"THE MORVTNG OREfxONTAIS. SATURDAY, JATT5JARY 30, 1915. IN FROM OLD SOD DIES MILLIONAIRE Romance of Tommy Cruse, Old Gold Miner of Montana, - ' Is Recalled, HELENA LOSES CITIZEN Fickleness of Luck Told in Tale of Discoverer of, Drom Lummon Mine, at " Om Time Richest Gold Miine jn World. HELENA, Jan. 18. The story of the bunt for gold la' ever 'a story of toil and privation, after' a tsagdy for the one who strikes it rich, thousands are lost in the oblivion tof poverty. - CoL Thomas Cruse, .who died here at 79, was one 'of the lucky few who leaped from poverty J to affluence 30 years ago. He discovered the Drum Lummoa cold mine, north of Helena, sold it to an English syndicate for 11,504.000, retaining- one-sixth interest, and shared in the profits of 30,000, 00 which the mine has produced. Mr. Cruse was 20 years old when he left County Cavan, Ireland, to seek his fortune in the mining camps of the West. He roamed around various dig gings in California. Nevada and Idaho, blew into Virginia City, Mont, in 1865, when Aider Gulch was at tle height of its glory, and later struck the placers around Helena, where fortune smiled upon him. Fickleness of Luck Retold. Drum Lummon drew Its name from the locality in Ireland where Cruse was born. Before It had a name it had a romance redolent with the Ill-luck of the original finder. He was a little wiry Frenchman named I F. Hilder brand, who drove an express wagon to Deadwood long after Tommy Cruse put Drum Lummon on the mining map. In the very early days Hildebrand pros pected in Montana. X stumble on the mountain- side caused him to chip- off a piece of boulder which was so rich in gold quartz that his eyes popped in the excitement of riches in sight. He and his partner began to look for the lead from which the boulder sloughed off. - - Unfortunately, Hildebrand and his partner" undertook to roll out of the way the great boulder which gave them a clew to wealth. By one of those queer capers of blasted luck which prospectors fear, the boulder moved too quickly and rolled over and crushed the arm of Hildebrand's part ner. Being .without money and need ing medical attention they left the place and trudged to Helena, where the a-artner was under the care of a doctor, and Hildebrand went to work in near bv places to earn money to pay the bill. Some 10 years later Hildebrand. still at outs with his luck, and weary of roaming, reached the spot where the boulder sent his hopes skyward. The boulder had the appearance of an old acquaintance, but the surroundings were changed to a bewildering extent. Before his eyes Was 'a monster hoist ing plant raising rich ore from a shaft hundreds of feet In depth, while in the gulch a huge stamp mill was at work. The boulder occupied a place of honor in front , of a building. Hilde brand touched it. patted it affection atcly and tears filled his eyes. Pres ently through the mist of his tears he read the sign, "Drum Lummon mine, discovered by Thomas Cruse." Fortune Changes Front. During the period of death of the breach,-, which miner's end. '- .daughter widened the continued to the gold NEWS NOV LACKING WEDDING IS RUSH AFFAIR Decorators Still R,nsy When Guests Arrive for CIews-"GoeIet Xuptials. NEW YORKr Jan. IS. It was after a day spent In hasty preparation, amount ing almost to wild r confusion, that Henry Clews, Jr., ana Mrs. Elsie Whelen Goelet were married one day last month at the home of, Mrs. Goelet 8 Washington Square North. So much had to be done In the time available that the arrangements had hardly been completed before - the wedding had taken place. In fact, it might be said to have "occurred. ' The ceremony had been scheduled for 2 o clock, but Mrs. Goelet. who had been out all morning arranging business af fairs, did not arrive at her home until after that hour. The work of decorat ing the rooms for the occasion was still under way when the first guests ar rived, and was not completed until 4 o'clock. - .- The Rev. Dr. W. A. Fatton, of Wayne, Pa, officiated, and there were present only the members of the families of the bride and bridegroom. The guests were: Mrs. C. Hartman Knnn, oi Philadelphia, mother of the bride; Mr. Kuhn. Mr. and Mrs. William B. Whelen, brother and sister-in-law of Mrs. Goelet; Mr. and Mrs. Henry Clews, Sr., Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Parsons, brother- n-law and sister of the bridegroom. and Mrs. Goelet's two sons, Ogden and Peter. The ceremony was performed in the music room of Mrs. Goelet's home. A temporary altar had been placed in the northwest corner of the room, and both the music and dining-rooms were dec orated elaborately with banked palms and ferns, calla lilies, lilles-of-the-val ley and chrysanthemums. Profound secrecy attended the ar rangements for the marriage, and the first inkling of it came yesterday when Mr. Clews and Mrs. Goelet applied for marriage license. Mr. Clews gave his age at 38 and his occupation as an art ist. Mrs. Goelet said she was 3 years old. Art and divorce stand out prominent ly in the recent history of both bride and bridegroom. As an artist ana writer Mr. Clews attracted considerable attention in Paris. His wife, who was Miss Louise Hollingsworth, of Balti more, had previously been married to Frederic Gebhard, from whom she ob tained a divorce, Ootober 26, 1901. She sued Mr. Clews in the French courts in 1910 and was granted a dt vorce on grounds of extreme indiffer ence and cruelty to her and Indiffer ence' to their two children. Since then Mr. Clews has spent most of his time at his studio, at 145 East Nineteenth street, next to that occupied by Robert Chandler, one of his close friends. Mrs, Clews now lives in Paris and has not married. Mrs. Goelet secured a divorce from Robert Goelet in the Rhode Island courts, and the final decree was grant ed October 5 of this year. She charged her husband with extreme cruelty and was given custody of the two children and $40,000 annually for her support and theirs. Her marriage to Mr. Clews, under the terms of the divorce, reduces this allowance to $20,000. A wide difference in tastes was brought out in the testimony in the divorce action.' Mr. Goelet was fond of outdoor sports, while his wife de voted herself almost entirely to her art. She was ah' .excellent caricatur ist, and attained considerable skill as a painter of marine pictures, under the instruction of Mr. Clews, having studied with him In his studio here.' She ,was the first woman In New York society to advocate the Greek form of garb, and provided herself with a number 'of Grecian costumes, which were widely ' commented upon. Last Winter she became interested in avia tion while in Florida, and made several flights with Miss Ruth Law, at Day- tona. No Casualty Lists ' Excep Death Notices Compiled. MAIL FROM FRONT DELAYED Italian Correspondent Finds Wide spread Dissatisfaction Among People of France, Due Largely to Censorship. Equal Terms. - ' (Washington Star.) "Sometimes," said Mr. Growcher, MI wish I were a boy again. ' - "You wish to share in the innocent pastimes of youth?" "Not exactly. I'd like to be able to development ecout and handle some of these young when hard luck pressed Cruse to the sters who throw snowballs, without verge of abandonment, some one ad-1 looking so undignified.' vised him to strike Sam Ashby for a couple of hundreds. Ashby was money lender in Helena who knew bow to sweat the coin when put work on good security. Cruse p matter of a loan up to Ashby. All he got. however, was a fine line of MILAN, Jan. 26. The failure of the French newspapers to print casualty lists and the inadequate delivery of mails from the front have aggravated the anxiety of the French people con cerning the war situation, according to report from P. Crocl to the Cornere della Sera. Among the Milan papers the Cor rire della Sera is probably the most pro-French, and its Paris correspond ent, P. Crocl,' the most enthusiastic prophet of French victory. Therefore M. Croci's adverse report is regarded as significant and the mental irritation of the French populace is ominous. M. -Crocl writes: No New From Trenches. "During the first months of the war the people accepted the blocking of traffic and the endless delays as nec essary evils. Today the mail and rail way service has outwardly resumed its normal condition, but it is actually in adequate. The delivery of field mail, which means so much, both to the sol dier and to his family, is deplorably unsatisfactory. Hardly a letter comes from the front that does not complain about the delay and Incompleteness of messages from home. Some families have adopted the method of putting short announcements in the newspa pers, hoping that the news in this way may reach their relatives in the trenches. Most families ' have been wuuQut news irom ine irons xor sev eral months. 'Even at this late date there are no casualty lists in France. The only lists printed In the papers have been scraped together from death notices. The press has vainly called attention to the German and more recent Eng lish casualty lists. It seems almost ah if the government were afraid to pub lish the lists. As a matter of fact, the government could not compile correct lists if It wanted to do so. The French bureaucracy is too demoralized. - Censorship Angers People. "Maurice Barres, who has taken up the matter, quotes a characteristic ex ample. , A wounded , soldier was re ceived at a hospital in Verdun Septem ber 20. A week later he wrote home. As there was no subsequent news, his parents wrote to the head of the hos pital. They received no reply. They then tried to reach Verdun, and re ceived from the Minister of War the usual noncommittal answer that., no fatal news had been received. Finally the parents appealed to Barres. He told them that their son had been dead for two months." It jta a matter of common knowledge that the French newspapers frequently appear with single sentences, para graphs and even entire articles deleted by the censor. In the rush of going to press tnese frequently cannot be re placed, and blank spaces confront the reader. - - "The dissatisfaction with the exag gerated strictness of the censorship, against which serious and sarcastic protests have been raised," saids Crocl, "casts a dark shadow in the shining picture of French unity and harmony." the animals of the Central Park me nagerie is becoming such an every-day occurrence that professional jealousy is springing up all over the place, ac cording to Head Keeper Bill Snyder. Even Zip, the sloth bear, is affected. Yesterday Zip put a policeman out of commission for breaking up a plot to kidnap him. Incidentally the police man, Frederick Lohmeyer, one of the veterans of the arsenal squad, saved a 10-year-old boy from Zip's sharp claws, only to be gashed himself. , ' Zip shares a suite in the bear pit with Tommy, the black bear, next door to the polars, Alice and. Joe. There Is a heavy iron rail four feet in front of of the cage, and as lobg as you keep that rail between you and Zip he is as sluggish as a well-behaved sloth bear should be. JfrobaDly that was why the would-be. animal snatcher of 10 selected him as a fit subject for a boy to tickle, the efforts of two full grown men to carry off the baby hippo and the prize tigress. Lady Alice, the day before having come to nought. The youngster had vaulted over the rail and climbed up on the stone ledge of Zip's home before Policeman Loh meyer caught slight of him. There were a few nursemaids nearby, and they screamed. Lohmeyer reached the cage in two bounds, cleared the railing and dragged the boy do wn,' just as Zip came jogging up- to see what was the matter. All the elothfulness had gone out of him. With a roar, "he raised his ip-ht nanr- and.. 'before the Doliceman could move, reaohed through the bars and smote Lohmeyer on thes wrist- The animal's claws dug in, but before he could strike -again,.- Lohmeyer ..jumped . out of the way. .- Meanwhile the boy slid 'under thai railing, and beat a retreat When Loh meyer looked arouna lor nun ne was gone. - KIDNAPING LAID TO KIN Today We Offer Big Reductions Double Stamps All Day! Charge Purchase Made Friday and Saturday Go on February Account, Payable On or Before March 10. Mm fDRUGSf mm "or USE THIS coupon: io kitiu za Bring this coupon and get 20 extra "ti. ii." Trading Stamps on your first II cash pur chase and double stamps on the balance of purchase. Good on first three floors today, January 80. Don't tot-get onr '-Hot linnet Parlor at noon. Dainty Lunenea. Quirk. Service. Phone na to call for year prescription. We ennaponnd an deliver promptly. Be sure and have your picture framed NOW, and set the extra Be stamps, as advertised. MAN- ACCUSES RELATIVES THEFT OF HIS WIFE. Woman Snld to Have Been Spirited Front Plnee to Place In St. Louts City and County. SLOTH BEAR PROVES AGILE Park Policeman Has to Act Quickly to Save Boy. . NEW YORK, Jan". 20. This business of trying to buy, beg, borrow, or steal ST. LOUIS, Jan. 14. Did Mrs. Ernes tine Gerling, wife of Frederick C. Ger ling, a grocer, leave her husband vol untarily or was she and her 6-year-old daughter, Laura, abducted from their home December 2.7 Have the alleged abductors spirited Mrs. Gerling from place to place in bt. Louis and St. Louis County or has she made the movements of her own accord, and. incidentally, is Mrs. Gerling ca pable of realizing her own actions or s she of unsound mind i These are some of the questions the St. Louis Court of Appeals will have to determine in passing upon a habeas corpus suit filed by Gerling to regain possession of his wife and daughter, whom, he alleges, he- has seen only twice in the last 38 days. The suit reveals a tamiiy quarrel, in which Gerling is arrayed against his wife's two sisters. - The defendants named are: Mrs. Frieda Albrecht, -one of the sisters; her husband, Albert, a grocer, of 3527 North 'twenty-secona street: Miss Flora C. Wiese, a sister, and George H. Wiese, : a brother, wiio are living on a farm near Spanish Lake, in St. Louis County. Gerling alleges that the defendants conspired to abduct his wife and child after vainly working on her mind to in duce her to leave him. The petition charges that, after falling in this, the defendants entered his home while he was away last December 2 and forcibly took with tbem Mrs. Gerling and her daughter. Gerling alleges they con cealed the two and moved them from St. Louis to St. LouiB County and back again to throw him off the track. He states that he demanded that the defendants surrender his daughter and wife, but that they refused to do so. He declares that the la3t jtime he saw his wife, until she was brought into court .was when she was ' riding- in a "conveyance driven along a public road in St. Louis County" by Flora C. Wiese. To these charges the defendants filed an answer in which they deny they abducted Mrs. Gerling. They allege, on the contrary, that she left Gerling. vol untarily on the date mentioned in the petition and took her daughter. The petition states she sought shelter at the home of the Albrechts, Ladies' Hand Bags $5 genuine Pin Seal Bags, in the latest styles, regular handles, moire and leather lined, equipped with mirror and purse. Some with in side frame. Special, VP 3.65 Pre-Inventory Sale of Leathers Continues but Two Days Longer Stationery One-Half Off All Postcard Albania. Oddn and Kada la stationery, aluca t i3e, for 17. One-Half Off on All Calendar. One-Fauna. Off on All Adrfreaa aad Kaaaae nrit Hooka. CANDY SPECIALS GOOD AND I'l UK. 40o Social Whirl Chews rt:i 60c box Fruit Chocolates 37 II box Fruit Chocolates 30o pound Horehound Drops llj 50c jar Stuffed Dates and Figs 5i)t Point rinriorfmflnt niui uruai iiiilul i i i.ou uueair Aiops..aa.w LV "Vf'-T'L 1.00 O'Cedar Mops.. TJ rtiNA." BOo Liquid Veneer.. 40 P! ROW' Y SSo Liquid Veneer... 20 In- TJi Johnson's Floor Wax 45? . Bathroom Fittings 66e Bathtub Soap Holder , 52 500 Tumbler Holder. . 37 45o Sink Soap Holder 36 75o Laundry Sink Soap Holder 5S 6o 18-inch Towel Bar , 44t Rubber Goods $1.00 Two-quart Fountain Syringe 63 11.75 Two-quart Fountain Syringe $1.29 $2.25 Four-quart Fountain Syringe 61.47 Two-quart Hot-Water Bottle 88 f 1.50 Two-quart "Wearever" Molded Hot-Water Bottle. 61.13 (We Mend Hot-Water Bottles.) Floating Toys, each 15 ?nd 23 BRISTLE GOODS. S2.00 Fourteen-row Hair Brushes special 61-43 60c Pyralin Ivory Combs special 33 50c Unbreakable Hard-Rubber Comb special... 37 75c Hughes' Ideal Hair Brush special 594 ALABASTER ONE-HALF OFF. PYRALIN IVORY 25 PER CENT DISCOUNT. PYRALIN IVORY PICTURE FRAMES ONE-HALF OFF WE BUY OUR nnUGS DIRECT AND IN ORIGINAL PKKAbKN. Our warranty of freshne and purity means that for half a cen tury we have devoted expert care, skill and knowledge to this task a task of which our patrons are beneficiaries. 10c Kp"om Salts T Iflc Soda Bicarb 7 lOo Horlo Acid Jf 10c Machine Oil Jc 10c Black Pepper 7e 10c Bird Sand 7 10c Denatured Alcohol J 10c Bon Ami 7 c OU'R TOILET REQUISITES HAVE ALWAYS THE MERIT OF FRESHNESS AND QUALITY. 75c Williams Toilet Water 47 75o Ricksecker's Toilet Water 47 50c Riker's Violette Cerate -. BOo Sempre Giovlne i3 25c Kolvnos Tooth Paste three for 50o BOo La Blache Face Powder 35 Jar Daggett & Ramsdell's Cold Cream 30 50c Ingram's Milk Weed Cream 33 6c Fairy Soap six for One bar Castile Soap it foams and floats li 25c Satin Skin Face Powder 13 2oc Woodbury's Facial Soap . . :! Mount Hood Cold Cream 25 and gO Peerless Almond Cream 25. SO and 85 Uardas Exquisite Cream 50 and 75 CDTTPIAI Four Cakes Ivory Soap OKf' Of &VlslrlJUr Four Cakes Lurline Soap aatJl Yea We Do- Sell All "PATENT" (So-railed) Medicines at "OUT HtTI'.s." H IM NUT, However, HlJlonilDMl Taera. Unit ran Wei Vi e Don't Know What They t ontain, ana we rrnmiae ii That When Von Ask for One. Vkere Will He flffort by " ("KILLED MI,KS1USHIP" lo Sell Von NomrlhliK line (Better. 11 PI i. k ham Veaelxble Com pound, Tablet Form SO 25o Hawley's llheumatlo Cap sules. 20 BOo Williams' Pink Plll 3 7 BOc Stewart's Oale. Waferx. . .40 50c Nature's Remedv Taolets.Or 2Sc Kings New Life Fills... .SO 25c Hood's Vegetable PI1U...20 25c Tutt s Liver I'llls 25c Pinkham'a I.lver Pills. 2r.c Carter s Little Liver Pills..! S 25c Pierce's Pellets iRc 25c Beecham's Pills 1 25c Aver's Cathartic Pills.... I 3 2."c Cascarets 17 60c Phennlax Wafers 35 25c Laxative Brorno Quinine.. 15 30: Hill's Cascara Quinine. . .20 60c Down's Kidney Pills 3! BOc DeWltt'j Kidney Pill 40 oc Meurn s Shai-k Ileadacho Wafers 17 I5c Oels-lt Corn Remedy 20 15c Hansons torn halve IO 25c Aloise s Indian Root PilM..lt .20 ..!!) Woodard, Clarke & Co. Alder at West Park remained one week, and then went to the farm of her brother. She is now said to be staying with the Albrechts. Mrs. Gerling Is a daughter of William Wiese, a St. Louis County resident, who died July 11, 1911. Her share of Wlese's estate, which was divided among six legatees, the petition states, amounted to $5000. George H. Wiese was named administrator of the estate. The petition states that in July, 1913. while Mrs. Gerling was of unsound mind, Wiese organized the Wiese In vestment Company, of which the lega tees of the Wiese estate were members. The petition states that Wiese con veyed 135 acres of land he had been directed under the will to sell so as to where she pay legacies to the Wiese Investment Company and issued stock to the lega-'close (hat ne''ttir thought the ll knew I i put at I I jut the f r. All free udvice, coupled with the money lender's- assurance that he would rather, throw paper money into the furnaces of his satanic majesty, than loan it to such "a shiftless fellow." Years after, when Cruse's day of prosperity came, one of the early visi tors to the "Thomas Cruse Savings Lank," Just started in Helena, was Sam Ashby. -The fortunes of Cruse and Ashby had been reversed. Cruse was flush,. Ashby empty of pocket. Cruse led his- would-be customer to the door and in the underscored lan Biiase of the West assured the cus tomer that he would rather throw his money Into the furnaces of his sa tanlc majesty than to loan It to such "a shiftless fellow" as Sam Ashby. Soon after Ma bank was started, at the age of 50. Cruse decided that he had enough capital to support a wife. Miss Margaret Carter, sister of the late United States Senator Carter, be came airs. Cruse. The wedding, in 1&N6, was the greatest social event in the history of Montana's capital. It was a celebration for all the popula tion. Cruse arranged -for an open house and free drinks with every saloon in Helena. Tradition has it that the whole male population of the town got drupk at the bridegroom s expense, and it took a week to sober the peo ple into a working condition. The jamboree .was the greatest ever pulled off in the treasure state; no one has attempted to rival the score.- The Joys of wedded life werejof short duration. Mrs. Cruse died within year. leaving a baby daughter on which the father lavished his affections and means. Name Linked with Omaha Pcoale. What Count John A. Creighton was to Omaha. Thomas Cruse was to HeD ena. Kvery public enterprise, every promising industry drew his support benevolent and charitable movements commanded assistance from his purse. He was. the chief contributor to the building of the Catholic Cathedral of Helena, which was dedicated on Christ mas day." The Methodist Hospital, the Young Men's Christian Association and the Young Woman's Christian Asso ciation shared-. n his bounty, and his liberality in. supporting the local club kept Helena on the baseball map. The career of Mr. -Cruse was linked in many ways with the active lives of several former Omaha residents. A year or two before Cruse struck Alder Gulch. Patrick Gurnett Mrs. Gurnett and three young children started from Omaha with a bull team in a caravan, which occupied six months in covering the distance to . Virginia City. Mon! Cruse and the Gurnetts probably be came acquainted there." In subsequent years, when the - Gurnetts became ranchers In the Missoula Valley south of Helena, Cruse's poverty as a pros pector was" frequently relieved by the food reserves of the Gurnett home stead. Frank J. Lange. son of an Omaha family of pioneer grocers, is the active manager of Cruse's Savings Bank, and has been confidential associate and ad viser of the millionaire for years past. Another man. Harry Cotter, married Cruse's. daughter, Mary who died a year ago last November. - Cruse - and -v- ,rl '. ''v ; - v " NEW MAP OF EASTERN THEATER OF WAR. j t v t Jhf f "AAViXTl TVs V IT r, W. Kiev& . -i 1 I I x. I V fli-H, UfT ,o Oubnor-0 V At f J o S9I" ,, I -A. 13ZZm&-.J V rKh XT - KarninietzK ,V! Ii-&U"9PO i VIENNA i: t v q rwstx XBuDAPfisTy nSDefK 1&p&S Ar t I 1 StaleEjerszej r f -Karlsbirg .f - ." YlSiMA, cfU L----3vKaposv:ar .L VTZt L JT"' virnuac sCsSH"1! FAw3JGki 'tOj-' V-tev V61? 'Al'iHs SZJ r F StrA" J . . Christian Science Monitor. J I f ' . RELATION OF ROIHAMA, WHICH T HREATENS TO BECOME A BELLIGERENT, TO SURROUNDING COUNTRIES IS SHOWN. I a -.. I tees. The petition charges that on July 14 Wiese obtained the signature of Mrs. Gerling to 40 shares of stock against her. will and that of Gfrling and that she signed a paper which is alleged to have been a receipt by her from Wiese of 14.166.86 and releasing her from her rights to the property. The answer tiled by the defendants denies these charges and to the allega tion that Mrs. Gerling Is mentally un sound reply that she has not been ad Judged so In any court. Mrs. Gerling, accompanied by her daughter, appeared in court pursuant to an order made by Judge Reynolds, but after the filing of the answer the, hearing was postponed. GYROSCOPIC PLANE WORKS Sperry Stabilizer Stands Test Xavy In Air Flight. of tng boat would collide with the sus pended roadway. After circling around HIiib Slug pris on at Ossining. Sperry started bum". ward at a rate of 62 iii1I'h an hour. He distanced a flock of ducks, best a pnssengur train easily, and nVw arrows Harlem and down the l:st Itlver and came to the water gracefully outside the naval basin at 4 n'cltx-k, after a flight of an hour and a half. Both aeronaut and passenKcr said Hie trip had demonstrated the value of the stabiliser remarkably. Twcnty-foui,drlvln whplp, rn,-h - J ln-h" In dlmtcr. are )rt of a tf.-,,tnntf v rr cntly f-omplt'il al riillatl!hia. 111 lnut TxMvrrfttl -f Till!" NEW YORK, Jan. 27. In a Navy test of the Sperry Gyroscopic Stabilizer young Lawrence Sperry, with Allen K. Hawley, president of the Aero Club as his passenger, made a spectacular flight recently in a Curtlss flying boat from the Navy Yard basin in Brooklyn to Ossining and back. In his flight he visited the lower bay. circled around the French line steamship Hochambeau as it was passing down the ship lane, and chased a flock of ducks down the Hudson. The machine rose from the river under Manhattan Bridge into the air below Brooklyn Bridge and .made a wide circle of the bay over Governors Island. Then It returned, topping both Brooklyn and Manhattan bridges and diving under Williamsburg Bridge so "Last winter I caught a cold that settled on my lungs and in my bronchial tubes. Two bottles of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy " cured me." Mrs. Charles Harrold, Vandergrift, Pa. Purity-Quality-Flavor aker's Cocoa Possesses All Three Begl stored V. a. I'm. offle It is absolutely pure, it is of high quality, and its flavor is de licious. Guard against imita tions: the genuine has the trade-mark on the package and is MADE ONLY BY Walter Baker & Co. Limited Established 1780 DORCHESTER, MASS. Cotter did not pull together and the I