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The Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles, California • 27

Location:
Los Angeles, California
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Page:
27
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

i SUNDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 19, IL 1 1 SB Fortunes Invested in Many New Projects. rooms. Restrooms for the comfort and convenience of both patrons and employees will also be provided. The New York Cloak ft Suit House will have In its new quarters a real "daylight store" In every sense of that term, the architects having given At Once, To West Seventh. More Good NEW HARBOR 'Aim INVOLVING HUGE SUM.

Los Angeles Shipbuilding Company to Lease Thirty crea on IFest Basin, Hire One Thousand Men and Spend Ten Million Dollars a Year in Construction of Everything that FloatsAll a Los Angeles Enterprise. PiuiEi: MasasuMuc ata sssasi tete Kb. IIICLAIDS ti. Jli JUk WlDBBJ w- OOTEMPLATINCt an ture ol $10,000,000 a year and iub employment 01 iuoo men, is Los Angeles Shipbuilding Com- any yesterday flled with the Board Harbor Commissioner an appll- Htlon to lease from the city for a erlod of thirty years a ship yard 'te of thirty aores on the west ba-n at Los Angeles Harbor. E.

O. Ekstrom of 137 W. Hell-ian Building, president of the com-any, said the articles of lncorpora-on will be flled tomorrow and that As company already has contracts $3,000,000 worth Of freighters not less than 8800 tons dead eight each. Work will be started at once on le piling in of the acreage leased om tne city and immediately there- fter a shipbuilding plant, costing 600,000 and fully equipped with odern machinery and capable of juilding five 8800-ton ships at one me, wilr be started. Three ships ill be started' as soon as the yard ready.

TO BUILD EVERYTHING. "The yard will be capable of (Continued from First Page.) been leased to Swobdl, Broadway milliner. This will ateo house the ru-w and bigger llg'n Whistle, Directly across the street from the J. W. Robinson Company's store, at the north wot corner of Seventh and Grand, the Central Business Properties, will build an eight-story store and office building costing about $350,000.

Dodd A- Kicharda are the architects or all the buildings. BIGGEST THING TET. Taken In combination and considered In all their details and ramifications, these projects- constitute the most sensational real estate and building announcement In the history of modern Los Angeles. The contemplated move of the Villa and the New York Cloak 1 and Suit House and the projected construction of the modern building at the southwest corner of Seventh and Olive were reported exclusively in The Times some weeks ago, but no previous mention has been made of the other three enterprises. All wre put through and are to be carried out practically as one great un dertaking In the development of West Seventh street.

The six new buildings, with their appointments and equipment, will cost in the aggregate $2,000,000, the bare buildings representing a total nulla- nnml 1 AAA uaf estimation of an approximate total amount represented by ground and building leases and transfers of real estate Involved In the development plan as a whole are not available. The lump consideration for all the manifold transactions carried out. however, will run into several millions. Shirley C. Ward, prominent local attorney, and known as the "father" of the whole West Seventh-street business movement, has been the guiding spirit In the negotiations leading to the great consummation now about to be witnessed.

Mr. Ward has had personal supervision over the mass of details that have had to be straightened out in order that all the various separate projects to which the developers of the new shopping district have been bending their energies might be'carrled through as one comprehensive plan, which has been the aim of the Seventh street people from the beginning. THE VTLLB DB PARIS. The new home of the "Vllle" will have frontage of 140 feet on Seventh by 133 feet on Olive and will be of reinforced concrete construction and, like all the structures In the development scheme, absolutely fireproof. It will have six floors.

together with basement and sub- basement, and will have foundations and walls of. sufficient strength to permit of the addition of two extra stories. The building Is to be handsomely faced with red pressed brick and terra cotta, and among its Interesting architectural details will be ornamental towers at each corner. Each main street entrance will be set off by an Iron and glass marquise. The building has been leased to the A.

Fusenot Comnanv. of which am, U. i THE "NEW YORK" TO 1 START WORK ON DAYLIGHT STORE IX ARCHITECT'S HANDS. Popular Cloak and Suit House will Have Imposing Structure at Seventh and Providing Attractive Features Never Used Before for Merchandise Display. The New York Cloak ft Suit House, which will early next year occupy large quarters at the southeast corner of Seventh street and Grand ave-nes.

Is essentially a product ot modern Los Angeles. Founded twelve years ago, at the time when Los Angeles was Just beginning the- great strides that have placed It In the forefront of American municipalities, the "New York" has grown and flourished with the city Itself. J. J. Haggarty, owner and proprietor ot the store, grew up In the cloak and suit business, having served his apprenticeship In these lines In the great shopping marts of London as a boy.

Before coming to Los Angeles in 1904, he had been associated with large Arms in Chicago, St. Xputs, Duluth and Denver. The present business was opened In the location from which it Is now about to move, occupying originally only half the space now utilized. At Seventh and Grand the store will have Just double its present space. Started from a small beginning, it has become one of the solid business Institutions of the city.

The new quarters of the store wilt be ready for occupancy next March, Mr. Haggarty having already let the contract for the excavations of the four-story structure which he expects to erect on Grand avenue adjoining the Brockman building and having his plans all worked out for the remodeling of the ground floor of the last-named property, which he has leased for a long term of years. The new building will be planned to permit of the addition of five extra stories. Insuring necessary room for future growth. The most striking feature of the new store will be an arcade extending along both street fronts and affording outdoor corridor lines on either side by beautiful display windows.

The frontage of the store on Seventh street will be 120 feet and that on Grand, 105 feet. The entire frontage of window display space, including the street windows and the windows on either side of the arcade will be close to 650 feet So far as Is known, there is nothing else like It in the country. The entire ground floor. Including that of the new bulldlns. will be surrounded bv a mezzanine thirty feet In width, the approach to which will be by way of a wide marble staircase.

On either side of this staircase will be raised platforms designed for the demonstration of apparel on living models. Another unusual feature will be found in the size and height of the Interior show cases, which will be of plate glass and sufficiently large to contain full-sized models for everything displayed." The new structure to be built by Mr. Haggarty will contain the business offices and alteration and fittlng- (particular attention to that feature. Cliaae. ACCUSED CASHIER DEPARTS IN AUTO.

ALLEGED TO HAVE PADDED COMPANY'S PAY ROLLS. Reported Gay life of Employee of Rubber Concern at Torrance Leads to an Investigation or His Affairs, bat He Goes Berore Officer Appears at His Home. J. P. Donovan, alleged absconding cashier of the Henrie Rubber Company of Torrance, has a twenty-four hour start over the officers who started out to follow the trail of his racing car yesterday morning.

The warrant In the possession of Deputy Sheriffs Fox and Nolan sets forth the accusation that young Donovan has defaulted In the sum of approximately $2000. His alleged flight may be checked by wayside officers, the local authorities having telegraphed In all directions In order to head him off. His apparent destination, from various clews uncovered yesterday, was San Francisco. According to R. Ahrens, general manager of the rubber company, who secured the issuance of the complaint through the Justice at Gardena, Donovan used a clever scheme to get the money.

As washier of the company, it Is charged Donovan padded the payroll, and the discovery of his alleged defalcation came only when he had put tnrough an entire dummy list of supposed workmen for their salaries and pocketed the proceeds. When Mr. Ahrens, in company with a constable, arrived at the place where Donovan had made his residence, they discovered that he had left about two hours before in his own car. The chase was taken Off In the morning, but proved fruitless. Donovan's alleged participation in the bright night life of certain cafes, his gay friends and several other Incidents lead to an Investigation of his affairs.

He came here with an excellent reference from former employers in Newark. N. J. BAD CHECK CHARGE. H.

P. Armes and Charles Kelly, who on past occasions have figured in arrests, but have never been con victed, were picked up yesterday by Deputy Sheriffs Fox and Nolan and placed in thd County Jail. They 1 are accused A having passed a worthless check on James McEwan of No. 3927 Compton avenue on November 8. Arraigned before Justice Hanby Immediately after their arrest the date for their trial was set for November 29 In the Justice Courts.

A number of other like charges are said to be pending against the two men. STUDENTS IO WORK. Several hundred men and women students of the University of Southern California have had employment during the Christmas holidays secured for them through the employment bureaus ot the college Y.M.C.A. and Y.W.C.A. Most of the students will work as salespeople In the city's department stores during the holiday rush.

uildlng anything that said the company already has rejected enry CJarke, general superintend- ftn(j turned over to Long Beach enn-it and efficiency engineer for the cerns orders for 6000-ton craft. "The Flies and other insect pests are disease carriers. They breed in filth and are dirty even when not deadly. Keep your home sanitary. Germs cannot live where Chieftain Chlorinated Lime is used as it should be.

It's the best disinfectant and so cheap that you don't have to mind the cost, Go over your cellar at frequent intervals with this famous germicide. Use it freely in the sewer connections, closets, outhouses wherever animals are kept and flies can breed. The U. S. Dispensatory says: "Chlorinated Lime (often called chloride of lime) is in all respects the best disinfectant known." It should be used wherever there is sickness.

To prevent contagion wash all bedroom receptacles with a solution of Sinclair's Chieftain Brand. It's the best bleach for laundry purposes makes clothes snowy white and germ-free. Read the label for its many uses. Sinclair's Chieftain Chlorinated Lime is the best to buy because it is the disinfectant that doesn't spoil. The patented package can be reclosed tightly.

Identify it by its gold lacquered top and bottom. At Your Grocer' or Druggist's. Large Can 10c The Sinclair Manufacturing Company O. Engstrum Company, who is sociated with President Ekstrom. he sum of $600,000 has already en deposited In the Farmers' and erchanta' National Bank, it Is ated, to prove the authenticity of company and the entire capital HI be supplied by Artierlcan finan- ers, Including Los Angeles lists.

President Ekstrom, who has been the shipbuilding business for venty-one years in Sweden, Ger- any and the United States, and ho did considerable work for Ad- iral George W. Melville, former tlef engineer of the United States avy, said last night: "The company will specialize on standardized steel freighter of (00 tons dead-weight capacity, but 111 also build freighters inil tnnlrofa ar A ft ty v-iwli And If) general repair work In connection lerewlth. It -also expects to op- ate the new drydock the city ans to build In the near future, a uch-needed Improvement that will instrumental In bringing to this irt the much-needed bottoms to ove local freight now routed rough San Francisco. "The officers and staff have been crulted from the blgvshlp yards of Atlantic and Pacific and 'are all en of over twenty years experience their respective lines. The fl- meee of the company, which were ranged by Henry Clark, No.

1719 avenue, were obtained out- de Los Angeles and are ample to Toledo. Ll SI" niim.iWnn rental understood to be In the I "We are confident that we are Jus-neighborhood of $1,600,000. The titled In making the heavy lnvest- The Los Angeles Times carries the story of your goods, and presents your appeal to a vast army of readers who are able to buy advertised articles, and who, on account of believing in this paper, are predisposed in favor of its advertisers. structure completed by January 1, 118. HENNING BUILDING.

The 'Hennlng Building will be a beautiful structure In the style of the French renaissance and has been planned with foundations and walls of sufficient strength to permit of Us going to the full limit allowed by ordinance. In reinforced concrete construction. It will have a frontage of forty feet on Seventh and will extend tack to a depth- of 107 feet. The facing will be of terra cotta, the whole being set off by rich ornamentation and a series of iron balconies. The sloping roof will be of slate.

The fourth floor will take the form of a gable fronting Seventh street. The quarters leased to the Broadway millinery house are to be elegantly appointed. The Plg'n Whistle confectionery store will also have elaborate quarters here. The business movement signalized by these wholesale building operations was really Inaugurated in 1912 when Mr. Ward and a number of associates secured a number of long-tern; ground leases to the west of Hill street along and near Seventh street.

The Bronson Building (noW the Brack Shops) on Seventh street, near Grand, and the Knickerbocker Building on Olive Just north of Seventh, were the first fruits of systematlo Seventh-street development plan. Prior to this time the Los Angeles Athletlo Club had erected its splendid structure at the northeast corner of Seventh and Olive. Latef John Brockman built the fine office block bearing his name at the southeast corner of Seventh and Grand. The prestige of the cross-town street was also Increased by the erection, of the Van Nuys and Union Oil buildings at Seventh and 8prlng and the coming of the First National and German American Trust Savings Banks to that corner. The skyline of this part of Seventh street has since been filled In still more by the erection of the Haas- Building at Seventh and Broadway.

Bullock's and the Lankershim Hotel at opposite corners of the same main thoroughfares were the pioneer big buildings of West Seventh. The Seventh Street Development! Company, organlzd by Mr. Ward In the early part of 1914, captured the first big prize In the West Seventh street movement proper when the J. W. Robinson Company was Induced to make its long Jump from Broadway to Seventh and Grand.

Ever since that concern took possession of its magnificent new building In September, 1915, the developers of the new West Seventh street shopping center have been busy every moment with their plans. Financial conditions hampered them for months, but the recent pronounced Improvement in the general situation has placed them In a position to go ahead with some of the most important of their projects. The opening of the thirteen-story Brack Shops last May marked the next definite step toward the realization of the plan for making West Seventh a ladies' shopping street Seventy-six individual concerns, according to E. R. Brackett the man ager of the property, have now se- cured space In this "upper floor shop we nave made and are ma tng in ground leases, real eBtate and buildings on and near West Seventh street" said Mr.

Ward last night, "and when I say 'we' I Include all who have had anything to do, either I individually or In association, with Mothers In the development of the street We have felt from the be- fflnninff that thA Was Seventh afreet traffic of southwest Los Angeles. Shopping was bound to follow this way of least resistance, especially In view of the fact that this path lay directly toward the best residence districts of the city. "The shortness of the blocks on West Seventh street had been another attraction on account of the greater number of corners afforded. An east and west street banked by buildings Is also always a shady street during the principal shopping hours. Another advantage that has served to attract the dry goods houses is the fact that the north and south streets crossing Seventh west of Hill do not have car lines excepting on Grand avenue, which Is so wide thoroughfare that It makes no dlf.

ference. The stores all have excellent car service and at the same time have quiet side streets where ladies may leave their cars while shopping. These are some of the things that have influenced us to bark the West Seventh street movement." Mr. Ward expressed pie belief that the removal of so many ladles' shops to the west would serve more to cen trallze the business district than would a continuous stringing out of business southward down Broadway Spring and Main below the present line of development between Ninth and Tenth streets. Unsightly Slda made fair by POSLAM Has helped others te attain perfect skin health and will exert its healing powers for yon promptly should any eruption al disorder affect.

There is nothing in Petlam that eaa ssisihly harm. Haals stubborn Ec-secaa. Gears complexions. Drives away Rashes, Flnrples. Just the right swtmntie treit for enr.

-M. abrasions. "After every application you feel that It Is doing good. If trdinmrf Imltt soap w-ntafo, try Ptmlem Sp. wdtemtr4 tnik PMan tnd mvprwrfir itdy km, JWUt and Balk.

rw FRIS fUMrTR write to Fiiwiiim, News. PROJECT take care of every need. It Is all American money. The shipbuilding plant will be established on the north side of the west basin at Wilmington opposite to the acreage secured by the Union 911 Company, but President Ekstrom says the new company has nothing to. do with the oil concern.

The company will advance the city the sum of $75,000, or whatever is necessary to reclaim the land, and these expenses will be applied on the year-ly rental It will pay for the lease. In view of the importance of the project the Harbor Commission is expected to make an attractive rate for leasing. Clarence H. Matson, secretary and acting trafflo manager of the commission, who has Just returned from a visit to the shipbuilding yards at EL VlBIt IO 1110 BI111UU11UIU JWUfl San Francisco, Portland and Seattle. I said: "The Improvement will have everything appertaining to a modern and up-to-date: shipbuilding plant, are informed, and the business expected to run up to $10,000,000 a year.

Including wages. It is the most important and biggest industrial enterprise presented to to us." President Ekstrom said that each of the ships already contracted for will rmtt mora than t1.flfln.Onn. anil freighters already contracted for are of the Robert Dollar type," he added. "We are coming here with a big Industry, financed by American capital entirely, we don't ask a dollar of local money. We will employ 1000 men here within a year and the only reason why we are not ready to employ them now is that the site is not ready.

We will deliver the first ship In sixteen months from now." Engineer Henry Clarke said the company has enough contracts on hand to make It good now and he hopes the city will establish a dry dock. "If we have a dry dock we can get a lot of tonnage Los Angeles Is not getting now," he remarked. "I Relieve this will be a tremendous boost for the local port" OCEAN LINERS, TOO. After having well established Itself building freighters the company may go Into the business of building ocean liners. President Ekstrom said It has prospects of constructing huge ocean liners for the Swedish-American Steamship Company, each one; of which costs approximately $3,000,000.

The three ships already contracted for will be turned out In three years from now, and In the meantime the company will, the of nclai. 'ctracd 'for a number more vessels. Orders for 10,000 tons of steel already have been placed. Later on the company will be In a position to bid for building United States warships. and move the Los Angeles harbor figuratively.

If not directly. Into the wholesale district of the city, and actually means thousands of dollars gain to the business men of Southern California, both wholesale aim rciuu. CENTRAL SHIPPING POINT. The Pacific Electric has already entered Into an arrangement with the city of Los Angeles to operate the munlclpally-owned sections of railway at the harbor, so that with the completion of the wholesale terminal there will be a central point for the collection of all the shipping gathered from the various wharves of Los Angeles Harbor, with the city participating in the earnings. There are three features of the plans of the wholesale terminal that make this possible.

First the terminal will be Immediately adjoining the incoming and outgoing freight-houses of the Pacific Electric, so that practically the entire shipping business to and from suburban towns of Southern California will be concentrated at this point Second, the location within the terminals of the Los Angeles public markets will make it imperative to concentrate here the produce of Southern California, and will permit Its rapid distribution throughout the entire territory served by the Pacific Electric. Third, the location within the limits of the terminal of the large wholesale houses of the south will permit them not only to collect their goods with the greatest ease, but their market w4 be under their very eyes, while their transportation facilities' will he the best In. the world. WILL REDUCE COSTS. The concentration of these three pnases of wholesale business op eration does away with heavy trucking through the streets of the city and cuts the cost of transportation tuny do per cent A recent investigating commission of New York reported that It was less expensive to ship a ton of sugar from ban Francisco to New York City man was to haul that sugar from ne wharf, at Forty-second street Because or street congestion.

Under the proposed service of the wholesale terminal, a shipment will be unloaded at the dock, the cars switched directly to the tracks that serve the wholesale tenant, the goods are taken out and, when ready for shipment to the retailer, they are again loaded at the wholesaler's door without an Instant's delay. The sav ing in this type of operation Is twofold first in the trucking charees. and second. In the saving ot time and Interest, Improvement. structure Is to be completed and ready for occupancy by August 1917.

A large mercantile concern, it is understood, has already made arrangements to take over the "Vine's" present store on Broadway between Third and Fourth. HUNTSBERGER MENNELL. The Huntsberger ft Mennell BIG CONTRACT FOR WHOLESALE TERMINAL. Will Spend Tvoo and Half Millions for Construction of First Unit at Seventh and Central Concentrates Ship ping Facilitates Distribution and Reduces Transportation Costs Because of Shorter Hauls. This May Bring Death or Disease to Your Baby Ohio.

-Av', 2 .1 1 i IffF" "All 1 ffjfi'litiiiiiirr. i i i Building, as It will be called. Is to shopping district was inevitable, have a frontage of ninety-two feet I "Bunker Hill has blocked direct on: Seventh street, extending back to communication 'between the older the full depth of the Vllle de Paris business district and the rapidly-Building beside it It will be of growing west and northwest resl-relnforced concrete, will have a base- i dence sections, and It has been in-ment and sub-basement and Is to be evltable that unless serviceable outfaced with pressed brick and terra lets through the hill were provided, cotta. The plans indicate that the I business would swing around this structure will be one of the hand- great obstruction as soon as It had somest In the downtown district, a I advanced far enough south. Seventh beautiful colonnade across the front street being the first through cross of the building at the sixth story be- street below the hill, it has always lng one of the striking details.

I been the entry way Into the business The Wetherby-Kayser Company district for all the traffic that has has secured from the owners a ten- been forced to go around Bunker year lease and expects to remove Hill as well as for much of the ma til tit; Jn 'M San-bathed Virginia birthplace of cigarettes EORGB I. COCHRANE, Isi dore Dockweller and Ri C. Gll-lis, the committee the Los Angeles Union Terminal ompany, with Secretary Gerald ltzgerald, yesterday let the biggest ngle building contract ever signed Los Angeles, to the Wuster Con- ruction Company of Los Angeles id San Diego, for the building of first unit of the wholesale ter- lnal at Seventh and Central. The contract, which totals 0, calls for the completion of two x-story wholesale' buildings, each 00 feet long, and two 1300-feet o-story buildings to house the is Angeles public market Excavation work has already en started on land which was ipraised before H. L.

Carnahan, bmmlsstoner of Corporations, at 1,860,000, and the Pacific Electric lildlnes on the Seventh-street end the property are being cleared vay to nuw room ior us con- ructor. Leases have been signed for more an half of -the space In the ter- tnal already. Ultimately four six-story ware- -ue buildings with 4.500.000 uar feet of floor space will be lilt Two of these buldings are eluded In this contract The total vestment In the first unit of con-ruction has been announced at PARKINSON APPROVES. The designs of the terminal have en made by Architect John Par-nson, whose careful handling of entire matter has largely made wholesale terminal a possibility, while the executive commit- let the contract officially, it was awn and approved as to every de ll by Parkinson personally. Under the terms of the Parkin-n specffleatlons, all buildings will i of reinforced concrete with time of square feet of window ace.

The elevator order for the -st unit of construction will be the rgest ever placed In the West Each warehouse building will ive an eighty-foot private paved -eet on one side end switching acks on the other, so that a 'eet and a combination of tracks 11 serve each building. In all there will be more than miles of railroad track, thus (raring the most expeditious ban- ing of all deliveries to the ware- lueea, while the private streets II assure correspondingly rapid ickiog up" of shipments for de-ery to retn.il concerns. Trafflo msn declare the new lolesale terminnl will actually ike every city io Southern Ce.ll-rnia an Integral part of Los Anise from a traffic point of jlw, irom us present location at ourtn i and Broadway Into its quarters In 1 k8 bui'd'n1'5 about October 1. next year. It Is the Intention of the company to fit up on its two floors the largest shoe establishment In Los Angeles.

The consideration for the lease is not given. AT SEVENTH AND OLIVE. Arrangements by which the Coulter Dry Goods Company will take the building to be erected at the southwest corner of Seventh and Olive have been practically perfected. The structure, although only to be built four stories high for the present will have foundations for two additional floors. It will have a frontage on Seventh street of 10S feet and of 220 feet on Olive.

The street fronts will be faced with pressed brick and ornamentad with tile insets. Each street entrance will be set oft by a handsome marquise. THE NEW TORK. The plans of Mr. Haggarty for the New Tork Cloak Suit House can not only for the erection of a new concrete building but for the remodeling of the entire ground floor of the Brockman Block.

The site of the new structure was recently purchased by Mr. Haggarty from Adolph Fleishman for a given consideration ot $110,000 and is forty feet wide by 140 feet deep. The plans call for a building ot nine stories, but probably only four stories will be built at the present time. Terra cotta and brick will be used for the facing. With the first floor of the Brock-man Building, the "New Tork" will have a ground space ot 120x105 feet, with a small In addition af the rear of the Grand-avenue portion.

Both street fronts will be planned so as to provide an arcade In back of the building line, an arrangement that win afford double the window space otherwise obtainable. The mezzanine will be thirty feet wide and will extend entirely around the main floor, being approached at the outside corner by a wide marble staircase. The premises are to be reajy for occupancy by March 1, 11T. BUSINESS PROPERTIES. The building tor the Central Business Properties.

Ino, will have a frontage of 100 feet on Seventh by 103 feet on Grand and will be of steel frame construction. The three 'lower floors have been planned for mercantile purposes, the other Ave iit-m arransea ior omces. ine Street experts agree that under the bright, warm flood of Virginia's sunshine grows the finest-quality cigarette tobacco in the world. It is the highest-grade Virginia tobacco that Piedmonts are made of; they're ALL Virginia! Golden in color; mellow as Dixie's sun. The pleasing zest that means character in a cigarette is plain in a Piedmont, as soon as you light one.

VIRGINIA TOBACCO PAYS NO DUTY ALL TUB VALUE IS IN THE CIGARETTE. "A packait cfPudmonts, Aa AIX Virgiriia cigarette NOTEi It is Impossible te seQ a package of 10 ciearrttctof Turkih tobicco for Sc. Not thit this Turkish tobacco costs more than Virginia, but berati'e duty, tetam Jrrigtt, itvim btntrantt and txfnnv handlinj thsrrtt Bust be added te the cott of Turkish tobaccos. But Piedmont, made of hktiest-gnde Virginia tobacco, hxrt none of these valueless expenses. All Mo value is in each xj ror iSJlsoTacked 2Q br IO, i iwa ii.n runiea Irirk end trimmed with terra cot- ta.

The owners expect te have the nmm imm bv. nn lark city. Bw Prwito..

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