but met stock for sule, and eased off with general list in second hour as activity decreased. Maxwell Motors lost 2 points, Bald- win Locomotive declined 3 1-4 from early high, In early afternoon mar- ket showed tendency to rally. Market became dull after rally oc- curred, in early afternoon a fow stocks advanced a fraction . beyond the early high. Crucible recovered and advanced to 80 34, was active only in ap irregular. but trading EE SPECTRE, tore oe me SSSTREE OF eeerEr F H+ | 14 Tavkavanna Steel. Lehigh Valie ee ie | KAISER, HEALTHY, AT FRONT. | Chickens 27c w. Extra choice soft, tender meat. i Treatea| joan Doctor, \ (by wireless to Sayville), Denying the report published quarters that the German i by an Ameri- rous condition ax News ‘a malicious Yorelgn Berlin Den by Ame) tn Emperor had been treat for a can variou nperor,”* It adda, | asked to have one of the public | in traveling | HEDLEY’S PARTNER PUZZLED WHEN ASKED * ABOUT HIS PATENTS (Coutinued From First Page.) Ret out of bed. 1 expect a doctors certificate that he is sick,” Chairman Thompson excused Young until to-morrow. |euess,” replied the witness General Manager Frank Hedicy of Q. How many patented devions a the Interborough came to the witneys, you interested fn with Mr. Hedley stand for the fifti time to explain! A. Ah, well, lot mé see, the the aLout revenues from his patents, paki{ coasting time recorder. ‘I'd have to, him hy outside companies since 1908, look at my liet to give you an exact when he entered the employ of th Interborough. He had three sheeta of | | typewritten manuscript, showing $5' | 750.70 receipts more than he had ac- vunted for yesterday, making a grand total of $109,862.95, Counsal Bainbridge Colby found that there War no record of payments from the Hudson and Manhattan Railway |Gompany (McAdoo Tubes), and Mr | Tledley promised to look it up and| ommittee's expert accountants help hin | MEDLEY’S PARTNER TELLS OF HIS INVENTIONS, James S. Doyle, superintendent of ear equipment for the Interborough | and elevated Ines, and Mr, Hedley’s partner in the railway device patent business, succeeded Mr. Hei witness chair, He ta rudd #ray-hatred and forty-four years old, Ho gets $10,000 a year, he yaid, paid! by the Interborough, the Manhattan Blevated and the New York Railways Company, His office and shops are at Ninety-eighth Streot and Third Ave- nue, He has charge of construction and operation of every kind of elec- tric transportation used on the roads, He said there are as many kinds of electric traction as there ate kinds of automobiles, ou are an inventor?” “Just a man of ordinary sense, I'd call it, employed in railroad develop- nt and operation,” said Mr, Doyle. ‘or instance, we were the first to heat-treated axiag automobile stock, Im electric cars—axles that cannot fail.” you and Hedley { patent | @. Why? A. (After a pause) Why, | We never thought of it. Mr. Doyle sald he had been in elec- lario car erection eines it began. He | Was & master mechante in Chicago at & month unt! he was brought to e#leotrify the Manhattan ete- i lines fifteen years ago “and now,” he said, “I'm doing the work of three men who preceded me | and got a great deal more pay than I do.” $150 Mr. Doyle declared he had nothing | to do with buying any kind of mate: rial or devices for his companies. DOYLE WAS PUZZLED WHEN) ASKED TO EXPLAIN. | Mr. Doyle was rather puzzled when Cow \sel Bainbridye Colby asked hi! “What 1s a mechanical fluid car con- trol device?” Q. What is it like? A. Oh, well, is—let me see (closes his eyes) Q. V Ay, you Invented It, Don't you know hat it looks like? Is it an animal or mineral or vegetable? A. Ob, {tis a pneumatic, mechanical 4 vice to register the amount of weight | of passengers in a qr. It is a long time since I saw one. It weighs about sixty pounds. I invented it T gave tho iden to be worked out by'| my asaistant, Rodney Kearns, When did you — invent A. Shortly after we put on the low! level cars in January, 1912. | it er! Mr. Doyle never saw Hedley work | on a model or at a benct Ae came up to the shop onco a wet ur #o and talked things over and looked at/ models. Mr, Doyle declared that there had long been low level cars and stepless cars, but that he and Hedley patented the low-level-stepless cars. | DOYLE SAYS IT’S THE SAFEST) KIND OF CAR. “It's the lowest level car there is,” he added, “and the safest. Its doors cannot be opened while the car ls | moving. It keeps passengers from | throwing themselves out and getting ktlled or hurt, We analyzed the losses of the New York Railways Company (surface lines) and found that more than 30 per cent. of the annual! loss of $700,000 or $600,000 was due to peo- pie failing up or down car steps.” Mr. Doyle could not describe a cur- rent registering apparatus and com- plained that Mr. Colby was "asking @ question with a thousand angles to “But you're down on the list as In- entor of it," exclaimed Mr. Colby. you describe it?” Doyle, look at ‘a print*— “Or ask Mr, Hedley?” asked Mr. Colby sarcaatically. Mr. Doyle de- clared that he took Mr. Hedley in aw a partner in his patents because he was "one of the best railroad men I ever met” “But Mr. Shonts is a good railroad man, Why didn’t you 6 him in?” “Well, Mr. Hediey ts my superior officer and J support him,” Mr. Doyle explained, Q. Do you regard the low-level, steples# car as a success? A, Yer. Q. A neWspaper calls {ta “devilish contraption.” A. Yes; but that's the opinion .of one man, and that don't rule the world. These cars are crowded now because traffic is aatu- rated, When all the lines are built and in operation they'll be all right, when traffic {8 normal WILL IT MEAN EVERYBODY) GETS A SEAT? (By Senator Thompson) Does that mean that everybody will have a seat. A, Why—I— Q. Mr, Hedley says that people will always have to hang on straps, for if they don't {t will involve the failure of the companies and the ruin of the city. A. Weil, if Mr. Hedley sa: | 1 am only in the mechanteal depart- ment When Mi ‘it I could Q Colby began to question IF YOUR HEADACHES Are Caused by Eyestrain Stop Taking Pills. relief, * Weietered va pag a Ryd tine alacses snoolied Frotyg x4 TUlexander no: Established Thirty Years. 263 W. 34th St. 54 E. 125th St. Hue of battle to nother, a ithy man can do," Near Sth Ave, Near Madison Ave, royalties paid to % m ugh the witnes a oerwritien to the "Is that yous own list or is it one by Mr. Hedley?” asked sre | Hodley gave it to the,” said ic. “His receipts are the same us iuine. We ate partners in| invention Mr, Doyle conidn't remember any- thing ag to Jie receipts from patents except $4,000 from the coasting re- corder “Can't you tell even foughly how much a year smpany gives you jfor your patents?” years, a twelve , for the last Mr. jeouple, of thousand dollars # veut, I} cipal movement of answer, Q. You cant tell how 1 y pat »| position, to | “TURKISH CROWN PRINGE |ASSASSINATED BY SUITE” Leader of ~ Opposition Declares } Young Turks Ordered Murder Because of His Hostility. PARIS, Fev. 3, 6 A. M.—"Yussot Inzedin, whatever may bo sald, was | assassinated by his auite by order of the Committes of Union and Pror- said Cherif Yasha, who, with » Sabah Edin, directs the prine the Turkish op- reporter for the Matin. ress,’ Prin |Crown Prince Izredin was the heit apparent to the Sultanate. “Latterly Yusi had revolted vgainst tho dictatorship of the Young urks,” Cherif Yasha continued, “He and devices you are part owner became dangerous and he had been Without looking at your list? ymoved, His successor and cousin, No, str Vahid Badin, is even more hostile to — oo the Young Turk than was Yussof, CREW IS TAKEN OFF | should not like to make prodictlon re- 1s f& the length of his life,” sald 3 . we Prince Confirm: The Silver Shell Rescues Men From| "“sint (5. G" witelens to Sayville, the Takata Maru, With Whic L 3.—Constantinople de- She Was } ‘ollisio: spatehes to-day confirmed the news sR yA Lit lthat Prince Yussof Iazedin, helr ap- Wireless messages to-day the | parent to the Turkish throne, com- Anchor ‘Line, the New York agents] mitted suicide yesterday because he for the Japannse steamship Takata] 1 IN for some tine, The Maru, Which collided with the Amer vered the arteries of bie left ican of] tanker Silver Shell 200 miles) arm in the Zinsirll Kayu palace. southeast of Cape Race Tuesday —_— night, state that the crew of the LL Japanose vest nave been rescuet| 9B SHIPS U-BOAT TO and are on board the tanker. ‘ the Teta Slate eee touna «of ~~ WW MEDITERRANEAN New York from Lyndon to load war} supplies for Viadivostok. The Silver Shell left New York on Jan. 27 with petroleum for Dunkirk, France. The Japanese and the American steam- ships collided during a fog and lost each other, Later the Japanese sent out $ O 8 cally and was found by the Silver Shell in a sinking condi- tion. The crew of the Takata Maru Was romoved without difficult The Silver Shell is commanded by Capt. Percy Gibson, formerly a United States naval officer, who com- manded the cruiser Lancaster 14 FRENGH AVIATORS DROP BOMBS ON BULGARS Make a Raid on ampment at Petrits and Capture German Aeroplane. LONDON, Feb, 3.—Fourteen Frenoh aviators bombarded Bulgarian on- ampments at Petrits yesterday, in retaliation for the »pelin raid on Ralonica, according to despatches re- celved here to-day. Capture of a German aeroplane and {ts pilot by French airmen was also reported, Deapatahes to the London papers to-day reported that Field Marshal von Mackensen, Gen. von Gullwits and Czar Ferdinand, the Bulgarian Crown Prince Boris and Gon, Jekoff have arrived at the Greek front, The | Greek newspapers believe the attack jaguinst Salonioa is about to begin, —— |SWITZERLAND FINDING HER MILITARY STRENGTH Inspection Ordered of All Citizens of Republic Capable of Bearing Arms. BERNE, Fob, 3.-—Tho Swiss Govern- ment to-day ordered the immediate inspection of all citizens between the ages of sixteon and sixty capable of bearing arms, and advised all over sixty that they might present them- selves voluntarily, Orders were also issued that every resident, whether Swiss or foretgn, possessing arms must present m for No reagon was given for t of the orde Te eesti caiman KAISER GUILTY OF “MURDER.” Another Hritiah Jury Charges © eror and Crown Prince With Zeppelin Deaths. » Feb. 3.—The Kateer and the ‘own Prince were named us “accessories to the wilful murder" of thirteen Zeppelin victims killed in Mon- day night's raid on Staffordshire, in the formal findings of « Coroner's jury to- ny a Persians Fight for Torks, AMSTERDAM, — Feb. Fourteen thousand: Persian, tryapy, who , have Joined the Turks, defeAted the Russians seventy-five miles southwest of Te. heran, large quantities of equipment nunition, ording to Constantinople despate The Largest One Was the 14,000- Ton Cunard Liner Transylvania. German submarines have sunk fifty-eight Allied ships, of an ag@re~ gate tonnage of 215,159, in the Medi~ torranean since the Balkan campaign began, according to the German newspaper Weer Zeitung of Berlin copies of which were received here two-day. Th Cunard liner ‘Transylvania, a troopship of 14,000 tons, was the largest vessel on the list. Reports reached shipping circles’ several months ago of the sinking of tho ‘Transylvania, though the news was not confirmed at London. ed School Emptied One Minate When Fire Starts. The sixty pupils in St. Gregory parochial school at No, 991 St. John’ Place, Brooklyn, got out of the building in one minute when the fire drill alarm rang ten minutes before they were to be dismissed at neon to«lay, Defece tive insulation in the cellar of the build~ ing had caused a small fire but was soon extinguished, BETTER QUALITY, BIGGER PACKAGE U. S. MARINE! ™ ae Pi obacco Has Captured New York SENSATIONAL SMOKING VALUE U, S. Marine Cut Plug created a sensation among cut plug smokers a year ago when it appeared on the New York market. Not only was the package bigger, but the tobacco was better. Such value had never before been heard of in the cut plug field. Smokers were quick to take ad- vantage of this, They bought U. S. Marine and found it the best, most satisfying smoke they ever tried— slow-burning, mellow and fragrant. Couldn't, be otherwise—because S. Marine is choice full-bodied Burley leat aged 3 to 5 years so that all its richness and tastiness are “| brought to absolute perfection. Result—U, S. Marine has captured the cut plug smokers of New York! You try U. S. Marine—the best jeut plug tobacco made in the gest five-cent package on the mag- Get a package today! ker, DIE. 3. at her residence, MART of th | PAUL.—Feb, PAUL, wite loved mother of Pa: | Mra. Catharine Schoder, Notice of funural later; flowers, kindly omit Special for To-morrow, Friday oS BHION, GUM DROS — Those atest of ‘undy, delliehts vrewrnted Ln % old otteriug witha ¢ Friday Extra Special iN 3,4 4 ig, Tem tFiavat cryatall mney 10c WE ALSO OFFER: CHOCOLATE COVERED ROASTED ALMONDS—The finest of thelr species, Big, Plump, full-flavored, each centred in m quinty shell of our Celebrated Chocolate, unex- BOUND rat celled In richness, fragrance and purity, POUND BOX 406 BROADWAY bones mp bate

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