The evening world. Newspaper, February 5, 1916, Page 3

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« VENING WORLD, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1916. a THE E i 6é 2 J ] MT t 4, >, a ae F HUBER’S CASINO No Beautiful Woman Ever Was Dancer; |SENATOR THOMPSON | 4#88 Florence Beall to Be Wed BRITISH KNEW i i | ~ a To Dr. Mynn Thornton Jr. To-Day + BURNED: POLICE. Never Saw Dancer Who Was Beautiful;’? |SUBPOENAES ALL BOOKS OF RAIDER BEFORE ‘f | ~ } | ish “‘ *?| OF ANDREW FREEDMAN a SAVE FOUR Declares Spanish een of Castanets | | APPAM'S CAPTURE f | ~ (ca IVES ee on Stosceetooooroooree PSSEOEG OOO n set Further Licht! | | <a La Argentina, Otherwise} 4 $ Wants to Get Further Light ecblaaipiladte Fire Also Destroys Pastime) Mme. Paz, Is Court Per-| + $} on Bonus Voted to Pres- | The Baltic, in To-Day, Had i A. C., Concourse Stables former, but She Isa t ? a erg | Warning of German War- and Other Buildings. Native of South Ameri-|? S| ae bosits ania dadounta oF ema erates ships in Disguise. — ca, Hence Her Name— ¢ lof Andrew Freedman, who died two | — > P th » have be t for by| + The Baltic of the White Star Line, TWO FIREMEN INJURED.| She Wears no Jewels $ S lees Hema invemtesting estat. ' which atrived to-day from Laverpest, H ‘i , and Does Not Talk of|; tee, Thoy are to bo brought in for Brousht the news that the Bettie ‘ I » Buby as| | mira e" in Danger—Inmates Stand i —_ $ ® | Senator George F. Thompson, Chair- of war at Norfolk that the Germans \) at Entrances an Hour. By Nixola Greeley-Smith. | ¢ 3 men. They wore directed | to Samuel were scouring the Atlantic with com- : ‘Tho greatest Spanish 4: tn the| > 2 | Untenmyer, Walter akman and merce raiders, | A $100,000 fire destroyed Huber’s| World haw arrived in New York Clty, | Siceei woe od the ‘opeeatlons ot 180 bead phora Casino, the Pastime Athletic Club and | “"4 Wa est thing she bss boson’ $ | fhe eens 8 Andrew Srevdiian wan | but Capt, Finch, the commander of the old Concourse Stables at One Spanish at all,|> brought into the Inquiry yesterday | | the Haltic, was warned on Jan. 9, j Hundred and Sixty-second Street and but Latin-Ameri- 3 by Secretary Horace M. Fisher of the inpdhong S ie ence tera left the ' Jerome Avenue, the Bronx, at 2| ean, Hence her $ ribet ca eee tice he boy armas hare, ey tarp. eo ( o'clock this morning. The blaze stage name—the S| ce pate th wredinent aoaeta toe ai was kept aboard (he Baltic from the namo of her nae $ | of $125,000 to President Shonts for bis could be seen almost from the Bat-| tive lesbain $| “extraordinary special services’ tn time she left Liverpool until the tery, attracting thousands of persons sentina, u ‘ 3] putting across the subway extension lightship off Ambrose Channel “wes from all sections. | She entered New | contracts had been increased to $150,- sighted, ¢ " Ernest Kolnberg, his wife, Marie, and their two boys, Ernest jr, fit- teen, and Alvin, twelve, who occupied & two-story frame building near the| Casino, were rescued by the pollce| after the flames had spread to their} home. The 260 inmates of the Home for Friendless Children, diagonally across | Jerome Avenue, were lined up near the entrances when it appeared tho flames would spread to their building, ‘They stood calmly for more than an hour on completing the tvolutions of their fire drill, while attendants manned the hose outside. The di- rection of the wind saved the home. Thirty blooded horses were saved from the stables, which were run by Robert H. Clark. Among them wore Clover Patch and Oakland Boy, bluo| ribbon trotters belonging to the stable | of Col. “Chicago” Murphy, and Her- man Biff, owned by W. C. Minor, wexton of the Little Church Around the Corner, The reserves got all the York in disguise, for on the regis- ter of the Hotel Astor, where she is staying, she is inscribed simply as Mme, Paz. And in the slender, bright-eyed, brown- haired young woman seen occasion- ally about the hotel no one has recog- nized the official court dancer of Spain, the inspiration and model of Sorolla and Zuloaga—La Argentina— music of the eyes, as Anatole France has hailed her Tho man in the street, however, whether the street be in Madrid or Berlin or Pi or Petrograd, calls See senit her the n of Castanets.” “In Spain J do not dare say T am American,” La Argentina confided “If 1 do say it they will not permit it They insist that I shall be Spanish,” the dancer added in that delightful Spanish-French which sounds as if it had been thickened with a little flour —French with a cream sauce, if you like, “How did you know I was here? You ses, I do not make my debut fine horses, as woll as the carriages) ynti) Feb. 10 and I anted to be #0 and automobile from the stable, | qufet and not too much written about, FAMOUS ROADHOUSE BEFORE! AUTOS WERE KNOWN, + The Casino was famous for years “and the rendezvous of million- aires and turfmen, was unoccupied, ‘The place had seen few prosperous days since the automobile became popular. It was a three-story building, and| fifteen feet to the north was the home| ef the Pastime Athletic Club, while north of this were the stables. Ser- geant Bender of the Highbridge 8: tion was the first to see the blaze, Battalion Chief Poling sent in a sec- ond alarm, and Deputy Chief Sloan, | ‘when ho arrived, a third. This brought Chief Kenlon from Great Jones Street | in his red automobile in twelve min- utes. A high wind from the south sent sparks over a wide area as flam e@bot several hundred feet in the al Residents of that section were ready and automobiles from the stable, that roofs were covered with snow) prevented a more disastrous conflag- ration. Because of snow and ice, fire ap: stus had great-difficulty reaching the high ground. TWO FIREMEN, CAUGHT BY DE- BRIS, BADLY SCORCHED. i Je Firemen Foody and Keller! of Engine Company No. 68 were at| work near the dance hall it collapsed. | They were buried for a moment in debris and sparks, When they worked their way out the hose had escaped them and was “snaking” under the | pressure of the water. They were | treated for burns and bruises by De- partment Surgeon Archer and sent to | quarters. | Although the wind blew sparks for blocks and it was so cold the spray froze on the firemen, the crowd grew until all the police reserves who could be spared were needed to keep it out) o@ danger. In the Pastime Athletic Club were | lost all its trophies in addition to the paraphernalia, All the burned build- | ings were of frame, and went quickly, | Ernest Kolnberg was caretaker of the Casino, When Policemen Herger and O'Hara saw his home was burn- ing, escape for the faimily by che stairs was cut off. Berger climbed the porch support and entered the bedroom on the s@ond tloo Koln- berg, blinded by smok rying to help his wife and two childre Berger assisted them to the vera and they were swung from thore waiting arms on the ground below, wae with hose and buckets, but the fuct were put out of commission by the fire, at — | A TIP. | A Plaza waiter has lost—and found —one of his bank books. This one showed deposits of $25 000. | GULDENS Mustard .,, All Ready to Use It tickles the Palate” graphically and so that New York would not expect too much of me and then be disap- pointed. “I wanted to let my dancing be the first Intreduction to the people of New York. But I have met many women of New York already. For, earlier this week, I danced at the Colony Club before about 300 mem- bers, This was at the request of Mrs. Lfdig and was a private affair, But those gracious ladies gave me more courage for my debut. My coming to New York is my own venture, I buve taken the Maxine Elliott Theatre for my recital. And it is I alone who will pay the little Symphony Orches- ; tra which will co-operate with me, Zuloaga has designed my costumes and my ge settings. He has painted me many times, “And do you not recognize me from the many pictures that were in ‘he great Soralla exhibition you had hero a few yoars ago? Sorolla says he found his ty; > in me. SHE'S AN OLD ACQUAINTANCE OF NEW YORKERS, “Perhaps you think this is my first visit to New York?” La Argentina added mischievously, “but I am an old revident, for the statue chat Prince Haul Troubetskoy made of me was bought by Mr. Archer Hunting- ton for the Hispante Museum, and I am part of the permanent exhibition there, “My dancing is not the Spanish dancing of muise halls, It ts aot all shaking of the head and stamping of the fect like this’—she illustrat disdainfully the typi- ce as We had known eal Spanish ¢ it- 5 L have no set dance, no set ster I originate everything. [ have tried to do for the real dancing of ain what Granad has done for Spanish music. I am proud te say (hat the music of two of the dances I shall give here Gran- ados composed especially for me, I hope New York will like me, What do you think?” I thought that it would be difficult in Goyescas not to like La Argentina if her dane- ing t ull like herself, With her simi ls shirtwaist and black skirt, inted face, her hair dressed’ in the high Spanish fashion, he looked more unlike the “Queen of than you would believe In the past, whenever I met Spanish dancers, they dis- ed im. of kings they had jucred and displayed emeralds and is Which tiey intimated had veposed in royal coffers until ned upon their beauty and al- Castanets” possible, have to 1a Argentina wore no jewels, She did not talk about kings, except to say that she had danced by command Granja several times before King Alfonso and Queen Victoria, But, t novelty of all, she intro- husband, Senor Paz, with Charming manners companied her to New York, isband is the last thing one ex- cts to find in the Buropean artiste, anyhow, I told La Argentina of those other man apartment of a! 000 at a directors’ meeting held later. Counsel Colby asked Secretary Fisher again and again for the name of the director who voted the in- crease in the award. Mr. Fisher de- nied that he could remember the @|name of that director of the Inter- ? | borough. The question was repeated Mr. Fisher sald he believed; yes, he 3 | felt quite sure that it was the late Andrew Freedman who moved the ® | increase. ?| Experts were busy last night and to-day scrutinizing the books of the >| Interborough Company, and of the ®|Gillespie Company, and other en- 4 gineering firms that had to do with Z| putting through the subway exten- » | sions, and it Is possible that certain ® | entries will be more fully und stood after examining Mr man's books. The testimony of one dead man, Gardiner M. Lane, brought out by George W. Young in the shape of a letter which he reluctantly produced on the witness stand, was an tmpor- d- » > ® | tant factor in r ling the $2,000,- LA @|000 slush fund President Shonts ARGENTINE © | wanted to raise for “certain com- * i mitments” in the subway extension aun | Job. by the word beauty, anyhow. | Argentina has not one of those faces jmade of sugar and white of egy that were codified in that very pop- ular magazine cover. “Nobody Home.” Her features do not tinkle, and she does not resemble that sad dest thing on earth, a Gayety girl. She is not a Broadway type. For, Broadway, it seems to me, would say of the Venus de Milo that she had “no pep.” But La Argentina has a profile of distinction, and eyes charged with vivacity, in which mer- riment seethes and simmers like the bubbles in a champagne glass. I thought her particularly charm- ing when she got out two ancient mantillas, one of black, the other of old ivory lace, and showed me how | to wear them. “The first thing that impre when I landed here ts the ppearance of your wothen,” she said. |*It is due to the fashions. In Parts the Spanish influence has been mani- | fest for more than a r, Women are wearing mantillas there, mostly black, on account of tho war.” La Argentina took up the long man- tilla of black lace, posed it gracefully over the high comb in her hair, fold- ed it under on each shoulder and, | with a toss of the head, threw it a Uttie back on the left side. “You put a red rose there to keep it back, and you put another red rose here—indicating the right shoulder, and there you are," she said, flashing me a smile “That 1s the conventional way, the historic way, but I wear it thus.” ‘This time she put on the white mantilla, simply drawing {t around ber head and pinning it at the back of her neck. ‘You see, I Ike to be original, even wita the mantilla." she sald, —$———— HARD LUCR, New Jersey man died at ninety-five from his first iliness, FRIGHT AT HOTEL FIRE CAUSES WOMAN'S DEATH d me Spanish Victims of Atlantic City Blaze Now Number Seven—All Bodies Recovered. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., Feb. 5.—A seventh death duo to tho fire in the Hotel Overbrook yesterday resulted at bookkeeper, stopping “at an adjacent hotel, succimbed to heart failure super- induced by the exciting scenes she had witnessed during the Coroner Richard t that the & repe had once been equipped with an auxiliary fire signal, but that the instrument had been re: moved recently, The delay in the re sponse of the fire apparatus ts at- tributed to this. The bodies of Paul C. Hendricks of Chambersburg, Pa., and Mra. Thomas Mott were found Ini the fire rutns early to-day The body of Edward Phillipsen, No 411 Palisares Avenue, West Hot N. J.. Was found this ‘afternoon. lh lipaen’s was the sixth body recover The police say no others perished, ————>__ FREED TO FEED CHILDREN. After spending three days In cells because his children were not well clothed and did not attend school re ularly, Michael de Liso will leased on probation this morning. The | tine of $25 imposed upon hin by Re- corder George Medina of North Ber- re- sh dancers 1 had met in New]gen, N. will be paid in instal |ments. The Recorder signed the re- “Dancers?” she shrugged, and each |lease last night, If de Liso falls to arched eyebrow rose half an ineh|feed and clothe his children he will f r in interrogation men, yes, but dancers? " ‘ nh a beaut Who ¥ t dancer, Ihave never seen neer Who was a beautiful woman, ner! 1? Oh, no!" NOT LIKE ONE OF THOSE “NO- BODY HOME” BEAUTIES. Dut I really thought so, I suppose | Be two perwons mean the samo thing 'tioned in the galleries, | ATHEN nesemblinig Deputies to-day brother of the ree {Pr Chang of soldi Michael ntly de was elected F Without oppo: «with fixed midnight, when Misa Jennie Cooper, a| rating | WAR ‘VET’ OF FIGHTING FAMILY I$ DEAD AMERICAN HERO WON SERBIAN HONORS FOR PERILOUS AUTO TRIP Ellsworth Zouaves, Succumbs Here. Albert Theodore of the Civil War, died last night at his residence, No. 64 West One Hun- mous of ninety. Mr. Lydecke descended from a well known Dutch members of which fought in roof the Revolution and every other war in which the United States has engaged At the outbr Gasoline to Supply Ambu- lances at Nish. | An American hero who won a Serbian war decoration for making a wild dash from Nish to Salonica nee k of the Civil War Mr. Lydecker was among the first to for gasoline for the ambulance corps] volunteer, leaving his birthplace at of which he was a membe Nyuck to join the Ellsworth Zouaves. to-day on the French Line He fought throughout the war, taking iin Cbione. part in many of the most important ony Vane battles, At the close of the war he He is Glen R. Bell of Denver, a| settled in New York. student in the ¢ xe of Physiciana| Mr. Lydec was engaged in | making musical instruments for many years, He was married three tim und is survived by a granddaught Miss Florence R, Angev' He fvas member of Noah L, Farnum Post ‘ No, 458, G. A. R. The funeral ser out, He volun | vices will be held Monday at Merritt's car the 300] undertaking establishment, No, 2343 gasoline, He! Bichth Avenue, and the body will be Journey suc- | buried in Nyac! he received a and Surgeons in this city, | retreat of Serbian Nish, his corps found useless because the bulances ‘had given |teered to go with | miles to Salonica for | made the dangerous | cessfully for which | Cross of Merit. | Bell came home by way of Vienna. | He describes conditions in Austria as rather worse than those existing in Serbia. \ "The food question in Austria, even n Vienna, |s very pressing,” be wad. ‘One is intensely impressed while there of the horrors of war, There are \positively no men visible of Aghting age. The work is done by women and children entirely | “After one has stayed any length jof time in Serbia the impression is strong that the invading Bulgarians are not in sympathy with the war, At heart a Bulgar regards a Serbian as a brother. They fraternize with the Serbs. | cNevertucions it way tho Dulgarians who defeated the Serbians, The Ger- After the army from itself largely fuel for its am- the his HUH? Commissioner of Uducation in Washington plans courses to teach future American diplomats diplo- macy. os MRS. FURST PREPARES TO FIGHT DIVORCE SUIT Her Lawyer Files Notice of Ap- pearance—Husband Has Not Filed Discontinuance, Although Armoid 8. Furst, wealthy attorney of No, 665 Park Avenue, has | mans could not have done it. declared that the fillng of a suit for Bell went out with the expedition| divorce against Mra. Nan Ashton which Prof. Pupin recruited, He ex-| Furst, society barefoot dancer, was a pects to return to Serbla On the Chicago was also M. H, Lines, one of the Dartmouth student mistake, apparently Mrs. Furst does not view the sult in that way, In the who served with the American Am- | me Court to A. Jocelyn H bulance in Northern France and Bel- | wth filed notice of bis appear- Slthe Chicago was two daya’ Jato in|°n°? 0 Mrs Furst's attorney, arriving, due to continuous rough| According to the usual custom weathe: pearances are filed only when a « eee ee fendant intends to defend an action FOE OF SLAVERY IS DEAD, | While no statement could be ob- —— tained from Mr, Magrath, it is be- ywell, Assoctate of Phil-|jieved that Mrs, Vurst plans to con- k Editor, test any action that may be brougnt, ing ut No, 352 Dill Place, vergreen, RE PARE L. L, was run over by a train at One BURGLARS ROB SAFE OF $300} Hundred and Thirty-sixth Stroot and Abt a § Kighth Avenue lust night. He wili A. T. Lydecker, Once of the Fa- Lydecker, veteran Made Dash of 300 Miles for] dred and Sixteenth Street, at the age was Lawrence Street Provision Store| dle: Batored With Raptioate Kere, Becker had just brought a “dead” The pr on store of Hugo Nagor|Ninth Avenue train north and left tt sil Nagel) in the centre tracks. As he was walk- No. 117 Lawrence Street was on-! ing acros# the east track a Sixth Ave- | dia by burglars, who! nue train struc m, out off his Fight d du keys. Th fe Was leg above the knee and injured him ken apart and $300 stolen. internally The police belleve that a man and a ar the same spot last year a womati who recently mude repeated train which Becker was driv- {ts of Inspection to the apartment ing left the tracks and landed in the over. the e mate wax impressions Street. His life was saved because the key the apartment, from|the train became imbedded in a heap yhich there is access to the store, jot . Beall, to Dr. Mynn Tho! the bride's mother, No. ceremony, fi RENCE MISS FLO GEALL The wedding of Miss Florence Beall, daughter of Mrs. Joseph Bond ton jr. will take place this afternoon in the home of 7 Madison Avenue, Only relatives will attend the MONTESSORI SYSTEM EXPERIMENT DROPPED "FOR SAVING OF $40 Teacher Tells How Lack of Heat and Supplies Put End to Work. failure of the Board of Education to support financially an experimen- tal Montessori class in Public School No, 4, the Bronx, authorized by it last year, was made the basis of an at- tack on the public school administra- tive system yesterday by Miss Mar- garet Naumburg, who has resigned | as teacher of the class, to Supt. Max- | well. “The Board of Education under the control of Mr. Churchill has wasted jand thrown away hundreds of thou- sands of dollars in ways that never appear,” Miss Naumburg sald to a | reporter. “The story of how the board do- jcided to experiment with a Montes. sort class, authorized it, employed teachers and then let the whole thing | go to pieces is only one of many in- stances. ‘The Incident, however, is more th ommonly illustrative of the utter inefficlency of the whole | public school machinery, r $40 a year an important experiment, on Which $1,000 had been spent already, could have been continued.” The history of the class, according to Miss Naumburg and as substanti- ated except in minor details by Board of Education officials, began April 19, }1915, with one teacher authorized at $60 @ month, This was shared by | Miss Naumburg and Miss Claire | Raphael | A porch of the school was inclosed for the small pupils with $400 ob- tained from friends, Requisitions for |supplies were not honored by the | board, however. a ity Annex, Washington Avenue and One Hundred and Seventy-sixth Street, which the bourd rented for about $9,000 4 year. In an inclosed porch, fitted up by Miss Naumburg’s friends, the experiment continued un- til the ‘school term closed. In September (the class reopened, with two teachers authorized board, but with no means to heat the porch’ provided, 90 th then moved into cellar & me supplies were obt trom play grounds material in in Brook- lyn, but the | bourds, according to the teacher. Then, learning after the Christmas holidays that no heat or further supplies could bo obtained, Miss Naumburg sent he | resignation’ to George J. Gillesple Chairman of the Committee on Bles | mentary Schools. President Churehit discontinuing the sch ee ora class lacked even black- uld he opposed | H b, Alba} When the divorce suit report be- | Honeywell, who was assocjated with}came public early this week Mr. Furst| MOBBED FOR AUTO KILLING, Wendell Phillips, William Lloyd Garri-| declared he was sorry he had caused a son and others in opposing slavery, dica|!8 Wife pain by Mnking her name) pottce Save Driver Whose Machine last night at his home in Hoon with Rega of Howard te ie a Struck Boy, near here. He porn in 1 wealthy lawyer, and he would im Frank Adelbers, driver o automo- Cayuga County, New York, and ‘early | mediately order his attorneys to dis-, Prank Adelbers, driver of an automo- became Inte nu-slavery agi- | continue the suit, Up to date no dis r Neoker'e undertaking breach @ gation, Hie atu titer going | continuance has been filed 0. Gates Avenue, Brooklyn, was| New York Eag! WAS anion ——_—___ rescued by the pollee lust night when " ‘ork Slay “a ” wtuacked by mob after his machin i to Chies THIS “DEAD” TRAIN LAST. | iP ia iaimer ttowan, ele Mr Honeywell’ owne ‘acres of | John Becker, an “L" mot 0 Hye | old. of No. 20 VRB land in Indiana and lino " in sounded his horn but the boy fell | and tried suys he ict against the auto and his skull was rushed. Adelberg wan taken to the Italph Aves Station, but was released rd Vound Dead watelin ‘ound dead ¢ om at No, Htreet to-day. In i poaronthy |the tubo ¢ with th Jon walon be cooked bis meals, } Then tho class was moved to Trin- by tho! TRAVIS CHARGES MISUSE OF POOR FUNDS AT ISLP Declares Doctors and Under- takers Collect Private Bills From Public Treasury. ALBANY, — Feh. M. Travis, State Comptroller, announced ~Eugene to-day that examiners from his office had made discoveries of misuse of the fund appropriated for the poor in the of Islip, County, A statement the Comptroller town Nassau issued by said “Physicians and undertakers, ap- ‘pull! could present long overdue bills against persona who, parently with a it is suspected, were not poor and re- celve pay on the same out of the town funds without any trouble, By this system it is contended that the poor fund has within a few years jumped until at the of the last fiscal year it amounted to more than $16,- 000. cloxe “There a very strong suspicion that a very large proportion of this sum did not go to deserving poor, but was pulled down by physicians, un- dertakers and others who had the amounts of the bills, which they could not otherwise collect, pald out of the town funds “After examining the accounts for rollef furnished it is “fficult to escape the conclusion that the admintstration of relief and the audits of the a counts by the overseers, particularly weer Crum, was attended with The fact that German raiders were searching the Atlantic for ally ship- ping was known to many of the pas- sengers on the Baltic and considera- ble uneasiness was felt until the shoreline of America was sighted. Capt, Pinch, in his orders from the Admiralty, was specifically Instruet- ed not to allow any vessel to ap- proach him closer than two miles unless she was properly identified, During the voyage the news of the Appam’s capture reached the Baltic by wireless and increased the feeling of uneasiness, According to the stories of the Baltle’s passengers at least two German raiders are at large on the Atlantic. that nothing about these raiders had appeared in the English ¥ the Government seeking to keep the news a searet. During the passage through the Irish Sea the Baltic went on a aag course to avold possible by submarines. Just before she passed out of the danger zone three British torpedo boate were sighted crossing her course. In the Irish Sea the Baltic came upon a fleet of forty-five British trawlers fishing for submarines. Ar ranged about fifty feet apart in « semi-circle the submarine trawlers dragged steel ‘nets to enmesh any bons) Varese boats. During the tlantic or 6 nO vessela were sighted, HE HAS STOCK FARM ON ROOF OF BANK Building Superintendent Raises Chickens and Ducks, and Has Pig, Goat and Monkey. George A. Diack, Superintendent of the Mechanics’ Bank Building, Court and Montague Streo |, Brooklyn, on ths roof of the building has estab- lished a stock farm from which be derives his eggs and poultry, Chickens, ducks, pigeons, turkeys, @ goat, pig and monkey comprise the live stock. Thi, are comfortably housed in wooden coops, and appar- ently undisturbed by the bustle in the streets beneath them. This farm bas always been a source of amucomeat to me,” Mr, Diack sald yesterday. “It was started & few years ago when Teddy Roose- \olt was to be Initiated into a certain organization. I was a member of the initiating committes and {t was my duty to ubtain a pig. When we got through with it I brought it up on the roof. I fattened !t up good and then ecnt it to the abattoir,” Mr, Diack also keeps his friends supplied with fresh fowls, His great- est favorite is Peter, @ monkey, who has a green back, “He does everything but talk,” Mr. Diack said. fau money OLD FASHIONED FAMILY REMEDY FOR COLDS, GRIP, AND COUGHS Fathe Father scription Pre Int in 1835, Father it became otherwise, Vather John's Medicine is recom Li ‘ous drugs.-Advt, ibed for O'Brien, of Lowell, Mass, by an eminent special. r John’s Medicine is free from Opium, Morphine, Chloroform or any Danger- ous Drug. scription, 50 Years in Use. A Doctor's Pre- Absolute Truth of This Story Attested by Guarantee to Give $25,000.00 to Any Charitable In- stitution if Shown Otherwise. John’s Medicine is ® physician's pre- the late Rev. Father John John recommended this to his parishioners and friends and in this way known as Father John's Medicine, This story is true and we guarantee to give #25,000,00 to any charitable institution, if shown ended for coughs, colds, and throat {tung troubles, and to make flesh and strength,—safe for all the family to et does uot contain morphine, opium, chloroform, cocaine or any other

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