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t | (thought would end. ¥ ostensibly for.a vise, ia order that they might accompany Gerard on the special train to be provided hy the German Government for the American Giptomat and b's staff. It was later thai the corresponden!s heard that Germany intended to hold them as hostages for the safely of German Ye Americ harbors. After his first talk with Gerard Count Montgelas returned again to 3 the Embassy and continued to urge ti ning of a treaty. Gerard persisted in his refusal and even declined to communicate the German proposal to Washington unless he was permitted confidential communication—presumably in code. Count Montgeias refused this per- mission. SAID HE'D SIT STILL TILL KINGDOM COME. It was apparently after these fruitless interviews with the unyielding | « ‘American Ambassador that German police took up passports of American correspondents, fin s, Red Cross workers and plain citizens. Americans came to Gerard and told him unless he asked ‘the Foreign Office to allow them to depart on the Embassy train they would be) % forced to remain for probably months. Gerard promptly communicated with Count Montgelas, but the cor- respondents and other Americans did not receive their passports until just four hours before the Eml@ssy train left Saturday night, Gerard and his party entered neutral Switzerland triumphantly—in gala spi The Americans were delighted to leave the stress and ten- sion of Berlin for the*quiet non-war atmosphere of Switzerland. Only champagne could do honor to such a celebration as thisdeaving behind of Berlin's tension—and champagne was brought out. In this the Amer- icans toasted Switzerland and her hospitality, as they crossed the border from Germany into Swiss territory. GERARD OFFICIALLY RECEIVED. Arriving at Schaffhausen, the first Swiss city after leaving German territory, the special train was met By American Minister Stovall and Col. Bruegge and Major Swirep, the latter two officers representing the Swiss Government. They bade Gérard amd his fellow Americans wel- come to Switzerland and extended every possible courtesy to the party. Gerard remained several hours in Zurich when that city was reached Jater in the day, and then departed with his staff to Berne, The general feeling of Americans ieft in Berlin was expressed by the | young son of Davis Maddy: “If J ever get my feet on American soil again I'll never take them off.” Gerard appeared worn out to-day, not only from the j journey from Berlin but from the strain of the past events. He plans to remain here fr a few days and will then journey to Paris, from there going to Spain for the voyage bi America, BERLIN, v payville wireless, Feb. Feb. 12—An Atwerican Red Cross THANKS OF THE BRITISH EXTENDED TO GERARD Balfour Tells Commons Nation Is Grateful for His Work in Berlin, LONDON, Fob. 12.-=The “gratitude and thanks of the nation” have been conveyed by the British Government to James W, Gerard, former American Ambassador at Berlin, for his work on behalf of British civilians and pris- oners of war in Germany. Foreign Secretary Balfour made this announcement to-day in the House of Commons, adding that the text of his note to Mr. Gerard would be made public, i Knocks Obstinate Coughs in a Hurry A tite ste at the Casas Thousands of people, normally jhealthy in evegy other respect, are a persistent hanging-on ' bronchial cough ye: fter year, dis- ' turhing ae sleep and making life ble. It’s so needless — there's an old home-made remedy that will end such a cough easily and quickly. ) Get from any druggist “21, ounces of Pinex” (50 cents worth), pour it int bottle and fill the b ee plain nulated sugar 8} we iBegin taking it at once. sare ually surely Ch ye notice the phlegm Hee out and then wae gerg altogther, ) thus ending a cough at you never Pinex is ‘a most valuable concen- trated compound of genuine Norwa: pine extract, combined with guaiacol and is used by millions of people every year for throat and chest colds with splendid results. meee void disappointment, ask your Gruggist for “2, ounces of Pinex” with full directions and don't accept | anything else. 4 guarantee of abso- lute satisfaction neg jreney. promoty refunded goes wit! is ‘the Pinex Co. FuWayne,ind-—Advt. LONDON, Feb. 12.—In an address at Wilhelmshaven regarding precautions taken by Germany in view of the pos- | mibility of war with the United states, Gustav 8t a Drominent National = Lib Reichstag, made the ment. according to |spatch to the Ev “Our German ol in United States will have seen to it t German in American ports shall not be usable by anyone for som Exhibits at the Aero Show Grand Central Palace, Feb. 8-15 The +4 + Airplane in the Wasid to Fly, the Original Wright Develo {he Wright Marti Airplane, bp. Hist moat advanced aero- i ment of Today no Bulge. oie pot tan, 60 BROADWAY, NEW YORK Look for the Luden yellow package. “The Guilty Man” has a hard time getting away with substitutes for Luden because the public will not be fooled. .The name “Luden” is on every drop—and the familiar yellow package is another guide. MENTHOL ANDY COUGH DROPS CAPE EOE 4OGH » © 16 MOSER WoRewoons UNDERWOOD busy in hospitals at Graudenz for tv United States Ambassador at Berlin t¢ day said they immediately departed. BIG RUSH TO SAIL ON SHIP CARRYING VON BERNSTORFF Agents Swamped With Appli- cations Because Vessel Will Have Safe Conduct, So great was the rush to-day to book passage on tho Frederik VIII. of the Scandinavian. American Lige, which is to carry Count von Bern- storff and members of the Gerfian diplomatic service in this country back to Europe, that by noon every reservation on tha vessel had been disposed of and several hundred ap- Plications turned down, The Frederik VIII, is scheduled to sail trom Ho- boken at 2 o'clock Wednesday after- | noon, The announcement that the vessel is to have safe conduct is responsible for the eagerness to make reserva- tions on her, The Frederik VIII. has 526 first cabin, 100 second and steer- age berths for 715 passengers. Agents of the line at No, 1 Broadway say they expect to refuse fill twice that space. There are about 175 persons in Count von Bernstorff's party, many of | | Whom called for their tickets to-day, thelr application having been passed upon by the Swiss Consulate, which is looking after Germany's Interests in this city, One hundred passengers from the Hellig Olay, whose sailing has been cancelled, have been transferred to the Frederik VIIL Chief Vatrick Hayes of the Hoboken Police has handled bigger propositions officially than looking after the safety of a German Ambassador and his staff, but he is puzzled over ghe ar- rangements made for the landing of Von Bernstorff and his party in Ho- boken to-morrow night. Last week Capt. Henry of the U. 8. Seeret Service made arrangements with Chief Hayes fer the transfer of the Von Bernstorff party from the Pennsylvania Railroad at Weehaw- ken, and from that plack by the shore road to the Scandinavian dock, Chief Hayes went ahead with arrangements to insure tho safety of the Ambassa- dor and his party. Later Commander Upham, an aide to Admiral Usher, visited ‘Chief of ' Police Monahan at J y and afterward visited Chief He told the latter that Count von Bern- storf! and tor transportation Applications to| P; 'How American Naval Gunners Shatter Target, Firing From a Vessel 12,000 Yards Distant 449948 04004444640000O000O000008 H0¢ BADE 4 94-88 44444948 DB8LOOORGOORECED65-6-994-46-99 04 0-04444490O08H) efficiency of the Américan naval gunner ig herevrevealed, The picture shows the rem- nant of a naval target that was shattered to smithereens at 12,000 yards, No, there is nothing wrong with the eye of the American naval gun-point er. delegation of three surgeons and three Red Cross nurses who have been vo months received orders from the d leave, The official press bureau to- to the Frederik VIL. ‘This arrangement upset Chief Hayes's plans, so he communicated | with Chief Flynn of the Secret Ser- | vice, who went to Washington to-day to-straighten out the affair. —_———— FEAR OF GERMAN RAIDER CLOSES BAHAMA RESORTS Ward Liner Morro Castle Brings Reports of Flight of Tourists, Stories of fear the German sea- raider has aroused among the win- ter resort tourists of Nassau, the British Bahama Island possession, which has practically cut the season in half and caused a cessation in, business there, were brought here to-day by passengers on the Ward liner Morro Castle, Hotels have been compelled to close owing to the Government de- cree barring lights at night and as @ result hundreds of tourists have fled the island, say the passengers. Among the fifty-six first-class pa: sengers was Commander Louis Josephthal of the New York State Naval Reserve, Naval Alde to Gov. Whitman, He said the reason for bis return was a@ cable from the Governor ordering him to report for duty with the naval militiamen guarding the waterfront. Two seamen of the Greek steam- ship Spyros arrived on¢the Morro Castle, bringing the first story of the sinking of their steamship by a Ger- | man submarine in the harbor of Las ‘almas in the Canary Islands Dec, They said that the submersible e tered the harbor and notified the captain to quit his ship in forty hours, At the expiration of the time limit the vessel was torpedoed, $28,177,035 A DAY COST OF WAR TO BRITAIN NOW Chancellor Reports Total Expen- diture to Date as 4,200,000,000 Pounds—New Loan Going Well. LONDON, Feb. 12.—The average daily expenditure of Great Britain is now £5,790,000 ($28,177,035), Andrew Bonar Law, Chancellor of the Ex chequer, announced in the House of Commons to-day. The Chancellor said the total ex- Penditure #ince the beginning of the war was £ 000,000, At the end of tho current year the national debt would stand between £3,800,000,000 and £3,900,000,000, Allowances to Aliles and inlons 1,000,000, The number of applications and the amount applied for by the general public for the new loan, the Chancellor said, were larger than ever before, would be approximately HAVE COLOR IN CHEEKS ' | Be Better Lookin Looking—Take ‘Olive Tablet: Vf your skin is yell yellow—complexton pallid—tongue coated— appetite poor you have a bad taste in your mouth —n lary, no-good feeling—you shoud take Olive Tablets. Dr, Edwards’ Olive Tablets—a sub- stitute for calomel—were prepared by Dr. Edwards after 17 years of study | with his patients. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets are a purely vegetable compound mixed with olive oil, You will know them by their olive cofor, To have a clear, | pink skin, bright eyes, no pimpies, a feeling of buoyancy like childhood days you must get at the cause. Dr. Edwards’ Olive 's like calomel— 8 after effects, and overcame | -'That’s why millions ot sold annually at 10e and All druggists. Take one or two! nightly and note the pleasing results, ~Advt. constipation, boxes are 25e, party would leave the vennsylvania Station at Jersey City | and be transferred by a navy tug | f Tablets act on} The Chaneellor pointed out that the total voles of credit for the current anclal year would amount to £ 950,000,000. He said the average ex- nditure had increased by £1,000,000 y a8 compared with the first sixty- three days of the financial year. {There also had been an increase In | expenditures for the army, but it was | proportionate with the increase in the |number of troops, the army being jfourteen times as lange as when the wa The amounts asked for, Mr. Law said, would enable the Gov- ernment to meet expenses until the jend of May. | nay apaperey {$200,000 GIFT REACHES PARIS Sends Thanks to Jamenw man for Contribation, b, 12.—The contribution of lust month through the ssador at Washington by James Stillman of New York for the as- sist of children of members of the of Honor who have lost or m their lives in the service of France da | rotme during the war, has been received by resident Poincare, The Prestd sent his thanks to Mr, | Stillman, = — | Trlest gnd Shipyard Bombarded by Hallan Flyers, LIN (via Sayville), Feb. 12.— {Italian flyers bombanled Triest and the Muegia shipbuilding plant, according to the Austro-Aungarian official report for Feb. U1, received here to-day. 6.|At Tupper | s GE-22 2O-D5-99-8-9-9-098930-90-9 $966-666-99600 500500 SHEOSE-39 O4 BELOW UP STATE; MERCURY AT 3 ABOVE BIG POWDER CRAFT FIREMEN RESCUE DRIFTS FIVE HOURS) WOMEN TRAPPED APERILINN. Y. BAY) IN BURNING HOME Patient, Nurse and Daughter Penned on Upper Floors of Brooklyn House. ee Lighter Passes Near Liner New; Aged York, Darts Through Nar- rows and Grounds, A lighter called the Columbia,] Three women had narro# escapes loaded with smokeless powder, broke | from death this afternoon in a fire which seriously damaged the four- loose from @ tow in the upper bay | mee brownstone dwelling at No. 200 early to-day and for nearly five hours | Union Street, Brooklyn, and gave floated here and there, as the tide) Brooklyn firemen a chance to thrill a and the ice floes governed, menacing | Crowd of several hundred with their scores of ships and finally passing |Tscue work. The building ls owned out through the Narrows and ground. |@nd occupied by Mrs. Susan Brown, ing on Romer Shoal, north of Sandy | “sed eighty-four, and her three Hook. daughters. ‘There was no one aboard the| Mrs. Brown is just recovering from lighter when {t was found on Pn an attack of double pneumonia and shoal, but a watchman was supposed to have been aboard at all times, was in the care of a nurse, Misg guarding the cargo of powder, Diesen, on the top floor. Miss Edith Brown was asleep in her room onthe The Columbia took on her cargo at a pier in Newark Bay. It was part third floor. of the tow of a tug which skirted LINDBERGH /:ARAIGNS THE FEDERAL SE Songressman Alleges That nate bers Have Conspired with Big” © Money Interests. é WASHINGTON, Feb, 12—Charge | ing “high crimes and misdemegnors™ In the administration, of “currency laws, Representative Lindbergh of Minnesota to-day on the floor of the House asked impeachment proceeds ings against Gov. Harding, Paul urburg and other members 6f the Federal Reserve Board, Lindbergh charged “conspiracy” with J. P. Morgam& Co., Kuhn, Look, & Co. in which Paul Warburg was @ former partner, the First National Bank of New York and other great banking Institutions, Paul Warburg, Lindbergh charged, had been active in framing Feferal Reserve legislation in the Interests of big business, and, with others, had y secret means” sought to influence and bbtain the appointment of the present members of the board. GIRLS! TRY IT! Misses Eleanor and Stella Brown were4n the basement abgut 1 o'clock, along the north shore of Staten Island between 3 and 4 o'clock this morning, bound for Gravesend Bay. The tow | way HAVETHICK, WAVY, supervising tho work of a laundress, when they smelied smoke, Going to tho first floor they found the hall- HERE ON COLDEST DAY ‘ciated |\Water Freezes in Many Apart | ments and B. R. T. Pas- sengers Suffer as Usual, A temperature of threo, degrees above sero at & o'clock this morning marked the coldest day of the season, It had climbed up to 8 at 1 o'clock. Previously Feb, 8 held the record. Then the mercury was down to five above. In the B. R, T. cars in Brook- lyn to-day it felt like 33 below. Cold weather may be looked for again to-night, the weather man says, but the temperature will rise to-mor- row. The cold wave started as usual in the Northwest. Water pipes in |‘ many-apartment houses were frozen. Passengers on the trolley Mnes in Brooklyn reached Park Row with cold feet, To the remonstrances of the B. R. T. patrons the conductors said the cars would be all right when they got more passengers aboard, It would make the cars too hot to turn on all the heat, But no instance was noted of even overcrowded cars bringing complaints of anybody being over- heated. However, consolation may be haa from the fact that the temperature jat Santa Clara, N. Y., in the Adiron- dacks, was’ 54 degrees below zero. Lake it was 48 de- grees below and at Saratoga it was 40 below. In Buffalo, early this morning, it was eight below and at Canton, in the extreme northeast- erly part of the State, it was 32 be- low. Moses Ludrick, blacksmith in a lumber camp, wag frozen to death at St. Regis Falls, where the tempera- ture reached 44 degrees below, At Northville, the south gateway to the Adirondacks, thermometers registered 36 degrees below sero and at Mayfleld 32 below.. Ogdensburg and Potsdam reported 36 below and Watertown 22 below, Eighteen degrees below zero wae registered at Pleasant Valley, seven miles east of Poughkeepsie, In Pough- keepsic 12 below was the lowest mark, Points in New England reported minimum temperatures ranging from 24 below to 6 above. At Northfield, Vt, the mercury registered 24 below, while at Burlington, Vt, It was 18 below and at Portland, Me., 10 below. Cleveland, O,, with the mercury at 10 below, suffered from low gas pri eure and @ shortage of coal, Chjeago woke up with the thermom- eter 2 degrees beow zero, At ISt. Paul it was 10 below, On the Pacific Coast the weather was delightful, At San Francisco it was 50 degrees above zero all day and at Palm Beaoh, Fla, {t was 64 in the shade. Ice on the northern lakes ts from thirty Inches to four feet thick The rivers were full of ice and ferryboats and tugs had to pick thelr way between floes and cak —————>—_—_—- U BOAT DEFIED FORT’S GUNS. Qurvivors of k Ship Tell How It Was Sank in Harbor, Gerasimos Dracates and Nicholas Esclabanos, survivors of the Greek steamship Spyros, sunk by a German | submarine on Dec, 6, 1916, in the har- bor at Las Palmas, Canary Islands, reached New York to-day on the Morro ana, according to the surviv- on coal when @ sub- marine entered the harbor rieht the dered the longings der er to Rather up his be his crew and get aghore re. Twelve hours later ntered the harbor again ik the Spyros ———— Swift, & Company's sales of Beef tn w nadia ‘rollowar at VOUMd Adve filled with smoke, and when they tried to ascend the stairs they were driven back by more clouds {coming from the fpper part of the house, Tying towels about their faces they @ second effort to reach their mother and sister and the nurse én the upper floors and were again forced to abandon the attempt. Mean- while neighbors nad turned in an alarm, Engine Company N: charge of Capt, Michael reached the scene first. While his | men turned water on the smoking staircase Brennan hurried to the top| floor and witp the assistance of the urse, carried Mrs, Brown to safety, | In the confusion the fact that Miss| consisted of lighters luden with pow- der and munitions to be stored aboard the munition ships in the Gravesénd Bay transfer groynds, Just where the Columbia broke loose is not known, A watchmen on @ vessel anchored south of Liberty Island saw the barge sweep by at 4 o'clock, By the Nght of a deck lamp the watchman made out a red flag on the lighter? which was total- ly dark, He recognized the derelict as a harbor powder or dynamite barge and notified his captain, who sent out a Wirgless message of warn- ing, which wa picked wp afloat and ashore, The tugs Neptune and Hercules) ,, were sent in search of the lighter. | Knowing that the tide had run out| Brennan, strongly during the early morning,| Edith way in her room on the third the tugs peat out for i? open | floor had been overlooked. Screams sea and at last came upon the Co-! ‘K* ; lumbia, Lines were made fast and TM the rear of the house brough: Battalion Chief Heffernan there in tme to see the young woman ge tting ‘ready to Jump to a ple of mattresses that had been dragged into the yard by neighbors, He urged her to hold the lighter was dragged off the shoal and towe back to Gravesend Bay, where her cargo was transferred, In drifting through the Narrows the powder lighter passed close by the liner New Yors, which had ar- fast and then, with his chauffour, rived from Liverpool a few bours Owen Ward, went up and brought before. |her down, Mrs. Brown was attended by Dr. Brausigmore, w! ‘rhe flue. lives re was caused by next a defectiv A. LINCOLN GODSCHMIDT LEADS CITIZENSHIP RUSH Namesake of War President First of 400 to Seek Papers on Holiday. The naturalization bureaus in Man- hattan and Brooklyn were kept open to-day to meet the convenience of would-be citizens who had an oppor- TO KEEP SPIES FROM CANAL. —An Execu- tive order to exclude sples and other undesirable persons from the Panama Canal zone and gtve to the Governor virtually unlimited authority to regu- late immigro there, has been signed by, President Wilson The text of the document has not tunity, due to the hollday, to present] been ‘made public, but it Is under | to contain drast provisions, Ve bi « themad®ves for first or final papers. | {0 Gantain drastic provislons, very. broad Chief Clerk Charles H. Weiser in| who “would be @ menace to the general Manhattan found a long line of appli- | welfare.’ a cants awaiting him and hin clerks! amendments to the Naval wit)! when he opened the office, Rejected. The rush was particularly heavy in] WASHINGTON, Feb, 12.—An amend-| ment to increase the number of sub- Brooklyn. By noon 125 men, all but marines from eighteen to fifty was re- a few of them Germans and Hun- garians, had applied for first papers Jected, as was an amendment to sub- And there were 200 tn ling walting Mime ut tw battle ee ares | 4a their turn, It was estimated that 400 battleships, {« ut cruisers, twenty | at applications would be received before | destroyers r, one | the end of the day. inet coust’ sub- The first applicant In Manhattan nd nine fleet submarines, An ide » instead of th t to prot for one bal ttle: in witead of was Abraham Lincoln Godschmidt, a youthful salesman, who was born iS Posen, Prussia, elghteen, was rejec HOUSE FAVORS BUYING =~ |" BASIC AIRPLANE PATENTS | Also Giving Government Power to ~ Take Over Ship and Munitions Plants—May Be in Naval Bill, WASHINGTON, Feb, 12.—Ry a vote of 281 to 19 the House to-day permit- ted consideration of an amendment to the Naval Bill to include $1,000,000 to buy basic patents of airplanes for | the Government and also to empower the Government, if geed be, to take over private ship” and munitions plants, Such legislation 1s, by ordi- hary rule, barred from appropriation aan Ckeced WOMEN PLEAD FOR PEACE. Crowd Into Prestden| Capitol and Add Stone, WASHINGTON, Feb. 12,—More than a| hundred women delegates to a peac: conference here to-day crowdtd into.the | Presider@'s room at the Capitol, where several addressed Senator Stone, Chair- | man of the Foreign Relations Commit- making earnest pleas to keep the Nation out of war, | With our desire to keep the Nation out of war,” Senator Stone replied, “and to preserve the penee of the country, 1 am in very profound sympathy, and I hope and trust that nothing may arise which would seem to make any hostil- ities inevitable, Congress will do. its best to keep the f war." mt American Her Health With ap n Par! PHILADELPHIA, Elizabeth N, Hill, Executive Mattes! of the Pennsylvania Woman's Division for National Preparedness, died to-day | at the Pennsylvania Hospital. It {3 sald Miss Hill ruined her healih doing war hospital worl in the American Hospital in Paris last r has been name exico to the Room a Beautiful Satin Covered Shield Candy Boxcsdecorated in true National cot- with choleest Assorted DE ARSORTED CHOC hed i pid EI Se rominent Golf Player CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Feb. 1) —Arthur! H, Goodale, prominent in amateur golf cireles and one of the low mark men tn KS—A eliclous cht of the Lite people. the M achusetts + Folt s Association Special for Monday, Feb. 12th handicap list, died at his home to-day . after a briet lilt He was thirty-one cca RISTAL, WAEKES— rs old and had won a number of prizes, including the Gen, Charles H aslor trophy at the Woolaston Golf Chub. | | ont BARCLAY STREET guns of the Spanish forts and or- | 6 610 oN Fy PgORTLANDT 'STRE PAR RK ROWSNABSAU st; “Paris in New York” eauxyirts|| Ft 8OW. 40thSt. 61180 pin Daily rn bet) brokow. WAY, MN ial Owen, The specified weight BEAUTIFUL Every particle of dandruff + disappears and hai : stops coming but: | Draw a moist cloth through | hair and double its beauty at once. ” ——— | Your hair becomes sight, wa fluffy, abundant and appcars as so! lustrous and beautiful as a young \girl’s after a “Dandersne hair | cleanse.” Just try this -.noisten a | cloth with a little Danderine and care: fully draw it through your hair, take ing one small strand at a time. This will cleanse the hair of dust, dirt and j excessive oil and in just a few mo- ments you have doubled the beauty ¢ | of your hair, | Besides beautifying the hair at once, Dandetine dissolves cvery par: ticle of dandruff; cleanses, purifies and invigorates the scalp, forever stopping itching and falling hair. Bae what will please you most will be after a few weeks’ use when will actually see new hair ~ downy at first—yes—but veally new hair growing all over the scalp. If | you care for pretty, soft tir and lots ‘of it surely get a 25-ceut botile of Knowlton's Danderine from any drupe gist or toilet counter, and just x, it. Save your hair! Beautify it! You will say this was the best 25 cents you ever spent.—Adyt. ———— Men Wanted. Men Wanted. Men Wasted. Intelligent, able-bodied men, age 21 to 40 years, weighing 150 Ibs, or over, to learn the rubber business at ouf Akron, | Ohio, factory; advantages are iheset | | Sueaqy Work, 4b Hows Wena, 914.4000 Str, ring workers cau caro $20 to $25 y. Complete noctat insurance er ny gt our New ‘York Branch, 0 A a ! 207 Second Avenue, Corner 13th Street THE B. F. GOODRICH COMPANY. , “BELL-ANS "| Absolutely Removes ‘Indigestion. One |provesit. 25cat all druggists! = | Oligo. | NANN.—Suddenty, at his residence, 980 * Prince st., Brooklyn, PATRICK HENRY. NANN, formerly of Leonard ati, New § York City, beloved husband of Catherine Nann (neo Cummings) and brother ef John &. Nann, Formerly « member ef the C, ¥, M, Assectation of White @hy HATES or Bon Hons and Chocolates . No es mera REALLY 6 af the Offering for Monday and Tuesday, Feb 12th and 13t 8 Fatleetlon of dalnty ut BO wtieks ie Crown Yow come tn tar aan vie Vin reb, 13th’ Kibses bee of rithenb here ROVAL Mend ed OF ie mWeet wox loner V1 ROu ms Aart West 3TH cane tba fie d+, #30 1D AVE. rooklyn, Closes 11.30 P, M.—Saturd; inetides the container,