The evening world. Newspaper, November 13, 1914, Page 3

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TEACHER ORDERED |Girl Terrorist Who Killed Man With Bomb Is Shocked by the Violence of Suffra - PUNSHEDFORPART N BABY SQUABLE “ote Satirical Letter and iraws the Fire of Superin- tendent of Schools. sAYOR GIVES HOPE. Says the Mothers Among | Teachers Will Have No Cause to Worry. Baperintendent of Schools Maxwell @ent a letter to Darwin L. Bardwell, District Superintendent in charge of high schools, directing him to sus- Pend Henrietta Rodman, Wadleigh High School teacher, pending her trial on charges of insubordination and misconduct, growing out of a sa- tirigal letter written by her to the ‘Tribune about the teacher-mother controversy, Miss Rodman is married and her name is set down on the department fecords as Mrs. Henrietta Defremery. Superintendent Maxwell said that her conduct in keeping her maiden Bame, under the circumstances, was i itself prejudicial to discipline and bad example to her pupils and “would be taken into consideration when the charges were considered, Mr. Bardwell will not be at his of- fice until after school hours to-day ead cannot carry the order into ef- fect until then. Miss Rodman will “not be allowed to enter her classroom Monday. In his morning's mail Mr. Maxwell Feceived official notice from Mr. Bard- well that Mrs. Lora M. Wagner, the ‘teacher whose baby was born last Friday night, has been suspended. According to the superintendent this makes the suspension, which was an- ‘nounced yesterday, complete. “There is no occasion for uneasi- Mess on the part of teacher-mothers who have been suspended or ordered @ismiased because they stayed away from school to become mothers,” Mayor Mitchel said yesterday. “I imagine the board will come to g@ome conclusion that will provide for Jeaves of absence,” continued the Mayor. “These charges made by the board must not be taken as that body's ultimate disposition of the case. I am going to look at this ques- tion as one who has the welfare of the city at heart. I consider solely the efficiency of tho teacher. “If a teacher is married to a man who has a lot of money there is no yeason why she should not teach in the public schools, even if she be- the city is goncerned. I do not see why a teacher @bould be discharged because she be- gomes a mother. ‘The efficiency of that teacher might be impaired for a time, but certainly not permanently.” Under the auspices of the League fer the Civic Service of Women a Mass meeting will be held to-night fm the Washington Irving High School to protest against the attitude of . 16 Board of Education toward teacher- mothers. ‘The Wagner baby has been named Hans Albrecht, after Mr. Wagner's employer. trice Forbes-Robertson Hale, sister of Sir Johnson Forhes-Robert- writing from the League for the Civic Service of Women, No. 316 Kast Seventeenth strect, of which she is president, tells Mayor Mitchel that that teacher-mothers are more effi- cient than the spinsters, simply be- cause maternity brings about a better understanding and a greater love of children. In her letter Mrs. Hale say: “Any educational system which tends to create a large Class of sterile ‘women on the one hand, or on the other, to impair its own efficiency by continually dismissing tried teachers in favor of beginners, is bound to fail, The profession of teaching is one in which women are especially It will always remain a profession and women will ys bear childre; These two facts, which have been made mutual- ly destructive by the present Board, can readily be reconciled by the use of a little common sense-—as has been done in France, where teachers not only receive leave of absence for ma- ternity, but receive ‘+ on full pay.” —_ > Brown Fights to Keep Place tn Congress. HEMPSTEAD, Noy. 13.—OfMicials of Queens, Nassau and Suffolk Cow including Board of Blection insp were served with netices to-day pro- biting them from issuing a certificate of ection to Frederick G, Hicks, Res Publican, who was sald to have’ bec elected to Congress by fifteen vot the present I The case Riverhead. One three ballots fro jared void. Whichever candidate wins will probably be elected by votes or fewer. ten | i} OP A BORROWED BABY Marie Sukloff, Who Spent Thirteen of Her Twenty- Hees Hi nine Years in Prisons and Siberia and Escaped, finding Happiness and Success as Author in This Country, Says She Does Not Believe in Force Except as a Last Resort. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. ' She could not even see the sky from the prison cell into which they thrust her, when she was sixteen, biography any girl ever wrote. At this moment she seems nothing but a girl, though since early summer |she has been Mrs, Gregory Yarros. Even her romance couldn't be ex- actly ordinary and matter of fact. She and Mr. Yarros knew each other la, “between my imprison- ments,” as she quaintly explains, But he came to America long before her, and when she finally arrived she went to Hull House and Miss Jane Addams in Ru: in Chicago, while Mr. Yarros w New York. She admits emilingly that she knew he was here, and when sho came East last spring to begin her| book, who should take the job of! The: book was done last August, but many weeks earlier the two who were Work- ing on it—and who had found each other after crossing half the world— decided that a lifetime of collabora- translating it but Mr. Yarros! tion would be none too long. On a hilltop in Yonkers I found them yesterday, writing happily at the; same table in their big living room,! with its view of blue river and bare,/ delicately drawn tree branches. THOUGHT OF SUFF=RING | Ment for nineteen months before she was given a trial. Condemned to lite exile in Siberia, she was chained to robbers and mur- derers and forced to tramp for miles in half-torn shoes over roads of ice and snow. but was sent back to suffer new rigors of confinement in a Siberian prison; from which she nevertheless contrived @ second escape after six years, baffling the triple pursuit of bloodhounds, Police and spies. And now she is only twenty-nine, this Marie Sukloff who arrived in New York a few months ago, just-published book, “The Life Story of a Russian Exile,” {8 the most poignantly vivid and moving auto-| { FRIENDS MADE HER LIVE, Marie Sukloff is a tall, are, a devotes, other Slav, asked wonderingly. “If | had been the only one suffer the imprisonment and privation and the wearin could not have lived,” she slender young woman with a face that holds both tenderness and strength. She is not strictly beautiful, but her eyes Long and luminous and the color of brook water, with a trace of iron in it, they are eyes of a dreamer and She has the wide, wist- fully bent mouth one sees in the pho- tographs of Paviowa and of many an- but chin and nose are strong and her handshake matches them. There is a faint color in her cheeks and she is surprisingly un- | broken in view of what the last thir- jteen years of her life have been, “How could you live through it?” I to the U id. “Neither my body nor my spirit could have borne what was laid upon them, that upheld me, the idea thai But it was the id must survive in order to let you, the rest of you, know what One Ten Cent Box of EX-LAX The Famous Chocolate Laxative will regulate your bowels and relieve you of the miseries of Constipation If your stomach isn’t just right, if you have a bad taste in the mouth, coated tongue, feel distressed after eating and have frequent headaches, just ” take Ex-Lax. igor and si quickly your energy, ambition This will tone up your stomach, aid nervous system. You will and appetite will come back digestion, ill to see to you, 10¢, 25¢ and 50c a Box, at All Drug Stores, promote bodil; surprised pol my She stayed there in solitary confine- She fled once to safety, ; and whose comrades were enduring. happened to me is such a little | thing beside what is happening now to a million others, “That is why I have written my ‘ook—to make you understand about the others. I do not care for myself. It does not matter that I was starved and cold and robbed of all my rights. Even in those awful days tho most terrible suffering I had to endure was not what they did to me, but the thought that they were torturing my! known and unknown comrades, | “I cannot forget it," she broke off, | the brown eyes seeming to darken with the pain of “old, unhappy, far-off | things" asx she spoke, and the single vertical line between her brows deep- ening. “After many years, perhaps | the memory will go away. Now onc Part of mo ts living here, in these | surroundings where you find me, and the other part, the inner me, is over there with the friends 1 left in| prison.” When she was arrested the first! time Miss Sukloff was little more than a child, She had gone to Odessa from her peasant home, fired with the ambition “to learn the truth.” She fell tn with a group of young revolu- | tlonists, and ‘in a few months they sent her,to Kishiney to establish a| secret printing office, Suddenly the police desce:.ted upon her at her lodg- ing, found a few pleces of type in her pocket, and this sixteen-y@ir-old girl | was held in solitary confinement for nineteen months without a trial, be- | cause she would not say where ad | got the type, ACCUSED OF INSTIGATING KISH. INEV POGROM. She was shut up in a damp coll, its one small window on a level with the ground, so that she had not even a glimpse of the sky. She had been in prison over a year at the time of the Kishinev pogrom, but a few days later the officials solemnly accused her of instigating it. There was a trial, with a verdict ordered in ad- vance, her father’s arms were torn from her neck by the police and she was sentenced to be “deprived of rights and exiled to Siberia for life”’— at seventeen, “We. were told to put on convict garb,” she said. “The dress of a| female convict consists of a course gray linen shirt, a skirt made of the | same material, a pair of black slip | pers with square linen foot-wrappers | in lieu of stockings, a long gray over- | coat with a yellow diamond-shaped patch in the back between the shoul- ders, and a gray kerchief. This dre changes a person beyond recognition, I was frightened by my own reflection in the mirror when | saw myself in this garb for the first time. There is something terribly desrading in it. “My comrades and ! were lined up with @ party of convicts who 9 transported to Siberia ry and mur Our chained to theirs, and What four abreast in the middle of the dusty road, to the railroad station. For the last time | looked at the big city to which | had come in quest of knowledge and happi- ‘Oh, God!’s| thought to my- t my native fields and his great city to find the y to a better life, and THIS is | what | have found! On the way to Siberia Miss Sukloff walked many weary miles over almost in the morning during a moment | when the guard had his back turne A rain of bullets fell around he she dre off in the carriage had provided All the family were out at the house where but she calmly ESCAPES Oiscused 5 aA ROE impassable roads, and slept on the floors of the unfurnisned forwarding Prisons, with no bedclothing but an overcoat. She was sent alone to a di; nt Siberian village, from which she escaped about a year later, trav- elling day and night in a sleigh and carrying a friend's baby in her arms all the way. Then she joined the “fighting league” of her party and be- came a terrorist, HURLED BOMB THAT KILLED RUSSIAN GOVERNOR. This slender, brown-eyed, sweet- voiced girl, barely twenty years old, ately hurled a bomb against rriage window of Gen. Khvost- jovernor of a province near Mos- cow, on New Year's Day, 1906, killing him’ instantly and severely wounding herself. ‘or this she was sentenced to death, but the sentence was com- | muted to penal servitude in Siberia for life, thought of all the others whom I. body. th right to live. But | made up he Governor's victi 1 ured the names of those who had been shot or Hlogued to death by him. | read and re-read f the thousandth time the simp! narratives of the peasants about his terrible crimes, and my heart bled for them. Hopefuily | looked in the direction of the shelf where the bomb lay. My own life and that of my friends had taught me that ceful methods of stru tyranny were no longer » only weapon left to us," she went on earnestly, almost pleadingly. “There is no other appeal that we can make, And no punish- | ment} no torture, will stop us. very terrorist killed or exiled tuere | re ten to take his place—or her place, for Russian women are won- But what would in- © would be a little »pportunity to plead and right our derful fighters, fluence us at o justice, a little our case peac es without violen “| do not believe in employing force until every other metho has failed. That is why we in Russia cannot understand the militancy of the Engl who have so much fri ful ways of winning And here in Amer- ica you have poor peo the poorest have their’ something no poor man in ever enjoys. | would rather be and have my rights of free speech and print and assembly ¢ a rich woman and not fr Miss Sukloff went into her second exile wearing fetters on wrists and ankles so tight that the flesh swelled, In prison sie received only black bread, soup and tea without sugar, She was given no work—"the worst torture of all,” in her opinion, She feli il of appendicitis and was kept in a filthy prison hospital for eight , while the drunken prison doc- erating on her, ufter her operation she donned a suit of men's clothes which had been secretly sent her and Mter- ally wriggled out of the hospital, crawling under the gate at 10 o'clock comi to some feminine ackey get her tire. He did, and burned the men's clothes she was aring. Varlously disguised mbermaid, a Sister of Merey, sity student, and a bride, hid. den part of the time in the houses of the Czar's own officers, tracked by | a bloodhound and watched for by| innumerable spies and she | ached Shanghai, an amer and tin Shall you ¢ a If I planned to do tha my nearest friend,” she sald “Always Lain’ hoping that d poli Italia w York, will be free, But on steamer that took me away Shanghai £ thor of my best and dearest friends th the world of shad- ows and stone walls, and [ thought there could be no freedom for me after all I knew, and I desired to go benefit of the fund in charge back and throw myself again into | Committ I had that de- peared 1: the unequal struggle. sire then and I ve it now,’ | lance Hospi k?" T asked, | 626.96, Contributiona are pouring tn I could not | steadily to the fund for the rellet of Jews suffering from the war, now over $3,000, according to yester- the day's report. from fund for the relief of Belgians has | TWO PLUNGE DOWN AIRSHAFT IN POST. WOMAN ACCUSES Millionaire Walters’ REFEREE IS SUSTAINED. Justice Davis Refuses to Re- Wife Charges Lawyer With Col- lusion in Annulment Suit. SUFFRAGISTS IN gettes) HGHCOURTNDGE SECRET CUD ANDANATTORNE NAME DR, SHAW Administration Forces, Fighting Opposition, Put President Up for Re-Election. NASHVILLE, Tenn., Nov. 12.—In secret caucus hero, leaders of the Ad- ministration element of the National American Woman Suffrage Associa- tion ratified a ticket headed by Dr. Anna Howard Shaw. The caucus was move Farrell—Counter-_—_{} Attack by Latter. Charges Involving the conduct of a lawyer who took part in a referee's hearing in connection with the annul- ment suit brought by Herman Wal- ters, millionaire carpet manufacturer, against Dr. Anna Kuethe Walters, | his wife, were to-day brought to the; attention of Supreme Court Justice | Davis, At the hearing, which was held be- hind closed doors, charges were made against a justice of the Supreme Court and against Mrs. Waitera'’s former lawyer, George Bristor, by Mrs, Walters, Tho nature of the|! charge against the unnamed justice Is not disclosed, Attorney Francis P. Burns, who charge of Mrs, Walter's defense after Bristor had dropped the case, asked Justice Davis to remove James O. Farrell, the referee appointed by Jua- tice Donnelly, This Justice Davis re- fused to do. In affidavits Farrell charges that Burns approached him and end ored to influence the referees in mak- OFFICE; ONE KILLED Clerk Gives Life Trying to Save Painter Who Fell Three Floors, “Sunny Jim" Watson, ans he is known to his fellow clerks in the United States District-Attorney’s of- fice, was fatally injured as a result of his attempt to rescue H. Bosse, a painter, when Bosse fell from the fifth floor of the Federal Building to tho skylight of the second floor shortly after 9 o'clock this morning. Bosse's back is elthar broken or badly sprained. Watson died an hour after being taken to the Hudson Street Hospital, Bosso was painting the interior of an airshaft when his ladder gave way. Watson was the only man in his office, which looks directly out upon the skylight. Others who heard the painter fall saw the clerk craw! out of the window. Bosse lay in a heap, sroaning. Watson tried to pick his way across the glass to pull Bosse inside tho building, Suddenly there came a crash of breaking glass, an entire sec- tion of the skylight gave way and Watson disappeared, Clerks in the registry division rushed to his assistance and sum- moned an ambulance. Dr. Valentine said he would probably die, Directed by Assistant United States District-Attorney Frank E. Carstarphen, clerks In his depart- ment got Bosse inside. Then he, too, was sent to Hudson Street Hospital. Besides the injury to his back, he was suffering from cuts on his head and face and contusions of bis shoulders, Watson was married. He lived at No. 116 West Eighty-third street and had been employed in the clerical Separtment of the District-Attorney office for five years. He was abo: forty years old. Bosse lives on Man- hattan avenue, between One Hundred and Fourteenth and One Hundrea and Fifteenth streets, He Is twenty. four years old and unmarried, eaidilieiaaeie JOHN WANAMAKER SENDS 2,000 TONS OF SUPPLIES TO HUNGRY BELGIANS. It was announced yesterday by the American Red Cross that John Wana- maker had purchased two thousand tons of supplies to be sent to the peo- ple of Belgium via Holland. The American Minister at The Hague, Dr Henry van Dyke, will distribute the supplies. The total contributions to the Red Cross Fund are now $342,100, Of this sum $732.67 was received yesterday The total for the Belgian Relief Fund has reached $447,948.64, of which $10,- 697.38 was received yesterday. The fund for the relief of the women and children of France, of which Mrs Whitney Warren is President, has reached $27,035.51 for the American Ambu- J in Paris is now §147,- func It ts The Christian Herald reached $40,000, A calico ball was held last night at Miss Joan Sawyer’s Persian Garden, Fiftieth street and Broadway, for the '20 PER CENT, ALIMONY ing hie report in favor of Mra. Wal- ter. “On Nov. 7,” Farrell seta forth, “T telephoned to Mr. Burns to inquire about the payment of my fees, he and his client having pledged themacives to pay me, Mr. Bristor having de- clined to stand responsible for their payment. I was at that timo ready to file my report and findings. “Burns called and asked mo to per- mit him to see my report, which was secret. I refused to do this, of course, Then Burns tried to ‘pump’ me as to the contents of my report, and when I declined to do this as unprofes- sional Burns told me that he would not ‘buy @ pig in a poke.’ Farrell explains that the question sent to him for settlement was as to how much Brister was entitled for his services in behalf of the wife. Fit- teen meetings were held before the refere. At some of these hearings Mra. Walker, according to affidavits, made the charges involving a Justice, Sho also asserted that Bristor had acted collusively with the attorneys for the carpet manufacturer's committes, Mr. Bristor admits that when he took the case for Mrs. Walter he made a contract with her by which ho was to receive 25 per cent. of all money that he obtained for her from Mr. Walter's catato, She wax allowed $250 a month pending adjudication of the suit againat her, Attorney Burns denies that he en- deavored to influence Referee Fa rell’a report and accuses Hristor of prolonging the litigation to swell his e “LT called on the referee,” Burns says, “ and in a casual way asked him what he would find so that I) might be guided in writing the proper | ‘arrell form of order for the court, ‘efused to tell me. ‘Since Mr. Bristor has bee ing for this woman," Far tinues, “he has recelved $1,877.50 fro her, while she claims she had paid |b him $3,000,"" on the ground that the rich man wa A sufferer from asphasta when he wedded sane and are now secreting her husband from her and she has no {dea where he Is living. her and was pi ENOUGH, RULES JUDGE Says Husband Must Have Incentive to Work and Grants $10 of $50 Salary. It's all off with the fifty-ffty split in the alimony game. according to delegates present, a full teket was aolected, Assombling and results of the confer- ence from becoming generally known, but @ printed ticket of the caucus selections was obtained and prom- inent members of the conference ad- | mitted that all but one of the namos had been ratified by the administra- tion faction leaders. in addition to Dr. rine Dexter Me ‘Second Vico-Premdent, Mra, Desha i Breckinridge, Kentucky; Third Vice- | Musician - salesmen demonstrate President, Mrs. Medill McCormick, l1- | this wonderful Orten H. Clark, Michigan; Recording Secretary, Mrs. Susan W. Fitzgerald, New York; Wade Rogers, Connecticut. —Mrs, Helen G. Miller, Missourl, and Mrs. Patty R. Jacobs, Alabama. pated in the the office of Firat Vice-President had|1 style IX. Victrola in mahogany not been ratified when the caucus ad- Journed. tures of the ticket ts that it contains the name of, Mra. Mdge for Second Vice-President. Mrr Breckinridge was selected for Pres! up at a caucus of the element op- posing Dr, Bhaw’s re-election. marvelous outfit, let Leon Kotherine D, McCormick, tentatively | you about the Liberal solected for Firat Vice-President on! Payment Plan; how youtan have ° | the administration ticket, waa named | this outfit in your home and “compromise | the pleasures it affords, paying for for late.” convention under @ special order of Clatming that her mother-in-: ated the affections of her husband, Prof, her in Germany while he was atudy- | trespas: |dymages. Tho annulment sult was brought by |sutt heard in Michigan over @ y Mr. Walter's brothers and nephews ago, when Prof. Willias and Mrs, ried turned to America and went to the home of her mother-in-law in Plym- outh Soldier Misain Bandy Hook, In seasion until 1 A. M. to-day and Efforts were made to prevent the The full ticket Shaw follown: First Vico "resident, Mra. Kathe- rmick, New York; inois; Corresponding Secretary, Mra. Treasurer, Mra, Henry Auditors According to those who partict- ucus, the selection for One of the significant fe: Desha Breckin- dent on the “compromise slate” made Mrs. Treasurer on the Discussion of the report of the Con- gressional Committee of the Associa-| Recerds,60cup. Victrolas, $15 to $28. tion was spirited in the convention to-day. The report was before the business. The so-called “black list" of Con- gressmen sent out by the committee has brought forth objections from a number of prominent suffrage advo- cates, who have asserted that auch a plan ‘of action savored partisan- ship. On the other hand, the com- mittee’s supporters hold that it is proper for the suffragists of the country to know and to let the public know the attitude of Individual mem. bers of Congress on measures con- cerning women and humanitarian legislation. _— SUES MOTHER-IN-LAW FOR $50,000 DAMAGES Wife Charges That Music Professor Was Won Away From Her by His Parent. WILKES-BARRE, Nov. 1 walien- Arthur Williams, who wooed Williams Plymouth against Mrs. Sarah Williams, her husband's mother, asking $60,000 ‘This uit follows @ divorce sought te divorce his wife, but was unsuccens- j ful. The couple were married in Berlin Williams claims their life was happy until they re Prof, Williams then went to Adrian, Mich, where he became instructor of muste in a colltge the: |he was there that the separation took place and the divorce mult was begun, . It was while ROLLED INTO THE RIVER. t to the Hook Slept on Leo Loing, a private at Fort Hancock, missed the last boat to Twenty Aa per cent. of a husband's ry Is all a wife who geta « divorce | “the hook” last night and went to sleep on the pier at Broad and South streets, Early to-day he rolled over and fell in. | Cupt. John Reilly of the houseboat Rits~ | ought to expect, according to a ruling of Supreme ‘o...! Justice Guy to-day against Willlam buyer for a big department store. Mrs, Berry, seeking a divorce, said she thought she ought to Ket $15 a week alimony. “What ts your husband's salary, madam?" asked the Judge. “Ho earns 0 a w the witness replied, “I shall order him to pay you $10 a week,” Justice Guy said. "We must keep the machinery in working order, If there is no inducement for a man to work when he bas to pay alimony he is likely to give up working.” Mrs, Berry had been granted $6 a hen she fled her suit in Which she accused her husband of too grout friendliness for another woman Upon Jacob Feinstoue’s testimony that he had followed Berry wo the Union Square Hotel and a door was slammed in his face when ho tried tc force his way into the room uccu- | Harrison Berry, fi t Mercy. Miss Sa dances. pled by the defendant and a woman companion, Justice Guy took the suit under advisement, i Carlton heard his cries and threw him a rope and Policeman ¢ in the sult of Mrs, Pauline L. Berry | him Street Hosp! about eight thousand head of horses, it wa. NO REAL EXCUSE FOR A 10 easy to get, so pleas- ant to use, so sure to help, that it Is a Wonder that any woman hae th | In tay why she should. —if your hands apply VELOGEN well ove helped pull He was taken’ to Nudson 1 suffering from shock, —»———— 4,000 Mounta en for Allies, BUTTER, Mont, Noy, 13,—French and British horse buyers are making con- racts In Montana for the purchase of out. learned to ree thousand hi 1y. One shipment’ of d is to start within ROUGH SKIN, VELOGEN Is st trace of rough: ron hand: '@ your comp! not at Ite best n harsh and roug — it in The pore | and pelle a denture, vn wilt | 5 Ing odor and your | ion will welcome its soothi Cente Cannot stain—cannet LORD GORDON-LENNOX OF THE GRENADIER G IS KILLED IN BA LONDON, Vv. 13 (A Press).—Lord Bernard Charles don-Lennox, Major in the Gi Guards and the third son of the D of Richmond and Gordon, hae killed In battle, it was announced to-day, Lord Gordon-Lennox in the South African war and ward saw service in China, Capt. Beauchamp Oswald of Con avi -in-Chief of the in India, Sir Beauchamp Duff, been lulled. The Cy Hi of the First King Geormee, en ha Hitt Says the MusicMaster: | Visit any of the five Landay Stores—let one of their expert Thanksgiving $68 | Victrola Outfit or other finish........ ese 1 Handsome $15 Record Cal to match......... 10 Double face, 10 - at 75c. 1000 Victor Dance Needles. . And after you hear and see this’ teteereens - 10,00 h Dance it, little by little each month. ~ a Authorized Victer FactoryDistributers 563 FIFTH AVE., COR 46TH ST. 427 FIFTH AVE., AT 38TH ST. 27 W. 34TH ST. Sth & 6th Aves, is really starved, They need that blood-strength which comes from rich medicinal nourishment. No drugs can make blood. SCOTT'S EMULSION ts 9 highly concentrated blood-food and every drop yields returns in strengthen- ing both body and brain, If you are frail, languid, delicate or nervous, take Scott's Emalsion after meals forone month. No Alcohol. articles Vertised ta The World will Usted wt The World's Eat tion Bureau,

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