The evening world. Newspaper, June 25, 1919, Page 2

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Mer. -Wison. Miss Margaret jong the” ee grooel Meh oti delegates and » ties, Who Will be present: ‘when Gernane Attach their signatures mae hese hundred jour- the interested na- a I" newspapet cor- dents afte 30 giidhts ap- joned ‘among the signatory op | will have places in the ball. even regiments of cava ins r regiments of infantry will guard palace grounds during the cere-| my. Within the marble, court t the Germans will pass wilh be sta- ed & company of drummers and lers, No other musicians. will jcipate, The soldiers withit = jace wilt all ‘be members of, thi ubliean Guard, wearing a sll red coats and ite ‘he Germans will be agmitted! at ide emtrance from the park, after othe# delegations are seated about horseshoe table within whieh wil! the signing table where the treaty 1 le, Clemenceau wil! open the cere- | nies With a brief igtroduction. No | nh is expected from the Germans, | iam Martin of the French Foreign jee, as master of ceremonies, will m earry the treaty to President Wil- and the Premiers, who will sige at ta, .treaty.ts brought pig to | ature table, the, names af ‘the | jegates will be called ahd they | will advance and sign, It ts expected tha: the signing will require about two hours. Tho s@als ciel delegates will be affixed in) { maay of them are alrowly | in the hands of the French Forelgn | office, President Wilson is using the| t's weal, Which is an evgle, he words “Seal of the President Bipited States.” ft ARRANGE PUNISH GERMANS = to Exact Reprisals on bivilians Who Interfere pared to exact severe re- oppdaition by the elvillam , In case rejection of the ty forced them to advance many. An order ready for tion, among German ciyil- ides the following: house from which civilians ied troops will be burned. will reapect persons and and enable the Germans to ‘busitiess, provided the safety ies for the Allied armies is nteed. must be handed to the jant within one hour after on of this order. infractions will be punished | ws to military regulations.” | WILL NOT PROSECUTE WIFE WHO SHOT HiM Dr. Tuggle, Recovering at Hospital, Eager to Testify as to Irrespon- sibility of Assailant. Steady improvement was to-day re- ported in the case of Dr. Thomas W. Tuggic of No. 523 Weat 149th Street, MEESED shot Monday evening by his! At St. Lawrence Hospital it was! stated that he had spent ch which all the witnesses @x-| | quently, | must be kept to enforce, if ne | peace with Bulgaria and Turkey will iseheme that will enable them to vote | by mail or which will permit special WATCH GERMANY SAS GLEMENGEAY Premier Paral Bar Early Demo-| | bilizing, But Is Worried by Scuttling of Fleet. PARIS, June 26—It is reported) that the French army demobilization Will be carried out with all possible | {wpeed and that the classes of 1907, | | 1908 and 1909 will be mustered out lane day after the treaty is signed. | | Premier Clemenceau appeared in| the, lobby of the Chamber of Depu- | ties yesterday, and members pressed the question as to the Government's | {intentions regarding the elections | and the demobilization of the army. | The Premier said elections would be held at the earliest possible date, | Possibly late in September or early in October, He sald that the Govern- | ment's principal concern at present: was demobilization, “Although It is desired that demo- billzation may be a# complete and rapid 4 possible, the Government is obliged to take into account the circum- stances at present and the state of mind of the Germana," he said. “To Understand the spirit in which Ger- many {s about to sign the treaty, It) [im only necessary to conaider the scutiling of the German fleet in Scupa Flow and the more recent destruction of German ships at Kiel, Conso- Precautions are necessary and an army of a certain importance | ombary, atrivt observance of the conditions of the treaty by the Germans, particu- larly the one regarding the of Poland, with which th seem reluctant to comply. Besides, not be concluded for several months. Aw the elections cannot be held without receiving the votes of syl- diers, the Premier is consMering & leaves to be granted to the men. Clemenceau's statement ts inter- preted by a number of newspapers a8 meaning that the Premier will not retire shortly as had been reported. Soveral newepapers print reports that It is possible there may be @ shakeup in the Cabinét and that spe- clalists in social and economic ques- tbs will be brought in, The Echo de Paris says that if changes are je in the Cabinet they will not occur before the ratification of the Peace Treaty by Parliament, It fy declared that as soon as the Peace Treaty signed the Govern- ment will bring before Parliament a general amnesty bi PETERHOF TAKEN BY WHITE GUARD FROM BOLSHEVIK! City Near Petrograd Is Cap- tured, According to Hel- singfors Report. HELSINGFORS, June 25.—Russlan Volunteer White Guards have occu- pied Peterhof, nineteen miles from Petrograd, according to a report re-) celved here, June 25.—General Pelle, | commander-in-chiet of the Cxech ting on authority from the Kn- a close friend of the physician, | Hungur hteen to evac {oclay took to his, home. tne months’ old boy adopted by the ph: sician and his wife. He said Dr. Tusxié | was anxious to testify in any Tags which may be had ns to the irre: | ity bis assailant @ Lot of nour- hment in them. id the flavor 2° + beats-everything! 1, Found” ‘The Wor!d Found Bureau articles avertising Amencie telephoned ‘directly Cahi 4000 Reekmen, New York. oF a ten! ultimatum to the anding it 2 all occ ‘upled territory before night of June 2%, it was reported in dispatches received here to-day, vanahh tenet tnatie "ADMIRAL VON REUTER British Naval Commander Holds Gennan for “Traitorous Act” in Scuttling Ships, LONDON, June &. British commander at | Flow, where the interned Admiral Free- | mantle, Scapa rman fleet | was sunk by its crews Saturday, moned Admiral von German ataft defo | formed them they were oners of war for armistice by a traitorous act," it was sum- Reuter and the and of the IS HELD AS PRISONER " re Pe ORL! bow tare | |Rulers Who Lost EX-KING OF GREECE AND OTHER RULERS SHORT OF FUNDS Constantine Appears Worse! @ff Than Ex-Emperor Karl . or Ludwig of Bavaria. PARIS, June 2% (Havas).—Former King Constantine uf Greece, who has been living in Switzerland, is financial difficulties, according to ad- vices from Geneva to Paris news- papers. Former Emperor William had been supplying Constantine with funda, but this subsidy has been cut off. Constantine is endeavoring to become reconciled with Government. the present Greek It was reported almost a year ago that Constantine was counting upon the marriage of his brother, Prince Christopher, to a wealthy American woman to ald him in financing his campaign for regaining his throne. When Constantine abdicated on June 12, 1917, he was temporarily granted an ingome. of, $100,000 yearly. In March, 1918, the Greek Budget Commission refused to give him any further pension. Since that time he has been living on the bounty of the Hohengollern family aad on income that his wife, a sister of former Em- peror William, derived from property in Germany, Since the German revo- lution it is probable this income has been greatly reduced, if not wiped out altogether, While King of Greece Constantine received $400,000 yearly. Switzerland also harbors several other former rulers whose incomes have been reduced. Among them 1 former King Ludwig of Bavaria. The income of that royal family was for- merly about $1,250,000. King Ludwig and several of his chil¢ren are living in a monastery near Zurich Former Emperor Charles of Aus- tria-Hungary is another of the royal exiles in Switzerland whose income has decreased. As Emperor-King, Charles formerly had a civil list of more than $5,000,000 annuaily, The former imperial family of Rus- sia, the survivors of which are now soattered in various parts of Europe, before the war bad an income from the state of more than. $8,000,000, When the Dowager Empress and a score of other members of the Rus- sian royal house fled from the Crimea some tme ago they were in need of cash, although they had, it valuable jewelry, LABOR FIGHTS FOR RECALL Government to Abolish Conscrip- tion and Free War Objectors, SOUTHPORT, England, June learned to-day. Von Reuter was re- ported to have declared that under the fame circumstances he would repeat the | ninking. | Walter Hume Long, Firat Lord of the iraity, speaking in the House of ommons yesterday evening, sald itish naval experts strongly recom ended surrender of the German ships | instead of internment, Lioyd George support was overruled by Long asked that the question be not June Bathe | Cou cussed the souttling wt Scarpa Flow, according to th eilce of Limited cil had befo: and examined fully the facts relative to what took place with regard to the ships al the Ume the armistice was signed, Asked if Premier | this stand but} President Wilson, | In anticipation of the labor confer-| formation on the Russian military ence here to-day, the executive of] policy wae ordered to-day by the Sen+ the “Triple Alliance’—consisting of| ate loreign Relations Committee. railway, transport and mine workers] ‘The committee amonded the rego- decided to convene a special confei-| lution to provide that the President, Jence in London July 23 to conaider| insterd of the Secretary of State and what action should be taken “to com.| tho Secretary of War, shall, if not pel the Government to comply with|!compatible with public interest, in- the demands for the abolition of con- form the Senate why American troaps -lacription, sho evacuation of Russja| WeT@ sent to @iberia and why they Ne aro being kept there, and the release of conscientious ob-| Arter a long discussion in secret session, the. committee adjourned | Yeputy Jean Lon-| without action on Fall's resolution and | M, Frossard, General Secretary of | end, he French Socialist Party, who were] ‘Tho vote was 12 to 4. on their Way to the con ce of the} Senator 5 emoc | British Labor Party to be held in South- Virginia, Sutierre Remocret, «9 Poneto, tere eeoReet At wolke:| made the motion to adjourn without HOt porm.tted 10 proceed to their destina-| ction, and it was said to have been tion, Other French and Italian So ist | SUPported by Senators Lojge, Knox, and Laborite delega and Hjalmar| Harding, McCumber, New, and Granting, the Swedisa jalist leader,| Brandegree, Republicans, and Swan- were permitted to proveed, gon, Hitchoook, Pomerene, Smith, —<>—— n AQUEDUCT RESULTS. Fr TE For three-year old and upward; claiming; purse § furlongs —Right Angle, 108 tor even, T to 2 and 1 to 4, first; Alvord, (Davies), 1 to 5, 4 to 4, and 1 to 5, Be ond; Uitra Gold, 120 (Stalker), 2% ‘to Sto 1 and 4 tol third. ‘Pime, 1141-6 Pasame Wawaboek, Thomas F. Me: Mahon FE a Ninety Simpl Peasant, Golden Rora, Mumbo Jumbo, Dandy” ‘Dude |®okus ran, in| was reported, large quantities of very OF TROOPS FROM RUSSIA British Workers Plan to “Compe” leader of the Minority Socialists, G Thrones ir in ¥ War | And Who Are Now Nearly Broke AS ARMY DISBARDS, KING CONSTANTINE GREECE SENATE FLARES UP IN CONTEST ‘OVER WORLD'S LEAGUE Committee on Foreign Rela- tions Postpones Fall’s Res- olution Declaring Peace. | No objection, but prescribed that the | the court and the defendant. | with his trip to Baltimore when | NING OF TREATY BY ALL DELEGATES WILL TH EVIDENCE ALL IN aeenidiiemnns Stammers Trying to Answer) Quiz on Murder Hammer; Sum Up To-Morrow. (Special From 9 Set m9) MINEOLA, June %.—The taking of ot ‘The testimony in defense of Dr, Walter K. | | Wilkins, accused of wife murder, wan quickly concluded this afternoon and both sides joined in a request that the jury be taken to Long Beach so they ‘could view the premises where Mrs. | S | Wilkins was beaten to death Feb. 27 outside her cottage. The court made visit must be made in the presence of The summing up of counsel is scheduled for to-morrow. It is pos- sible, but hardly probable, that Jus- tice Manning may finish his charge) and send thé case to the jury to-mor-/ row nfght. ‘The cross-examination of Dr. Wil- kins to-day ended with more severe treatment than was aceorded to him | by District Attorney Weeks yester- day. While under cross-examination re- garding the hammer and lead pipe with which Mrs, Wilkins was killed, the aged doctor faltered and stain- mered, Most of the examination had to do | his arrest was imminent. Justice | Manning hi frequently indicated | that his charge will have much to! say as to the legal effect of “flight” on a plea of not guilty. The first witness of the afternoon session was Joseph A. Healey of East Rockaway, who swore to the. physi- clan's good reputation in East Rock- wa Edward W. Boyd, the conductor ed | the Long Island train on which Dr. and Mrs. Wilkins, rode to Long Beach Feb. 21, was sworn. He sald that he walked up the Long Beach Station platform with the Wil- kinses. He entered a car on another train, When he came out, he said, and went into the station, Dr. and Mrs. Wilkins were’in the waiting room. He saw Police Sergt. Sneider, e WASHINGTON, June 25.—Discus- sion of the Peace Treaty and the League of Nations developed in the Senate to-day during consideration of the Army Appropriation Bill. Loosagea Borah declared the treaty was guarantee of war.” He said the acid test” of the document was not its ap- Dlication of the principle of self deter- mination of peoples to the people of enemy countries, but to peoples dom- inated by the Allies, Ireland, Korea and Egypt, Senator Borah afwerted, should have been given independence, “T any not criticising the President for what he failed to do,” said Mr. Borah. “He was prevented by the imperialistic designs of the European nations with which he was associated. There is no doubt that the sentiment of America included Ireland.” Mr. Borah spoke in reply to Senator Thomas, Democrat, Colorado, who declared partisan politics was involved in the Borah resdlution recently adopted by the Senate, requesting a hearing at the Peace Conference for representatives of the provisional Trish republic, Senator Walsh (Democrat), Massa- chusetts, aid that the statement of Senator Thomas reflected upon the loyalty of the supporters of the Irish resolution. “It would be a mistake for the American peace delegates not to seek a hearing for Ireland,” Sen- ator Walsh said, “Just as we have asked the Fil{pinos to come here and make their pica for self-government, just 90 Great Britain quested to hear Ireland's plea.” Favorable report on Senator Hiram Johnson's resolution asking for in- (Arizona), Pittman and Shields, Deum- ocrats, Voting in the negative were Senators Fall, Borah, Johnson (Culi- but did not see him walk away with Dr. and Mrs. Wilkins as Sneider tes- tifled. Boyd and his wife, who followed him on the stand, said the Doctor and his wife were very friendly on the train, Boyd also swore Dr, Wilkins wore the same coat Feb, 27 he is wearing now. He remembered every detail of the suit with regard to which Mr, Wy- song asked him, Harry Martin and Andrew Curlow, chauffeurs of Long Beach, said they never saw a hammer with a handle like that of the murder hammer in any automobile kit. Major Robert J. Grant of the Ameri- can Red Cross mid he was in the army | hospital when Mrs, Wilkins was brought in, He said he had questioned the injured woman and she answered, He testified she said she was Baptist | and pleaded: “Don't hurt me! Don't | he saw the hammer or the lead pipe WILKINS FALTERS mn SIG UNDER QUESTIONS; OF HERR SCHEIDEMANN PHILIP, SCHEIDEMANN Attack on Former Premier Was Set for Monday Night, but Frustrated by Arrests. | LONDON, Juhe 25.—A number of! soldiers have been arrested in Wel-| mar, according to an Exchange Tele- graph despatch from Copenhagen. on) charges of having planned to arrest! and murder Philipp Scheidemann. the former Premier, The plot was to have been carried out Monday evening. BERLIN, June 24.—The Tageblatt | said to-day that a party of soldiers | went to the palace in Weimar yester-| day and demanded that Mathias <1 berger, the new Vice Chancellor. and Minister of Finance, be handed over to! Eraberger fled in an automo- , the newspaper said. and Samuel Rosenthal of the Hotel Ansonia, a wholesale clothing maker. Both qualified as experts and said the brown overcoat found in the Wil- kins cottage after the, murder was not more than seven years old and was probably lessthan five. This was to ‘prove the coat was never owned by Mrs, Wilkins's son, ; Leon Krauss, who died eighteen years ago—and therefore was probably left | by the barglars. The pther witnesses except one testified to the devoted relations of Dr, Wilkins and his wife and to the! dootor's excellent -reputation for Peacefulness and truthfulness. EXAMINES AGEO PRISONER RE- GARDING MURDER HAMMER. Mr. Weeks produced’ the murder hammer when Wilkins took the stand this morning. Q. Is this the hammer that killed your wife? A. I believe so. Q. How did it differ in appearance on the night of the murder from the way It looks now? A. It was all{ blood. All covered with it. Q. Did it look otherwise different? | A. Not especially. Q. Do you mean to say you didn't see any paper on it? A.I didn’t notice it then. Q. You know it now? A. Yes, Q. But you recognized this ham- mer when it was produced here, bare of paper? A. The outlines were the same and it had an unusually long handle, Q. Is that your A. Yes, Mr. Weeks asked the defendant if dest answer? hit me!" STORY OF PIN. Policeman Elmer White, who had | testified as witness for the prosecu- tion, was recalled for the defense, Did he ever make a statement to you Yes, in front of the pharmacy at Long Beach three weeks ago. he had found the doctor's pi wrapped in a piece of silk cloth, He said it was found in a couch in the Wilkins *ouse and he said they found a watch. He said the crystal was broken. Q. Did he show you the pin? Not then; he did on June 11, Q. Did you comment on it to Meyers? A. Yes. I said “That's not the pin; that’s a thirty cent pin. |said, “That looks shady to me.” District Attorney Weeks asked if he himself, Detective Plant, Clerk Barbute and Sergeant Sneider were present when White made this state- ment to Meyers. White said they were. Q. Didn't I tell you out in the cor- damned liar? cried Mr, Weeks. There |was @ storm of objections from Mr. Mr, Wysong, Judge Whitehouse and Mr, Friess, the Wilkins’ counsel, “This is cross-examination,” ruled Justice Manning. “The question is The defense closed. In quick succession the District At- fornia), and Moses, Republicans, #| Senator Fal announced tater in the )|Senate he would not press his 5} amendment to the Army Aporopria- tion Bul, making a peace declaration similar to that in the resolution, The New Mexico Senator said he had “| reason to think the resolution would | reported by the Foreign torney called Meyers, Barbute, Plant |and Sneider in rebuttal, Meyers de- | ntea ever saying “in front of a drug store or anywhere else” that he had found the much disputed pin in the Wilking house, | Among other witnesses for the de- POLICEMAN ATTACKS MEYERS’ ‘was attacked by the burglars, | physician said he did not, ‘which Mrs, @. Do you know Allen Meyers? 4-1 don't know. I suppose somebody | regarding a lover's knot scarfpin? A.| @ You think Dick carried them out? What he y? He a bed ae BS De ATE Ae er you see him take them out? And if) Q. Did he describe the watch? A. | dn't. A. eagerness to counteract the sugge in the yard before he went in and The | Q. How did these articles with Wilkins was beaten to death get out there in the yard? took them there, heard a burglar say “Dick, | go out and quiet that,” meaning the | screams of Mrs, Wilkins, Do you) Did | he did, mustn't he have taken them trom inside the house? A. Ob, I didn’t say, I don't know anything about It. I didn’t deny, I mean I don’t deny he Mr, Wilkins was stammering in his | tions of the District Attorney. His answers showed his character with increasing frequency as his cross ex- | » y amination went on, | CAN'T EXPLAIN WHY HAT WASN'T CRUSHED. Mr, Weeks showed him the purple hat of Mrs, Wilkins and asked bim to show any mark of its having been crushed by blows. It is the effort of the State to prove Mrs. | Wilkins took off her hat in the cot- tage bdefore she was..struck and declaring war with Germany at an|Tidor just now that you were @ 011404 out of the house by her hus- band, Dr, Wilkins sald the hat was not | las stiffly upright as it had been when she wore it. He suggested a fist blow might have flattened it without marking it, | Q. Do you mean any of the sixteen or seventeen blows which ended in Mrs, Wilkins'’s death were inflicted by a@ fist? A. No, I didn’t say that, but he may have hit her with his fist, The District Attorney went to the clue of the love knot scarf pin. Dr. Wilkins assured him with finality, not apparently apprised of the pur- pose of the questions, that he had the twisted shank added to the pin Committee “within a day fense were Carl Hadmund of Bayside, at Macy's two and a helf years ago. am editor of a man's fashion journal, Q. Ahi you never had’ any trouble f TAKE TWO HOURS > [MERCIER AND LEMAN MAY VISIT AMERICA ‘PERSHING AND ‘HOOVER WITH BELGIAN aad (a the Cardinal and the Defender of Liege | Expected to Join the Royal Party. (Associated Prem.) BRUSSELS, June 3%, 1919. ARDINAL MERCIER and Gen. Leman, defenders of Liege in 1914, may possibly accompany King Albert and Queen Elizabeth when they visit ' the United States. ‘The date for the trip of the King and Queen has not as yet been fixed, but it will probably be late in September, or may be postponed until early in November, The date of the visit of Presi- dent Poingare of France to Brus- sels has been fixed stor July 21, which is Belgium's national fete day. He will be accompanied by Marshals Joff h and Pe about its coming out of your tle in all the years after that? Never had any cause to buy another cateh clasp for It? A, Never after that. Then the District Attorney called the white-haired defendant's atten- tion to Mra, € nbrocky’s testimony that she saw the physician's pin come out and he would have to got another catch clasp. “Why,” sald Dr, Wilkins, “I had other pins, cheap pins, and I had some of those clasps around.” “That 1s the best explanation vou can make?" asked Mr. Weoks. “I think it 1s a good answer,” satd | the old doctor irritably, SHOWS GLASSES WERE FILLED | WITH DRY DUST. Mr. Weeks set up the nearly empty brandy bottle and the three tumblers and glasses—one metal, d one ordinary whit which the physician gald burglars had been “enjoying themselves” while lying in wait to attack and rob him and Mrs. Wilkins, Q. Did you notice that these glasses were filled with dry dust? A. I did. Q. Oh, you did? And you knew ail the time the robbers couldn't have been drinking out of them? A. There were a lot of cups and things on the Sideboard and all around the they might have been drinking out of. @. So you mean to tell me you never sald anything like that up to this minute? Don't you say that now be- cause you have here in court these glasses you pointed out to reporters, Ox elated Prosa).— |bert c. stor of Civil was | was detectives and neighbors, as part of , your story? That they could not have been used, as you pretended they had? A. 1 ma,” have told, 1 spoke to a number of the peonle, Mrs, Du- compte and Policeman White, I think. Q. Why is it, whenever Dea you if you" spoke to anybody about some- thing new to you, yo pick out Po- liceman White as the one you never | mentioned before? A..Because J did | tell him. There were cups and dishe and glasses all around, and you know it, 1 seo you know it, “Curb your habit of the verbal al- tions with the District Attor. ected the Court. “Answer. Leave that to the proper regu Q. You had _ a burglary when you lived in 82d Street. A. The cireum- |stances were different at that time, Q. Q. Did you or not? A. Yes, but—— Did you go in and open the door turn your back to the place ere the burglar was—or did you run qut in the street and call a po- liceman? A. Now, Mr. Weeks, let me Q. Did you call a policeman? A, Yes, but-— WOMAN HELD IN DRUG CASE. Mra. Warren Haring Accused of ‘Trafficking in (Special to The F HACKENSACK, June Tsa- belle Haring, thirty, attractive and wearimg many jewels, was committed to the Hackensack Jail to-day on a |charge of trafficking in narcotics and having quantities of drugs in hee home at. Cresskill, Her husband, Warren Harin business in is in the trucking k, and is wealthy rank G. Gyer, who faring ‘home da with ail. drugs Ww His secretary my is s in said to have procured th identified Rather than hold thes ing price. and 26th, or as long will be rushed out at ASSORTED soUR S—These are big line globes of tart delichousnesss — presented in pleasing assocty of snappy, long lasting fan vors, The. Kiddies per- haps know these better a ca day 49e¢ Phe specified weieht Stores: D BOX For ex xt ann exerc of thi HONORED BY mNFO $ Degtee of Doctor of Ci Law With Ceremonial Pomp. land, June B ( n. Pershing and Hoover represented the U; in a distingnished ed men from the Aili 8 who were honored by © niversity with grees Law. The ceremor held in the Sheldonlan Theatr the culminating feature of ‘the al encacnia, or commemoration lses. The event was rich in cere- pomp fostered by the traditions famous institution, Mrs, Hi FORD, En was present AL | Chief of 3 Depa Joseph Curran, tion Open Monday ond Saturday Evenings ALL JUNE BRIDES’ SPE- | CIALS REDUCED—EASY JUNE BRIDES’ SALE OF HIGH GRADE DINING pol ity. tase AVE BETWEFN 16 6 Mattress Guaranteed Extra Fine Cotton Felt; litte hway Department Cats Stat, BANY, June 2—The office off aintenance in the Highw: has been | abolished, who has, held the posi for five years, is out. rtment MICHIGAN FURNITURE TERMS ON THESE ished extra dual= JUNE BRIDE SALE OF ODD DRESSERS 50 hu Porters in Watmet, fey You Full ates PAWN TickETs CONNORS—On June 23, ELLEN OON- NO} wi Funeral from her Inte residence, Washington at. ati Chureh, emn mass of requiem will be offered, Interment Calvary, ——_—_—_—_—_[~~~ee LOST, FOUND AND REWARDS. A Candy Special Extraordinary! LD DUTCH STYLE CREAM CHOCOLATES -—-smenietey 8 one of our most known as bei.g very peri ce vt fu oo ing the public the benefit and taking a most half regular = and Thurs st, th than we require for the week, DIAMONDS and OLD JEWELRY Jur service is quick, confidential & reliable” SATZ BROTHERS, 3 (nee Curry), am Connors, bel on Thursday, June 2 thence to St. Alphonsus’s West Broadway, where @ sol- 0.30 A. M, uF ni rom Buckinghi Return 23 ‘Trade Merk. ci Through an error of our the close of Monda: we are going to make a POUND BOX New includes the co New York, Brooklyn, Mee

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