The evening world. Newspaper, June 23, 1900, Page 3

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~ WOW ATTACKED BIG THR WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING; JUNE 23, 1900, OUR MARINES, IN FIERCE BATTLE, BURGLAR. jms tu caicacons Mrs. Oakley Struck Him with Vase and Drove Him Out. Two Men Tried Hard to Rob Home of Wm. H. Seaich. A burglar has just left Roosevelt Hie- pital with souvenirs in the form of , permanent sealp wounds hestowet by Mre, Thomas © Oakley, a witow, of No. TE Riverside Drive The burglar visited Mre Onkley’s home a few nights ago witha com panion called Jim | Dispens! with polite methods they went in throur) a window and exp ored the prem! ] the abvence of Mrs Oakiev and her father end Mrs. Willlam H After sorting and mother, Mr Sevick erware into p hes rt @ble quantities and arranging viluanies in compact bundles they sat down t fejotce on a good night's, of rather mornings work. While in this state of exubderation the family entered The heterogeneous co lectign of bureau drawers and silver ware, dresses and summer hats wae put down to the account of how ning Mra Oni: red to her room, her! father and mother to theirs, and the Durgiar crawled out of a closet and breathed again Recollecting something he had for Gotten, one of the burglars went to the third floor Mrs. Oakley heard him, and politely asked him what he wanted He threw the full glare of a dark Manern in her face and replied with « ‘ #m ie 7 Do use your sense I ain't here for | my health “You had better depart, said Mre. Oakiry, calmly Now. do shut up, ered the in- 4 trader, “and Pil © one. Mrs, Oakley grasped a heavy cut-aians vase from a table, and approaching the astonished burma) brough fown on) his head He fell back and tried to strike her She dodged and hit him another blow harder than the first Then she called her father. The burglar leaped .o hie for be tng freely, “Ruy er it, Jim. he sna to is pal. He started downs’ Oakley still held the jar #he took a and hurled it after the retreating visitor, It struck him on the head and materi ally hastened his deseent He went down wrong ¢ Jim seized his friend aod out When Mr. Serach wore speeding around a corner. The burglar wae discharget Roosevelt before ( ai A firet from Was reported Mrs. Oakley has been suffering trom prostration since her thétiling expert ence —_—— WALDORF COACH HIT HER, | Rus Over—Twe of the hed One of Her Ankles—Driver Arrested. In attempting to cross Sixth avenu Beventy-eeventiy — A delightfully tuneful and potnetie| Ballad entiied “When Dusky Twilight | Steals Upon Me,” words by W'ilam C. Dunn, and muste by George Retohmarn, Will be ipsued as a eeparate iprlonpat with to-morrow's Sunday ae 4 “ a's Opera Garden| being sung at Dietri this week by the popular baritone, J. Aldrich Libby, of the American Opera Company, and it & the bir tolre. ot the many good songs recently | lishers, Sapiro Bernstein and Von Til- Me” and Von Titers vest Days Are Over.” are gaid to be the Dest. It ts by courtesy of this firm that one of these beautiful songs to its read. ers, Order the Sunday World to-day it you wish to insure your getting the helved atm | | pairtecn satenneiee from That City Were in the Dis. tarbed Districts. CHICAGO, June M%-If the news which comes from Tlentsin is true, thir- teen Chicagoans have perished under tthe Boxer rd have lost their centr the north Of the Chicagoans who have gone ¢ | worth China missionaries the best known are Dr Henry Porter and Rev Arthur Smith These men, with their families, are supposed to have gone to Tientsin from their station at Bang- Chuang five weeks ago for safety, With them was Mr. Porter's sister, Mise Ma: H. Porter, foremcast 6 sent ntatives of th Women's Board of Russell. who, while not a died here and went from notified friends at Besse- recently that she had left nh of Tlentsin to take Last .. the list of B. Patterson, whe n is in. Thentsin th. trie Mich her statton written Its. people eregational 1 has had eney at If Tientwin is des |g wtroyed the mission workers of Ching station, including | the two largest and oldest hospitals ta} SEND URGENT CALL FOR HELP. (Continued from First Page.) ceived by the European powers and | Was granted by them, am by our State | Department. A communication from Minister Wu to the State Department says that he has received a cable mes- ‘sage from the Viceroy of Nanking that the legations at Peking are safe. In answer to a request from the | Navy Department as to how many | Americans were in Peking, Admiral | Kempff replied under date of June 22, via Chefoo, that 30 Austrians, 75 | Frases. 50 Germans, 79 Britieh, 40 | Italians, 23 Japanese, 75 Russians | ana 58 American troops are in Peking. | He further says: “No | whereabouts of Peking’s relief expe-| ‘dition, Reported by cablegram June 12—Japanese expect several thousand | troops now due. No news from Tien- | tein or Peking since last report.” Thid despatch arrived at the Navy | Department prior to the despatch from the Admiral announcing fight- ling in progress between the Chinese rpeared, the two imperial troops and the international (column. Admiral despatch sent Kempft's ugh official circles here. had been details, thrill the espatones additional made on the movements of forces, Mator Waller in command of American marines who participated in the fight, is known here as @ brave and efficient offiter whore coolness and dar- ng were displayed during the baitle of news of a Other received, giving but these were not Je.» they did not shed light upon the engagement itself, but more the | Sant ago when he commanded the me- | tines onb oard the bet tleship Indiana The marines referred to in the cable are the 130 men taken by the Solace from Ma at the first for rein- forcements Admiral Kempff's specific statement that the engagement was “with the Chinese army” at first caused some Go Heitude among offtetals, for this was the first positive official statement that the imperial forces of China, and not the Boxers, were fighting the foreign troops Later, however, the view obtained that the Admiral had used the words “Oinese army” as a handy means of expressing the Chinese opposition en- countered without intending to officially declare that the |mperial troops were fighting The view of the Administration ts that | the despatches are not yet of a sult- clentiy definite character to show (hat any war with China Is in existence The anxtety over the situation at Pe- king was somewhat relieved when the Btate Deartment received « letter (rom the Chinese Minister, Mr. Wu, stating that he was advised by cable from the Viceroy of Nanking that the legations at Peking are safe. In quarters likely to be thoroughly ad- vised the Shanghai statement that Prince Tuan was in charge of a port accurate than at present, father of the heir apparent and one of the officials closest identified with the Empress Dowager. The Shangha\ statement of a practical ‘Anglo-American alliance” elteitea an experesion of indignation from the of- ials here, who have explaining that there such alliance. of the Chinese troops was credited as If this is established beyond dowbt the| situatton may become even more acute | Prinse Tuan is the ex weary of absolutely no POCONO OU UU OO Lo A STREET IN THE CITY OF TIENTSIN DRONA NG OSA # 101018 G90 CHINESE RULE WRECKED; NATIONS LOOK TO US. SHANGHAI, June 22 (Midnight).— Foreigners and commercial men at all of the treaty ports are of the. opinion that the Chinese Government has been wrecked beyond repair, and that the only solution for the exist ing anarchy will be the establishment of a new Government controlled by the civilized nations. Attempts to restore the Empress on | the basis of her foreordained promise sition of the foreigners worse than ever. A popular plan a the restora. tion of the Emperor if found alive, With liberal advisers’ he could be held subject to strict supervision by | some counci| representing the foreign powers. ALL EYES ON US. The personal ponishment of the highest officials concerned tn the anti-foreign movement is considered ‘ensential. Interest is focused Russia and America. It is the universal belief that Rus-) sia instigated rioting, expecting to pede an army to Peking and pro- aim herself protector of China under the guise of restoring order, but achieved a flasco on account of} the prompt action of the other jean alliance of good behavior would make the po- | AAAAD AAA | t' C1eseiese(e e1eletesetereieie, e1ereseier t fn China. The com-| mercial organizations of ‘both na- tonalities are urging their respec- | tive governments hurry more| The presence of enough sol | diers to enforee the demands upon China, besides being in check to the ambitions of rival powers, is deemed vital” There is an insuMcient number of English troops available to protect} the interests at stake in the (reaty| ports. The English and Americans confidently expect that several regi- ments “ill be sent from the Phii pines without delay | No confidence is expressed in i | Hung Chang, who Is expected to fol- ‘low whatever policy is likely to re- sult in personal aggrandisoment, | Many missionaries from the Yang tee-Kiang Valley are coming to Shanghai for safety. |THREE LEGATIONS BURNED, Three Chinese gunboats recently | built by the Armstrongs, have ar: | rived at Shanghai from Taku, fleeing from the foreign fleets, leaving a Caps tain behind in their haste. Two| Chinese cruisers at Kiang-Ying Fort, | fifty miles up the river, are kept un- | der steam. The forts are provided | j with modern artillery, and are jn-| structed to watch for the approach of to troops. powers. America, which ts considered to hold the key to the situation because) of being beyond suspicion of land- of his repet-| added to the catalogue «f music pub-| 1. “When Dusky Twilight Steals Upon | “When the Har- | the Sunday World ls enabled to prevent | BOMBARDING FOREIGN at Thirty-second ke morning Mrs Elizabeth Mason, forty years old, who lives West Thires- Tour uiees wie wwetet wt seal =) QUARTERS AT TIENTSIN. run ver by a team and coach belonging | to the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel | | Tro of the wheels passed over her) LONDON, June 23.—Despatches) Shanghal and Japan, Many consider | ankle. She was iaken to Bellevue Hospital |from Shanghai, dated at 7.20 P. M.| Shanghai unsafe, owing to the ab: | The driver, Frederick W Fast | yesterday, give additional details of) #€n¢e of foreign troops. SHANGHAI, June 2.—Prince Tuan, as the bombardment of Tientsin. ThAL) ova nder int’ of the Chis town has been incessantly bombard-| army, is directing the assault on Tien- tein. He is determined to clean out ed for the last three days. the foreigners there, and has made grabbing motives, ts in the best posl- BRITAIN AN ALLY. There is a qractical a Amert-| three. a oe | tion to take the lead in making pro-| | Posals for a permanent arrangement, foreigners. Six American y- ‘terian missionaries from Kiang-Ying | have arrived at Shanghal. | A wealthy,Chinaman who fled (9m legations except the British, Austrian and Belgian have been burned, the| foreigners taking refuge with those! LIEUT. WRIGHT AMONG KILLED, REV.BROWN SAYS. : The entire British and French set-| hurried march from Peking itee.t to do| An alarming cable despatch has been) most gone, This is the message jit [received in this city from Rev. Fred just got away from Thentein tlements have been destroyed. Heavy Young La, a nephew of the Dowaget) orice i Brown, Methodist Missionary at, °" ® a casualties are reported, The Chinese) mmpress, was formerly General-in-Chlef, |. ‘ ot ” number at least fifteen thousand in-| Prince Tuan dismissed him and took | Tentsin, whose despatch to Rev. A.B oraj days by the Cb side the city, while thetr emissartes charge himself, Then he gave notice) Leonard, Secretary to the Methodist All the foreign part of Tlentan has | that he would march on Tientsin and! foard of Foreign Missions, was pub- been destroyed crowd the foreign quarters, S€ttIDS) pweep out ihe handful of foreigners F ore Lieut. Wright, of our navy. and 1 Gre tm the batidings | tnere lished exclusively in the Evening World| tical Ur! yi ae The Chinese guns are being worked) At daylight on the morning of June 21) Yerterday. | and Wr apintance, "| he attacked the foreign settlement at] The cablegram is dated from Cheefoo, are killed or wounded ateadily from the walls of the native) 7. sin g4e had artillery and the best June 22 It declares that Lieut. Wright.) “The American Consulate building has city, The Consulates all being de foreign defied troops in the Chinese, U8. N., and 1 persons were killed OF been destroyed stroyed, the foreigners flock to the) army wounded in the bombardment up to) “Ammunition ts almost gone The town hall His forces had forty-five Krupp guns.| Wednesday. that the garriton is in garrison are suffering terribiy and need They managed to burn the United| terriole straits and its ammunition al- instant heip BROWN.” The assistance of reinforcements) * it onsumie The warehoures and rates consul o and} 8 fips is implored. The Russians are now intrenched in the depot. They are resisting the advance which the en- cmy is making in overwhelming The latest # from authentle eourere nu.abers. in Peking is the effect that there is no No word has been received from|no change tn the stuation. This Is un Admiral Seymour, and it Is feared | derstood to meam (hat the Lagations jthat the relief column fared badly.) The Chinese have surrounded them, There is an exodus of foreigners ona do not dare 3. sane Hog? at from the Yanz-tse-Kiang forts tol out those who have © taken Tefuge there. \CLIMAX NOW REACHED, - the Standart Off Company's premises are believed to have escaped Though the situation ts grave, | Chinese have mot occupted Tlentain OFFICIAL LONDON THINKS. “PEKING IN PERIL,” CABLES MISSION BOARD AGENT. | LONDON, June 2—The Chinese crists ‘has reached @ climax, Imperial troops | are besieging Tientsin and not Boxers, lene this is regarded officially here as meaning that the Empress-Dowager has | declared war against the world. Merchants in Shanghal and other sea- ports are realizing on thelr goods and 'G@eeing into the interior They believe the trouble will spread. The Govern- ment is being urged to selse the forts | at Woo Sung for fear they may open fire on the foreign quarters, Possibly as a preliminary to some ac- nese Admiral asking high to remove his fleat trom Shangoal In compilance with this request two Chinese warsh) are to sail to-day and thar rest to t- row. In the meag while the gravity of the situation at Tientein can hai diy be over of affairs estimated. The critical # vwtth whieh seems plain from the hy the small force of 20 ma) was spateh from Taku to the reef of the! Tientein garrison force. cone pert Rail bee at-0lt) tien of tite hint Sp Conti of Hane June 3 »e| NINTH INFANTRY CAN'T LEAVE UNTIL JUNE 27. WASHINGTON, following despatch has been received storm, whieh to starve) at the War Department from Ma -The “Departure Ninth Infantry delayed In response to @ cabled inquiry whether their missionaries and Shan Tung were safe terian Hoard of Foreign Misstons this city, to-day received th wing reply from the Presbyterian Miss treasurer, Eltertche, at Chef ’ China HEFOO, Jane 22—ek ordered perl port. Tess in the heart of th pres ne, Seepatc 1 means wince of 4: Pro caer tr he Government until June 27 in broke araph and made consequence of railroad tele. | approach to trans- pogt Imponstble | “(Signed) MAC ARTHUR” tection of a United States aunboat This shows tha situation is con: sidered vy the consu.s to be very serious, The Se of Hoard of Foreign Missal hor er to-day from David J. HM, Anis Seerwiary Siate at Washing va soknowleda@e (he receipt of iy China in reply | have to say tha: while the stiuation in China ts very s lous the Department h. as yet bee informed of may | fe among th. Amertean mim Protection h od will vmtinue to be extended (9 thews by (nis eramen eigAi, information roc received t' pa ei he of Amerteap ci ‘eal colved a Bin antl The sectioms most sa *tions it 1 mission \ries Bociety. The Germans 4 in & portion of the province and | brought the nation to the verge of Fuin,}of hi the Dowageir hoped by stirring the peo- in horse bewa: to Cg ‘about. ple to oppertition and a display of ants forvign feel, vg to discourage their fur- ther encroac hments. periods to bear ment is measures tn driving the Germans to ta into their own hatred Guilt of Liao Tum, say BEGAN THE RIOTS. Tre American Bible Society today re-yment was finally stirred somewhat dy itl the fear of must follow nd property, citying edi@ts to stay news. bat too | edicts Seen widely (watch they were not) the ruMans, wi dad banded themmely peria! command, Nad gone too far to be content with wmaything short of plun- from Charles F Gammon, n Tlentain, a report dated April which Mr Gammon expiaing the jerman feeling by the Chinese eport saye in part | comparatively few) oily directed against holies, Protestants being dle and undisturded, in other) jt ie anti-Christian, while in| anti-foreign, affecting native Chratians and for enerally dicts of the Empress Dowager tne hem to form as militia for local and tional defense, were doubtless tne iain of 4 already lo: | cal ‘This ts the) view taken by many Welle informed for tignera and the inactivity of all the officials during the woret { rioting by the Boxers seems vat frat opinion, The Govern- prowerl and any active y Empress against the toty she hers elf brought Into life and 1 the pugh her official would turn ite ene and direct) jainst the throne | doubtless |tnem to rebetlie a The lawlevan They punished in turn aroused who were in travelling vande vffenders, vwhieh in the matives, 4 to acts of violence by anders of the Box ere. Eexalt the dynevsty and kill the for- eigners’ was their ery. The Govern- RUSSIAN TROOPS MOVING \*=ROM PORT ARTHUR. CHEFOO, China, Jus ve MA despatch from New-Chwang, at the head of the Foretane The Britien Co! & Kunboat, but has received no reply ks port ry apparent ty left under FENIAN DEPORTED, = “Skin the > ae and “The Dwarf" Sitlled for Ireland To-Diay- The two Irish Invinetbles, Jam vs Fits Harris and Joseph Mullett, known as “Skin the and “the Dwamt” are n their way back to Ireland M™ on board the Canard the rteerage hospital lawiess: these der, the the flow “But it that Central Government, following out the! you’ ft, bh moaning: mistaken policy of the Empress Dow ag co fle hag | San ¢ Yi-HeChuan of Boxer ager after the practical dethronement] pur at 1.3) this iene he of the CHINESE EMPRESS | causes 4 grave situation and to the people of Shantung, calling upon | threatens redeliton amd bloodshed. The GIRL VICTIM: CF GREED. | Ten-Cent- Fare Rule Held Child at Coney Island All Night. certain consequences tha’ the’ lose of foreign lives| A ten-year-old Brooklyn girl found and strove by mild and! ¢leeping on the sand at Coney Icend the hand of eariy this morning was another vietia sor even had] of the ten-cent-fare rule on the Broglie pudiisned } im Heights trolley. Police Capt. Harte as recently detailed Offleer Hamiten to ride up and down the beach at to preserve order. Last night was sight of burning homes and| second time “hat he has done {t. 18 of diood. & dreary task, which lasts from ts not alone the Boxer Society! PM to 400 A.M. During the first part of the night, es he passed by « certain point near Tile ogether by im- as of @ child crying, He found oe Emperor Kuapg Heu, 88) aound again quite plainly, and ti | and |e itself in such @ condition that| The famous police dog Major has * the next year, it would see, ust) companied him on these midnight z. riage about some great and overwhelm. | trols and has trotted contentedly ep Never, probably, in the) and down Lehind his horse. aistory ref the Empire the Government fapsees of such ignorant, sme c0 stent oe la andl-progressive men finally began to bark loudly in betweem must come of ail this,|twe buildings on the sand. Policemen snething will mean the over-| Hamilton by the light of his lantern dismemberment Throughout the xercised the ¢ st rulers, am m are pre are ind Bo: in Shantung resulted | Gen Yue) m! the tion and reteliion immi jton of China seems thevita lant resource fo it may Russian arriving from Port Arthur and north. “The is not ikely to be seriously interfered with.” \PRENCA aa Cables of Destrec- ttem ef American Con- PARIS, June & ~The French Consul- General in China telegraphs under date Friday, June 2, a8 follows Tientain concessions and the Amer) A despatch received here from the French Yunnan-Fu under date of Sunday, June) uy, against owing to apprehensions of a war @ays thu Another telearem, tha h elved secret instructions not to use force with the Boxers, but to teach thom that their ideas are @ little mis-|get home with. Her father dovernment in its present condi established 1 the situation in Yunnan-#en the present dynasty, or the found a ight to revolt against un-| had an air of refinement alout het, t no time cor 4 pelt Ee Oe S moh) “He took her to the pollee statin sutberners ere avalous for it—| where she gave her oo treme for it, Northern ent (0 @ feat extent, wren of © Feereapen lyn. Her mother was notified this mera’ The child had started for Coney Tate and with 10 cents, and had ie the civil Governor 1B dhantung, We have that Cae reserved and eaved but with] mercial traveller, <n BRITISH WARSHIPS TO CARRY TELEGRAMS, LONDON, June %—The British Gows, ernment hi Britian i on the good of the be ‘welcomed ® = ar-ships between Tale Chefu to carry neg Consumption » Coll The Best Brooklyn Doctors Said | Had Consumption. stad aes MOUTHFUL, protection. Russian troops are the residents are eafe and business Re: NEWS PROM CHINA. ee. My Mother, Two Brothen sad Heataad — ” All Died of Consumption. - T bad chills and fever, raised quantities of matter lungs. My breath was bombarded the @ destroyed Chinese have in Conaula Consul, M. Francols, sent from ses fear of an insurrection the mandarins in Yunnan-#en He sls the reason he ls detained. dated Wednesday, the mandarins had re- nquillity In Mong-tee and! Peking on the i4th days that all the , cnehanged. Two Europeans from the yiace had succeeded in reaching having encountered great obstacles, and four Chinese con- victed of participating in the burning of steamship Servia, which sailed at } look The men did vt go witholt leavioe ® parting remembrance of thelr Agh ting acing ihe cemre at a{% church and five European houses, “yagi “4 June 16, were executed me all ye e deck at onsnilpeamee Rossa, Ed Carey, Major Lowentres, Ju seph O'Netll, Edmund Farley and about twenty other Irishmen of New York jown to em off, and » jolll- . ton nad been promised on the deck “sate and We! But Dr Warke. of the Servia, had & BERLIN, June 2—The Chinese Min- titerent plan. Ho had ent the steorane| iter pene, Lual-Mouas, as hoapital ready to receive the deported : ; ieiohunen, and 06 they passed the door jsermed che Pereign Omes that the Ger with thelr tan Minister at Peking, Raron Von Ket- smenme the officer from the} Immigration Bureau, who brought them te ler, who, {t was reported, trom Ellis Island to (ne Barge OMee and | 4 Ved py tne Boxers, was safe and weil. then gave them « trolley ride for an hour and a half, showing them the fights of the city. by & britk movement showed them into the hospital and closed, the door The "Key wae not on hand, and they left a big German, the ship's maste arms, to hold the door Toe trapped Irishmen yelled luatily. They denounced their captors and de- manied tgeir rights as British subjects} mira! ler the shadow of the Statue of Lib-| Navy Department an urgent request for more of-ers He wantin three had been REMBY LACKS UFPIGERS WAMTINGTON, June %%—Rear-ad- y threw themacives against tn | door and finally ¢ it open, for no | tenant e»mmanders, ten a man of the ¢ satiy Irishmen | wwenty ca: lets and a Meet paymaster, would respond to the German's calls for | ———=: bu araisiance Mullett was flerce. He challenged any S1 UDIO FOOD and every one to combat, and the . assembled friends cheered tustily An Artist's Diet, Some of the New Yorker ved) An artist living in a New York thar the immigrants would Leh nd| studio writes regarding the advan- were allowed to have thelr fare-|tage of a proper selection of health- vn the steerage deck,|ful food. He says, “Some time ago of the Servia, however, |a sister who wd been il wrote me vem with a number offof the good she had obtained from the use of Grape -Nuts food two meals « oy and that aif the family made great use of the food She recom- mended it very stroggly to me. 1 had up to thai. time supposed lehia was a luxury and had not tried hey well joliification he first ofcer surrousding men picked from the cre ASPHYXIATED AT CONBY. Guest May Die, and te Probably | it, put | sent for some and for quite GW. Derrick, of ie little time depended largely hg Grape-Nuts, with a sur) rising result hp scgptsperit || neve Irgeiy loat my tuete for meat With 825 In bills In his pocket and */ and am unusually erong. walking a afd Searing the address of G. F Der | long distal daily, which for some rich, So. GH State sect, Br ‘| years has been almost impossibie. Conn, 4 man was found over |" “1 Hve in a studio and bave neither gas in Wacke’s Hotel, Coney Island. this | eime nor rom to cook, therefore the , Grape-Nuts, being ready cook ed, come in a especial boon and I felt 1) must thank you. “The Postum Cereal Coffee | have +] used a long time, and if that comes had | from you it must come in for @ share) of thanks alto.” Ada A. Brewater. 204 jogth &t, New York City. A. Brown He re ot Inet night as ew Yo He was taken to Kings County How pital unconectous, The man was 5 f T inches tall, wore « gray sack sult brown hair and mustache and pooner: (TT pounds. eH will probably die. I Remey, at Cavite, has cabled the! @, ete ae balmy oils into the my relatives died of C a | taking creosote and di | by taking the I Koch tion, at 48 West , where first treatment is given free. This Koch healing vapor prove. | finally got wel! charged as cured, and all know it. They will I was cured by ‘he Koc! at 48 West 22d St., of and I am again well. been saved. I feel shall do my duty by simple statement for the benefit of those who have weak lungs, It ag only cures but prevents MRS. JOHN 535 9th ave., N. Y. City. C WITH A TAIL! it Has Come to Stay with Us Forever —Health Follows in its Trall-A \ Welcome Awaits It Everywhere, ‘owns Not ba sarSined 8 byt tte sSyeurenee. ‘e te It looks lke this | wun a Taub er the United States re promouy jumped imto Nemedy Co. New York ~

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