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TOMIRS, DAY LEADS TO MAN'S ARREST a Missive Hinted at Scandal as E Result of Shooting of Lieut, Col. Beck. SAPULPA, Okla., April Bd Read, held in jail here on a charge of 20.- attempting to blackmail Mrs. Jean P. Day, wife of the s ? charges at Tul: er of Lieut. Col. Kk, will face forntal 1 to-day, Vederal wu- Paul Ward 1 thorities declared. Read was arrested in connection with a letter received by Mrs. I demanding $2,000 for the writer to 1 1 I 4 ¢ 1 x y ety a c 1 « « 4 Y 1 1 1 Okla., w weeks fn connection with oll leases. jis financial would return the money at the end of] ment on @ They are living temporarily at the ds: Scott, a man of No. 12 East 110th Street. was convicted as Bu is had not been home. ‘forever forget’? what he claimed he saw “through the window of the Day ome" the morning Judge Day shot Beck, following: an alleged attempt by We aviator on Mrs, Day’s honor. The etter accused Mrs. Day and her hus- pand of not telling all relative to the shooting Read denied knowledge of the letter. de declared he had been at Edna, e he was arrested, for two The letter demanded that $2,000 be sent to “G. Daer” at Edna in $10 and $20 denominations and labelled ‘‘mer- describing declared he handise."" The writer, distress, he year with 12 per cent. interest. Postal inspectors were assigned to he case and sent a letter to “G. Juer at Edna. They declared late esterday Read went to the Post Office and asked for mail addressed to Read, Ga. Daer, Jim White and William C, Wilson. Read claimed, they he said, that had met “Daer’ and the other men nd that they asked him to get their @ wai. OKLAHOMA CI‘ » April 20.—Ed. Read, who was arrested at Edna, on ® charge of attempting to blackmail Mra. Jean P. Day of this city, is a sivil engineer, according to an investi- gation at the address given by Read in Kana, Judge and Mrs. Day refused to com- the matter early to-day. home of Sam M. Wood, a friend. At the inquest which exonerated Day, the Judge testified he returned from taking guests home from a party and found Beck attempting to attack Mrs. Day 27 CONVICTIONS OBTAINED IN 1 DAY ourts Making Progress in Clean- ing Up Congested Crime Wave Calendars. District Attorney Banton and his assistants in their effort to clean up he overcrowded Sourt of General calendar of the Sessions and the riminal Branches of the Supreme tourt obtained twenty-seven con- ietions yesterday, The crimes harged ranged from unlawful entry o murder in the second degree. Sentences trom wenty to a imposed life were years to down suspended sentence. Forty years was given to Samuel egro, convicted of holding 1p Deputy U. S. Marshal J. 8. Hoff- He & second offender and also will have three years to serve of an old sentence. He is twenty years old, iis Ss CASHIER, HONOR EMPLOYEE, GONE andard Oil To-Morrow Was to Give John D. Wheeler Meda for 13 Years’ Service. John D. Wheeler, cashier of the y refinery of the Standard Oil ompany, Elizabeth, N. J., disap- ed Monday and auditors have een put to work on the books. Tho surety company which bonded Wheel- for Mrs. 310,000 has been notified. Wheeler said she did not know where her husband was or why he re- mained away have two chil- ren. Wheeler left the office Monday to dentist." He did not return, Puesday an inquiry developed he Wheeler worked ig company thirteen years, | They ad ing statted as a junior clerk, He was to have been one of nut 400 em- ployees Lo by 2 medals gt the lant for len ice to-morg aw sets cls, TOLD OF KILLING FOR RUM, HE Sj|AYS Tug Owner Testifies Agcpeed Ad- mitted He “Got” Watchman at Warehouse Musene Merrett! of tnond, S.J. owner of the tug Phoenix, testified in the County Court at St. George to-day in the trial ef Raymond ¢ % 72 Gates Avenue, Brooklyn, for the murder of Michael © night watch- a warehouse in New Bri yon Mareb 1 Merrell sald ns and Frank Bich ford, of No 1 aylor Street, Brook Ipt, hired his boat for 3 tom $20,000 worth of whiskey from the wa house. He said he took them and six others to New Brighton, waited in vain for the whiskey and then tied up his bos er, he said, Collins came to the boat and told James Pymm, also. ine tlietod the murder, that ‘they had not gol the whiakey bat had the Disbl Waichoens cs , ,Jmark her first Lady Astor Thinks About Many Things of Public Interest} \NIIRF)IN|FA “She doesn't want to think of the politi. goal of women as~ separate from the goal of men.” “Setting off women against men in poll- tics only breeds sus- tagoni: “If the best women “On nioral issues will co-operate with the influence of women the best men they > will bring will go further to: courage into pol gether,” “As ty the question “it of whether she. will keep _on—thoe answer «time by For Lady Astor When She Goes Back Home to “Ole Virginny” All Albemarle County, in Bib,and Tucker, to Welcome Nancy Langhorne to Scenes — of Her Childhood. CHARLOTTESVILLE Va April } wor n leader of Great Britain, 20 (Copyright). "Nancy Langhorne] Nancy Langhorne of Mirador —— in coming home," coming back to Mirador, and even though it is to be just a short visit, all Albemarle County rejoices. Her arrival in New York has spread far and wide through the count and all the old folk here- abouts who remember the “tomboy,” girl are getting out their best bib and tucker to call on Lady Astor when she Brilliant dress Greets arrives Of course there are political and] After suffrage engagements to be taken] Political speech care of before Lady ‘Astor is free to] “Ady Astor, M. at the home of come to the old home surroundings, that the corn en which will 1} here will recollection to Charles Dana 73d Street. the rv} Union but it is safe to say pone and the fried c mi To dinner of the tears of joyous at eyes. 1t has pleased the “home folks" tre mendousiy that Lady Astor in he first interviews announced that she Ambassador, the Biltmore ward goes to the Sunrise ball at the American Who Became an ‘ Audience Gibson, making her first in the glish- at M. P.’ Town sister, No. 12 pe and LADY ASTOR SPEAKS AGAIN TO-NIGHT; DELAYS TRIP HOME First~ Ad- Girl Amer n P,, is resting to-day but Mrs 1 aft ing There have been so many demands was an “unreconstructed Southerner, ]on the Viscountess of the Comm that loves corn pone and Dixie and] she has char her p ‘and wil still eries over the ato real Buns nei go to: Baltimote unt! Sacuraay, That was home-folks talk and scattinwthake dant nsck Virginia is chuckling over it to-day. | *Peaking there that night, For, while Nancy Langhorne went tof Last night about 1,200 members England, became a peeress, and the|and guests of the New York Learue first woman member of the British] of Womon Voters heard her ‘Town Parliament, the Old Dominion still} yian speccn, * ciaims her as its own, for the Lang- : <P ae hornes of Mirador are a part of Vir- Laay Astor wore a short satin ginia’s traditions. frock, and her sp So Nancy Langhorne is coming | effective. back to the old estate where as a]yig ney theme sub-deb she spent her waking pours out of doors chasing foxes, fishin: Lady Astor said for ‘shiners’? in the creek, or sec “My entrance ing the dizziest peak of the barn. Seemingly frail, she was as resilient in the nature of a always as the “E" string of a violin|/” (0° DAture o tuned to concert pitch, She is best remembered here as the slip of a girl who could ride any horse in Chilly"? Langhorne's stable—a_— sunburned. youngster who knew all the country- side—an early democratic trait which stood her in good stead as she cam- paigned through her Plymouth con- stituency in her first fight for Parlia- simply evolution “L felt voyage of faith, my d Membx pir 3 loo! than ch was frank and revolution, pilg of Com: ” nm) most enough to have ment. u I Wee J. L. Fieklen of Newport News, Va., | House Po must sy first cousin of Lady Astor, to-day re-|Honuse of Commons, called something of her childhood. He remembers her best as a girl of fif- teen—the flapper age. But Lady Astor shock with body of and fal dauntiesc men could have than they t © House me more “The Woman in Politics” of Commons was not, as some thought, It was that I was embarking on a but when I arrived at stination some of the honorable as a \ woman it wa nw hey deceney as D been kine t! the + for the Wore their No sex can taut one of does not» believe very much in the} “We seatize that no one modern flapper. She says flappers are} govern alone. [ believe their mothers’ fault—that mothers do] the reasons why civilization has falled is t nment so lament sided gover the mis’ happen in, T nothing worse world—except 4 world—but 1 can tion of the making civilizat the name of civ Christianity, not best way not control their children to-day as they should, and thut the first lesson for a child to learn is ohedience “Uncle Chilly had one horse with a very bad reputation,” said her cousin to-da: “This horse was named Badger, and was docile enough until some one hit him, Then he would run away. I was on Badger one day in Greenwood Village when a boy struck him with a stick. Of course he ran away with me. I had given up all hope ke two after three miles of prayer, when the how them our ambitions are] Pave t f an oe Antena tinsel yk Lene eeu dap pinesy oy Rot personal. Let them see that wel fect “one's “thoughie “aiusta’t Ing that he had reason to be “Nannie Langhorne heard about it| desire a better, safer and a cleancr| ‘ect, one’s thoughts, — Mustn’ the girl he betraye! was ov and ‘immediately said she would ride Jd for our chi and their ehil-| OR®? age of consent. Te must just t that horse, Her father, Uncle Chis-|dren, and enlize that only by deing Bee rch aaint ahar the well Dal Langhorne, had forbidden | our bit, by facing unclean t with He was smiling now, a flashing bill becomes-a law. it: but she threw herself on Badger untiness, by facing wrongs witn| Winning smile, “Lady that back just the same. She it him alright, by going fearlessly into all} “T know you and I want the women will riait blow, and away ie went naroestthinen that, may ue A pablo, this same thing,’ he went on, naive nto politics the fields like a bu Nannie rode] we will somehow make it a little bet-] Iv “We want her to be a suc- voting stre Badger until he was tired out and] te: worki cess; we want her to, pull it off: will have this could run no more “1 dor " going to; “nd she can’t, if she's disturbed too, she wants to “Did she break him’ asked the} de L dei omen ; Jt wouldn't be fair—it reall in office, local and national hah hange the it | doxeay that | ~Wouldn'é be fairt™ considers Mrs, Win’) ngham’s en “Break him’? N What they can if thes nt, and 1, coming We were standing in the deep trance into Parliam >it a wonds want to’ break him for? n from t i) whieh has Window embrasure. ful thine te 4 ce. Part wanted to ride him while een a dey AOL looked disappointe ment TI believe that a num of ning away wanted the the future without tl that tire paused, ¢ ancing women will.win seats.” the adventure,” women of all coun do the down iperior - wady Astor was a splendid Judge of | duty and { generation of men height. Then he him: nched “ J 3 : ae Ae sy dcah, and an unusuaily gooa|and women who will lovk upon war] the radio thought-wave idea. ‘If How do you feel 3 wes . ‘a to it with a 1c! there is something [ could tell political career?” 1 n shot, according to her cousin, More-} and all that leads t with as muc ie pa of it Avab, ror’ nt cold you?" h gested. He added, sure you're proud ¢ over she was a very patient fisher-girl, perror se we is Mpen A Col |) Snodeatie 1 know pretty well “Ol, rather!” exclaimed Lord jing to 8 01 a r yur oO} jooded murde ola sc gisiia ie jf throw ire Ene ee i ‘the ee oe “If we want this new world, we can| What she thinks about things.’ Astor He did ‘exactly t ror eee only by s it. The, “You ARE Lord Astor?” { out his chest, bu ainly He cae etna an aie ant cio will t arsely questioned, at this point. He threw back ‘his shoulders. Then ook, She was a friend of all dumb| Struggle will be urealye: Pi re we sonfaasion Le ue 8. put out of ou ness, of our| 1ooke nage Ry his pictures, a Be mas, a copie nl fF dneligantee “And t reminds me,’ id her} hearts: and of esee a ey rs baie ‘pttea ae sink ! he declared, “When I went cousin, “Do you see that scar on my {Makes for war—hate, envy: Beee) ci wa hadn't heen in i up to the Lords, you know, f sus thumb’ ‘That's where an old parrot] Pride, foree ant Bat : ail T wauteal tata mire of tha seated that she take my plnce of Nannie’s bit me, She asked Me tol woryy pap PROM LYSOL POIS-] identity of this obliging and and represent Plymouth clean lis ca) I took hold of Poll ONING democratic individual “ptyon know," he went or and. Val BOOK eld, OF MOP SERB nag ai. « » 9 Menahan “Oh, yes," he smiled, ‘T am hey asked a nd of our That made me mad and 1 beheaded | ei wa nd dead off Her husband—otherwise, 1 Mrs. Philip Snowden, to stand as the bird. Nannie wept and raised Hm Y oon he hroom of bis] Shouuldn't feet that 1 could speak Labor candidate against 1 As Cain and Uncle @hilly gave me the ome tocday. Ile was fifty rae gener er ween hed she. tae worst licking I ever got in my life."’ old and had ed eee fused. She sald that she thought Virginia's welcome wwalte not the since the deat “Then will you tell mo, frat of no woman ought to stund againet ile inl ~ . ee of ever D: L an concetve man-governed woman-governéd has had one- n't let us make wing that to of sce the combina- oing forward and nh more worthy of zation based on at we can do that M en and Women is that she cannot pos- eral small children not be conceited.” sibly stop.” goes into Partiament.” eS ope lady Astor because of all she mm Politics, had done since she entered t the Best of Each, ‘Should Co-operate, Thinksthe Lady American-Born Wife of a British Nobleman of American Antecedents Believes Women Will Bring Moral Courage Into Political Life—Astor Proud of His,Wife’s Achieve- ments. HIS is one of those thought- wave inter- views, Dave Hirsh- field and Mayor Hylan hold no ‘copy- right on them, lh Lady Astor, Lord Astor and myself partict- pated in a highly successful radio thought-wave experiment five minutes after the first woman in the British Parliament and her fall, good-looking, exceedingly nice husband reached the New York home of Lady Astor's sister, Mr: Charles Dana Gibson, at No. Hast 73d Street. «1 called to find out what the most distingulshed woman in po- litical life to-day really thinks about women in politics. I found out what Lord Astor thinks Lady Astor thinks—and what he him- self thinks about her! Also, I dis- covered that in quiet courtesy, in clean-cut speech, in frank direct- and simplicity, Lord Astor himself is like the best type of American, One remembers, after meeting him, that his ancestors were Americans, and one forgets that his father preferred a British peerage to American citizenship. ness q He the came running lightly down inding statrease to where [ ited neur one of the long win- dows in the reception hall of the Gibson hy He ts at least six feet tall. and without a pound of surplus flesh. Hair, eyes and mus- tache the same shade of bright, warm brown, and his skin is brown, too, like an American's, instead of florid, like an [nglish- man’s, “I am so sorry,’’ he began, apologetically, while he was still half way across the room, “but Lady Astor cannot give any inter- views until after she has made her, two speeches, one to-night and’ one to-morrow night. Did you ever make a speech? If you did, you'll know that one must have time beforehand to work it w ne. ave By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. all, what she considers the most important thing women can ac- complish in politics?" I urged. Lom! Astor's brown eyes wero thoughtful. Then he spoke, slowly but decisively "She doesn’t want to think of the political goal of women as anything separate and distinct from the goal of men,” he said ue of the things I have heurd her say a hundre times is that all women cannot be put together in @ group, any more than all men. She doesn't like to set up a woman's point of view, as op- posed to a man's point of view. ‘Quite simply, she believes in co-operation hetween men and women in politica. She thinks that if the best women. will co-operate with the best men, they will go further together than efther group could go alone. She thinks tliat setting off women against men in political I!fe only breeds sus- picion, distrust. antagonism.” “But does she find men willing to work with women?” T asked. “Has the hostility against women in politics died down in Eng- land?" ‘Oh, but women have been in politics In England for a long time,” replied Lord Astor. “Our men have never been opposed to that. ‘There is still a little feel- ing in some qu against women in office, but the hostillty to women's votes has disappeared altogether, and I think it will not be long before women have the vote on the same terms as men. ‘They haven't now, you know, in England; women do not vote until) they are thirty. However, Lady Astor finds that the@better sort of men in polities are glad to co- operate with women in every way. “LL fs especially on me that she believes the influence of women will be most perceptible. Yes, she belleves that women should help to establish the woman's standard of morality, the gingle standard—something like that. Of course, this is not altogether a matter of law. But it can be bolstered up by law. For example, there is the Criminal Amendment Act, for which she has done a great deal of work and has spoken frequently, which is almost sure to pass, owing to the moral sentiment of the women voters behind it. The two main provisions of this law are that it raises the age of consent, which is now sixteen, and that it forbids 108 THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, APRIL 20, 1922 will lore the work- yan with seve be some make thelr practical and liament for women and children, That was rather nice, now, wasn't it? Lord Astor com- mented, with quite boyish satis faction, “They say it will be hard to find a woman who will ever run against her. “As to the question of whether she will keep on—the answer is that she cannot possibly stop, proudly continued her husband “The base forces, the forces of corruption, haye “fought her so ever since she entere nt that she couldn't think of seeming to yield to them by withdrawal." “And she proves, doesn't with her six children, that a wo man can go into polities and not neglect her home T suggested. Lord Astor nodded, then quali- 1, smilingly: “OL course, it's been much easter for her because she is well- to-do and can afford assistance One has to use common sense in these matters. 1 fancy it may be some little time before the work- ing woman who is the mother of several small children takes « seat in Parliament.’ “Doesn't Lady Astor believe that women should share in the ambassadorial functions at the various national embassies?" 1 She did say something Uh that—she feels that a woman ut- tached to each embassy might well represent the interests of her countrywomen,"" admitted Lady Astor's husband, Then he added, on his own account, with a fugi- tive twinkle, ‘Just what the or- der of precedence might be in such case I hesitate to aftirm “What is Lad toward world tioned, she's attitude I ques- favor of Wash- very much negotiations the ington and .the Genoa confer ences,” he answered. “And in England, now, with so many sons and brothers and husbunds dead, there is a pretty neral feeling, in which Lady Astor shares, that in such the peace of the world must be kept," Again Lord Astor interpolated a thought wave of his own “Are women, as a Whole, so much more set on pe than men?" he questioned When there actually is a war, it seems to me that the women ¢€ more patriotic in the narrower sense than the men. [ know that the Boer women were much fie r much more bitter, than their men folk."" “Against what dangers, in poli ties, does Lady Astor think wo men should guard themselves?"’ I inquired She has sald that they must to make their idealism prac that they must not be con- ceited and think they know the whole thing; that they must de- pend on organization; that must not depend on partieu lar party—even » woman's patty —but must try to work with and through all pol 15 “She thinks that women they must play their part in polities because government touches ever rami- fication of our lives Tt does, doesn't it?’ finished Lord Astor, with his mode: little tric of putting an as nt form of a question 1 had had just a limp or she ir-haired, light from the « But inasmuch present in thought-wave intorvinw, it to me her should be properly « A eyes ure. the she had been luring tt seemed “What morning?" . is e wearlng this He hesitated Jonger th for any of the other questions “A long dark he said finally, with truly masculine ex plicitness, ‘And with a ner- vous finger and thumb he plucked gt his coat—'a—a— vou call f jersey, don’t you’ ppe Which simply goes t Lord Astor may knov Astor thinks, but y other husband—dor what she wears! “Women must try to idealism must “CANT USE “MRS.” © QUININE ee © BLACKMAL LETIER|Lord Astor Gives a ‘Radio Wave”? Interview on What He Thinks “They must depend on organization, hut must try to work with all political groups.” ONBALLOT IN HER RAE FOR SENATE Minnesoia Attorney General Rules Wife as Candidate Is ot Mrs. Peter Oleson. ST. vlight) PAUL, Minn., April 20 (Copy- —Minnesota women are indig- nant over a decision of the Attorney eral, whieh wy prevent Mrs. Peter Oleson from being Mrs, Peter the ballot when she runs or Frank B. Kellogg tor States Senate this tall. ‘The Attorney General says a woman Oleson on cannot use ler husband's name in polities und cannot use the prefix “Mrs.'" He holds the legal name of Mrs. Oleson is Annie Dickie Oleson, though she is a whole lot better known as Mrs, Peter Oleson, club- woman, Suffragist, Chautauqua lec- turer, the only woman speaker at the Democratic Jackson Day dinner in Washington in 1920, Democratic National this State and candidate for the Sen- atorship. Oleson iy Duluth, ne 744 TO 20 YEARS FOR ARMORY KILLING Sergt. Sheehy Shot Sergt. Major Vallance—Manslaughter Indict- ment Dismissed. Sergt, Maurice A. Sheehy, who shot und killed Sergt. Major Walter Val- lance of the 104th Field Artillery in th armory at Broadway before sentenced Judge to Sing twenty years. The killing was done while Sheehy was Intoxteated, Val- lance was his friend and was trying to stop a revel'in the armory on Feb. 14. An indictment for manslaughter in the first degree against James Tague, twenty-nine, of No. 44 Moy! Place, found last July 1, charging the killing of Ann Mungavin, was dismissed to- Melntyre upon the recommendation of Assistant District Nothing but in- hearsay evidence had and Jury and there was nothing to warrant placing Mr. Brothers who was a waitress at the Waldorf, claimed to have been hit over the head with a crucifix in a Hquor store at No, 317 in. St. day by Judge Attorney Brothers. competent and heen presented to the the defendant on trial, stated. Miss Mungavin, Bleecker Street. She died er's Hospital, Brooklyn. a FIVE-YEAR BATTLE FOR BEACH FRONT STILL ON. Ownership of a strip of beach front town of Oyster Bay, which has was subject of consideration by Justice Brook- Stehii who claims the land Is his and is suing the town of Oyater Bay for it asked for a change Justice Can- If the change Is not granted the suit, instituted In 1947, in th tigation for five years, the Cannon in the Supreme Court, lyn, to-day. Emil J of venue to Kings County. non reserved decision. will be tried next month. member of the Committee for Superintendent of Schools in Cloquet, a little town near and 68th pleaded guilty to manslaughter McIntyre and Sing prison om seven years and six months to GIRLFATALLY Five Girls and Operator in Cage; Five Jump to Safety, 7 Five girls and the operate nding to-day Lorillard Tobacco ¢ plant, Pince and Newark Avenuo, Jersey City, when the car, after running’ smoothly for three fights, be . manageable at the se were des ¢ the Senaté in an elevator t ne une ame Uns, pnd floor, vil Four of the girls and the operators leaped from the car passed’ the ond floor, The fifth girt tried to leap out, but by the de.” a time was © pinned to the fluor by the top of theme: ch, She was Muriel De Zot, i, Ofer No, 360 First Street, Jersey City. - «fh A moment afterward she dropped toot the bottom of the shaft. When shes» was got out it was found that her back), had been broken, also her wright writ and there were cuts about her head and face, At St. Francis's Hospitals it was said that she would, probably, not live through the day . % BORAH LOOKS INTO SEMENOFF CHARGE... “Ghitc tt o GA i Will Confer With U.S. Prosecutor | On Allegation of Bigamy a ] Against Cossack. r Gen. Gregorie Semenoff, Ataman of the Cossacks, who was terday from Ludiow Street Jail on cash buil of $25,000, was unable. to-.. } day to attend « of thes: as it was caught seending car and for yes- continuation heuring before Referee Olney into the ban'sruptey of the Youroveta Com- pany, upon whose cinim {hat the ; Cossack leader owed it u judgment of * $478,000 he was ‘arrested Gullie B. Golden of Clarke, Pr tice & Roulston, Senienoff’s attorney said he wa indisposed and obtained from David W. Kahn, counsel for the trustee, consent to an adjournment until next Wednesday 6 Senutor Borah was here to-day from Washington and is expected to discuss with with United States District At torney Hayward u declaration thes Russian is id to have made on en= try to this country that he had buty ~~ one wife, Publication of a story im? the Japan Advertiser shows 2 woman | In Tokio claims she is his first wie and that he is the father of her son. ke ee CHINA INDORSES BEN CONTROL, A The American Birth Control League to-day received a cable message frou Margaret Sanger in Peking, Ch The cable stated Mrs, Sanger had uddreased’ ~ an audience of thousands of students of the National University of PeRim: on the subject of birth control and its relation to national problems. ‘The mes ange continued that Young China ha» ee accepted without reservations Mra. Ranger's propaganda and she will ad- Gress other gatherings in Shanghut omie Hong Kong. THE CAUSE French writers frequently tefer to the eating habits of ;; Napoleon. , Thus, his great’ defeat at Leipsic is explained to have been partly due to an attack of indigestion. If the truth were known, many a present-day failure could be explained in the same manner. It is to prevent such failures, in a degree, that the CHILDS menu is designed. fh gloated Hen of wholeness fe scientifically prepared and cook TE Tetley’s Orange :Pekoe embodies all the blending + knowledge gained in a cen- tury of experience.‘ Its clear deep color and its refreshing fragrance come from the tender top leaves of the world’s finest tea plants. Tetley’s Orange Pekoe In 10c kages, quarter- potted: halieeeey al are. pound packages. Makes good TEA a certainty