Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, June 30, 1916, Night Extra, Page 9, Image 9

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    1 CAMDEN WILL PUSH
r i
$
DESPITE SETBACK
(jity Ofllclnls and Manufacturers
ViH Resume Battlo for Im
provement Denied by Fed
eral Board
WILL ASK FOR HEAttlNG
A reouest for a publ'.o heArlng before the
TeAtml Board of Engineers for Itlvers nnd
ititbdn. to show the necessity of deepen-
flnff the Delnwftro nt that point, will bo
1 '??. 'V... ntnvnr Hilar OB II. Rll S. backed hv
! K- !.(.. trial nml hustness lnterext.il of
ino iuuu.. - -
rMden.
This step was decided upon today follow
ing tho report of tho board disapproving
(the project. Tho hoard oald It waft not
Convinced that any Improvement was neces
' txtV at tho present time, for the reason
i that existing depths In tho main channel
.sat of Petty Island appeared to he fairly
' adequate for tho trnfllo making use of tho
channel.
Discussing the matter, Mayor Kills eald!
"While I deeply regret tho action of tho
ami nt nncrlneem. 1 think tho Imnrov.
went will como In tlmo and that the board
may bo convinced of tho necessity of this
undertaking by a public hearing. The niat-
, ter has been turned over to City Solicitor
Bleakly, who will prepare more data and
suit for A hearing nt Washington."
i. Slhoo tho ngltatlon for tho deepening of
tho river at this point started, the Mayor
1 added, Petty's Island was bought by Crew
Levlck & Co., who subsequently sold 100
' 6res to tho Cramp Shipbuilding Company,
Doth of theso concerns will build plants
and will rcqulro an additional outlet on tho
Camden side of tho Islnnd, Tho Mayor also
pointed out that tho d'ty owned a public
wharf at Pavonla, which will bo Improved
and brought up to meet present require
ments, If tho Government will co-operate.
The position of tho bonrd Is set forth In
the following statement:
Tho Federal Board, after a long light
made by Camden, still regards present river
improvements an ndequnto and tho channel
east of Petty's Island As nmple, Tho
engineers, howover, arc open to conviction
and will arrange for n, hearing when Cam-
dn Is prepared to reopen tha fight. Tho
position of tho board Is set forth In tho
following statmont:
'Tho rlvor and harbor act approved
March 4, 1915, contained provision for n
preliminary examination of Delaware ntvor,
from mouth of Cooper Itlver to Fisher's
Point Dyke on the Now Jersey shore, in
cluding consideration of any proposition
for co-oporatlon on tho part of local In
terests. Tho required examination was
made by the district officer, nnd pursuant
t6 favorable recommendations thereon a
lurvey was authorlzod. Tho report of tho
district oincer on tho survey Is favorablo
for the Improvement of the locality to tho
extent of recommondlng a channel ID feet
deep and 300 feet wldo with an opening In
the dyko 800 feet wide, the qhannc'l to fol
low generally tho present Una of deepest
water, at a total estimated cost of $72,875,
and $2600 nnnunlty for maintenance, no
work to be dono by tha United States until
the city has actually secured and opened to
public uso for freight transfer purposes a
wharf within tho boundaries of tho pro
posed channel.
"In accordance -with law, the report has
teen referred to the Doard of Engineers for
River nnd Harbors for consideration and
frccommondatlon. From tho information pre
sented, tho board Is not convinced of the
i-advisability of tho United States undertak
ing any Improvement at this locality nt
Athe present tlmo for tho reason that tho
aexlstlng depths In tho main channel cast of
'Petty's Island appear to bo fairly adequate
, for the traffic making use of this channel.
The difficulties that exist are mainly due to
shoal water at tho wharves In tho ap
'proaches thereto, but theso conditions nro
'customarily loft to the' care of local Inter
ests. To provide another channel along the
front of the wharves would apparently In
volve excessive cost as compared with tho
.commercial benefits resulting to the gen
eral public
"All nartles interested In the nronosod
Improvement are Invited to submit, within
a period of 30 days from tho date of this
notice, statements and arguments bearing
upon tho necessity for tha Improvement In
the Interests of commerco and navigation.
Such statements should be addressed to
The Board of Engineers for Itlvers nnd
Harbors, Southern Building, Washington,
D. C. Should a hearing be desired this can
be arranged by corrcspondenco with tho
board.' "
If
EVENING LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, J"UM 80, 1916,
p
:sr
CASEMENT'S' POEMS AMONG RECENT PUBLICATIONS
PAGEANT FOR FOURTH MARKS
LAWNDALE'S CELEBRATION
Continental Troopers and Colonial
Maids to Be in Farado
Cllrl Scouts from the Baptist Temple, a
troop of Continental soldiers. Colonial belles
and many pretty JloatH depleting tho prog
ress of the city apd country will be seea
In the pageitnt which will be a prom
inent feature of tha Lawndalc-Crescentvllle
Fourth of July celobratlon.
In addition to prizes for the best-drilled
troops, there will also bo prizes for the best
floats, most American costumes and for tho
novelties.
, The pageant will bs given under tha di
rection of Charles J, Kraus, iho success
fully conducted last- year's Celebration. It
will be led by the P. O, S, of A. Band. At
the conclusion of tho parade residents of
the community will assemble on Gilbert's
Field, where the Declaration of Indepen
dence will be read, followed by patriotic
songs by the children.
inere will ba sports and a band con
cert in the nrtornoon and a display of
fireworks in tho evening. For the sporting
events 12 cups. 12 silver medals and 13
gold medals will be awarded.
SCRANTON SEEKS U. S. AID
IN HALTING MINE CAVE-INS
Sinking, Second in Six Years, Menac
ing Buildings
BCRANTON, ra... June 30. Following a
series qt mine cave-Ins during tha last six
days in the portion of the city bounded by
Wain avenue, Jaokson street. West Lacka
wanna avenue and Robinson street, com
prising about eight squares, In which prop
erty worth $300,000 has been damaged, the
West Scranton Surface Protective Asso
ciation, which has been seeking soma reme
dy for tha condition af attain, has ap.
pealed for both Bute and national Inter
ventlon, tha city admitting that It Is power-1
less.
The cave-Ins are tha second within six
years In tha same territory, and ara said
to be dua to tha mining of more than 50
per cent, of tha coal under that part of the
city. Tha total damage there In the six
'frs hag been m6re than half a million
oouars. Twenty business houses, pearly
M many residences, St, Joseph's Assyrian
Church and Ko. 16 school have been dam
Med In the present settling. The school
was recently rebuilt at a cost of 170,000.
following the previous cave-In.
PLEADS GUILTY TO MURDER
Kan Who Killed Brother-ln-taw to Be
Sentenced July 31
?OTTSVirXE. June SO, James O'Brien,
of Lost Creek, today pleaded guilty to
second degree murder, by causing the death
WjItUm Noon, ft, brother of Mr.
Brian, several wefjc ago. O'Brien had
otfn to Shenandoah and upon hlj return
jwn lata, Mrs. O'Brien complained that
w brother. Noon, had beateu her, TW
wMa O'Brien, who heat Noon with a
tod, inflleiisg Injuries, from which h
gM At that State. IloimlUl At Fountain
fjpwfx. Mft WUt h liojiUussd. 04 July It,
IRISH REBELS' POEMS
PUBLISHED AS LEADER
GETS DEATH SENTENCE
Verses by Casement Included in
Remarkable Little Volume by
Pearso, Plunkett and Mac-
Donngh
OTHER' NEW" VOLUMES
"roems of the Irlxh Itevolntlonary
Hrothorhood" (Smith, Mnynard &. Co., New
York), fresh, with a rare timeliness, may bo
read through In nn hour, hut their remem
brance Is likely to last much longer say,
n lifetime, at least with some ot Us. Vot
theso 87 verses como to renders fragrant,
not of the lamp, but of swords nnd blood,
of ago-long yearnings mid battle, however
brief; of rebellion, of Drlson, of death. They
ore the worlt of Thomas MacDonogh, I'. II.
Pearse (Pad r Ino MooI'laral) and Joseph
Mary riunltctl, signatories of Ireland's
May Dny declaration of Indepemlcnco (at
ready pathetic In Its seeming remoteness),
and ot Sir Itoger Casement, who was yes
torday convicted of high trenson nnd sen
tenced to death. ThO rost are dead, Offi
cially dead ; tha bullets were Urltlsh.
Howover, there Is not a breath of Drlttah
sentiment In tho poems themselves; thoy nro
more Irish than Yento nnd Hyde and Man
gan ever were, nnd they palo In their fierce
unity even the passlonnto native fnlth of so
Celtic a poet ns Lionel Johnson, whoso
"Ways of War" Is used as prologue to tho
book. Tho foreword might well hnvo been,
Instead, "They went forth to battle, but
they nlways fell," for If over tho talo of
Ireland's ageless failure was written it Is
written In these little pieces, which bear the
nntlonnl Imprint of scorn and rang In each
line. Technically, they nro what ono expects
In this sort of writing now drenmy In out
line, now strongly palpnblo In their endeavor
to record an emotion nlways with tho senso
of Incompleteness upon them, even as tho
lives and dreams of their creators woro In
complete. To those Americana who thrilled to tho
drums of Stephens Qreen, oversea. It Is
enough to say that of the four poets Mac
Donngh and Plunkott nro thi) most defi
nitely poetlo; Fearse the most Irish, nnd
Casement tho most classic. N'0110 of them
Is Mlltonle and none maudlin. For Bhcer
beauty of Imauerv nnd bedlzenment ot
vsound, Plunkott's "Whlto Dovo of tho Wild,
Dark Eyes" is supremo among Its fellows:
tho bald melodrama of hatred In tho next
sonnet, celebrating Britain's fall, sounds
tragically silly beside It. But tho poems
cannot bo Judged by the workaday meas
ure; they are Inextricably blended with tho
history of the men who wrote them. This
history Is gently und sanely set forth In
a preface by Tadrnlc Colum.
That those men were students and sol
diers Is n thing to pralso: but that they
added to that tho craf t of the lylc is won
d or fill, nnd tho noto of lyric detestation has
rung with no such clanging vigor since
Swinburne's "Go Down to Hell." So,
whother tho reader reads for the curiosity
ot old forms, as In Casement's "Hamllcar
Barca," or for mystic comfort In Plunk
ott's "When All tho Stars," or for epigram
matic sheen, as In MacDonnEh's quaint
quatrain, nr for homely common Benso, ns
In Ills tare ot tno wcuucu tinner, ne rausi
feel, with each word, tho stir of tho heart
which Is paBslonato. and which. Mr. Yeats
says, "must be sad." For ovor It all is the
smoke of old wars and tho call or them
"who took up spears and died for a name."
A sweeping Indictment of pro-Cerman
propaganda In tho United States In general,
nnd of the activities that have bcon hero
displayed In the interests of tho German
Empire by' the National Gorman Alliance In
particular. Is tho sum and sub3tanco of
Qustavus Ohllngor's little book, "Their
True Faith nnd Alleglanco" (Macmlllan
Company, New York).
Without waste of words, and In a se
quential array of facts, dates and figures,
Mr. Ohllnsrer scores the pro-German activi
ties that have "boon touched upon" In tho
nubile nrlnts of this country for the past
18 mohths. He makes claim, and supports.
It In many instances by proot provcu, mat
the National German Alliance, of which C.
J. Hexamcr Is president, stands for a policy
as exemplified In German kulturpollttc
"our bwn prestlgo depends upon the prestige
of tho Fatherland, and for that reason we
cannot allow any disparagement of Ger
many to go unpunished." Mr. Ohllnger
blames the Prussian, "whose level Is to sink
Lusttanlas," nnd not he south German as
typified by such men as Carl Schun. men
who lovo their ndopted country as they
lovo music, poetry and Idealism, for the
"misguided energies" that have been dis
played In the Interests of Germany In this
country slnco tha outbreak of tho European
war.
There Is a passionately patriotic foreword
to tho book by Owen Wleter, who says It
should be read two or three times by every
American who believes In "Union, In Lin
coln and In liberty."
Discovered a new Jack London! Whether
a better London than tho one who gave us
"Tha Call of the Wild" and a score of
inhi hlnnr1.nntthlinriprv vnrnft of thft out-
nMnnr, Im n mn t tr n f nupR t lnn Tn "The L,lt
tie Lady'of the Big House" (Macmlllan Com
pany, n, X,) Air, ,onuun inea iu cmur iub
ninla nf w.!LiraH FinMof v a nil nptn At tlmflfl
a little 111 at case. Accordingly we get a curi
ous intermingling 01 JiL'in. innny repartee
and much concerning tha technicalities of
stock breeding. It Is unfortunate for the
tale that London seems unacquainted with
the former and that the latter Is very out
of place In such a story, Tho plot Is, to say
the least, banal. It Is a plain, unadorned
tale of the "eternal triangle" presented
frankly and wltnout embellishments as
such. Nor la Mr, London's treatment of his
BUbJect at all remarkable. The, best feature
of the book Is the character drawing, which
Is delightful. Paula, the young wife, will
probably attract us most, and because of
the fact, the traglo end may seem a little
unnecessary,
LARGEST OLD BOOK STORE IN AMERICA
Bought
iniiTJb'C Let our
lllllis shelves siiGrirest
your reading.
Pay us a visit.
There are 300,000 volumes,
on every conceivable subject,
displayed here. But do not
imagine you must wade
through a mass of books to
come to one which interests
you. The books are classified
in sections, and you can go
from section to section, stop
ping just when and. where
you please, Our little price
is marked in each volume.
School and College Text Books
Bought and Sold
Leary's Book Store
M'mth Sir? Bf lew Wfariwt
Offfltt tat OJk
AD WEEK MARKED
BY PUBLISHERS
Century Company Issues De
lightful nnd Instructive Book
let on Types
A booklet on the whyn nnd wherefores
of that mysterious source of modern prog
ress, printing type, Is rare enough. A booK
let that leads many a small advertiser-
nnd bigger ones, too, for that matter out
of tho sloughs ot poor "dlsplAV" Mid
wasted money, should win wide ftcelftma"
Hon among Its benefactors. But a booklet
that does nil this, and does It with such a
senso ot personality and suoh a srnse of
humor ns "Making Typo Work," deserves
to win n sale of 7000 extra copies by com
ing out In "ad week." I'erhnps tho Century
Company thought .of that.
Anyway, here Is a contribution to the
eclonco of typo nnd printing which Would
ho called scholarly It Its Author, Denjamln
Sherhow, hadn't put It up In the simplest
nnd shortest of tormn. it 1 full of succinct
nnd sound advice About the Use of this
typo face and of that to secure desired ef
fects and the equnlly Important use ot
white space nnd "lends," Hut, mora than
that, It Is put together with nn Ingenuity
nnd a wit that make th little volume good
rending oven to the average man who
doesn't know an em so.uad from a pikestaff.
It would not be far wrong to make the
stAtemant that the stories In "Old Judge
Priest" (George II. Doran Company, New
York) are. taken as a whole, the finest col
lection of short stories that has appeared
In America for several years, lrvln S.
Cobb has written tho stories In his moro
serious mood, and, ns In tho case of "The
Moiled Buzzard, " there can be nothing but
praise for his efforts. In the present vol
ume tho render Is again Introduced to Judge
Priest nnd before wo finish h la llkoly
to put that delightful old gentleman Into n
very high nlcho among his favorlto charac
ters In fiction. Thero ennnot be loo much
of "Old Judge Priest."
The popularity of tlio "historical ro
manco" hns, for sovernl years, bcon notice
ably on tho wane, after Its long period of
prosperity. Not only has the quantity fall
on olT, hut also ahd most evldontly the
quality has suffered. Porhnps, after all.
this was tho reason for the waning Of
popular lntero.it In this character of story.
If all theso romances had boon as enter
taining and enjoynblo ns "Tho Bright Eyes
of Danger" (J. B. Llpplncott Company,
Philadelphia), tho modern school of un
healthy realism might never have gained the
strength It holds today. John Foster, author
of this new Btory, deserves all kinds of credit
for his wholly delightful pleco ot work. It Is
a tale of tho "Voting Pretender" and his Ill
fated attempt to como back Into his own.
Tho hero Is a King George's man, and tho
heroine belongs to a Scottish Clan Willing
to go to nhy ektrema la nld the young
Stuart prince. The result may be Inferred,
but not the all-around Interest of the tale,
Kven when fr. Foster patterns rather
olouely After Btevenson, ho does not show
to poof- Advantage. More could not bo snld.
The young followers of the school of
realism seem endless In number. New
authors of this school are being Introduced
every tlayi some Attain exoellende, many
do not. Mites Lewis, author Of "Chnpei"
(Oeorga H. Doran Company, New York),
may he said to have achieved some meAs
Ure ot success. For Its kind, tho story is
A rcmnrknbly well written one and pre
sents a most Interesting character ntudy In
ltn hero nnd several additional personages,
who will hold tho attention. It Is men
tioned as "Tho Story of A Welsh Family"
and It fully lives up to thb Impression to
be gathered from that statement. Some ot
tho sordid, commonplAco details could welt
bo omitted, but they nro all a part ot the
school to which the book belongs.
A new writer as far as long.work Is con
certlod Is Introduced In "When I'nil Pipes"
(Oeorgo II. Doran Company, N. Y.) This
writer, Mary Taylor Thornton, has n pleas
ant, graceful and easy style, but In tho pres
ent volume she has given the rending world
nothing remarkable. H Rccms to be a weird
combination of romantic novel, ffllry tale
and Story of tho English school of renlism
of the present dny. These elements Are
rather hard to nnHoclftto, It is ono ot that
endless chnln of novels which revert back
to the Victorian era and attempt to give
the life-story ot the herd, hoping thereby to
be considered masterpieces of chnracter de
lineation. It the writer of the prcsont story
Intended that, sho has unfortunately over
shot her mark.
Francis Ilolt-Wheeler has written a
book, "Tho Monster Hunters" (I,othrop, I.co
& Hhepnrd, Boston), which Is prlmnrlly In
tended for young pcopje, but It will enter
tain old people and those who aro neither
young nor old. In It ho hnB diluted science
and mndo It digestible. Ho tells tho story
Ot tho prehistoric animals, how they lived
and how we learn about them from tho geo
logical records. lie has ndventuro In It
and romnnco which nro fascinating cnotiKh
to hold tho nttcntlon of a boy who reads for
the story and has facts enough, scientifi
cally accurate, to meet tho demands of tha
parents that the boy should learn while ho
reads. Not tho less worthy feature of tha
volume Is that It reveals to the reader that
America as well as tho Old World contain:!
prehistoric romalns worth searching for.
Jobless Alan Tries to End Life
Despondency, due to his Inability to ob
tain employment, Is Bald by tho police to
have caused Thomas McKanc, B2 years old,
1743 South Dorranco street, to attempt to
end his life. McKane, who was nlono in
tho house, went into tho second-story front
room, turned on tho gas and thon shot
himself In tho right temple. At St. Agnes'
Hospltul, whero ho was takan. It was said
that his condition was critical.
THEY WENT TO PRISON
TO WRITE THEIR PLAY
The Interesting History of "Pun
ishment" nnd tho People Who
Wrote It
A irinn who Is a confirmed contributor to
tho New York nveitlhg Post, Ahd nil nctrcsi!
would seem to make a fair antithesis, yet
these two people, Mr. Hdward ltnlo lller
stadt ahd Miss I.oulse llurlelgli, combined
to wrlto "Punishment" (Itoltl, a four-act
play about prison life In the United States,
that Is applicable to such life pretty much
throughout tho civilized world. By nil odd
coincidence both authors nre 88 years old,
Iloth of them nlso went to Jail for their
"copy," as guests, not an prisoners, nnd Mr.
Blcrstadt contributed n poem to tha Sing
Ring prisoners' paper, "The Star of Hope."
Many of the dramatic Incidents In the play
aro duplicates of some that havo actually
occurred within tho last year, And tha
prisoners have been carefully studied from
actual ones In Slug Ming although the Au
thor. emphatically state tho scene Is not In
tended lo bo there.
Miss Burleigh Is n gradunte of Professor
Baker's famous course At Harvard and put
on the first play nt Ills workshop there.
Then she wont on the stage for a couple of
yearn and has since published short stories,
verge and plays.
Mr. Blcrstadt himself states that he Is
not a graduate of anything, and that he
has dono a doicn things, all of them un
pleasant nnd unimportant) Including being
a "rotten" literary agent; that noho of his
plays hnvo been produced, nnd that this
Is tho first ono to hnvo been published,
He Is a nephew of Albert BlerBtadt, tho fa
mous American artist.
ltornco Howard Furnes3, Jr., A. B.,
Lltt. D., who received tho degree ot I.ltt. T.
from Pennsylvania Juno 21, has thus added
to tho honors which he shares with his
famous father, Horace Howard Furnoss,
Ph. D., LL. D., Lltt, D. Mr. FurncSs, ns
the world knows. Is completing tho mon
umental new variorum edition of Shake
speare to which 40 years of his father's
Ufa wero devoted, King John will bo tho
next volume, nnd will probably be published
next year by tho I.lpplncotts. This will ba
volumo NIX of thin edition, ono of tho
greatest achievements of American scholarship.
SMITH, LEADING CONNECTICUT
I'ltOailESStVE, FOR HUflHES
Lender Dissatisfied With Wilaons Alms
nnd Methods
IIAnTPonb, Conn., Juno 40. Herbert
Knox Smith, lending Progressive In Con
necticut, Bull Moos candidate for Ooverhor
In 1012 And United states Senator in 1914,
Is out for Charles Kvans Hughes for PresU
dent, and Is ready to take tho stump for the
ltepubtlcnh nominee.
In n statement Mr. Smith declared that
Mr. Hughes stands effectively for thoso
things he wants and that he regards Mr.
ltooscvelt's decision to support him aa ona
of the "greatest acts of a great life."
"I Intend to support xMr. Hughes and
work for his election. I Am personally
satisfied that Mr. Hughes stands for a
strong, efficient tiatlonal government, for
an undivided patriotism, tor the security
of American oltltens, for Its national honor
nnd for the economic and political Advances
thnt I want, Mr. Wilson nnd tho Demo
crstlc party do not sntljsfy me, cither In
their alms or In their methods,"
TAKE THESE BOOKS
TO YOUR SUMMER HOME
UumlrrdA ot recent ntorlts by popular
authors, removeO from our library
25c each
rivo for One Dollar
THE NEW FICTION LIBRARY
123 South 13th Strett. l'hllaileliililnt
French Senate Votes War- Fund
PAnlS, Juno 30, Tho Sonato has
Adopted without clmnge tho tlovernment's
WAr appropriation bill already passed by
the Chamber ot Deputies. The appropria
tions nre for the third quarter of lDin.
U. S. WOULD PROTECT
AMERICAN-MADE GOODS
- - - nr r ' ' "ii
Administration Plans Campaign
to Gain Advantages at Home
and Abroad
WASlHNflTONr, June ao.'-One ot tho
most fAr-reafthlng steps In the Industrial
preparedness campaign Is to be tho protec
tion of American goods In foreign markets.
It WAS stated today At tho Department of
Commerce. Acting on complaints received
from American manufacturers and ex
porters, Secretary of Commerce Itedfietd,
Chairman Davles, of the Federal Trtds
Commission! Chief "Wilbur Carr, ot the
consular division of the State Department,
And other Government officials are prepar
ing nn extensive campaign not only to pro
tect American goods selling In the foreign
market, but to Insure a fair competition
between home-made goods and foreign
goods In the United States,
Government ofllclnls realise, It la stated,
that with the ooet of labor constAtuiy rising
In this country extraordinary steps must
bo taken to prevent European goods, pro
duced with cheap foreign labor, to undersell
merchandise made In .the United States.
fVf yyli w
ICQ I Sff 11
Campaign
Watches
PHILADELPHIA
Practicable for
the Militar Man
Store closed torn
Saturday 12 Noon
until Wed. Jul 5
th
raok
the
Following Brands of Cigarettes
DEITIES
'r'tfc
,'-- -
M
A
HELMAR
' ,rj.
V
14 vVO'R'Sf"
M
UL
TURKISH TROPHIES
LUXURY LONDON LIFE
anufactured by S. ANARGYROS
v ., M
VK
;-!
-a -.
w-
.,
The rumored shortage of Turkish tobacco
may affect other manufacturers, but causes us no
concern whatever.
It is a well known fact that Turkish tobacco
improves with age, and for years we have had,
and now have in storage in the United States by
far the largest supply of pure Turkish tobacco ever ,
carried by any manufacturer.
' So large is our supply of pure Turkish tobacco that we are
now making the above standard brands out of the 1910 and 1911
crops, ageing our leaf from the subsequent crops for future use
We maintain in the Orient our own organization, and are
net dependent upon the haphazard supply from brokers and
speculators.
Notwithstanding the difficulties of ocean traffic, we have
continued shipments from the Orient, adding to our already
enormous leaf stock more than a million of pounds in the past
few months the. most recent cargo, amounting to about toiir
hundred thousand'pounds of the best Xanthi and Cavalla leaf,
having arrived at the Port of New York on Thursday,
June 22, 1916,
Each individual cigarette in every package of the above
Brands is guaranteed 100 Pure T.urkish Tobacco., ?"-
' ' :" ' jftk.
'.1''
'-.
V
'J'k
&
-
.Ti
t i
Maktn off At Kst Cradt TukhS
end Etypllan CtiurcUt) in ths WerUj,
t
1
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