The evening world. Newspaper, May 15, 1917, Page 3

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i ce 20 EFFICIENCY MEN ‘GO WITH ENGINEERS New Soi: Regt Regiment Expected to Depart Very Soon— Cooks in Demhnd. Capt. John P. Hogan, chief aide to Lieut,-Col, McKinstry, in charge of roorulting for the First Division (New York) Engineers, is organizing an “‘ef- | fielency corps,” to be composed of twenty men, who have been in charge of “big business.” “Modern warfare, as recent events Lave demonstrated,” declared Capt. Nogan to-day; “is more or 1éss a ma! ter of mechanics and business. The New York division of the nine units | of American encineering regiments to be sent abroad is therefore anxious to obtain @ section of men able to use| sound judgment in purchasing equip- ment, appraisal of values. ’nd mod-/} erm business methods. “Circular letters have been sent to efficiency men of the big department | stores and other large commercial enterprises asking them to volunteer their services. It 4s pretty tough to| ask a $12,000 a year man to give up| his Job for the comparatively nominal | wage which he can make as a mem-| ber of tho Engineers’ Efficiency! Corps, but In times like these there might be a sufficient number of men with the necessary qualifications willing to ‘do their bit’ in this way Rumor now has it that the engt-| neers will be off for the French front very soon. But. there is one thing that {s bothering Captains Hogan and Hudson—the apparent impossibility to enlist cooks. Men from practically every other line of endeavor have ap- plied, but there has been so far not a single enrollment for the squad of twenty chefs which the engineers will carry with them, 1 “Our working equipment, with the! exception of pneumatic tools and drills, will be provided by the Allied Governments,” said Capt. Hogan. “This will be a material factor in aiding us to be the first American regiment to land on foreign soil, We. are ready to move just as soon as our quota {s made up, which will be with- | in geven or elght days at the present rate of enlistments.” H Uniforms and geners! armament for the Engineers’ Corps have been delivered at Fort Totten, ‘Inasmuch as the great majority of the men en- rolled are experienced in railroad, and construction work generally, it will not be necessary to give them much preliminary training on this side of the water, except for disclp- | linary and organization purposes, There is keen rivalry between the New York and Pittsburgh over which will be the first to recruit its full strength, It looks like a neck-and- | neck race, but Capt. Hogan declared that by the end of the week New York would be ahead of any of the nine divisions of-the country, Michael McCarthy, a guard on the Subway, has promised to organize « volunteer recruiting squad among the underground workers, and it js ex- pected that a big body of recri rubs will be enrolled in this way. Officers of the engineers, acting on his sugges- tion, will try to get up similar mov ments among employees of the vari- ous big construction and contracting plants and the railroad systems, The engineers will not carry a band, The house warming of the army's new recruiting headquarters at No, 280 Broadway was marked to-day by the biggest rush of recruits to come ‘Yorward for this arm of the service so far, Yesterday's recruiting led with an enrollment of 189, according to Major Hughes. But with the re- moval from No. more central enroliments will run far above that figure. Upon being passed at the New York depot, the men are sent to Fort Slocum for final physical examina- You can make for yourself, with your own hands, the mildest, most fragrant cigarette in the world and the most economical. Ma- chines can't imitate it. ‘ GENUINE BULL DURHAM SMOKING TOBACCO A Suggestion to Pipe Smokers;— Just try mixing a litue genu- ine “BULL” DURHAM tobac- co with your favorite pipe tobacco—it's like sugar in your coffe Ougrertons 5 | Massmeass. Oecaeky? WANTED ATONCETO. ‘of the Mosquito Fleet: ‘wishes are carried out , Corps will be in all verity, so far as|ish steamer ) Which would have been finished in MISS M’ADOO BRIDE _ OF RUSSIAN EMBASSY SECRETARY TO-DAY 90 LOST ON LINER; SINKING WAS KEPT SECRET BY BRITAIN Thrilling Stories Brought Here of Torpedoing of the Abosso April 24. Ninety lives were lost on April 24 in the torpedoing of the 7,782 ion British ner Abosso off Fastnet, ac- cording to stories of passengers here | tov@ay from Burope, The ship was orpedoed without warning. Forty- | SIX Passengers were lost and forty- {tour of the crew, The Abosso was unable to stop her ; engines after the German torpedo) ; Struck and the hull smashed into three of the Jifeboats, crushing those | aboard or drowning them. She ‘was! bound for Nigeria to Liverpool. | The Abosso was steaming 300 miles | south of Fastnet when a lookout saw | lights ahead, Almost immediately afterward the torpedo exploded | against the ship's side. No submar- ‘ine was sighted then or later, | ‘The Abosso was armed and fitted! with wireless, An Admiralty patrol, | summoned by wireless, picked up the survivors within forty-five minutes | and landed thera in Liverpool, Thomas W. Cooper of Watonga,| Okla, a passenger, and Louis M. Go-| bous of New York, a member of the crew, were both among those saved. Lloyds \lists the Abosso as a steel screw liner, registered at London, and owned by the African Steamship Company, ! An affidavit by Louis Deboue, one of the Abosso’s survivors, was quoted to-day ag giving a graphic picture of the disaster, He said the lifeboat in which he obatined a place contained fifty-nine others. It was tangled in the davits and hung suspended, with its passengers clinging to the sides, for forty minutes. Then the Abosso gave a sudden lurch, throwing the lifeboat against another boat and dumping the whole sixty info the sea, Many perished by drowning. Bighty minutes after the Abosso capsized Capt. Toft of the vessel, with Duboue and six others, clambered aboard the upturned hulk of the ves- sel, clinging to the keel. Then the Abosso went clear under. All were sucked below the surface, but man- aged to fight their way to the top again and were later taken abourd other lifeboats, From the same source as that which gave details of the Abosso dis- George Barneit's| aster it was learned two Americans the Marine | survived a torpedo attack on the Brit- Hesperides, April 25. 4 small section of them is concerned,| They were Milton P, Saxe of Pvans- the “Horse Marines.” Marine Corps] ton, ID., eee John M, Simms of Law- officers will be required ta be profi-| rence, clent in horsemanship, and the plan| More tea 'a week ago the London is to provide horses for the fleid off-| Chronicle printed a story demanding cers at least when operating in units| to know why the British Admiralty ag large as a battalion or larger. concealed the torpedoing of a “certain Dig ship” wit “loss of more than lives.” “The Chronicle prob- ayy referred to the Abosso. |STOP BUILDING ZEPPELINS; | "net sos’ | SEND WORKERS TO FRONT] BRITISH, CANADIAN, CUBAN AND U.S. LABOR MEN CONFER Gompers Says Workingmen Here | Are Prepared to Stand Behind Nona H. McAdoo, daugh- ter of William G. McAdoo, Sec- retary of the Treasury, and Fer- dinand de Mohrenschildt, Second Secretary of the Russian Em- bassy, are to be married in Washington this afternoon, The President and Mrs, Wilson will attend. British Foreign Secre- { tury of State Balfour will also be tion and later .will be assigned to the regiments to be trained at the Syracuse and Montauk Point camps. Ensign R. W. Kerry, detailed from the Brooklyn Navy Yard, took up his duties of teaching the young idea how | to shoot at the gunnery headquarters of the Naval Reserve at the Biltmore Hotel to-day. One hundred and thirty men presented themselves with cards entitling them to try for the rating of gunners’ mates on board the craft The examina- tion includes a written test on the theory of marksmanship, Robert Mc- Creery, son of the dry goods mer- chant, ts assisting Ensign Kerry. Recruiting for the Marine Corps continued to be so brisk at Capt. Frank 15, Evans's headquarters at No. 4 East Twenty-third Street, to- day that ten additions were made to the clerical force. Statistics complied by Sergt. Boller show that during April and up to the present time forty-six per cent. of the applicants have been signed on. Records show that prior to this time the average of acceptances was twelve per cent. of the applicants. If Major Gen, Geneva Hears Germany Will Stop Construction of Great Dirigibles, GENEVA, \ 165.—It is reported 3 . S, sigue onieuahorns GAaaaa Go, Fighting Forces. stance, that since the death of Count] WASHINGTON, May 15.--More Zeppelin, who was always Pee vow than two hundred representatives of by the Kaiser in his aerial plans, aj labor, of labor interests and of em- number of employees in the Zeppelin] ployers in the United States met at factory at Friedrichshaven have been| American Federation of Labor head- dismissed and ordered to join the|Guarters here to-day for conference army. with Iabor commissioners sent to The framework of a large airship,| Washington by Great Britain, Canada and Cuba, Before the conference was called to order by Samuel Gompers, Presi- dent of the American Federation of Labor, as chairman of the committee haven Is that the German military| 0? labor of the Council of Natoinal authorities will construct no ore! Defense, a delegation of the conferees | Zeppelins. No further orders for| waited on President Wilson. building have been en received, In opening the conference Mr, | Gompers made it plain that the work- WOULD MAKE 51 STRIKES | ingmen of Americ re prepared to| stand behind the fighting forces of} the couptry in bringivg production Drastic Bills Introduced in Special} Session of West Virginia six weeks, will several months workmen. The general opinion at Friedrichs- not be completed for owing to lack of to the maxlinum, Care will be taken however, to promote and protect exe isting standards of labor ——_——_—_ HOBOKEN TO DO ITS BIT. | F | Legislature, |Mankers of German (ity Meet to! CHARLESTON, W. Va. May 15.—| Ald Sale of Bonds. | It will be unlawful “for any person} Under the inspiration of the idew or persons employed at any kind of | Si*t Hoboken. the most tierman city labor or service” in West Virginia tole oiesented in aubscriptic the strike either “singly or in groups" |} iherty. Lx mmunities not so during the war if a measure jntro- | strongly & meeting of banks duced in the Legislat is made alors wa to-day im the Hudson law. Trust Building to formulate a plan to 0 | The Legislature is now in extraor- | ftimulate public interest in the by dinary session for consideration of} ltudolph Ff. Rabe, President of the measures urged by Gov, Cornwell us| Segond National af ebaken, | nude essary by the war. r dent au | The bill would also prohibit the dis- urge from employment of any pot cause of m Pr inion eiinaaee CHANCE TO ENTER THE NAVY. itz, | Bank for vane wake W | ready ‘D AY, MA Shoulder Rohe nie) Is New Patriotic Order To Women of America Fashionable Newport Has Agreed to Do Its Own Mar- keting and Attend to Delivery of Purchases, Conserving Food Supply a Nation in These War Times— Society Women Save Their Own Money and Better Their Own Complexions by the Added Exercise They Get. By Nixola Greeley-Smith. HILE men of America are shouldering arms let the women shoulder the market basket. Advance news from Newport, sum- mer capital of fashion, makes It certain that the. bese way to bo fashionableas well as patriotic is to carry a market basket on your arm and take home yourpurchases . yourself, Fs Mr, William P. Clarke, Secretary of the Board of Trade and a merchant of Newport, brought these interesting tidings to New York yesterday. Mr, Clarke told me that New York women who are al- in Newport, to open thetr cottages later, have pledged him their word that they will carry home all their groceries and meats in ‘heir own automobiles. "The young.men who wagons are all of an a be drafted,” Mr, Clarke told me, and there is sure to be a famine of drivers. The delivery » tem is greatly abused anyhow. Every woman who carries home a parcel in war time is a real patriot, and she should t. as proud of the market basket on her arm as a recruit is of his uniform, “The cost of delivery is a very con- siderable item in the cost of living,” Mr, Clarke continued, “and every woman who will carry home her own parcels will get better goods, besides doing her patriotic duty by releasing a man for military service. "So far as housekeeping is *con- rned, the telephone is an invention of the devil, Women who telephone thelr orders cannot and do not get} their money's worth, Say a house- wife telephones for halt a peck of spinach. When she receives it, not having selocted it herself, it is likely rive delivery to | dollars to be old and wilted and she has bad throw @ lot of it out, HOW, it sre went to market ner-, “Must Detail Employees to self and saw that the spina Was poor that day she would select something else—some vegetable for which she would get 100 per cent. value for her money. “The same thing applies to meats. Going through the street, passing one op after another, she has @ chance to compare prices, and If her trades wan Is overcharging ber she finds it out. Moreover, if she sees her mept weighed she gets full weight, and she gets everything that is coming to her the bones and trimmings as well as the meat. Housewives who telephon to butchers have no means of telling whether or not they get full weight. I am sure it is reasonable to state that not one housewife in twenty weighs the food that is sent to her, incé I came to New York I have talked with representatives of several leading stores, and they say that If) Women will carry hom 3 much of the cost and all the dit culties of distribution will be elim~- inated and the housewife will get better merchandisg and more of it, since she will be sure of full weight, and that prices might be low- ered when the item of distribution is imized. ‘ Nothing could be easier thon for a woman who has her own automobile to carry home her purchases. In Newport, where I have a store and m brought into contact with the women of society who have their summer homes there, I have talked with a great many ladies on the subject, und they have all said! ‘Why, certainly, we will be glad to do 3 The car runs to and from the house four or five times a day, anyhow, and we might just as well do our own marketing as not.’ Wome SN who have no cars will be all the greater patriots if they revive the market basket which their mothers and grandmothers were roud carry, and the fact that they to get out and walk every morning will do their complexions and their figures a lot of good. If, in addition to carrying ‘home her purchases, every housewife would undertake to run her home on a , having @ fixed sum to cover ns of expense, saying to her- ® 80 much a week divided into so many portions, and 1 must make it do, because I can’t get any more,” just as men say im running their business, they would be doing additional patriotie service, “It may not be very spectacular patriousm to carry a market jon your arm and do your mari yourse:f, but {t's the real thing, Clarke concluded, basket movement could sweep over the country it would save millions of a year in food cost and dis- tribution cost ne NEW BOOST IN POTATOES LAID TO FOOD GAMBLERS Officials Declare Speculators Are Controlling Supply to Keep Prices Up. State Food Commissioner Dillon and Commissioner of Weights and sures Hartigan agreed to-day that the jump of $1 @ barrel in the wholesale price of potatoes over Sat- urday was due to ipulation” by specula‘ors, Deale id it was due to the law of supply and demand and that potatoes muy jo still higher next Kk. Commissioner Dillon said men in the business go South, buy up whole crops of potatoes before they are put in the ground, and allow only as many potatoes to come into the market here as sults their purpose, This enables them to shorten the supply as they see fit, South Carolina No, 1 potatoes wholesaled yesterday at $10 to $10.50 a barrel, Florida No. 1 potatoes a bag were the same, Florida No. 1 for « double hemted rel were $11.50 to $12. Old potatoes were $9 to $9.5¢ for @ 165 pound bag. The United States Department of Agriculture reports the total sbip ments by raill of Florida potatoes thi season up to May 7 amoualed to 2,198 cars, as compared with 982 car shipped by rall to the same ¢ 1916, In addition 161 car tatoes were shiped by boat from I ida up to May 7 _— TO TAKE FACTORY CENSUS. Lhousand Engineer Volunteers Caller On to Ald Clty Work When Military Cen taken Alfred n, Deputy Ch |wineer of the Board of Water supp ssisted by I ww i Blanc! wan decided to appo' Congressman La Guardia te Mola) of Hoboken to « a Uxamination tor Cadet ry th and to GOneTasaniha Dincal be Federal Reserve 0 ng lorelie be agreed up { dia he I eld next ride hold on Ma ee A peeliminar f cand ekdoo Asks - vallelaaey ‘sasuilnaciey 06 shad SUFFRAGE BILL IN COMMONS. neto the United states Naval Acad WASHI a a ephG IL Will be conducted by ¢-| McAdoo appealid t Those of Ane hirty Wil He ative men from his district. tn-, employ ° structions will be mailed to any one) ment ant LONDON, May 1 “e : practical patri : r the < ho communicates with M La peaee ees ;, | Secretar f State for th > Guardia or Harry G. Andrews, Ithe people by |introduced in the House of Comn y of the committee, at buying a “da ¢ Franch t ‘Thirteenth Street. Con \Getat inp verona 6 : ¢ under Baftalo W Musiness |i ty-two years of ane, Meth wat be aeuiial cemidencs ‘of the | WASHINGTON, Mia BOS, eee Poacta ena! Aelairict, which | ter, @ Buffalo manufacturer, to-day wa and from the Bast to the North me Austatant Chief of the Young of proper a Foreign and Domestic Comm M eligible regardiess | Will, instill business methoc and all ¢ r d oF Condition, Durgau and be peld's nominal salary. ‘are to be held on the sane day, TAMMANY GOT A CHILLY RECEPTIONIN WASHINGTON Committee of Braves Call to See; President, but Their Mis- sion Fails, 1 Staff Correspondent L id.) WASHINGTO! 16.—The mimany Tiger tried to see Pre: Wilson failed, wanted patriotic of The to-day and They to present resolu- tions adopted by the organization and and @ record of having voted solidly in Congress for every administration measure during this session, In the Tammany party were Sen- ator Robert F, Wagner, Chairman of County Committee; Thomas F, MeAvoy, Chairman the Legis- lative Committee; — Congressman homas }, Smith, Secretary of the anigation; Sheriff Alfred E, Smith nard H, Rosenblatt had driven dver York by automobil pl road train for T y's be on such an err 5 Congressman Smith was watting at the of and Th from lan ra t bra he gate to escort them in Senator Wagner carried in hand two coples of the resolutions pledging unsawery support of Tammany’s members id tendering free une of ull the or ization's buildings, club houses, and any other service de, nd by the President saw eretary Tumulty, and; ign of spec « escorted ito the President's own private of tt which he rarely uses I hat PRO-GERMAN “NEWS” SENT VIA ARGENTINA hour th but the resid an tamman enle Detectives Claim i il Propaganda Hea in Buenos Ayre WASHINGTON, May 15,—se vice agents of the Entente Power have discovered what they believe to © the headquarters of pro-German ganda in Buenos Ayres, wh! is al¢ed by cables sent from Spala 8 tly coming out of | A snd credited io Rome or Ma Jhave been traced to Gern r 15, 1917. “and if the Saarkat| dent | COL. POPE URGES MANUFACTURERS T0) AID FARMERS Work Crops,” He Says— “Every Man a Patriot.” . | A patriotic appeal to manufactur- ers of the country to aid in the pro- duction of food for home consump- tion and for the Allies were made to; day by Col. George Pope of Hartford, at the meeting of the National a | elation of Manufacturers, | Gol, Pope said that in the paat year @ shortage of labor in the agricul- ure districts wag largely respon~ sible for a decrease in agricultural production and predicted that, unless there is co-ordination of effort, t | Prospect is not more cheering for the present year. His solution of the poblem was for manufacturers adjacent to agri- cultural sections to detail some of their ‘employees to work on the crops, “Our farmers must have help,” said Col, Pope, “and I believe that they must turn to our manufacturers for a considerable amount of that ass tance, The in¢rease in wages manufacturing sections during in the t two years has drawn from the agricultural districts an immense number who otherwise would remain upon the farms, It is within the pow-| er of the manufacturers to alleviate this condition to a very considerable extent., “Without sufficient food the mana- facturer must suffer as well as others, And such help from the manufacturer the farmer will to ‘create a feeling of friendship and in- sure a bond of fellowship by uniting the interests of the two great produc tive elements in our country to an extent that has never before existed, ‘Our present Administration has stupendous task before it, in- creased manyfold by the recent de- clsions to hurry our armies into France, It is unquestionably a mat- or extreme meas- should be ter of life and death, of vietory submission, ures now and the decided upon arried out, nt to you the very simple proposition that each American eitt- zen be a patriot, If we cannot sup- port and aid our Allies, and that soon, the realization of the horrors of war may come to us in our own |1and before we can possibly be prop- erly prepared to repel such nations jaa may attack us.” | James A, Emery, general counsel of j the National Counclt of Industrial De- j fense, in his address on "War and In- dustry,” pointed out that within the terms of the Government eight-hour law, “manufacture for the Govern- ment automatically restricts the hours of labor and increases the cost of pro: duction.” It was his opinion that this Jaw, if applied indiscriminately, would {not maintain the existing standards of production He attacked two principles of the pending revenue bill as not being “fair or economte.” ‘These were the prinel- ples of retroactive taxation and “the i imposition of invidiously discrimina | tory burdens upon income derived from the cor rperete f form of busine COST BRIDE Pf POUNDS TO GIVE HUBBY $2,500 So Declares Mrs. Charles Dumey in Suit for Separation Now on Trial. Whenever Dr, Charles Dumey of No. 354 South Fifth Street, Brooklyn, demanded money from his bride, Sylvia, while they were honeymoon- ing among the pines of Lakewood, she lost a pound—of flesh, not money She urged that as ground for a sep aration from the doctor when her suit came up for trial to-day before Jus tive Callaghan, in Brooklyn | Mrs, Dumey's father gave, th | vride $5,000 when she married Nov, 5 |last yeur, | "When we got to Lakewood ny husband began to ask tm for money,” he tol dthe ¢ wanted first $1 used his demand $100 shed, He finally got nd ast Thad to had | leave rr during t ir ried lif Jen aiked in es bie }her husband who did voturnal conversa wn __ GIRL TRIES TO DIE IN RIVER. Island Hulirous yb the Thirt 4 Long nearing Bethmann-H 1 Way between Italy and ‘ spitaite It much irritation :1) attempted suleid for Italy is bound by tht Treaty of Thousands of Me 1 that the German G LU ME ‘ fo mission in this country ca i . 1 to prejudice Italy's interests) | yf iif 1 affect popular opint Ail P ‘ stories are already discounted in oft'-|b rking on farn r" \ cial circles here. taken by Gov, Cox. FRANOES MONTAGU WA WILL BE THE BRIDE OF LIBUT. LEONARD COX | While Lieut, Leonard Cox, gon of Mr. and Mrs. Kenyon Cox, and of the Officers’ Reserve Corps, is at Plat! burg, announcement ts mado of bi engagoment to wed Miss France: Montagu ‘ard, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C, Montagu Ward of No. 157 East Wighty-first Street. Miss |? Ward has taken an active part in the social and charitable affairs of the younger set, and Mr, Cox graduate of Princeton, class of and is un architect, The date of the wedding has not been set. TORPEDO MISSED BALTIC BY 10 FEET; TWO ATTACKS Boats Fired on Liner Twice on Succeeding Days, but Vessel Es- caped—Saved Danish Crew.» A torpedo fired by a German sub: marine at the White Star liner Bal! on Apri! 19 missed the great liner by a bare ten feet, according to informa. tion obtained from travellers in New York, U lwake of the approaching torpedo was seen in time to switch the liner trom her course, On neither occasion did the Baltic sight the U boat Which fired the torpedo. When the Baltic finally arrived salely at a British port, she had a Danish lumber salling ship, forty- two days out of Savannah, The men had afloat twenty-four hours when reseu The Baltic is one of Passenger steamers now slon—23, been the * largest BY AUSTRIANS IN AIR RAID Archaeological Museum at the Heid | of the Adriatic Also Badly Damaged. May 15 (via Paris). The Basilica and the Archaeo- liogical Museum at Aquilela, at the head of the Adriatic northwest of Trieste, were each struck by an ex- plosive bomb during a raid by Aus- trian airplanes on Sunday and sut- fered damage considered irreparable. Phe first bomb fell near the famous ary Guilery in the museum, ring @ portion of the walils,, The neighboring chapel of St. Antoine was also damaged he second bomb passed through the roof of the right transept of the Bastlica near the tombs of 1 mi, wrecked the Ii terior arches, went through the floor and then, burst, blowing off the roof. ‘This is the third time the Basilica has been attacked, and it is believed (OME, ancient | | an th mith thi |fat vot, Maria i eta aa This was the second attack made | on the Baltle In two days, ‘The first attack was made on April 18. The abourd six members of the crew of | in commis | motor ambulances, a repair car and equipment to the American Ambulance Field Service for duty in France, it was announced in this city to-day, Gates ean Dion son w wilt hea @ party ork nes nm nite nent Tussday on their honor in the? Banbere ‘Club, ARE YOUR Nostrils Clogged? ae ABOUT ira FEES : i is weyer who muke the” Joleen beeanme fa Fase ee ves ri ™ * | other dow dot rs | Yonpte. that ‘anent ad ea : | Save. cen; a | tat wl Ay | ween. the ti of Tecial “ARE YOU penis pea : | My, soecialty te. Y treating “deativme The case 0 \ Shun of ag Rathod.” Clogged Nostrils, Dropping Throat, Deafness and Head Noises Mr, Robert Allew resides 4, No, = Yer ‘ve fh H Avene. Age rat sia en ce @ treat al ciety etree ap can sina? nontrily are tr ny out wan without wabind. Me a pain Aero | the eam, he can old have he ‘all We returning, a, sufter from clouded deat ve a pd uetaet or a, ra dinate nee na Oe have, a bed ‘Throat: form of Naa Bele ie fave you valt my soit Nt will cose’ you | & of ah em! \ DR. J. C. MeCOY | 214 Flatiron Building | Broadway and 234 St., New York jth re h definite intention to destroy Mowry Monday. Wednentay, 4a ba at. Maree | epee bad fat os naa Tra ro | Autoint Speeding for Medical Atd noo, | Shot by Sentry, - — — KEEND, N 11, May 15 Speeding? _qu_aseeeaesepessemmmmmmmmamaay medical aid for a vietim of an automo- pil necident, Pred Watkine travelling Saletan. from. Dets py pu. ten drops of Bur. the command of a bhi to-day nett’s Vanillaonalump | i vie taking cetteet Ant of sugar and suck it. neck Wathine and Mra. Lau Then try the same with Serbianus Advance and Repel Coun- May 4 ¢ tartilery » ed yesterday on all the says to-day's official erbian War Office ‘In the »brapols i n and M nda ia Mustare SS Adds a Neat New Zest Fish to Cheese, ANTONE HT any other. We make extracts | only under the name) |

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