The evening world. Newspaper, November 11, 1916, Page 3

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OAL GONG DOWN, | BUT DEALERS DENY THEY FEAR PROBES To-Day’s Price $9.50 a Ton Delivered as Investigations of “Famine” Go On. CHEAPER IN JERSEY. Swann’s Aide Says He Has Evidence of “Arrangement” To Boost Cost Here, It loks as the al famine” will 800n become a mere memory. Fhe “middle house the speculators who | Were asking $12 4 ton for coul a wholesale—came down to $9.59 9 ton to-day. The venxon for the reduction in price Is said to be the increased amount of coal brought to New York by the big coal mining companies. ‘They are getting more coal to the city, as they explain it, “because of the improvement in the car situation, due to the concerted efforts of th rallroad officials to urge con) dea to unload cars more promptly.” They deny ‘that The Evening World's exposure of conditions fol- lowed by the investigations started by the county and Federal authorities, had anything to do with the improve- ment; yet any one who considers their explanation carefully can se@ that some powerful influence has suddenly stimulated coal operators, coal car+ re tiers and coal dealers into action that! has relieved the “famine.” They still inalst that labor is scarce at the mines and that they will not be able to bring the normal amount of coal to New York until the end of this month But the indications are that there will be no more talk about the impossibil- ity ‘of getting enough coal into this market. Assistant District Attorney Samuel | Markewich, who Is conducting the in- quiry into the situation for Dis- trict Attorney Swann, hus examined | @ great many coal dealers as well as manufacturers and other consumers of coal, Much Information has come to him anonymously, “I am convinced,” he sald to-day, | fe an arrangement—I do} “that ther not yet call it a criminal conapiracy— to boost the price of coal to people 8 this side of the Hudson. “The arrangement is to make us| pay more for coal and to try to mako us delleve natural causes are re- sible for the increase, They talk ut shortage of labor at the mines, about tho men taking too many holl- days or being lured away into am- munition factories by higher pay, and ament @ chortage of cars (o carry the coal here. Yot at the same time you ean buy all the coal you want across the Hudson River at very little in- crease over last year's price: “They make the excuse these Jersey ecg] retailers ure the ‘selling repre- sentatives’ of the big mining com- jes, Who aro keeping their regu- ar customers supplied by making ex- treordinary efforts. Are not the coal consumers of New York just as regu- jar customers? Yet we are left to the mercy of brokers, ‘middle houses,’ one iw sorts of speculators, 1 the evidence of thin ‘arrange - ment’ to boost prices points to the logal retailers as the active parties. 1 wk we not yet discovered positive evidence of violation of the Donnelly Law, but there ts plenty of moral pee and I expect soon to get the evidence.” rank Burns of Burns Bros. de- elared to-day that householders can buy coal from his company at $%)0 a ton, in small lots “That 1s for old customers only,” ‘0 eatd. “We are not accepting any new Dusiness now, and we don't expect to until mora coal begins t2 come into New York. The panic ts all over, an.’ to buy how, and few people are tr, much coal.” Assistant District ef Kings County continued his tn- quity. He said he had not yet found evidence of conspiracy to raise prices sufficient to warrant an {indictment Can’t Enjoy the hildren Attorney Peters, A mother who suffers with kide & ney trouble finds it hard to keep up her duilly” work. Lameness, back- ache, sharp pains when stooping, and sick, “blue, nervous or digry spells muke home life dreary, Ac tive kidneys bring buck vigor, health and al pleasure in fam iy duties. Thou sands of women say that D Kidney Pills have meant new life to | them, If the kidneys are weak, try a] box New York Testimony Mrs. E. M, Twiggs, 110 Meserole Ave, says: "One day when Twas out | doing my daily marketing T got a sudden, sharp pain through my” back and kidneys. T was so bud that on my arrival home I way forced to lie down, I had fearful headaches and dizay spells ihe kidney secretions were unnatural, “Soon after | using Doan’s Kidney Pills 1 noticed an improvement for the better. I kept on taking them and they gave me entire satisfaction.” pS tall Lprug Stores Buffalo.NY THE EVENING WORLD, BATURDAY, NOVEMBER | America Wins Japanese Prima Donna ‘With the Kiss, the Dance and the Corset, i} ! | | The Hae Butter i B Wise 16 TH SEEEE She Is So Sorry Her Hus-! band, the Dignified Dr. Miura, Refuses to Learn Delights of Former, but Won't Let an American Girl Teach Him, No, No, No! Back Home She's Going to Wear Her American Clothes and to Tell Her | Native Friends What ; Good Times American | Ladies Have With the | Kisses, the Corsets and the Dances. SkEEE By Nixola Greeley-Smith. erica ‘bul. puns Chose second Tamak! Miura, the tiny Japanese prima donna whose interpretation} of the title role of “Iris” {s the musical sensation of the week, has lived in the United States @ year now. She has travelled from coast to coast with the Boston Opera Company, and she is 5) of the opinion, which she confided to me one day after her American debut, that our noblest institution is the kiss. “I ike to kees, yes—more—than—ever,” said the Uttle singer, whose syllables fall from her flowering lips one at a time like the loosened petals of cherry here e thing that hw ‘ . iy s afte! 8 in, Since I have come— | 0c fully. demonstrate f “And, furthermore,” said the Colonel in conclusion, “the President 5 blossoms after e spring rain, Since ‘ Licensed hauiuien Not to! ‘alifornia, iny Sta is gaining votes with each return from the Minnesota district like Joss * here 1 learn--to kees—-many kinds. But Dr. Miura—|L NEN sd With if (« Repubittas repre eee Willard to gatning: walght President Wilsob ip alected wow. esd ce ¢ my husband—still not like the kees. He is yaneees Be Interfered With if je Republican at the samo tine iu: | will be elected more than ever by Monday.” & H gentlomen end very proud, what you call dignined. They Are Honest. ites that elected Mr, Wilson in Cali “How about" —— ees siete = Japanese ge aii do not kees, It is 80 sorry . fern arORY the et aB sans Notliing at all. Unless the Callfornia lady vote exercises the pro- ve co rose to = - epre 0- # of otes in ae : ; alpine cette vole Terened| Was fine. And once 1 dance with] William Morican, President of the California, and if a whole lot of them | Fogative of Hts sex and changes {ts mind, nothing further can be sald." a note of interrogati | Riccardo Martin, who sing with me |New York Newsdealers and Station, | 48d Bot boen Wilsonites the election “Do”. 6 or socretary, “It ts) "6 eo kees ane dey e might have resulted differently. The " fr ne vteyt the Corbet und the dance. My teacher [ers Protective and Honevolent Asvo-|vote of Califoroia waa A Penaekar ah at all, A barber who voted for Hughes Is an anachronism.” 0 0 d dance. My teac ‘ 5 in high school in Japan taught me| ciation, Issued a cireular yesterday! personal tribute to Mr. Wilyon from ———————-— SHE LIKES THE MUTUAL KISS,!° Walls, (ae & but wnen Ij}tot that the Bureau of Li- | the people of Culifornia.” SHIELD “ yor NOT THE ONE-SIDED. came bere it wus not wha! you dor |censos contemplates refusing the re-| award L. Doheny. or | vLueky | SAVES “COP’S” LIFE. “In ‘Madama Butterfly’ I have @]so T learn again. And besides dance x a A Strike” Doheny ax he hus been called —_—_—_—-- hrees,” th ndid little lady continued.) 1 like~T like President Wilson, T do newal “good WAny)| by those who know history as a Dogger Strikes It When Man Whe lags ie ee ne eiige vou enti iaue| S08 understand when Armericun ladies | newsdes Mr. Merican goes on to! discoverer of oil fornia, wan Stabbed Wife Attacks Him “It is a kees Om nie “| talk politics, but 1 understand your |eharge that “eighty of the best stands! bern in Fond du Lac, Wis, on Aug In wt h “e S tual, But in Iris L diet kill myself—| prosident is always for peace, So bY | in the vity are already on the list,” und , 1889. He comes of Irish’ atock on WGeA dataee oh” naaie” Sima because 1 am pure innocent girl and] is @ very nice Kentieman, T think. 1| : both his father'a and mother's alde * id holes ram aioe Into a slave and af @M for peace always, everywhere, and| Warns the reciplent of the elroular! Mr, poneny started A ov Horner, a laborer, of No. 8 Diamond Iam stolen, made In it it [ereat peaco between this country and |that he or sho might be one of thojerment surveyor in Indian ” Street, Greenpoint, stabbed his wife gentleman kees mo--against MY Wil) Japan.” city and then went into Mexico on a cae | to-day and then made a nN at oh, very vigorous-lee and Tain dis-|" “Will you ever return to Japan?" 1| y livelihond is im danger, 1 survey tack (on Patroiman ‘eorge Durkin, faved t elf. So I die asked th 1 fikure, who] i : Zin Los Angeles Mr Doheny "The. SA Ne rattbed: Jia die a (orn Od to mite the hes that ta all on| might have stepped out of a Hokusa)| Warns the circular, The President first big oil strike Tater Ghd et eee eta cai ie neck ‘one sid she added quaintly, Mine.) print the newsdealers asks all who hold oi at Fu on, Cal, house) When Durkin. ent Horner Miura’s English bas grown She nodi Yea—to ‘sty stands yer at subway or elevated, in the River V Me y. When eat Pushed at him with dnager, since she came among us | to wear m an clothes. MY | entran to attend a mecting to-| WAS discovered ne, ‘amipico, Mex., | which | atru fy Meld * a e 1 the Mr oheny organized he Mexican | and split it in half coat Pa eae re eRe hencon here, A an friends do | merrow in Jurden “to Gnd) peirceum Companys This company | Putines doauoan m U P Stair] the” in soak as we all know, 1s aguinst not Hike, “But £ love them. | 4 oreby this catuae) has grown until it is now one of the| ways and Force Occupants [tite yt ee | an eeiavely Aly babbies and tient pu them in the igunks, f ema copuecam ves Siac Sa ae ‘i i win Renken te ene “L kees love merican e t them he ttunks, for we | ense Commiissior } - _— ——— wi Ss night stick snk Bel ka Fag ight) travel so much, ‘But 1 thke them out| License ne her George HH. | —— \ixincoh, so pretty! I @f- and look and look at them every day, | Bell has this to avy of the Mericun KILLED AS HIS SISTER | Adjatant Gener ( New Jersey fectionate, 1 wish Dr, Miura would, And when I go back to Japan 1 will | circular Vive cbildren and two bed-ridden D fear to hoes, Hut he not ik wan them and my Japanese fiends! "No stand holler who attends to DISCHARGES SHOTGUN de Ware ‘vandued \euriwetazanetes ARLASLE rm Adji. Gen, little lady in. the i) is orsber busincaa Is in apy danes Wilbur Sadler Jr. of Now y gold hinjono that was like 5 iny | Bis orb ince nO ORY danger ee during the burning of 4 five-story died of heart dl the haine of ‘flame Jet her voice sink Ina mother, litde prima donna von- | Tee Depart cs icenses has no . tor 84 tea a brothe ‘ le | of dejection Her husband, « le arone tinued.” “She keeps my liome and my|list of newsdealers #wnose Heenses| Henion, \\ 0 Had Been Hunting, | tenement at No. 24 Madison Stront. hia . t ws up at Col Mis | cats and dog three ot to be owe: f a eo: grou abe ne bull is| pein sci was UR, BE Ge Par rerlcase and dom i Fires Rava Ure tare nat 10:1 wel, and baw none! Was at Dinner When Girl in The ground A ft the building is |p search work, So he did not hear this} pecause he jumps up and down all the |i" mind. An Play Touched Trigg Jeccupled ax a cundy and stationery wifely confession mado in their suite | time. They are not fine cats and the | ment ty tis - bide store by N phowits, who with his at the Hot cAlpin, | dow has no pedi I picked all of | Brossiy mt loerately | spwelve-vear-old Ethel Henion was! y Molly en in the re T) 4 OOo eeguld he: 40. ‘ qd uttering A “Personally 1 s the ahot st Mag : } A ih MOrOUR, WAdSAe MING Ice ae Uy alate believe that ri playing are fae nae whieh | were awak the crackling of igre. ‘vo ind have nice 10g. irtmen tfenaing [her atenbroter, ames enon, vd Baas a ta ne ee A » for husband who i them about slond-hulders hat there jg! Just Anish rebine © OPENING) ney Med ¢ , The fire swep ’ ' . feation for t - Gey of the hunting season fb baggin et me like a. bu ail the three, se hustaend hie a ata At ah then Woe propped | behind } mushroomed up the Neat to American ike | girls lov te RUT bestde hin fat eatin In| gtaircas American corset, It makes tine neck Fanunes 3 Up trouble. | nis home Lane, \ r- | 9 . And throat, Without corset 1 sit~-not |; Ht ae ecpny AUOAlly | on ny | Tena ipper flo re bewan | straight 4 ke American lady— when her family 7 » Intent ol When wt fleving to Mrs. argaret but bent over Vike. this: AUle Bueno learn th tava hin uet bil f apy atand | gun w Phiten, a third floor tenant, finding ‘The little figure in red robe d Wie she ean F 6 rikOt thing.) & charge ‘ exaggevatedly In its big chute Bi) recannie inaerleeeibeAne eases pending | County Physician Armatror er pneumonia stricken husband John Yellow and ved chrisanthomumm Her| ancee eentiomai, But. not oe. fr holdera at the present | death was Do ieee nabl velp himself, wrapped him oot women, hung their heads | japan re | reoused have been in a dlanket and carried hin ta the sy mpathetic pa y “ay ike the COr-| kay, an i : Me ie Pell = POLICE FORCE LOSES woseand dow gh another build 1 jer that corse ts are all + bets on the races—in | “ yy iing. Mrs, Phalen then re i she | righ , but that 3 ving @ bh Dok hed lots hort lidren behind. 0 moon their iy in é 4 (hat of & stands | ere Policemen Thomas O'Connor and 1 1 , » neil a stand pri - ‘6 Peeae iat ty i tore| yank STARE | tau wut ar siegeon gnome Pinar neve o'r om see | Sli trouble app! sot but not} 24) i “ city leustom of talking to polemen tn a) Hon, one forcing his way up the stairs | Shore it ie neoded to make tine neck." | ot hand oF Aah ears ' fatherly w toad of Mak Vx Clavges and the other up the fire-ascape, suc Mme Miura admitted nd sho] otested earnest And f the against them, earnod briquet | ceede ing the Phalen flat | straightened her drooping shoulders | oy tat WAS West and We W. of the "Golden Kule Cop,” has retired | - found the chiidren-Mar- jin a charming imitation of the athe | gl! Know that Judy O'Grady a PM ARAARUEe rom the police force s aaceeral oe ana let girl I the J jwly on the point of ar OA ree keeP | Masterson became a patrolman June! Th h of eru u " y witnin the law will recelve Heenae re- a ‘od ar ‘| hat patch of eruption is not meces- THE AMERICAN Gone 6 SHELw rewaly at the present rate, which Ig, 2% 288% A Lieutenant for fourteen Mt Anna, scared within| #@réd’aserlous matter! Even in severe, ‘4 : ho for clevated and $5 subway | years, he recently has be ached to . well-established cases of ecsema, ring- { would like,” added Miura, stands. ‘Ti don't need Mr. Merle |the Retph Avenue Station, linekiyn an inch of their lives. They were car Bor ar cidice avec R . Sto. hlay games ant 6 ub as ean's | either Perhaps his moat spectacular feat | ried to the roof by the two policemen | 4 nd R coe ening: American girl, and—oh, | can dance 4 a ne |was the capture of “Jack the Slasher’ py omay Moore, a fourth oor ten intment a esinol Soap usually re- | Xgapced in & ten som at Itachesten, | - Clerayman Under the Katte, in Ook Stress during the rule of In : Med bia. bederidden mothor,| Weve the itching at once and quickly N.Y, It w " autluls Tanne The Rev, Dr. Brown Left #1,000, The Rev, Dr. J. Wilbur Chapman wag | spector Byrnes. Byruns, ha anes ant, carrl od-ridi a overcome the trouble completely. How | what you ca one wep) io tt » had | pte Rey. Dr Fran is ei aw operated u yesterday at the Poly. | BOCM Whit era In Lone | Mra. Marmaret Mullins, to safety by) ccd more, then, can this simple, in. ‘so many ladies dance, and I had} president of Union Tucoto m or, Wil ee hel shociigner mukderety y of tho roof ane was badly | mores 1 9 simple, {n+ HRover danced with gentioman bofora| nary. tet an estate, of ¢ only fi,000,ne~ | elink aca i Williata A Bains | dani and ene a eee, maa Wad st Sh Kane maa i OUY) expensive treatment be relied onto dis- only with girls in Tokio, but Amori- | cording, to papers fi he Surroe |b DPALINAL steele and gall ean In f / urned & a ‘ aie pel skin troubles in their earlier sta an Kentieman see my eves dance | Res Pour erday, whe Sonny th ; aaa TAT " ai 4 (Fyne teer Hospit < Louise Reiss pitnsed ui tie atio cess: | to «lis Soap and Realaol Ulutuent are void by j With Lie music and he tall ine--'Come Claremont Avenue, applied for appoint. fully. Hus Mite and ‘his, brother, ‘Des | tnen 4 The fire did $1,000 damage. Its orle| " i, 20 apis, For samples ot cach, (ag, wile on, ee rf at up and Beato a H inisicatils Dr, ipo: h erie a Te of soringtetg, | uet_aites he had slaued @ wag tg being investiga F iy i ia “helone step And She Sings in Praise of Them All “MERE INDENT” ‘RAID ON NEWS STANDS CONTROLLED BY CITY CALLED FALSE ALARM MON $900,000 BET ON WILSON; TWAS Edward L. Golehy, “Lucky Strike” Oil Man, Makes Wall Street Gasp. Kven Wall Street gasped when it |learned of the half million dollar bet won by Kdward L. Doheny on the [election of President Wilson. And it] takes something to make (he street [that talks of millions as smokers (alk of coupons gasp. {t is some distine- ion to be the winner of the r ever made on # Presid tion, but it is a mere incident in the life of “Lucky Strike” Doheny, one of the wealthiest oll producers in the world, Mr. Doheny, accompanied by Mra Doheny and # party of friends, will leave New York to-day on bis yacht ct ja for a cruise to Havana, Tam- Pico and New Orleans. Mr. Doheny will then proceed to California to cust an electoral vote for President Wil- jon, He was ohosen an elector in Los Angeles County, where be makes bis home, Half # million dollars is of such in- consequence that Mr. Dobeny dis- miaved the subject of the wager by remarking: “It's @ mere incident. it would also bave bee cident.” “Your confidence in President Wil- son must have been # remarkable one | for you to have backed him so heavi- ’ Mr. Doheny was asked. ‘My confidence was no greater than that of thousands upon tnou: men who probably could no wager @ cent on the outcor Mr. Doheny. "Backing a money Is no added prouf of your con- fidence In him or your judgment that be will win.” Mr. Doheny has been doing big things so long that a half-million-dol- lar winning meabs but little in nis life, Mr. Doheny is President of the Pan-American Petroleum and Trans- port Company, which owns 600,000 acres of oll land in Meaico, This land is valued at $50,000,000 and representa 76 per cent. of the oll producing ter- ritory in Mexico, The company has in commission or being built some twenty steamers and operates a score of re- jeg in Mexico and the United If T had lost & mere in- Doheny js a thorough belie in President Wilson and his policis including hia Mexican policies. “First and foremost, L am a Demo- crat,” sald Mr. Doheny, “and believe in principles that do not veer toward Socialism or inonopoly. And I have been a Wilson man trom the begin- ning. 1 believed in Mr. Wilson's policies from the beginning, and Usti:) | b in them, and my belief in them bay cost me large sums of money {n Mexico. When Mr. Wilson reftised to recognize Huerta, Huerta wag all powerful in Mexico, and our | property suffered, I cun tell you; 1 etill think Mr, Wilson Is right but (o his policy, and f intend to stand by him 11, 1916. vr. BUGS: “The People Want a Presi He Was Emerging From a SAYS | Plate of Shredded Wheat.” By Bugs Baer. Copyright, 1916, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Eventng World.) When interviewed at bis palatial offices in the corridor of the Hotel Insomnia, Col. Bunkem was aa fatigued as the chameleon that had Just played nine innings on a plece of Scotch plaid. ‘The famous prognosticator of events that have recently occurred wan exhausted but jubliant over the outcome of the election, which was a vindication of bis statement that the winner of the contest would be the next President of the United States and the Bronx “| don't know whether bistory is repeating Itwelf or merely stutter ing,” sald the prophesier of events in the past tense. “But I wish to go on record as predicting the victor of the balloting long before the Canadian and juvenile vote had bean tabulated. While slightly handl- capped by the fact that the outlying counties were trying to outlle each other, my falth In President Wileon never wavered any more than & plate of calf’s foot jelly in an earthquake. It is always darkest before dawn, unless you are {na cabaret. Even in spite of the millions spilled by Wall Street, the amateur vote in the South and West was enough to elect Woodrow Wilson for four more years of free coal at the White House.” “Do you consider that the boatioad of currency sunk by Wall Street in the campaign affected the voting, Colonel?” “No more than a complaint affects a janitor,” retorted the Colonel. “Cheering isn't voting by several yards. You can pay @ man to shout for you, but there are no ears on a ballot. A voter can accept Repub- Nean money, ride to the polls in a Republican taxicab, grab a bribe with Dis left bund and then vote for Wilson with his right. It is the privi- lege of every untrammelied American citizen to be corrupted only on one side “In my opinion,” continued the Colonel, “what happened to Wall Street simply proves my contention that a squirrel doesn't have to climb @ tree for food, All the farmers aren't on farms. Wall Street contains more hioks than the alfaifa district, All they got for their millions was @ lot of echoes. A man can shout for one candidate in a big, bass vo! and then go out and vote tenor.” “What do you think of Roosevelt’s personal influence on the result?” “It's Impossible to print my unabridged opinion; Dut I think that Teddy was hired to talk for Hughes by the Democratic National Com- mittee. His audiences cheered so bard and Jong that their lead pencils were too hoarse to write ‘Hughes’ when the time came to vote.” “Do you think the election was sincere, Colonel?” “Woll, there are rumors that the voting in the Rocky Mountains wasn’t on the level and that several citizens !n Philadelphia were affected by dual personalities, but, on the whole, I consider the con- test to have been reasonably honest. If a misguided Republican imag {nes he ts twins, it {s up to the Democratic Judge to divide his vote by two, Tho voting In the mountalnous districts was rather rough, and Delaware went Republican; but this may have been due to the fact that the voting took place at high tide. At low tide we have three more Nemocratic votes Jn that State.” “Wheat about Rhode Islan “That went Republican too, as Roosevelt was too busy to speak there. Still, Rhode Island's vote didn’t affect the ultimate result. They only have five electoral votes and you can’t swing @ bull by the tall. “Although the Mexican vote {6 still uncounted,” continued tho Colonel, “1 think that the result reflects the people's choice. The people want a President who doesn’t look as {f he was just emerging from a plate of shredded wheat. The most important part of a President is from the neck up, and every American citizen bas the unalienable right to observe the contour of bis President's Adam's apple. Low visibility ie all right in battles, but out of place with chins.” “Then you consider the result to reflect the temperature of the projeturiat rather than the ticker?” As I predicted after the returns were in, the American citizen's vote Was triumphant, No election judge has the right to look a voter up in Bradstreet's and Dun's, Each citizen is entitled to vote bis own way, even if ho is married ° BAER | dent Who Doesn’t Look as If MURDER VICTIM LED 10 DEATH WITH GREAT T CEREMONY Assassin’s Agent “Agent Who Lured i Inglese Ambush Real Diplomat, Police Say. ¢ Vincenzo Ingle parted this tite | With unusual ceremony, detecthws | announced to-lny after investigating | his mysterious murder at No. @o Laxt Eighteenth Street. He wae the jVited to the house to see a ‘di |friend.” An escort ted him to a ste |way opening into the areaway. The door was politely held open for him Expectantly be started down the steps. The door noiselessiy closed. behind jhim. Some one in the areaway shot jain in the left eye. As his body toppled down the stairs four bullets | | were fired Into it from an automatic. When persons in the nelghborhoed : rushed in they found only @ corpes and five empty shells. His §100 Jn leash and valuable jewelry were up- | touched. | Inglese forty-four ye and owned a saloon at No, 409 Fifteenth Street. He was well kno the police, but had never A short time ago he a saloon in East Eighteenth Street, He seemed annoyed wi negotiations fatled, It was not until the saloon was “stuck up” patrons robbed of $300, Then the ice Ko! busy among wrongdoers hood, It was rumored t know something al i holdup, and about the mystert tips that caused so much police tivity, and bis death late last night did not surprise or excite the neigh- | borhood. | The thing 4 ad was to buy id | that puzales the poll i is why the man fell such | victim to the assassins. Without ing how kn detectives zt. the men who lured him to the houge arranged that the first man ne the door was the one to be shdt. Inglese’s acquaint his db- jeort mumt hiss of | diploma to get him. to |thromch t first ; SAVED FROM KIDNEY TROUBLE | Mr. Henry Dater, of Troy, N. ¥., Now Appreciates The Powers Of “FRUIT-A-TIVES. HENRY DATER A Mr. Dater isa firm friend of “Frualtes- MR tives.” He be in the healing and restoring powers of these wonderful | tablets made frou fruit jut He knows—because he tried “Fruit-a-tives” when be was ill and suffering, and is fu log on to speak with authority, 058 Virst Ave., Troy, N. ¥. + April 20th, 1016, “IT have been @ sufferer for years with Atiuey Trouble and Constipas tion 1 tried “ Vruit-a-tives” about, a month ago, and with almost immediate results, ‘The Kiduey Trouble bas disap- peared and the Constipation is fast leaving me RY DATER. “Fruitea-tives greatest Kidney ti ly in the ld, and is equally leffective in relieving Constipation, | S0ea box, 6 for #2.50, trialsize Se, At all dealers or sent on receipt of price by Fruit-a » Limited, OGDENS- BURG, NEW YORK,—Advt REMEMBER |Today when ordering your food supplles to SK YOUR GROCER FOR Austin; Michots € Co. Inv New York ! | PURE FOODS TheWorld’ Best unbea: BELL-ANS : solutely Removes igestion, One package’ . 25cat all druggists,| | ee)

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