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> — COMER-REVOWUTION > ket I “army or any of its other troops in re- quiet u a outlaws out of the country. ‘This is regarded as a great victory for Ignace Jan Paderewski, the Polish wwPtemiér, Who appeared before the “Counel! in company with Hugh Gtb#on, ‘American Minister to Poland, and ex- hibited many, photographs showing the brutal manner in which the outlaws tortured. their victims before killing them, ' The ‘armistice between Poland and Ukraine ended June 21, when officers fepresenting Simon Petlura, the Ukrainian peasant leader, advised Polish Generals that Petlura’ had not authorized the negotiations which re- gulted in the armistice. GERMANS OUST GENERAL WHO: FOUGHT PEACE PACT Hoffmann, Father of Brest-Litovsk Treaty, Removed for Refusing to ’ °' Give Up Eastern Lands. , BERLIN, June 27 (Associated Press). General Hoffmann, who was « prime mover in tho negotiations leading up to the Brest-Litovek Treaty with Rus- tela, Das been dismissed from bis com- “mand in tho Eastern District, having declared he would defend that district ito the last man in defiance of the Gov- ernment’s orders and nover recognize the Peace Treaty. ——— “LABOR DEMONSTRATION ON BEHALF OF SOVIET British, French and Italian Factions Oppose Intervention in Russia by the Allies. GOUTHPORT, England, June 27.— British, French and Italian labor rep- resentatives have decided to make a gen- eral demonstration on July 20 or 21 to protest against Allied intervention in Russia, This announcement was made y Arthur Henderson, British labor leader, at the Labor Conference . to-day. Mr. Henderson explained that the dem- wonstration Would be an attempt to pre- vent the governments of Europe from adopting @ reactionary policy through- out that continent. ts It-would’ b@ left to each country, he added, to decide whether the demonstra- ‘Bion would take the form of political or “Industrial action. Resolutions would be passed protesting against eny inter- fm Russia and demanding aban- jonment of conscription. REVOLT AGAINST SOVIET River Monitors Engaged in Addi- tion, to the Street Fighting. . COPENHAGEN, June 27 (United Press).—A_ counter-revolutionary move: ment against the Hungarian Soviet Re- public in Budapest has been suppressed, according to despatches received here to-day. Im addition to street fighting, river monitors bombarded Soviet headquarters Tuesday night. Crowds of spectators swarmed the banks of the Danube dur- ing the bombardment, cheering and waving flags and handkerchiefs. .The Fevolt.was put down when the counter- revolutionary leaders were captured ‘The latest advices said that order had been restored and that Soviet armed guards were patrolling the streets, RAGING IN BUDAPEST Warships Hoist Old National Flag and. Bombard the Red Headquarters. % WEENNA; June 27.—A'counter-revo- | lutionary movement has broken out | in BUdapest. Monitors fying the old | Hungarian national colors are yom- barding Bolshevik headquarters at ihe Hotel Ungaria. Fierce street fighting has taken place, but later an armistice was arranged for removing the dead and wounded, ‘A state of siege has been proclaimed, Tbe government claims to be coni- _ dent of suppressing the movement, Bela Kun has assumed control of | the troops, | WILSON PLANS NEW INQUIRY | INTO JEWISH MASSACRES | order that such a wrong should never be perpetrated again. WARNING TO ALL NATIONS THAT DO WRONG. | “Merely to beat a nation that was) |wrong once is not enough. ‘There) must follow the warning to all other | nations that would do like things} that they Ju turn will be vanquishe: and shamed if they attempt a di jhonorable purpose. | “You ean soe, therefore, sir, with what deop feelings those of us who | must now for a little while turn away \frem France, shall leave your shore: and though the ocean is broad it will seem very narrow in the future. It will be easier to understand each other than it ever was before, and with the confident intercourse of co- operation, the understanding will be strengthened into action, and action will itself educate ylike our purpose and@mur thought, “fo, sir, in’ saying goodby France, I'm only saying @ sort o | physical by, a 0d Informs Senate He Is Considering Sending Another Mission to Poland. WASHINGTON, June 2 Wilson advised the Senate to-day, through the State Department, that he was considering sending another com mission to Poland to investigate reports of Jewish massacres. He said a decision would be reached after he had conferred at Paris with Hugh Gibson, American Minister to Poland, The jent’s plans were outlined ‘om acting Secretary Polk nse to a Senate resolution, was the first anouncement here ‘that Gibson had been summoned to is discuss the matter with ter io mt reports td the State De. ment, Mr. Gibson said reports of mi treatment of in Poland were grossly exaggerated. Mr. Polk's letter disclosed that the mt also had directed the Ameri can Mini to Roumania to Investigate Teports of atrocities in Roumania. oP) tas ales So Aeami : aarsbip. bia. beep. oa Jews ed Eastern Galicia and ~ PUT DOWN IN HUNGARY | It| the TO BROADEN AT TE, SYS WISIN ; Peace Conference Has Devel- oped More Than Priendship, Declares President. PARIS, June 27 (Associated Pred). President Poincare last night gave a inner to President Wilson and all the delegates to tho Pesce Confer- ence. Mrs. Wilson accomganied the President. Responding to an address made’ by M. Poincare, President Wilson said: | “I thank you most sincerely for the words that you have uttered. I ean- | not pretend, sir, that thé prospect of going home: ia not very delightful to me, but I can say with the greatest sincerity that the prospect of ledving France i, very painful to me. ‘I have received a peoullarty gen+ crous welcome here, and it has beem pleasing for me to feel that that wol- como was intended not so much for myself as for the people,whom I rep: resented. And the people of France know how to give a welcome that makes @ man’s heart glad. They have @ spontaneity about them, a sim- EFT BERLIN IN SECRET, FEARING ATTACK __ THE EVENING’ WORLD, FRIDAY, Plicity of friendship, which is alto- gethor delightful. STAY ENLIGHTENED BOTH HEART AND MIND. “I feel that my stay here, sir, has enlightened both my heart afd my mind. It has enabled mo personally to see the evidence of the suffering and the sacrifices of France. It has enabled me to come into personal touch with the leadors of the French People, and through the modi ot intercourse with them to understand better, I hope, than I understood be- fore, the motives, the ambitions and the principles which actuate this to me a lesson in the roots of friend- ship in tnose things which make the intercourse of nations profitable and serviceapie for all th an ~ er the rest of man Net oe che, Work of the con- as Beomed to go very slowl: Indeed. “Sometimes It has seemed as if there wero unnecessary obstacles to agreement, but as the weeks have lengthened I have seemed to see the profit that came out of that. Quick conclusions would not have produced that intimate knowledge of each other’s mind which I think has come out of these daily conferences. “We have been constantly in the Presence’ of each other's minds and motives and characters, and the com. radeships which are based upon that sort of knowledge are @ure to be very much ‘more intelligent not only but to breed a much more intimate sym- pathy and comprehension than could otherwise be created. “These six months have been six months which have woven new fibres of connection between the hearts of our people, and something more than friendship and intimate sympathy has come out of this intercourse. ONE PORTION OF WORK HAS ONLY BEGUN, “Friendship je a very good thing. Intimacy is a very enlightening thing. But friendship may end with senti- ment, A new thing that has hap- pened is that we have translated our common principles and our common purposes into a common plan,. When We part, we are not going to part with a finished work, but with a work one portion of which is finished and tho other por lon of which is only begun. “We have finished the formulation of the peace, but we have begun a plan of co-operation which | believe will broaden and strengthen as the years go by wo that this grip of the Y that we have taken now will need to be relaxed. We haye bean and shall continue to be comrade We shall continue to be co-worke in tasks which, because they” ai common, will weave out of o ntl ments a common conception of duty and @ common conception of the|t rights of men of every race and of every clime. If it be true that that has been accomplished it is a very great thing, + “As J go away from these scenes, I think T shall realize that I have been present at ong of the most vital things that has happened in the his- tory of nations, Nations have formed contracts with each other before, but they never, have formed partnerships, they have associated themselves tem- porarily, but they ‘have never before associated themselyes permanently, “The wrong that was done in the waging, of thie® war was a great wrong, but it wakened the world to te Je to ft 1 rt always the warm feelings which the} generous treatinent of this great peos| ple has generated ; Wish in my turn, str, to propose, as ve proposed, the continued and ou locteing briehaship ph the. two nas tions, the safety and prosperity of ‘ana closer and closer com. free peoples, and. .the of every induence catre, Germany in orde bloodstained mann, Basle. occupied are urpose of humanity.” President Poincare in » President Wilson per. “We want all of us, as you do, Mr. President, that this peace*be not vain words, that it be not a fugitive hope and that it be not a passing flash of | for one evenin, Burope. We want, as you do, that the soclety of nations shall become a beneficent reality, We want, as you do, that all the clauses ty which our enemies are going. to ally observed. by appearin, ubseribe be lo SCHEIDEMANN SEEKS REFUGE IN SWITZERLAND Said to Be in Fear of Assassination and to Have Crossed Frontier on Foot. GENEVA, June 27.—Philipp Scheide- former German Chancellor, Hved in Switzerland Thursday night, according to the National Zeitung of The Swiss Federal authorities have grahted him permission to remain in the country for ten days on account of bis hemith, jt is said, Constance newspapers state that the former Chancellor fled from Germany because he feared assassination, cro It is reported that his request to remain longer than ten days is under consideration by the Wederal Government. AMERICANS AT COBLENZ JAIL ANOTHER GERMAN Frederick Ketterman Convicted of Violating Armistice by Re- ing the frontier on foot. cruiting for Army. COBLENZ, June 21.-—-Frederiek Ket- German to-day ‘by an American Military Commission of re- cruiting civilians within the American This was held to be a vielation of the armistice terms and an infraction of regulations published by American military authorities in Ger- in February ntence@ to six months’ im- |prisonment and Aned 6,000 marks, Letters trom Berlin authorising Ket- terman to enlist men for the German possession. Other papers showed a general knowl+ the American trocps' ments and the location of theit forces, the recent near man newspape! man was 6 army were found in his edge of He also burning Coblens. papers evidently Berlin, rm eruited more than Afty men, had @ report on of ammunition a great. mora! necessity of secing that it was necessary that men|terman, under oMcer in the should band themselves together in| Army, was convicted a IRISH DELEGATES COMING. Deanne and Walsh ‘To-Morrow, PARIS, June 2%7.—The deleg representing Irish — soctett the Irish que: io the hands of the President of Ketter- dumps ‘The original copies of these been forwarded to admitted having re- wm which inatructs the mind and the ving a toast id tribute to e_ war, Conference and outlining what still remaing to be done. “The treaties,” said President Poin- ‘must be wholly applied and peraistence on our account will he no leas indispensable to their execution, The delegates of the victorious coun- tries have not met during these long months and haye not convoked to Versailles the delegates of conquered to retain in their hands nothing but a simple piece of move- jon bere in a my heart, and Tiwnited States has been hotified that #0 far as the Peace Conference is concerned, has been u eepemloe, Cie eau, Hh PLOOLOD OLODEDO HODES OSD OSEDO SO OOO OO SOOO DOPOD OD OOOH LEFT TO RIGHT——MRS, JAMES L. BREESE JR. AND FRANCIS; ar- the i PLOT AMONG GERMANS TO CREATE A NEW STATE Exposure Caused the Allies to Send a Special, Warning to Berlin, BERLIN, June 71.—(Associated Py Details of a secret plan to create arate state in northern. Germany. are revealed by the Danzig correspondent of the Tageblatt, who says it was the intention to cooperate with thé Grand Duke, of Mecklemburg in the establish iment inf thier a republic or a monarchy to include East Prussia, West and Posen. The plan, he says, was favored by Adolph Von Batooki, President of East Prussia; Herr Schnackenburg, Pres!- dent of West Prussia and Herr Von Buelow, President of Posen. It was probably in connection with this Plot that the allied Peace Council yesterday warned the German Govern ment & would be held responsible for any attack on the Poles. oF eh cect vx hate a UKRAINIANS DEFEAT BOLSHEVIK FORCE Recapture Odessa and Other Cities and Are Nearing Kieff. BERNE, June @.—The Ukrainians under, Gen. Petiura have defeted Bol- ashevik forces all along the front, re- capturing Odessa and threatening Kieff, accotding to a Ukrainian officia! state- ment received here to-day. ‘They have captured Harkow, Fastov, Skvire and are within thirty kilometres of Kieff. Gen, Gregorieff's army, following the capture of Odessa, Nikolaief and son, is marching against the Bolsheviki along the Dneister for the purpose of joining Petiur Prussia a GOLD PEAGE MEDALS ORDERED BY FRANCE Wilson, Lloyd George, Clemenceau and Orlando Each to Have One. PARIS, June 2 (United Press).—The French Government has ordered a num- ber of medals, commemorative of the peace treaty, to be struck off. They will be three inches long and one* inch wide. On one side will be a woman, symbolic of Victory, and on the re verse a harvest scene. Upon the medal will be engraved “Conference de la Paix, 1919." Solid gold medals will to President Wilson, Premier Lioyd George, Premier Clemenceau and form. er Premier Orlando. Gold-plated silver Medals will be distributed among the diplomats who aided in the peace set- Uement. be presented PERE a1 SE ES R-34 TO START JULY 4, BOSTON, June 27.-The British dirl- sible R-34 is now expected to” leave England on its cruise to United States July according to advi reeelved from Washington at the Boston Navy Yard to-day The plans for an aerial escort for the R-34 made when the flight was ex- pected: two weeks ayo, have been rer vived. MRS. freat pation, It has, thérefore, been! ¢. READ, MR&. J. C. MONTFORT, MR8&. WALTER HINTON, MRS. P. TALBOT, MRS. H. C, RICHARDSON AND MARGARET. J. NEW CO-OPERATION | Wives and Children of Ocean Flight Heroes Waiting on the Dock for Aviators to Land H. TOWERS, JUNE 27, 1919. MRS. P. N. BELLINGER, MRS. A. of jee in {Calls on Gen. COBLENZ, J Press).—Marsha Wednesday for visit to the Cob! its occupation several called upon Lie Marshal Liggett his adm: cans. “Peace terms ha with Gen. Ligge on bis journey AMERICANS and Giv Ss June are fol PARIS, workers Zukauskas, fensive Dvinsk, ceived by of the whic} against Inter-All n Baltic is stripped of to the condition triet. Dr. Aldon can woman of man's College, after American Men Will Qu Are Met CHICAGO, Ju of municipal e wider scope to-d nor, President ganization, sald unless salary once. ‘The patrolment | BUFFALO, singer, one of |from a road ga Tucsday, . He told rg to seo his » FOGH GOES TO COBLENZ; LAST VISIT TO AMERICANS and Members of His | He was accompanied by his aldes and members of his staff. gett at his headquarters. Foch expressed In reference to peace, he said and until they are actually signed we must not relax our watch on the Rhine in the least.” Marshal Foch spent a half-hour| pinning to return on Thuraday to his advanced headquarters at Kreuznach. 60,000 LITHUANIANS Follow Army as It Drives Out Reds Lithuanian Army commanded by according Herbert Hoover, who when found were have been strong enough to run about. June Liggett With Aides] Staff. une 27 1 Foch arrived here what may be his last jena bridgehwad auring | by American troops. | (Associated He ut. Gen. Hunter Lig- to Gen. iration for the Ameri- | ve not yet been signed | tt and then proceeded | by automobile. He is RELIEVE es Food to the tarving. 27.—American lowing the relief victorious Gen. h has resumed the of- the Bolsheviki near to a despatch re- commander lied Food Commission from Capt. Howell Forman of the Ameri- Relief headquarters at. Kovno. In this region there are 50,000 Lith- uaniangs still remaining, and most of them are starving because the country all foodstuffs, The Americans are paying special attention of children in the dis- las Slipupas, an Ameri- Lithuanian parentage and the graduate of Philadelphia Wo- who is assisting child welfare work, says that within a week food arrived, unable children to stand CHICAGO POLICE VOTE TIME FOR STRIKE nit Unless Demands , Asserts Their Leader. ine 27,—Chicago's strike mployees threatened a jay when Michael O’Con- of the patrolmen's or his men will quit work demands are met at ask $1,800 a year. They now received $1,700, They were to vote on a time for the walkout late to- day. Firemen also are dissatisfied ————— A n Fagitive Recaptare: 27.—Harold K\ the two men escaped | WASHINGTON, June 2. ment legislation for both wartime and Constitutional prohibition was for- ,Mally reported to the House in a bili | Of two sections by the House Judtcl- ary Committee to-day. enforcement | part one, |tion was 17 to \stands more lenient laws a: vided In the section for wartime pro- hibition than in the Constitutienal prohibition seotion. Those voting against the Dill were | Representatives Igoe and Dyer, both Louis. St. En. section is set 2. As the’ bill DRY ENFORCEMENT BILLS GO TO HOUSE -BYVOTEOF 17702 \ Judiciary - Committee Urges} More Lenient Regulations in War Section. forees The wartine down as | The vote on reporting the leyis'a- now pro- A special rule for consideration of rtain one bill. failed | the logislation ‘will be avked of the Rules Committee, but it is practically it will not-come up in House until the middle of next week |A_ minority: report will five members of the committee. Another eleventh-hour move to re- |Port @ separate bill for wartime pro- hibition in the hope of rushing tt through before July 1 vote of 10 to 6, the committee stand- ing by its original intention to pro- vide separate enforcement provisions for the two kinds of prohibition, but the be filed by by a The committees adopted an amend- ment by Representative Steele, Penn- sylvania, allowing manufacturere of non-alcoholic beverages to reduce the amount of alcdho!l in beverages so | they may be classed as soft drinks. |The amount of alcohol after the re- TELLS HER STORY © | AT GUNSON TRAL (Continued From First Page.) | Is! called a patrol wagon. I objected and said we wanted to go in a trolley. “Gunson seid to me, ‘You're an 6id bird, you are—the patrol wagon for yours.’ “When we got to court we were) not arraigned immediately because Gunson told Magistrate Mancuso he } had a date.” MAGISTRATE MANCUSO AN TERESTED SPECTATOR. Magistrate Mancuso was an inter- sted spectator at the trial. He yat at the lawyers’ table and took many notes. The trial was presided over by Firat Deputy Commissioner Leach Third Deputy Porter and Fifth Dep uty Ellen O'Grady. Witnesges were excluded from the trial room, One of these was a woman with two children. It was said that she would be called to tell of an experience similar to that of the two girls. Her name was not Made pubiic. Did she go to cabarets much? Miss Cohen was aaked, “Oh, yes,” she said. “Sally and I 0 now and then to the Moulin Rouge end he Bal Tabarin and places like that.’ Will you tell us,” she was asked, ‘the names of some of the men with whom you gg to such places?” “I certainty will not,” sdid Lilian. “I'm not going to drag the names of those prominent business men into this case “Did you with a man?’ said she did. ‘Was he married “I should say not,” said Lillian “{ don't go out with married men," she added indignantly, “Do you go to Turkish baths? was another question. ‘Yes, Sally and | go sometimes on Wednesday nights.” She did not know how much it cost, she said, because Sally paid. At res- taurants frequently she would pay Sally's check. Mrs, Ellen O'Grady, Deputy Police | Commissioner, put a question: “Why didn’t you get away from Broadway if you were being annoyed there by men who accosted you?" | “We were trying to get away when we were arrested,” sald Lillian Magitrate McGeehan as a character witness for Gunson said the detec- veracity “better than and that he was “a painstak- ing, consclentlous officer.” Similar testimony was given by In- epector Thomas V, Underhill, Thomas V. Underhil AQUEDUCT RESULTS, RAGH TRACK AQUEDUCT, N. ¥,, June —FIRST RACE—For fillies, | two-year-olds ; claiming purse, 91,125.74 ; | five furlongs; Phantom M.’ Fair '109, Schuttinger 2 to 5, out and, out won! Betsinda 107, Ensor 10 to 1, 2 to 1 and 8 to 6 second; Sweet Apple 98, Wesler 15 to 1, 3 to 1 and 6 to 6 thin; time 1,02 2-5, Barlex Water, Brynhilda and | Merry Sinner also ran. 0 home in a car once she was asked, and she | | | | Senate Asks Wilson Yr requesting the Senate military son's resolution to inform regarding | policy in EERE EY Albany Saloons Pinn to Keep Open | After Jane 30, H ng near Auburn Prison was arrested here early to- shot, ‘whoa be enya loons wl be LBANY, June 27.—According to ad-! sine tee oe gcse wor Dealer ion - Lia cla ive, law. ‘These one per cent. duction must be less than one-half ot ‘This. wilt allow. ,the use of a large amount of wine and beer, Steele said. As, to..what+President Wilson tendsnto dovgs to: annalling: war time prohibition, so far as it affects wines and beer, after July 1, no one in Washington apparently knows, there is no agreement among Admin- and ‘ation officials as to the likelibood approved by put up in these pric ABSOL|' long oth Thocolate Operany ot Stic: dads PACKA Two Big Friday and Saturday Extr ‘CHOCO! KD K mate! fragrant olat aay fe Combination ie, made ANAL ‘of his action. Although enforcement be continued by will be legislation cannot be passed by Congress and the President before war-time prohibition becomes effect- the Department of Justice will undertake to enforce the prohjbition Unofficial reports have reached the Department that in a number of cities in the East the brewing and sale of beer containing 2 8-4 per cent alcohol will ‘brewers and dealers on that such beer is not intoxicating. attempts some | the ground watched closely by the Department, but it was said to-day no whof€sale indict- ments were to be expected until a test case now in the courts had been decided. The original case in Now York de- teebnicalities which threa! ened a decision without deciding the merits of the contention, so the*de- relying brought in Baltimore to give a cloar- cut verdict as to whether the beve: age of the alcoholic content now be- veloped partment is ing brewed is beer being intoxicating. When a decision probably will not meet until ment Meantime, expected to pass is had the case be appealed to the Supreme Court and, as the court does October, Prohibition by constitutional amend- may become offective before the question is finally disposed of. however, the law declaring intoxicating any ber- erage containing more than one-half on n the Cor en of one per cent. of alcohol, This Marshal meat that McCarthy arrests and that a jury determine the guilt or innocence of those accused In the mean time, according to the legal advice of their attorney, hotel men and restaurateurs it Is up to President Wilson a proclamation as to the term. of the wartime prohibition act which wil, operation of the act, according to Hs terms. There is a rgmor that the President will do this as soon as the demobilization, m United States ust Peace Treaty is signed. NEW YORK GREETS HEROES OF FIGHT AOS ALAN (Continued From First Page.) and Lawrence L, the pilot of the NC flyers. dirigible but n Driggs, President of the American Aero Club, It was Mrs. Walter Hinton, wife of 4, who arranged the big “family” party to meet the She introduced an Evening. World reporter to Margaret Richard-' son, who says she has been up in a’ rin an airplane. “But papa’s got to take plane pretty soon, there too, “Mother wanted to leave me home but I wouldn't stay,” she said, going to Oy some du All flying husbands. From the Battery the tug Manhat- tan set out at 10 o'clock with another Lieut. Col. W. G. party inclading: Barker of Toronto, down fifty-two enemy planes in the war; Major Cushman A. Rice, Dock oner Murray Hulber dent Allen R. Hawley of Commisi Club of 4 y. she insisted. ‘Three-year-old Frances Breese was the wives said they consid- ered themselves as “partners” of their who ica, and Secretary Aug- ust Post of the same club. the case sense of national ingress is iLorcemen | make the the y that make end me in a a brought Pyesi- Aero OIlED. LOVELAND.—DAVID. Lying in state at the CAMPBELL Fu- NERAL CHURCH, Broadway and 66th, STONE.—MARY. RAL CHUE cn Lying in state at the CAMPBELL FU- : Broadway and 66th. FLATS & APARTMENTS TO LET. Wit Let hoe $6, Call oF, ajem, O-roum aparien telepa Ried, 1308 ment; Ocean are. Brooklyn, phone Kenmore 39 Mf, PACKAGE No. 1 This handy week-end combination rong Box ¢ ce lies, t Lb, Box Spee! LOFT Ohewitig Gum, said Man Supe RIGHT, he t ‘ord tim: goods in ri as they las te o beautiful juven! Mocolate: hllver” lk Chocolate. Sliver ete ot Old’ Fashion COMPLETE LATE COVER. AND PEA- RS—The Fleh, it. velvety Choos 400 So, there’s th. story. .UTELY PERFECT in every will be passed out to the candy buying pub! e Coal Bells 99c box " At AGE COMPEETE Drastic Price Reductions Ordered to Move 20 Tons of Chocolate Covered Vanilla Cream Drops E MUST HAVE THE SPACE FOR OTHER GOODS NOW COMING THROUGH THE FACTORY,” the General Superintendent “But do ou realize that means rushing out 20 tons of candy to the stores for rapid-fire selling?” asked the S. thout | Mana, ted and approved). starting Friday, June 27, at a CLEAN CUT SAVING OF 19¢ words, the extraordinary Sa Bary tngsd Overs M. “Sure could see the de! a PER BOX. In Price is, POUND BOX ASSORTED stock, “You can di f you name an unusually attractive These are our ular 44¢ to the smatlest Ig on chewing deligh P te good: Suturda: é: ‘Trade Mark. Our Popular Week-End Combination up of individual packages, rd container, wrapped in plain paper and has a handle attached for carrying. The contents of Combination No. 1 are as follows: Box Victory Chocolates, 1 late Carameln, '4 Lb. the said the Gen, ing an eyelash, “but the goods a all bright, fresh, d see for yourself” (taking one of the sweets and gently cr his fingers, that the Sal White Cream, which ious 25¢ Other Attractive Week-End Offerings -Taporey COMBINATION FAGKATE CilnwiNa TAF ny the answer Every candy lover from pit bs at with these old fashion pi di These are big mor. sels of delicious, buttery confection, euch plece wrapped in senitary waxed paper. A pleasing and diversified as- sortment of Mint, Fruit and spley flavors is presented, D BOX nf pose doods, Pure of 49c a Specials a