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fa., f . - mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmtmmmmmmmm mm : k it 1 ,f mm s r - lifFrh 'ft nninhu fflULLtn. In rnlMJIi run mm um ' nrw k :amy fi.iuit uiunmi. uli j. FREE ON PAROLE "Marrying Count," Accused of Having 19 Wives, Gets Out 3 Years Ahead of Time. DUPED WOMEN HERE Detective Work of New York "Girl He Married Led to ,f Conviction in Hoboken. TRENTON, N. J, March 10. Emll Karl von Muller or "Count Vonder hagen," known as "the marrying Count," haa been paroled by the Now Jersey State Board of Prison Inspeo tors. The "Count" was sentenced In ItlO to serve eight years In the State prison for bigamy. He wma arretted In Los Angeles early In 1810, where It was said he had Just married Miss Pearl Wood Powers, daughter of a rich grocer. He was accused of having, In all, nine teen wives, but he denied that any beside his Los Angeles bride had any legal claim to call him husband. The rest, he. declared, wero Just "sweet hearts." ills arrest was brought about through the detective work of Miss Iteglna Velbelmann of No. 2051 Third Avenue, Manhattan. There were two other claimants Miss Annie Jacobs of No. 214 West Nlnety-eecond Street and Miss Bertha Albrecht of No. 75 Batnbrldge Street, Brooklyn. The "Marrying Count" was charged with bigamy In having married both Miss Velbelmann and Miss Jacobs. Mlaj Velhelmann testified aralnat him, but Miss Jacobs did not appear, at the trial In Hoboken. The record of voa Muller"s marriage to her was offered in evidence, .However. , , After be was found 'guilty lie said: "iVaever married but two women Mies' Velhelmann and Miss Power. I WW-Informed by a lawyer that th avjAlace to Miss Velhelmann was not wfwaa x cuanasrea myseii rree to marry Miss Power." The convicted bigamist said he was of nowe German birth and had served as asiomcecftfc the'Oerman Army..' In New York and in Los Angetea he was in the real estate business. 2oItranps hold up h thaw on west shore Swktn Aboard Freight After It Leaves Weehawken and Attack the Crew. HIGHLAND FALLS, N. T., March 28. Detectives seeking the murderers of Omar Hotallng, tbo night telegraph operator who was killed at his desk lastt Wednesday night, wore called won during the night to aid the crow '-..of ' West Shore freight train who hd been forced Into the caboose by m uui vi awut iwvuiy tramps, it is believed that Hotailnsa assailants , Conductor, Stanton of the freight iwopnonea mo ponce wnen me train arrived here. T.iree men were arr- rwsrea. xney were to be given a bearing. d-dny. The 'conductor said that, the tramps ' boarded the train after it left Weehawken and, Intent oA robbery, had attacked him and the ctoi uis i tummy oi j. f. Morgan, two miles below born. "Emw Pielur' TsHse Story" iv y sn Uric Acid in Your - Food , Even dogs can' eat too much meat. Certainly many people "dig their grave with their teeth." ' Few get eaoegh exercise to iustity a meat diet, (or meat brings urlo acid. The kid neys will try hard to get rid of that poison, but often a backache, diisiness, urinary disorder, or some other alight symptom will sbow that the kidneys art' weakening and need help. The timVtried remedy, then, is Doan's Kidney Pills. & New York City Man Says So: Paul Anderson. 800 W. 148th St., New York City, says: "I was subject to attacks of backache and the kidney secretion were too frequent in passage, causing .me much annoyance. As soon as I began taking Doan's Kidney Pills, I felt all right, I used about three boies altogether and have bad no further neea of any medicine for my kidneys. IDOAN'SI I K at ail Druf Maraa i i,i usrasetw.T. "PolumurieL " New Uniform Dress for Women vwvviririrvvrrrinnftfvvi TTt7 Mrs, Mildred J Landone I am T ls sMssssssssssTl LLLK .f a Costume to Suit All Occasions Will Be Popular, and Plans to Open a Prize Com petition for Designs by Artists. Dff Marguerite Mooera Morthall. How would you like a PolymurlelT No, It's not a new kind of cracker nor a new brand of cigarette. It's the namo of the uniform dress for women, In which Mrs. Mildred Johnston Sf SKt - BBBSv meni, o. ozs niversiae urive, and found a slender. Pink-cheeked young woman with a thick pile of ash-blonde hair and a dreamy smile. "'Poly Is for many,"' she explained, "and 'muriel' is the name of my little sister. It Isn't the title that matters, so much as the thing It stands tor. I,sjn thoroughly convinced that one of he greatest needs of the present day Is a costume for women which may be worn on all occasions and In all seasons, which will be as suitable for a reception as for a business office which will never go out of style." ' WILL BE BEAUTIFUL, HEALTH FUL AND SIMPLE. ."And what's It going to look Uker I Inquired anxiously. "It Is to bs as besutlful as pes slble and yet consistent with hsalth and comfort," she replied. "My own idea of a Polymuriel In cludes trousers. They will be rather full and reach to the ankle. Over them will be worn a skirt sufficiently wide to make walking comfortable, and ending about midway bstween knee and ankle. In rainy weather It will be possi ble to butten baok the trouser legs until they do not oome be low the edge of the skirt, and there Is therefore nothing about the ankles to eelleet moisture. The skirt will be hung (rem the shoulder on suspenders. The waist will end at the normal wslst-llne and have loose, full sleeves and a neek that can be msde either high or low. No cor set will be worn with the costume. "But I by no means set myself as the proper authority to design the Polymuriel," Mrs. Landone added quickly. '1 am only giving you my rather vague and tentative Idea of It I want the design finally accepted to be that of a real artist, and there fore I am going to open a competi tion, with prizes. All Polymuriel de signs submitted will be shown to the public, and the winner will be picked by a committee of representative women. "I do not advocate that all women should be garbed in Polymurlels on all occasions, but I should like to have such a costume accepted as suitable whenever one wishes to wear It. For travelling, for Inclement weather and for all gatherings of a serious nature it would be Just the thing. "The church, for example. Is the last place In the world to advertise the modiste. I know that many peo ple stay away from church because they dread the sartorial competition waged there. And I have always felt sympathy for poor working girls who attend meetings for their benefit and are confronted with a platform full of richly dressed women." AND IT WON'T DETRACT FROM THE BEAUTY OF WEARERS. "But can any uniform dress be found." I objected, "which will prove becoming to every woman?" "Yes," continued Mrs. Landone. "because women are naturally beau tiful whatever they wear. "Any woman who has managed to look beautiful while -wearing the absurd fsshions of the last few yesrs need net fear that a uniform dress will detract from her charm- Everything Imag inable hips,, been fsshlonsble Mrtww . eh eu Iters, wide shetil dsre, arms Hiss balloons, arme . . . Include Regular Trousers, So There! How Can It Fail? """UTiTrri i'lrr th 'rety tout, away mm trm am Believes Her Idea for jjanaone nopes to Interest us all. She herself is so Interested that she has written a book about It, and she plans soon to open a prlte competition to which well-known artists will be Invited to contribute their Ideas of a Polymuriel. All designs submitted will be placed on exhibition and a committee of prominent women will be asked to award the prize to that uniform dress whkh they consider best meets the needs of the modem woman. "What doea the name meanr was my first curious question when I had called at Mrs. Landone's aparfr hlpe broad, hips narrow. We have had the walst-llne underthe arms, at the hips snd now finally It haa slipped down to the ankles. "Hair has been fluffed, waved, sleek, wild, borrowed, greased and dyed all colors ot the rainbow. Bhoes were once pointed and at another time broad, with all kinds of heels to Increase the height and tho agony. "When we revisw the galaxy of fashions thst has been thrust upon long suffering womankind we must truly admit that the female is attractive in spite of these disfigurements. "Most of us have a horror ot mo notony and believe that chango Is the only thing conducive to happi ness. Tet there was dignity In the custom of, former days, when women raised their wool and flax and soun their thread and the same garment was handed down from mother to daughter and from father to son." Maybe there was dignity but even a child hates to wear hand. me downsl And then Mrs. Landone frankly at tacked Now York's general adher ence to the old proverb (doubtless in vented by a tailor), "clothes make the man." "It Is a fact," she said, "that many sensitive women, whose minds and attributes would lend glory to our sex, are shut in, year In, year out, for want ot suitable or rather stylish clothes. It is easy to say that great minds should be ubove such trifles. Indeed, thoro are many who aro above the dc ) to possess, but they are not aDove inu nun o: ino ridicule or their neighbors. Tho doors are shut to them, not only in tho social world but also in toe business world. WHERE UNIFORM C08TUME f WOULD BE A OOD8END. "I am speaking for the sensible woman who stays at home becauso she has nothing to wear. The pre dlcamont is not a pleasant one. When it occura repeatedly, not among hun dreds but among hundreds of thou sands of women, the remedy should be found." I have never thought there were many Flora Macflinvsys in Now York, but Mrs. Landona promptly supplied a long list. "There aro the mothers ot growing children," she said, "and tho business women who aro too fatigued to give much time to fineries. There is the young, small-salaried girl who is sup. porting a mother or a brother. There are teachers, social service workers and nurses. It Is a shame theso women should not exercise their full social Influence because they have not the stylish clothes of flighty women. "Modern women often wish they were men, snd I think the wish ep rings from the yet unrecog nised advantage of the simplicity of men's attire. To be aure, men's dress to-dsy Is unbesutiful. But in this mattsr of dress men may be willing to meet woman half way, and when the latter adopt the prinolptes of slmplloity and uniformity we may see a few low neokt and laee ruffles In the sombre masculine wardrobe," Mrs. Landone hinted smilingly. "At any rate. Pol rra Uriel, uniform dress for wesson weald save Usee, aaa Matt mU mm tart mmF txi iriirrv WORLD, SAT " ejjMavt TM CAAT an nwsi m rm I va SKOWIMC tht four FOR cvenypAr As TWRfMT, TOR irAjar FEVERViCTIMJUMPSTO DEATH FROM WINDOW Mrs. Heney, Sister of State Ex cise Commissioner Farley, Was a Story Writer. Mrs. Ellen, Heney, a sister of State Excise Commissioner Parley, jumped from a fifty story wlndon of Marlon Court, a fashionable apartment house at No. 672 St. Nlcholaa Avenue at A. M. 'to-day and was killed. She had been suffering from typhoid fever for two weeks and was de lirious. The nurse, Miss Margaret O'Con nor, went to the bathroom to prepare some medicine, atd re-entered the room Just as Mrs. Heney Jumped. The patient bad raised the window and climbed over a nursery guard to make the leap. Night Supt Thomas Page and tbo elevator operator found the body In tho courtyard and carried It Inside the building. Thomas Heney, the husband, ts a lace salesman. Mrs. Heney would have been taken to a hospital several days ago except for tho fact that her doctor thought It Inadvisable to move her. Mrs. Heney was thirty-two years old and was a writer on New York papers before her marriage. She was at one time editor ot a woman's paper In Detroit. She had written many short stories before and after her marriage six years ago. She was born In Blnghamton. One of her brothers, Vincent J. Farley, Is a' New York newspaper amn. Besides a husband she la survived by a four-year-old son. FOURTEEN-INGH GUNS START FOR ENGLAND Two Naval Monsters Lashed to Deck of Orduna, Which Carries Other Pieces. With two fourteen-lncb guns lashed to her deck and consigned to a Arm In England which has purchased them for tbo British navy, the Cunard liner Orduna sailed to-day for Liverpool. In her hold were other artillery pieces and war supplies, and to add to the warlike aspect of the trip, she will call at Halifax for English army re servists. The big guns on the forward deck were held In place by specially con structed frames. Tbey are fifty-three feet long, fifteen Inches In diameter at the breech, and welgb 170,000 pounds each. It was said they were Intended for naval use, but the ar tillery pieces In the bold are said to be for Held service. MlMoart'a OMest Ma a U log. RICHARD, JJo March JO. Copies of records received here to-day from Bos ton fix the age of John Holloren ot this city at 101 years. Mr. Hollorea had lost track of bis years sad birth records were resorted to In an aCort to deter' Ms yum.. He is salt, ! M the eaaV r A III iT A . A Jl MM itl HER NURSE, MAEOM " TMnr 0r Ait Nt lOWNtCK ttl IvVMiMeT rnsA MMuaai. 1 mMSL ft lOWNCCK r I KAUTVOWU SutMVtTMt SfttCOVAJft CMlLV 6A V 1 w Ni Mr Ml w IN AUT01STS ARREST AS SLAYER OF CHILD Girl Swears She Was Um bach's Companion When He Ran Over Boy and Fled. More than Ave months after seven-year-old Walter Olllo ot No. V North Third Street, Woodslde, L. I, was run down and kitted by an auto mobile, Julius Umbach Jr.. twenty two years old, of No. 15 Grand Ave nue, Corona, has been arrested and wilt be arraigned In the Long Island City Police Court to-day charged with running the automobile that killed the boy. Umbach, the son of a wealthy con tractor and builder, was charged with homicide as a result of a state ment made to detectives by Miss Agnes Fllckenstoln of No. 0 Jud- son Avenue, Long Island City. Bhe said she was In the machine and that Umbach was driving. The Olllo boy was struck at Jaok son Avenue and Sixth Street, Wood side, on Oct. t last. The automobile did not stop and the only clues were the color of the machine yellow and the fact that a man and woman were In It. Ever since the tragedy the police have been Investigating. Lieut. Rob ert Williams and Detectives Mind helm and Hurton of the Queens Head quarters were told a day 'or two agu that Miss FUckensteln was the woman oassenger in the car. Ques tioned, she admitted that and named Umbach. After his arrest yesterday Umbach denied that he was driving the car and said he had sold the machine before the accident happened. He re fused to say who now owns the auto. Young Umbach was held In $15,000 ball by Magistrate fkcb m in Island City court to-day. His father furnished the bond. Gets HI Maa After Six Meatfca Haat. John J. White, known as "Whiter." whose picture la No. 8346 In the Ilogues' Oalery, was brought to Po lice Headquarters this morning charged with robbery, having been arrested last night by Detective Cas- sidy, who had bean looking for him for six months. Daniel J. flupple, manager of the Ilronx Theatre, at No , 1..I.. A .i ...... ... naHHH 101. F I ni!ii, niuimri mo iflutu. was held up and robbed on Thin) Avenue, Oct. IS, by three men. and he told the police White was one of them. White was sentenced to nineteen yours in Hlng Hlnir In 1907 for boating and robbing Jose Medina, but he was pardoned by Gov, Dlx. Clareacc D. Marti a Sale!. (Bpocttl to T!i. EnBlnf World.) NEWAKK, N. J., March 20 Clar ence D. Martin, thirty-eight years old, former treasurer of the United States Express Company and an executive of ficer of the Wells Fargo ftxpresa Com pany, died to-day at the Homeopathic Hospital in n"iB. lira en. in flicted wound In his head. Martin, who rCBiaCU WIUI fiisj wtiv eut wwv vuiiurcii &t No. 106 Elm Btret, MontcUlr, was prompted him to tako hU life U not Known STEAMSHIPS DUE TO-DAY. arlma SL Thamia... 10 A.M. Calabria. Palermo 10 A.M. Ptfrtftj Mwsm4....m,u. is SO, lfll. on All Onnaaiana. Ul " wOHCM HAW AIMHYT tMVKOJ r-S V2L THSI CCBTMtr I m m h I Y MEN A FtV v I HI5 I mmnm EX-WIFE WANTS BACK PHOTOGRAPHS LA EVE Court Refuses to Order Return by Former Husband-She Threat ens to Tell Anthony. Clara Roles;, a pretty young woman who lives at No. ISt Mortense Street, Platbush, doesn't believe an ex-bus-band should keep his ex-wlfe's photo graphs, at least not the kind' of photo graphs her ex-husband bos, and It he doesn't return them she Is going to appeal to Anthony Comstock. She said so to-day after Magistrate Steers In the Flatbush Court had dis missed her complaint against her ex husband, Arnow Koch, ot No. 425 East Eighth Street, Flatbush. There are other things the young woman wants returned, she told the - wB.-t,,. '" mnil (mnnrrnnt 'an wall at,.. are posed a la Eve. The woman ea- plalnod the pictures were taken be- fore they wero divorced In June, 1913. Ho forced me to pose for the pic- tures but tho films too," Koch a for mer wife naid. "lid Mid thv w.rn'enncn h1 Pck- up In harbor. for his eyes only, but I'm nfrnld." Koch said no demand had ever been made for the pictures or the other articles. The Court advised him either to return or destroy tho photo graphs. ARRAIGN EX-POLICEMAN ON 'POISON PEN' GHAR6E Court Frees Herlihy, Pending In vestigation, Refusing to Accept HandwrKing Experts' Evidence. Former Detective Lieutenant John J. Herlihy was arraigned before Magistrate Appleton In Centre Street court, to-day, charged with sending an anonymous letter to Clement J. Drlscoll, of tho llureau of Municipal Research; the letter was an attack on Capt. Alonxo Cooper, commander or tno ourtn District brancb bureau, whero Herlihy formerly served. Cooper was said, In the letter, to be aianonesi onu immoral. William J. Kinsley, handwriting ex pert, picked out Herllly's writing from the blotter of the branch bureau as the same as that In tno anonymous leuor. iiinsicy ana uriscou were not In court to-day. Herltly told of his recora as a poucoman ror twenty seven years, recounting several of the important canes In which he has worxed, including tne uollneux the Ilaby Clark kidnapping and the uoage-Morso investigation. The hear Ing was put over until Monday. "I wouldn't bold anybody on tho word of an expert," said Maglntrato Appleton. "The best two In tho world will disagree It employed on opposite siues, uei ocuer evidence than that or I will not hold this man. He Is released on his own recornlxancs. I don't ntd any ball from a pensioner or the city or his recora." Horllhy said tho lottor was a frame up. THINKS SON WAS POISONED. Inquest Will be Held Into Death r off KpDli Bar. An Inquest to ascertain the cause of tho sudden death of Frederick Kemp, elght-and-a-half-years-old, son of Dr. Charles Kemp, of No. (D Tomp kins Avenue, Ilrooklyn, was ordered by Coroner ISrnest Wagner, to-day. The boy was taken violently 111 at the home of his grandfather, II. Herman, No. 209 Division Avenue, last evunlnsr. His father was summoned and. with two other physicians, workid over th'i boy until two o'clock, when he died, presumably of ptomaine poison ing. To.day. Dr. Kemp learned tha hnv had not been at school yesterday or tho day before and on l.-.vc tlon. came upon Information, so he told the coroner, that leads him to belleva 111 son was killed with an Irritant poi son. In his delirium, last night, the little fallow kept screaming; "I . escaped from then; I escaped from them.'' Dr. Kemp aald bad Dors older than hi sea had tuerrtled with him lately. FOUND FLOATING IN GRENADA HARBOR Newark Man Says West Indies Whites Look on This as German Ruse. News of the will-o'-the-wisp Oer mas cruiser Karlsruhe was brought to New York to-day by Edward vraasworu or Newark, a passenger on the steamship Parlma of the Que beo Line. Mr. Wadaworth, who had spent the last twn mnnltia nvitlalttM a h.u. . -v Weat Indlea In a 10-foot seheeasr, put lnt hrbo, ot 8t Ckor Orenade, a British possession, aad saw there two olrcular life-buoys marked "Karlsruhe" and several cap Among the native Inhabitants of rjrenada the story persists) that tha German .cruiser ran Into a reef at night and that her commander, after disembarking his crew, blew the ves sel up. Mr. Wadsworth sold be made every effort to verify the story but could not "The white population of Grenada," he continued, "believes that the Karlsruhe is safe aad sound some where and that her captain simply ordered the life buoys aad the oape thrown overboard where they would bo found and lead the British to de duct that she had been lost at sea." The harbor or Point a i'ltra, a French possession la the Leeward Isl ands, Mr. Wadaworth said, bs fomad to have been prepared against a naval raid by the Oermans. Bteel rails had been driven Into the harbor bottom so that tbslr ends stuck up, a brlstllag under-water menace to the hull of any vessel attempting to enter the barber. FREE WOMAN OF DUNE FOR PRISONER'S ESCAPE Magistrate Releases Mrs. Phillips In Tombs Case After She Helps Cause Abrcms's Arrest. Mrs. Fannie Phillips, arrested In the Tombs In connection with the escape from a cell there ot Jacob Abroms, charged with forgery and subsequently recaptured, was to-day released at the request of Assistant District Attorney Von rtcnsaelaer, who stated to Magis trate Appleton, In Centre Street Court, that she hod given Information re sulting In Abrams's apprehension and also in the arrest ot Bernard Cava naugh of No. 433 West Thirtieth Street. Cavanaugh Is sold to be a member of the gong headed by "Owney" Mad den, now In the Tombs charged with the murder, last November, ot Patsey Doyle In a saloon at Eighth Avenue and Forty. first Street On the day Abrama escaped from Cell No. 114, on the" drat tier, Mrs. Phillips was visiting him. While she was talking, a man, said by her to be Cavanaugb, told her she was wanted at "Owney" Madden's cell an another tier. It Is now believed that as she turned away, cavanaugn gave Aorama ina pass which enabled him to leave the prison, i n pus naa neen oouunea. the police hold, by Patrick Dorgau, who was found In the prison without one and placed under arrest Cavaaaugfe and Dorgaa were held to-day la H.W0 bell eieh fsrmuaioa. ' ' Uas Moaday. OFF FOR WNE! COREY PREDtCTS : War Great Help to Axnk$aik i 4mt l BUSINESSES inausincs, Declares rof- a .yi mer Steel Magnate! The White Btar liner, AdrletUi ftcnoduicu to sail At noon to-dar far, Liverpool, was delayed three hearf on account of the Immense anUnat of freight crammed Into her het and lashed about her decks. Ma haa ' on board between 17.00 aafi lMt" tons, said to be the bluet' earge that ever left port on a at earns M The promenade deck looked' pfca aa automobile show, being crowds with motors and trucks. ' , Mysterious lookinr boxes were' he- lng lowered Into the hold, Ul' nihrsW. ing. They were labelled "r Ti-f ery." Scores ot eases msjrksid "Sewsk knives" were also put on hosird 'assst the holds are crowded with hams and provisions of all tlons. Tons of tobacco for the) asea la the trenches were alee 'hr the The AdrlaUo carried Me passengers, SO second cabin and;;Ufl In the steerage. Moet.of tWUMf are Canadians and young stag! -en, . men, not styled .reservists, kmt aaaa? bound for .the front , " T' ...lit. mil. 'm ' t uiiKiii tynjs vurwy, rorrasr.BSSMl est the Steel Trtist, and Ws wtfel fome1- ly Miss Mabel airman, were sweater their chateau,' VIMe akls.1 'thlrtsiet miles southeast' of Paris,' which (tier were compelled to leave aeon after the. war 'started, the OerfeaM'betihr near Paris.1 The gtoSBMswsre'cea verted Into Stockyards, tint IWiva aiaee been vacated. The Coreya are rolag to put the chateau Into Its former condition and expect to reraala, there tour months. ' "This country Is araitaaUy fettksc a wonderful buxness," saia air. Corey, "and the buslaess 1a veins to Increase. It's coins; up, up aad will ooatlnue to to up for' many years to come. It Is a basin eas, of steady . growth and the country wOl eee ka,.a year the greatest jweeperjty It haa ever known. Wa are vetUag a area trade away from Bnropa and jnueh,!. It Is going to stick. To the war, et course, must tw attrtbtited the wan. derful Increase of our preeperhy, hst ' we are not going to lose. It aCtot.tssjr, ar. ... , - . There will be a lot IsjeajntM;. England and Oermaay wUl Ke- MnssOsf' ' return uwiwrw vwrr.,ww..ZTJiii able to aet back Into their .est NWV In manufacturing.' Meantime, wa.nde ' going right ahead, making aHklade'oc , ig antaiaesi oc . j la ever, there. and trosa Wh' , V Wf-Ja,.- . ..' gooas. tvaen insj'war m will be a wonderful demand rope for our manufactured .It . n.iMl,1 H ncu hm iui tmww i.h.1.1 - , A number of French vhlages are kr i the vicinity of Mr. Corey's iHace.anshs he proposes to give the natlvse) sss' much worx as possiMo, All Parties Kadarswd (lixclil to TV lXasai WoiM. STAMFORD, Coan. March M 1 P. Waterbury. Town Clerk stnee 1 and so poplar la local peilUes as te bav endorsedb all parties, died lo-dag. was sisiy-iow years oia. "Hat, a a satsbaa Sssf I 1E safe von rtt firsts lis ri Rye in the Boo-rsllahla . - bottU-"s seed keette w keen good whufcey load." Men wka Mtroolse hi dubs and cafes on the "Flf Avenue" or 'Broadway" of mm mmrnW au Dig ciues, are carwairs' .rjM tltmin of ths' old school" and' I' liWU a those of the new, call for Car- I wjjB I horasa K7 IjjtflS I mWART DBTOLDtO 00. ?J&mW rkbssleUs NewTsik lisliirs , . . mML BBHUl e . MM CleaniniT Fluid jm tfffb Clean JrJf Covert lbm K.V?fr Cloth 'mmL i ,fli-ik w-""rf fkssvssasaasV I Uk. 1 ..W-r. '11CBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBS I . . 5,., slsnnnnw Ready tm wtr te m -Si2B.fa.aWj$ HPaTssB m m am I 1 vim liiiiiliTlVl'iVi'irjiiiiiiilTiiil'VMiiin