The evening world. Newspaper, June 19, 1908, Page 3

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CONS TAT Gh Horence With His J Requests Cu Running Him for Ts OFF FOR CINCINN: Ms ME 10: he Plans for Joint of “Matters of Im- F portance.” = TTON, 19 Taft sent a tele: Ranresentarice Shermon immediately hearine of the nomination I eincerely and cordially eongratu- Jate you upon vour nomination as Vice-Prasident. Welcome vou as aA colleague tn the « and look for ward with conf to the result the joint struggle. Will vou not mea ™me in Cincinnati to-n w to confer on matters of mportan-e ‘ ‘Secretary Cortely: sent the follow- fine telegram of congratulation to Mr { Sherman: “Hearty ocongratulat! 4 best owishes for the ticket.” Usually an early riser, Secre » Taft was late in taking business to-day. and it was r nine o'clock this morning fore he took breakfast. The prin-ipal lower of the wit rooms of the K street residence Secretary of War w magnificent bunches telegrams of congrat Nigh upon a sideboard. One peculiar interest. It was as “MADISON, Wis Nam H. t, Washi e stil] filled cut flow sation were pil was Mows “Hon, W! D.C. “While the platform !s dis) in some fundamental provis omissions, and I shall n to say Ao, I congratiilat sincerity, and in the faith that yo more nearly tn accord with the great body of Republican voters than the platform I shall do all in my power to insure pou: election. “ROBERT H. LA FOLLETTE, Will Go to Cincinnati. A sign of the change that has tak wlace in the status of was the early appearance of a police- man, who took station at the c front of the Taft residen « or one of his mates will remain etantly on duty while the candidate 1+ in Waghinston Mr. Taft's first caller was Lieut.-Gen Henry ©. Conbin, known to the Secre tary in that capacity and while he w Governor-General of the Philippines and @ warm personal friend. A telegram from a family determined Secretary Taft to deave Washington this afternoon for red he would take Nf member of his Cincinnat!. He d the 4 o'clock train, and stopping in Cinainnati to-morrow will leave that city in time to reach New Haven Mon- day to participate in the reunion of his class of 1878. Secretary Taft House at 10.20 o'clock Into the executive office with President Roosevelt. —_—~—- FIRST’ TAFT BANNER ached the Wh J at once wen’ and conferred ALREADY UNFURLED. NEW HAVEN. Conn., June 19—The first. Taft nomingion banner in New England, if not 13 the country, was raised last nieht vy the Young Men's Republican Club tn this city, with the name of the Vice-Presidential nomince ti NOT SO IMMODEST AS Discussion | to be in blank for the present. Speeches | were made by Prof. BE. B. Yale. and James H. MacD. Highway Commissioner, and sentative N. D. Sperry. Help Wanted To-Day ! | As advertised for in The Morning World’s Want Directory, FRIDAY, JUNE 19, 1908, Addressers .. 1 Horreshoers 2 20 Ironern . 20 1 Janitors 1 2 Janitresses 3 Bookbinders 8 Ladies’ Tatlor ... 1 Bookkeepers 5 Laundress 4 Boye .... +24 Machiniate 1 Brassworkers 2 Manicures 2 Bushelmen .. 8 Milliners 2 Butchers 10 Nurses ..., 6 Buttonhol 1 Operators . 9 Canvassers .. ... 12° Painters . Carpenters 4 Photographers 4 Printers 12 Plumbers Polishers Porters Rien eorere en B ene ween Salosiadies Hee eee pouras we sanan Outters... Balosmen .... a | Day's Work Shipping Clerks \ ‘Dressmakers 10 Shirt Hands Sign Painters . Skirt Hands Sollcitors Stenographers (F.) Bleotricians ‘Tailors .... Elevator Runners, ‘Tinemiths A Bmbroiderers . ‘Typewriters (M.), Engineers .. Typewriters UF.), Feeders . Upholsterers». Firemen Vestmaker: Folders Watters Foremen Waitresses Gardeners Watchmen Girls .. qo . 11 Miscellaneous. Harness Makers. 1 Housework .. Total .... i" The World printed 644 Help Ads. to-day—340 more than all other * NewYork papers combined. | | Beautiful and Unoblectionable, Says Qn roi — oy | Bui Suffrag:tic Sofia Loebinger Insists: That When tVorn by the Proper Woman /t Is Pertectly Beau- if ond Unobjectionable. LONG GOWN HELD HIGH. Fashion Makes Things Proper, Says «| Ardent Defencer, and New Style May Abolish Mass-Meetings of | O lers at Windy Corners. | Sheath Gown, Dencunced by Stage and Pulpit, Is Praised by Suffragette. “The way our women are dressing themselves to-day 1s immodest, Impure and immoral {n its tendencies. ° ¢ And now,to cap the yrant Fashion has decreed the sheath gown, a dress making 0 immodest an exposure of the wearer’a form that a respectable woman ought to be most > 7*tily ashamed to be seen wearing it."—Rev M. G Dickinson. climax, “The sheat dressed, is perfectly Sofia Loebinger, Suffr: gown, b properly worn by the proper woman, properly autiful and absolutely unobjectionable.”—Mrs. tre, “Sheath gowns are !mmodest, and I don't see how any woman can have the face to wear them. Gertrude Hoffman, Actress. I think tights are much more modest.”— Greeley-Smith. A voice crying in the wilderness has denounced the sheath gown as an abomination. The voice belongs to the Rev. M. G. Dickinson, pastor of the Second Baptist Church of Hoboken. Another voice, that of Mrs. Sofia Loebinger, prominent among the suffragettes of this city, has taken issue with the Rev. Mr. Dickinson. “The sheath gown, properly worn by the proper woman, is perfectly beautiful and absolutely unobjec- | tionable,"” me yesterday. | So the question stood: The pul- pit against the platform, the cler- gyman against the suffragette. And then there entered a third element—the stage. marvels, the stage sided with the pulpit. Miss Gertrude Hoffman, famous for her fmitations, whom I hap- pened upon later in the afternoon at Keith & Proctor’s, indorsed the Rev. Mr. Dickinson’s denunciation of the sheath gown so heartily that I felt | is if the Actors’ Church Alliance had called a special session for my | benefit. | Tights Are More Modest, She Says. | hold a mass-meeting to view a womai ankles in wet weather wien the shea gown can be seen any fair day. “Fashion make: things proper WKOLA. GREELEY “They've bern trying for six weeks to! get me to wear a sheath gown on the or ge, but I won't do it,” said Miss) otherwise. I have no doubt that where! Hoffman, earnestly, “I think tights| It 1s the general custom to dispense witn are much more modest. Worn in the|*lothing, a clothed woman may seem, just as !mmodest as an unclothed one street or for an evening gown, I thor- oughly agree with what the clergyman says about them, They are !mmodes' and T don't see how any woman can have the face to wear them "Sho doesn't have to have the face, but the figure,” I suggested. “On the stage.” continued Miss Hoff- man, Ignoring my fiippancy, "it may be necessary to wear them, but anywhere would appear to us If we met her walk- | ing along Broadway. These things are ill relative, * the majority of women Wear becomes right the moment majority wear it hether the majority will wear t sheath gown remains to be proved. B {f they do, I think they will be charm. ingly dressed,” the elge they're Inexcusabl \ But such was not the opinion of Mrs. |NATIONS HAIL TAFT Sofia Loebinger, who led the embat- A suffragettes into Staten Island the WITH GRATIFICATION. ver day, and who has the unique dis- tinction of !iaving heen converted to the cause woman suffrage by her own husband Nomination Pleases Germany and | Other Powers, But One French Comment Fears for Result. BERLIN, June 19.—The nomination of | | Secretary of War William H, Taft for the Presidency is published in brief ‘form in the papers this morning. The news came too ja however, for com- ment, Emperor William had been formed through the G Embassy at Washington of Mr. T person- | auty and the Mkelihood of his nomina- Suffragette. “The sheath gown worn by the right woman is very beautiful, and I can see no objection to it,” Mrs, Loebinger said emphatically. “Whereas, any kind of own worn by the wrong woman is im-| proper, The wearcr stamps the gown, | not the gown the wearer. “Monna Vanna, to save her city went to Prinzivalll's tent clad only in a fully tne cloak, Yet the purity of her soul and| tion. of the love she inspired cast out all} ‘The news was commented on pleas- thought of evil jantly In offle:al quarters this morning. “A great many worthy persons are| From the German point of view Secre- denouncing the sheath gown, I know.|tary Taft Is regarded as a sultad T recall a line from a limerick T read! statesman to carry out the construction some years ago that covers their case—|of the Panama Canal, the Philippines, “fo the pure almost everything's rot-| naval, Far Kastern trade and the other a | general foreign p i Hcies of the present I think a sheath gown frankly | administration, sinshed, and showing @ portion of the! PARIS June 1%—The Petite Repub- onsil Tatts s Bowsnation a stocking, 1a much less immodest than a/ Uque | victory for the spirit of imperialism long gown held up way above the) ene “great democracy,” th.s pap ankles, And this we sce in the streets} says, “after avoiding this spirit for’ so i long, ends by ceding to it: it is a bad every day. sympt m.” ‘somo one said that morals are a) “ie ‘eunps says the services rons matte ygraphy. Clothes are equally | dered by Taft to his country fully jus- matter of geography. Clothes are equally (°° 0) vomination and attributes his 4 matter of climate, Where there is revelation there can be no suggestion. | il make @ strong ca Artists maintain that the nude figure is! 1) egagtiens Ag & strong candidate and absolutely pure; that » few yards of/ HOMME, June 1%—Although It success to his frankness and ity, In conclusion the paper sav his quiet was at f ra Sasivappe he! fu xpected here, the nomination of neese cloth on a model appeals to the) fully expected here, {ir nomination o| agination as undraped charms can: | eect ey eee ee sions This’ Is ee. not do. | pe true at the Vatican, where Mr Taft Is considered as favorably inc ed “Fashion Makes Things Prope to Catholic influence In the Philippine “T think the sheath gown will have| TOKIO, June 19.—The nomination of one decidedly beneficial effect, It will!/Secretary of War William H. Tart for tho Presidency has been received every where in Tokio with expressions of gratification because of the personal popularity of Mr. Taft. PARIS, June 19.—The nomination of Secretary of War Taft for the Presi- dency created a good tmpression on the Bo to-day, and prices were firm. abolish the mashers about the Flatiron Building and in Twenty-third and Thir- fourth streets, who congregate on ralny days to see the women go by with their skirts held up. Naturally these AW yet_vilesminded creatures will not VENING WORLD, FRIDAY, JUNE 19, 1908. MRS: SOFIB: LOEDINGER. THAW TRIES AGHIN —= TO QUIT MATTEAWAN said Mrs, Loebinger to His Counsel Asks Justice Dow- ling to Amend the Order of Commitment. And, marvel of | ‘The argument by which Col, Franklin “Tigh ‘s Ave More Modest Than the Sheath Gown,” Actress ertrude Hofiman Asserts, Indorsing Preacher's Views’ \hy Jf) SFE ki Sl GRATE. GERTRUDE HOFFMANN RABIES. “CURE” | FAILED 10 SAVE MAD PUP'S VICTIM Bortlett ved to obtain from Justice! % ; Fi Dowling, who presidedlat the triatiwnion! Henry ©, Koster Dies) Nine: resulted he acquittal of Harry Ken-j{ i :. da! Thaw of the murder of Stanford | teen Days After He Is Bitten, White the ground that he was in- | sane wi the the at order to another hospital heard the architect, a modification of Thaw might be rem r the insane, So that to-day. and the oved was State Asylum for Insane Criminals! Matteawan, Thaw is now tn the Sheriff's quarters | at the tee Morehauser, of habeas c se him: rel Poughkeepsie fall, held by who dismissed a yr Thaw. refusin and who only awaits Jus- writ Ez 10 Jus tice Dowling’s decision on to-dav's an plicatt Justice oretral or amx } week the written ut Col. understood that to modity Morchanser It | DowlIne 7 jon. st Juste e to one fe si go by Thaw's lawyers te Asvlum tn place of the Matteawan on Bartlett tn Dowling ts tute Is designed solely for er als. He sald it is a prison, and Thaw is not a criminal; was never be an one Mr. Jerome con and that it wi a who fs il n ne ts su ond . will presented a in which Middletown In- | argument before Matteawan vn- that con- | ould n e points raised Col. Ba ument was all on the side of keeping, aw at Matteawan ‘To Middletown.” he said “are sent © pauper ins They are there in arse hot sufiable associates a nat or used fine surroundings Motteawan the inmates are of a much hheher class ents, thin t M wr add that s Jutter prostration Wednesday Despite Pasteur Treatinent. The fatlure of the Pasteur treatment any effect on Henry C Koe- ) died in terrible agony and night at to hav ter. w his home. No. 2757 Crescent avenue. the Bronx, has brought to the notte of rts one of the most remarkable of hydrophobla on record Van Gisen, in the nresence of @ Score of physicians, conducted a mi croscople examination of the spinal cord and brain of the unfortunate man at the Willard Parker Hospital to-day. “IT have never known a case where the ptoms deyeloped so soon and with such violence as in this one,” sald be. J. R. Fabricuy of Fordham Road id Grand avenue, who attended Kos- ter for two days before his death, “and pt that the disease showed abso- y no response to the Pasteur treat- , although he took the treatment shortly being bitten, makes me a type of hydrophobla hich we know nothing.” Bitten by a Puppy. re is Koster Mr was sixty-three years a retired grocer of means, and ved with his wife and son, William, o is a policeman, He had a little te bull puppy, about old, of which he was May very fond. On 4) the dog se dd to be affected It ran around the house anted to jump out of the win- A fri told Mr. Koster to put n his mouth, and tt was while he following this advice that he was n oy the right forearm. heat Koster didn't feel any special ineasiness, He cauterized the wound with cahbolic acid and then valled at a nearby drug store, where a clerk a. vised him to report the case to th Hpsomaniac Health Department, He did so und ne weak: |was immediately given the Pastour ot treatment. When son went home of tecaupleat yf, [the night of May 2 he shot the peppy. preraney wet oe ittathzencs | It was not until Tuesday of this week and capacity and culture than Thaw {that Mr. Koster com, ned of pains Svar “was 0 eee bee anot lel Jin nis stoma legs and arms and a man Wi! iM im wo ¥ mbne: ts h yr lansages, and xcept for 9 naranolac's didn’t believe it was an effect of the heincion that he Is being nersecnted )Y | pits, bi wife, who hac ’ eeGerman physician. in pano_and of @ | oite. but hia wifo, who had been living Tate of intelligence. hese aps |in fear of developmenta since May 2, fi hotter asscdlates for Marry Thaw {made him call on the family physician, then, could eh ea Ming OM son | Dr. Fabricus. who gave him some med- ‘| F is unlerstood that at {icine and told him to Ko home and go special safeguards i DE the cori {nal ine Tuesday night the symptoma had a eat axed with great rapidity. ‘Th ich more humbness spread to his limbs, the pain n—for in spread all over his system and when rears, and with Dr. Fab called he found Koster joundary near at hand and prostrated. ‘at Middletown is necessarily se- An Unusual Case. vere 1 | “I realized It was an unusual case,” ‘Thaw.ls 9. dangerous paranoiao, said Dr. Fabricus Koster could en hunt ite. Tt is Yy bot ¢ Pee eke Pat eel aie wee herdly talk Wednesday morning, and Justice Dowling reserved decision, I applied the test of giving him a spoon- four months) | tui of water. When he couldn't swal- | tow and went Into a violent spasm the second the water touched his Nps I rs ani knew he had hydrophobia in its most| Mam Run Down by Third Avenue acute form. He was choking for eignt| Car Dien in Honpital. or ten hours before he died, and must} have suffered horribly.” Morris A Grawbarth. thirty-four | ——_—_>—___ years old, of No. 210 West One Hun- CHAUFFEUR FINED $100. and Eleventh street, who was ed down by an at age | ivenue and One Hundred and Judge Would Have Sent Speeder to [awenty-second street to-day, died Jail if He Could. at the Harlem Hospital Cais atternoon | (Qyeetal ty The Evening World) Gata) ak as employed | YONKERS, June 19.—Joseph Thomas, | a clerk in Station I. of the Post-Ortice, |chauftour for James T. Malatesta, a| @t Collunius avenue and One Hundred wealthy Bronx contractor, was fined 2k Dov van the motorman, who $100 by City Judge Joseph H. Leal! to- in ohange of the day for automobile speeding on Sunday. | ‘Thomas, when pursued by Sergeant Van Sternbergh, put on full speed and | }ran his car at sixty miles an hour, He led Van Sternbergh a chase of twelvo infies, when two tires of the automo- bile were punotured Judge Beall said that were it possible to send the chauffeur to jail he would do #0. As it was Thomas's first of- tense, however, he could only impose a fine, he sald, and the highest possible fine was |, Mr. and Mrs Mallatesta, who were {in the automobile, said they had or- |dered him to put on full speed tn order to reach the home of @ relative who was seriously ill, 1 > { \SCRAT CH OF KITTEN FOLLOWED BY LOCKJAW. Four-year-old George Brenner ts in a critical condition in St. Francis Hos- | pital, at Trenton, trom lockjaw, be- Heved to have resulted from a scratch on a finger received while he w ine with a kitten. | ‘The ohild's jaws are so tightly locked that several teeth had to be broken in J order to force food down his throat. ————————— play "PHONE OPERATOR Regained Memory on Right Food. The girls who answer your call on the telephone must be quick, accu- rate and courteous. They must have | good memories, also. Those who work nights often get \im the way of eeting almost anything handy, whic’: is apt to be the kind of | food which does not rebuild waste brain and nerve cells, | “I have been night telephone op- j erator for a number of years,” writes a Calif. gir’, “and was formerly in | perfect health; never knew an all. “But frregular hours of sleep and | meals and the use of pastry or any | |food that happened to be available | soon caused my health and memory | to fail. | “The loss of my rot-st health wor- |ried me very much, And medicine ‘seemed to do no 400d. | “Four months ago mother told me ‘tt was the condition of my stomach that caused my trouble, and she be- ,Meved if I would change to Grape- Nuts food I would {mprove. ager to regain my health, I took her advice, and instead of eating just | anything I ate Grape-Nuts regularly, and at the end of four months on Grape-Nuts [ am the happy, robust girl I once was. “I have gained eleven pounds in weight, have good color, am strong jand hearty and nothing seems to es- cape my memory. And all this I owe jto Grape-Nuts | ‘There's a Reason.” Vame given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read “The load to Wellville,” in pkes. Byer read the above lettert A mew One appears from time to They are g ne, true, and human tntereat, 0 SIN TRAIN ON Former State Senator James | | W. Milliken Stricken in Pullinan Car Berth. | | = | Former State Senator James W. Mut | ken, of Michigan, was taken suddenly {ll | on a New York Central train while on his |way to this clty at Syracuse early this morning and died as the train reached The body a Pullman | Poughkeepsie. was brought to this city in berth about passengers knew death on board Mr. Millikin came Fast with to attend the graduation of his son, [James W. Milliken, jr., at Yale next |week. The young :nan had come down |from New Haven to meet his parents |and was overwhelmed with grief when [he learned of the death of his father. Mr. Milliken was a prominent and wealthy business man of Traverse Cit Mich. He owned a large departme! |store and a factory for the 1 |ture of agricultural implem served in the Slichigan State Senate and was prominent in the State With Mr. Milliken on the train were | his wife and a young woman said to |be the fiancee of the younger Milliken, | All were on their way to New Haven | to attend the commencement exer anything the his wife and | TWENTY INJURED ; IN TROLLEY CRASH. Telescopes Freight Car on Sharp Curve, and One Victim [s°? Mortally Hurt. . June 19.—Twenty ne mortality veral seric to-day, in al°A@- the Meadville and Cambifilge ree( car line, near Bakertowh, ‘A passenger car telescoped a frelght at a sharp curve. he mortally Injured person Is My c. ractign superintendent of the t fevers Eee ; STATE BANKS MUST REPORT. , ca ALBANY, June 19.—Superintendeht Clark Williams, of the State Bank® De- artment, to-day issued a cali ior re- condition of State banks the close of lay, June 1 ts of the nd trust companies at business as of Wednesi NOT APARTICE. SKIN ON BODY Worst Case of Eczema Doctor Had Seen in 40 Years — For Six Months Father Expected His Baby to Die—Blood Oozed Out All Over fier Body—Had to Be Wrapped In Silk and Carried on a Pillow— Now She Is Perfectly Cured. DOCTOR RECOMMENDED CUTICURA REMEDIES | When young Milliken learned of the | death of his father he at once | phoned to George L. Wentworth, of | No. 25 Weetminster r Flatbush, who reached the Grand Central Station a mhort Ume after the arrival of the | train, Coroner Harburger was communicated | with by ‘phone, and authorized the re- moval of the body to the rooms of a casket company at No, 52 Great Jones | street body will be embalmed and Grand The cause ack of taken west on Central Deport t of death was attributed to | apoplexy. | Mrs, Milliken and her companion were | taken to Mr. Wentworth's home in Plat- train leay an | bush, and young Mr. Milliken will ace |company them home to Traverse City. Mr. Wentworth said that Mr. Milliken was born in Biddeford, Me. sixty years ago. He went to Michigan’ about forty | years ago and starte a 1c ng camp | where Traverse City now stands, He Is prominent in business and polities in | his St and Is also pr nt of the | Sunday School Association of the $ | of Michigan Sees | ACCIDENT HAS FATAL END. 1, Was arraign ‘ourt this mor rharge of the Keeping in your iq refrigerator a sponge sprinklad M} occasionally with Platts Chlorides. }. Wesh the sponge piwice a week | Bewy houseleeper oul! bere ver book. It tals how to prevent iehemm Sand fr tren copy wo Masry B Pint 42 CUE Suet, New Vert, wie munelacta of Platts Chlorides, The Odorless Disinfectant. A eolerlam liquid prvertel, ele and wonomical Lamaatly desrore tot Shere ped davusr breeding matte Specally prepare! bt beowe: Wiha Sen Suis ‘only la eam botienby sraggit caper Write for Wustrated Catalogue. Cioran LEVELAN {44 Bowery ESTABLISHED 1857, Bowery Savings Between of Grand Bank Block nort | | This style magniticent Gypsy Ring we have been selling richt slong for $100, but for quick action \e offer a limited number at $58. The three diarronds are perfect!y cut, unusual color and weigh over one karat. WEDDING RINGS All styles, solid 14 and 18 karat gold seamless Wed.ing kings our specialty. Prices $2.50 to $25. Cuality guaranteed. No Extra Charge for Lettering. Arti tage Cort ng. Ask | cate Given rit ~ Saturdays till 10 poner Open Evenings till 7, Mail Orders Fiiled. Inga ces solicited., tele | “My little girl was born two weeks fore her time and my wife died tour hours after’ the birth of our child and { had to reise the baby on arci- ficial foods, | Six months after birth she broke out and I had two doctors in attendance ‘There was Not a article of skin left -d out just r ite on her body, the blood 007 anywhere, and we had to wrap } and carry her on a pillow for She was the most terrible sight I ever and for six months I lookedrfor go to her maina, but thank; Ged his agents, she is alive and W will be three years old December and has never the drend trouble sines, known remedy to alle- her and to-day and sh the seventh had a sign “T used ev viate her suffering, for it was terrible to witness. Dr. C—— gave her up and then [went to C— — and got Dr. B and he and Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment saved her, He recommended the Cuticura Remedies, or said we were right in making use of y as I can remember, of Cuticura Soap Ointment; nsideration ptional case, for vetor said that it t had come to him them, we us 1 ej and three boxes of Cut out you must | that hers an old and ¢ ‘was the worst asc th 1 have alway: in forty hinged on Cuticura Soap to keep her skin soft aod to give he! a pure complexion, James 3. Smith, Wood and) Metal’ Pattorn Maker, Box 254, Buena Vista, Va., Oct. 14 and 22, 1906,” Complete External and Internal Treatment for Every i Tren aud Adults vito Cleanse-th Heal ‘the tie farm ot Vial of 00) to Purity the Blood, Potter Drug & Chem, ase n Skin Dineaser “orp. Matied Free, Cu Vacation Footwear { 7 | Whether your feet turn | toward seashore or moun- | tains, we have the Coward Shoe for casion. every oc Natural-foot-line-lasts in russet, vici kid, calf and patent leather, in styles ang sizes for men, women and children, SOLD NOW JAMES S. COWARD, 268-274 Greenwich St., N.Y, eX ATRELT Send tor Catalogue, ERE ELSE. NEAR WAI Mail Orders Filled, Furnished Complete $9 HIGH GRADE. FURNITURE LIBERAL CREDIT SYSTEM 350worth, $3.00 down «“s 5.00 * 7.50 SONIA-TENSION. Richmond Terrace, SANITARIUM at 304 NT PA lyn, for cu IMATISM, USN NER | OMNIA, and for Correcting wi Caste, CUT 3 OF THE SPINE, STIFFNESS JOINTS, ABNOR- MAL LIMBS, SU: < CHBSTS: tag ULDERS. Perfect accommodations for Patients, Applications received at both places:iae Contagious Diseases treated,

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