The evening world. Newspaper, June 18, 1904, Page 2

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a) Sixteen Additional Near North Brot der Rocks. ‘bed of the river he found a x great _ two girls, one twelve years old and @hd w5en the tide slackens they will y to the swift race of the ti fivers can work. ‘That the fire started on the Gen. Bloour fully two miles and a half froin "Where she was beached was born out : fn the remarkable story told to Quthorities by John Engelman, © forty years 014, of No, 42% wast Twelfth Street, one of the survivors, Engelman ©) Visited the Emergency Station, at the ‘foot of Hast One Hundred and Thirty- econd asirect, to-day, and made In- sonar @bout the finding of the body of _ Bis iktle boy ~ Hoe declared to Sergt. Lundrigan, in = ‘Marge of the station, that he had dis- Severed that’ the steamboat was on Gre when she was opposite Ninety- #e0ond street, In the Hell Gate channel. Reached Shore Opposite 02d Street. Mitend my wite, two sisters and lit- boy,”’ said Mr, Engelman, “ aitting forward of the engin I discovered a burst of flame a “Short distance from us, Anticipating “the terrible panic that followed I took Wife and son to the side and we overboard. I know every foot ‘the water in that part of the river, ana towing my wife and child I struck re for the Long Island shore, The fe térriné and i I managed to keep up my wife thé boy was swopt away from us and fear drowned. made the shore e ite Ninety-second street.’ ~ Bttitements are being made tn rapid! jon that give firm basis to the voiced by a number of city thorities that the crew of the Gen. im made no real effort to check the flames that resulted in such an Overwhelming loss of life. More Bodies Under Wreck. H | The police are vertain that there are \miany more bodies buried “@unken side of the Gen. Slocum, and ntil these bodies are recovered the pu- Hee will net allow the insurance com- panies nor the owners of the steamboat to take any part in the work of raising Mhe_ wree: in midchannel 7 ‘Of the steamboat companies that Doats plying, through the waters felghborhood of the have instructed by the police to wari captains to slow down when puss- “North Brother Island. In the Int, Gays severil of the big Sound | ers have gone at full spoea ss the channel near where the 3 ith ppline-irons and the divers 4 working, and the heavy rollors ; out from’ the trough ploughed up i craft have torn a number les from the grappling-lrona and them beyon in Weacthe tine Fixing the Name. Much valuable testimony has been Drought out at the various investiga- Hons being conducted for the purpose Of fixing the blame for the grent loss recovery the e, ‘The evidence so far gathered by the Mivers from the wreck indicates that crew mode little effort to fight the , a! e 1 fe-saving ap The ite-boats were f te and the life-pre: nenace instead of a help. Valuable evidence w Diver John Rice, acting 1 Coroner O'Gorman, e brought up a section of stand- twelve feet long, with nozzle at- i fe wheel valve that opened hut the pipe was held fast, closed ie y t ed by der orders Fass cap gripped #0 Drouhgt up by Rice, pipe werd Berry's of- famed Two Mikes B " Coroner Berry is making rapid head- : M Ths preparations ‘for hie whiten he if dozen members of hewn questioned by nin, and one ce them, John J. Coakl ind learned that the fire Mas firat raised when the Slocum A$ 9M Mitehwell's Island. Coakley's paeatinony that ‘Capt. Va Sehaick had run the steamer two mil beaanirs wan rained an iow her after the alarm of Ps of whole families bein ep wiped jut aire nuW common, In the case of Aye Hiageniuchers three daughters, two Pot them married, and having with them ) ther tour chilaren and a friend, were ) drowhad. Their bodles were all ‘reco cred and will be buried from Fitr- 3 ick'® uinndertaking rooms, at No. thy Lexington avenue, Monday A unothor case six’ members of bodies buried to- Mrs dred Smith. ag he an Infant will be from the home of Will- » S13 Central avenis ¥ to be taken from the 4 i EA 1 a in an American fa, ok silk, but woun, Were'the tangle WES. RECOVER MORE BODIES TO-DAY eo ————__—- under the | ore Beached : . This. woe fai Noted Untecognizable dead, ¢.‘P® *UPPoARE! Victims Are Found her Island—Big Pile of Corpses Jammed in a Pocket Un- BODIES FOUND.......00 600 esc ce cess cecese OG LIST OF MISSING (ESTIMATED)...... 250 Bixteen more bodies of victims of the Gen. Slocum disaster were rc- D to-day. The majority of these remains were taken from a pocket } short distance from North Brother Island that was discovered to-day by ‘Diver Gilligan. When Gilligan examined this sunken hole in the rocky mass of tangled bodies, He declared ‘there were at least fifty and began work immediately to raise them, None ‘found in this place had been burned, but met their death by drowning. Bight bodies were taken up early in the day and six this afternoon. > Of the six recovered this afternoon two were young men; two were women, | Ohe Shout twenty-four years old and the other about twenty-seven, and the other seventeen. All these bodies ~ fre in good condition and can be readily identified. The missing bodies will;be taken up as rapidly as the divers can wore, beraised with the greatest possible ex- ‘petition, so that it will be/more than probable that as fast as the bodies of “Wietims are taken for burial from devastated homes on the east side now ‘Podies will take their places, until fully 200 more are recovered. © Owin) ide, however, there are only compara- tively few hours in the day that the men with grappling irons and the! |from the taffrad! of the Gen. Blooum and that {n jumping she became caught in the ensign and dragged into the water with her, —— HE LOST MOTHER, WIFE AND CHILD. Three victims of the Slocum disaster not previously reported are Mrs, Aroma Younger, sixty years old, of No, 308 West One Hundred and Thirty-third street; Mrs, Estelle Younger, twenty- three entra old, of Germantown, Pa., and 1@¥ daughter Alice, aged three. ‘The women were wife, respectively, of John Younger, @ business man of Germantown, He sent his wife and his only daughter to visit his mother in this olty last Sunday. At that time Mra. Younger had $500 in cash And she wore $2,000 worth of jewelry. The elder Mra. Younger, her daugh- feria low and little Allee went on the St. Mark's Church excursion, Younger came to New he heard of the burning of the Gen, Slocum Thus far he has been unabie to find the body either of his mother, his wite or his baby, ees PRESIDENT BARNABY AT JEROME'S OFFICE. | President Frank A. Barnaby, of the Knickerbocker Steamboat Company, the owners of the Gen, Slocum, called at the District-Attorney's oMce to-day, and with his counsel, ex-Judge Dittenhoofer, was closeted two hours with Assistant District-Attorney Garvan Mr, Barnaby and his attorney called upon Mr. Garvan at the latter's re- guest and submitted td an exhaustive examination concerning the conduct of |the steamboat by the officers of his | company, Mr. Garvan {nterrogated Mr, Barnaby the provisions made for the of passengers, the fire appa- {t# Inspection, the drilling of the the purchase’ of life preservers, thelr’ Inspection and otlgr matters con- cerning which harsh criticism has been made against the company's officers, After leaving the District-Attorney’ office President Barnaby and his cou sel went to the Bronx, where they we! again examined by Coroner Berry, Caty Will KH je Hulk, At the conclusion of the conference between Mr, Barnaby and Mr, Garvan the latter sald: “he hulk of the Gen. Slocum will be"Falsed by the city, That much was York as soon | about safety rat crow, decided last night at the conference In Mr. the Mayor's office. anxious to assist in every possible wi the Investigation that ts being made. Me has given us the names we have | asked for, and has offered to produce any papers that we want | “He Is as horrified as anybody, at what took place, but says the Gen, Blocum wax looked upon as one of the best marine rial The rate of insurance on her was as low as on any Barnaby seem aft in these waters. “The attitude of the company has been very fair all through. ‘The one thing It will not do ts to raise the hulk, and they refuse to do that because to | touch It would be to vitlate their rights in the Insurance she carried. Of course, they cannot be blamed for that. DEAD IDENTFED AT THE MORGUE List of Victims of the Slocum Disaster Who Have Been Recognized by Their Relatives and Friends. ‘The following {dentifications of vic- tims of the Slocum disaster were made at the Morgue to-day: TOTAMORE, Mrs. SOPHIE C., thirty. | No, 1714 Bushwick avenue, Brooklyn, |by Dr. George H. Samken, No, 888 Lex. } ER, forty-five, No. 190 (Wife, child and niece nd avenue. pissing.) | | A, two, No, 116 Lake twenty, No. 1000 twelve, No, 338 Mrs. HENRI- Mark's orled’ missing enberger,” iy eleven, No, ily, id A, fiftee: No. M4 Bt, FISCHER, EMMA, No. 108 First « aaa > lowed themselves sufficient time, and word was sent around notifying per- Meee PRE 4 THE WORLD: SATU: shinai RDAY EVENING, JU te ie NE 18, 1904. LONG GRAVE THAT HAS BEEN PREPARED IN THE LUTHERAN CEMETERY FOR THE BURIAL OF THE SLOCUM’S UNIDENTIFIED DEAD * ghd Stee Sc, “ SLOCUM VICTIMS BORNE TO GRAVE (Continued from First Ps ) of the minister of St. Mark's, Mrs, George C. P. Haas. It was rendered doubly pathetic because the bodies of the pastor’s daughter, Gertrude, his mother-in-law, Mrs. Mary Hanson, his sister-in-law, Mrs. William Dietmore, and her son Herbert, have not been recovered. Because of the ghastly burns he received in the destruction of the Slocum, Dr. Haas sat behind a screen during the funeral services. The sermon was preached by Dr. Alexander Richter, of Hoboken. In the course of his remarks he said: “We must not blame God for the negligence and carelessness of the owners and the crew of the Gen, Slocum. Members of nearly every family in the parish, most of whom had themselves lost relatives in the disaster, attended the funeral, Dr. Haas went to the cemetery. Several boys were arrested for pelting the crowds in the streets around the houses of death with watermelon rinds. Ten of them were arraigned in the Children’s Court this afternoon and fined. NOT ENOUGH HEARSES. Owing to ‘the scarcity of hearses many funerals that were scheduled for to-day were postponed. In some cases the black dead wagons of un- dertakers were used to remove bodies to the cemetery, This condition dered more pitiable the already overwhelming misery of the situation. In all the boroughs of the city there are not more than twenty-five white hearses, and as a majority of the dead are children, white hearses are indemand. There are about three hundred black hearses in the metro- politan district, but the normal demand requires from eighty to one hun- dred and fifty a day, and as the death rate is high at this time there are not more than one hundred and fifty available for the dead of the Slocum wreck. Orders for hearses have been sent to New Jersey and up the Hud- | son, and the ordinary rate of $7 for a hearse supplied by a liveryman has mounted to $20 for the day, and is climbing. The undertakers in setting their time for funerals did not admit of delay. They figured on driving their horses at the limit of speed allowed by law and hastening back from the cemetery to euother funeral after each interment. While the day was young they found that they had not al- sons wh dead to bury of postponement. BUSINESS WAS SUSPENDED. Business was practically suspended in the devastated district. On every hand in every street white crape fluttered from the doorways. The atmos- phere of gloom dissipated the bright sunshine, and even the most careless heart felt the shadow of sorrow. All business houses were draped in black and It seemed that almost every one on the street was in mourning. The police arrangements were excellent, There were ten policemen as-; signed to each funeral, and considering the great number of vehicles for the dead there was very little confusion. As rapidly as possible the funer- als moved out of the district, by way of the Williamsbur,; Bridge and the Twenty-third street ferry. A continual -procession of hearses and car- riages moved vover the bridge both ways all day long. A. A. Hill, of the Charities Organization Society, representing the Mayor's Relief Committee in the neighborhood, got his agents to work soon after dayligit. ‘fhore were twelve of them engaged in the work of succor by 10 oclock, The misery and utter desolation encountered by these men was appalling. They found houses in which the stricken rela- tives of the dead were simply paralyzed by grief; where food had not been thought of for three days; where misfortune had rendered men and women helpless. The agents were supplied with money for the purchase of supplies for immeviiate use. Mourners in need of mourning garments were suppliod with orders, Wher2 it was found that the families were unable to ber) the expense of a fune; nd it was a heavy expense In most cases—they | were instructed to engage to bury the dead at the expense of the committee. FUNERAL CHANTS EVERY WHER=. It was discovered that in many cases the overworked undertakers had not visited the houses of death since leaving the bodies after removing | | In these cases the rellef agents notified the under. | them from the Morgue. |{aker that unless he took immediate steps for the caro of the hodies an- 4 other undertaker from another part of the city would be engaged. } | brom Uhivd avenue to the river the funeral chent resounded from the! open doors of churches. Services were held In churches of all denomina- | tions and ministers were kept busy repeating tt prescribed forms. St. Mark's Church was, of course, the centre some activity, but a surprisingly large number of funerals were held from other c net | } This was because of the resentment that {fs felt to Mark's by | the surviving member of fom"ics that have heen almost wiped out by the deiaster. With tae unreas nohlencss of great grief, these sorrowing mothers wold the church jaany months before and fathers and sons and daughters and brothers and sisters responsible, in a vense, for their desolation, It will St, Mark’r recovers from the blow, A pitiful feature of the depressing scene was ‘he frequency with which hearées were passed in which more than one coffin was place* Many car- oe a bs Os. Deilinn mero a ried three little white caskets. A lone carriage following two hearses often| marked the passage of a husband and father going to the grave,with the bodies of wife and children. Occasionally this father held in his.arms an infant, left motherless, LIKE AN UPHEAVAL, OF EARTH. Out at the Lutheran Cemetery, in Queens Borough, it was as ,though some great upheaval of the earth during the night had rended the in- closure. § AM through the night @ fored of 160 grave diggers had been preparing the last resting place for the General Slocum’s dead. Most of the graves were in the south end of the cemetery, but all through the graveyard were piled stacks of the great unwieldy pine boxes in which caskets are in- closed before they are lowered into the ground. The burial of Gertrude, Anna and Henrietta Prawdzicki, three little girls who lost their lives, while their mother was saved, was most affect- ing. The mother stood at the side of the grave, her head swathed in band- ages, for she was badly burned, .and her grief was so poignant and so man- ifest that even other mourners offered her sympathy. One hundred and fifty school children from Public School No. 25 fol- ‘owed the body of Olga Totlisch to the grave. Olga was fifteen years old, the holder of the school medal and one of the prettiest girls on the whole cast side. It was hard to see the white casket containing her body lowered Into: the grave, while the children sought to sing a requicm, ending it in a chorus of sobs, 26 BODIES IN MORGUE CANNOT BE IDENTIFIED. There are now eighteen bodies in the, unidentified dead for burial. improvised morgue on, the Charities'| The identification was made by Dr. Department at the foot of East! George H. Semken, of No. 866 Lexing- ‘Twenty-sixth atreet, and twenty-eight! ton avenue, the family physician, from badly burned bodies in the Morgue] pecullar surgical marks left on the, Proper. Two of these latter have béeen| body by an operation he had per- identifed to-day by the scars of sur-| formed. gical operations which they had en-| Mrs. Tetamore's son, Herbert, elght dured in the past. Of the elghteen| Years old, and her mother, Mrs. Han- bodies still on the plor, there are two| 0" of No. 64 Seventh street, still are men, two women, three boys and eleven| lasing. girls. Of these elght have been iden-| Henry Oelrich, a boy of fourteen, was tied, sitting on the curbing in front of the Ono of the badly burned bodies tdon-| Morgue when the sun came up to-day. titled this afternoon was recognized by|#ia head was bowed in sleep and. his Henry Fischer, of No. 108 Firat avenue,|@fms rested.on his knees, The police as that of his wife, Emma Figcher, He| Tan others back who struggled forward recalled that some time ago his wife| to get a glimpse of the thirty-nine un- had an operation performed, and he/| Claimed bodies of the Slocum disaster, brought the physician who performed] but no one disturbed this boy. the operation to the hospital and he| “Let him sleep,” said a policeman. found the marks of three incisions on| “He has been here constantly since his the left breast, which he had made at| mother, brother and three sisters went that time. to death on the steamboat.” The body of Henrietta Heisunberger,| Tils boy was on the Gen. Slocum with forty-five years old, of No. 22 St. Mark #|his entire family with the exception of place, was one of those which was s0/ his father, He saved his life by swim- badly charred that it seemod hopoless | ming, and then b to expect her to ever be positively | dead. The cloth known. But to-day her husband called | jumped from the sinking boat into the at the Morgue and, by her false teeth | water have not been changed, He has and a band on her arm, identified his| been outside the Morgue for many, wife. many hours, Pastor's 3: “Law identifi Boy Fonnd Hii One of the first incidents at the] There came a boat laden with dead to the, Morgue last night. The boy had been joined by his er, and father and son pressed through the crowd and looked over the boxes containing thi Gead added to the rows of boxes on t! pler. Behind the man and boy came other persons, some of them in Morgue to-day was the identification of the body of Mrs, William B. Tetamore, thirty years old, of No, 1741 Bushwick avenue, Brooklyn, a sister of Mrs. Haas, the wife of the pastor of St. Mark's Churoh, just as the cody was about to be placed among the ‘Authorizes Commissioner Me- " Adoo to Contract with Wreck- ing Company to Lift Hull of - Gen. Slocum. Vet Mayor McClellan practically defied the United States authorities to-day when he authoriz@1 Police Commissioner Me- Adoo to at once enter into a contract with wreckers to rajse {Ie hull of the | steamboat Slocum. Although It was uncertain that the ‘elty had any jurisdiction over even the burned hull of the Slocum, Mayor McClellan to-Gay insisted upon tho in- vestigation being pushed to the extreme of offering umbrage to the Government authorities by ordering the work to proceed. The Board of Underwriters told the Mayor to-day that they would not ex- bend more than $6,000 for the work of | raising the hulk, and, ag the estimated ‘cost 1s $12,000, the Mayor, after a con- ference with the Police Commissioner, | dectded to order the raising of the wreck. : | “I will take my chances of getting jthe difference from the Board of Esti- |mate at the proper time," said the | Mayor when he discussed the matter in his private office to-day. “The Dis- trict-Attorney demands the raising of the hull for procuring physical evidence, ‘The clty demands the immediate rais- ing of the hull for the reclaiming of the bodies sald to be lodged within tts burned confines. The use of dynamite would not do at all. Bwidence which the District-Attorney demands would be destroyed by explosion and besides the bodies now in the hull would be fur- ther mutilated, “If $12,000 can obtain evidence for the District-Attorney and afd the city in recovering bodies we ai “How about the city’s jurisdiction over the hull?’ was asked. “It were better not to agitate that question now,” said the Mayor; “but, at any rate, we propose to go ahead, and hope to have the hull raised and secured before any possible interference can arise, We cannot wait. We are going to act." Pablio Stands by Mayor. In making provision offhand for the expenditure of $12,000 for the raising ot the hull of the Slocum, Mayor McClellan not only runs the chance of incurring the displeasure of the Federal authori- ties, but leaves himself open to indict- ment as well, it was said at the City Hall to-day, Under the charter no money for any purpose can be provided or expenditure authorized without the sanction of the Board of Estimate, of which the Mayor fc ber. But in demanding the Falsing of the hull and guaranteeltg the money the r does not fear the “Grand Jury ¥ resent or the ire of Unc! Sams repros tatives, and is supported fhe’ people he has en. Calls on F the city in the stand ‘al Authorities, MocClellan to-day called aren the Federal authorities to make an im- Mediate inspection of all pessenger-cag- rying js plying in New York er ‘The or addressed the following letter to Secretary George B. Cortelyou urging that jn view of the Slocum disas. ter and the advent of the summer se: gon, wi og Rundreds: of excursion steam- ers in service, these vessels be a inspec! by the overnment offi- 8. The Board of Health later condemned the hulk of the General Slocum and this action was considered sumMcient by the authorities to give the Police. De- ees seat full jurtediction in the mat- search of dead, some of them curous. ‘The boy had not gone far when he halted and uttered a cry: “It's Helen!" he said. He bent over a box containing the form of a baby. The body was quickly claimed by the father and taken to the Oelrich home, No, 519 Willoughby street, Brooklyn. There the father spent, the night with his dead child, but the son waited for the mother, brother and two other sisters, One of those unkno' ‘the boy seen in praye! box of the doomed steamer wher was burning and going down. Those on is the body of as they were overcome by the heat an smoke, saw this boy kneeling, and those who saw him say he was praying, ‘The searchers after do: grappleg his body in the hooks yesterday and he was taken to the morgue. In his pocket was found a Sunday-schoo! card, sho ing that he was & member of St. Mark's junday- i . oueands have seen this boy's body, but no one knows who he Was and no one claims him, EVERY DECK BENCH A LIFE-RAFT ON THE FERRY-BOATS IN ENGLAND—DIAGRAM OF HOW THEY ARE CONSTRUCTED. Te Va mY \) le Ke Resevoirs OF A Ferty-boais on the Mergey,"in Eng-/ for ite rafts, They will aupport in the TAU, “are, Supplied with deck, water m whle® lu ‘case of accident cha. Bb used | "Pde ame aN Be OS Detachable seat ma ranve yt ay ir : nder the seats at ine fron cylinders, +t on the paddle-| 4. she | BRIL CITY WILL PAY {$50,000 CITY'S -TORAISE WRECK) GIFT TO VICTIMS Resolution Offered at a Special Meeting Making an Appro- priation for Those Who Suf- fered in the Slocum Disaster. The Board of Aldermen held a spe- cial meeting to-day to take action on the Slocum disaster, Alderman Timothy P. Bullivan intro- duced a resolution appropriating $50,000 am the citys’ contribution to the relief fund, and an aldc@#nante committee of fifteen was named to cooperate with - the Mayor's rellet committee. ‘Ta Slocum disaster was particularly brought ‘home to Alderman Bullivan, five of’the victims being inmates of his residence, while scores who were lost were his personal friends. His resolu- tion will be acted upon at the next meeting of the board. Mayor McClellan In a message to t Mayor McClellan wrote: Honorable Board of Aldermen: You have been called together at this special meeting to take action upon and give expression to the sor- row caused by the lamentable dls- aster to the steamer Gen. Slocum. In that disaster many hundreds of Persons lost thelr lives by drown- ing and burning. These losses are pecullarly sad because they consist almost exclusively of women and children, The public-spirited citizens of the city have already undertaken sys- tematically the relief, so far as pos- sible, of the victims of the dis- aster and their families, and the sum of $15,000 has already been com- tributed, GEORGE B. M'CLELLAN, Mayor. Alderman Leopold Harburger, whosq father, the Under Sheriff, is leader of the Tenth Assembly District, and one of the Relief Committee named by the Mayor, introduced the following reso- lution of sympathy, which was adopted by @ rising vote: Al by the visitation of the most appalling disaster in its history the city of New York has been. cast into an abyss of profound grief and sorrow by the burning and sinking of the steamer General Slocum Wednesday, June 15, 190%, whereby near- ly a thousand lives ‘of men, women and children were ruthlessly sacrificed; and Whereas, Joyous hearts which gleefully started out to attend the excursion of the Sunday-school of St, Mi man Lutheran Church were within most a brief hour forever stilled by, death in its most dreadful form; and’ ‘Whereas, hundreds of happy homes have been desolated, thousands of friends and families bereaved, and tics of love and friendships sundered; and Cel, Wh and 38, ereas, gloom sadn. plunged our olty into mourning foi matron, ohi! husband and wife;’ therefore be it { we, thes of the Board of lermen of th York, the direct Tepresentatives ot ire people, hereby it unparallel catastrophe to our people and to ey surviving relatives of those so incone Umently done to death, we offer the sincerest. sympathy—further, That ti City Hall and the Aldermanic Cham- bers be dra; in mourning for thirty days, ‘That a Special Committee of fifteen members be appointed by the President tu devise such measures of relief for the survivors and stricken families as may be meet and "oe in i the premises. That a copy of these resolutions suitably engrossed and duly authenticated by the City Clerk, be transmitted to the ‘Trustees of St. Mark's German Evangelical Lutheray Church, and_be it further am: burger, Mvan, Hage! Sickles, James, Shiely |. Goodman, Meyers Kline. MONEY SENT TO EVENING WORLD, The following conrtibuttons have been, recelved by The Evening Word forthe General Slocum relief fund: JOHN. R, . No. 181 Essex street, Brooklyn... LULU and LEONARD RUESS BABY BEATRICE Ti A BYMPATHIZER 3 wy 8 2358 e roo) ROGERS. CENT, No. 176 Rock: N. Y. Re it ViN- a nue, Rockaway MR. and MRS Jersey City, N. J. i oe 200 WITNESSES ARE CALLED FOR INQUEST) Coroner Berry, of the Bronx, issue@ 200 subpoenas to-day for witnesses to! appear before him at the inquest intw the General Slocum ly, which begin on Monday. It pected the inquest will continue throt next week. IF YOU WANT GOOD WHISKEY order the real thing Old Crow Ryc S0ld ONLY tn ourregis- tered bott Never in bulk, All dealers, H. B, KIRK & CO, Sole Bottlers, New York, 10 10 , Advertisers In World Wante get 9 larger circulation than any other suc sonal ew York want medium can « SS. el eh, a ae

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