The evening world. Newspaper, July 12, 1915, Page 2

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THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, JULY 12, ATING BOMBS DRIVE FRENCH BACK AT SOUCHEZ Paris Admits Loss of Trenches] Part of British Position on Hill at Cemetery in Night 60 Blown Up, Says Attack. Berlin. B 9 oy G HOLD THE “LABYRINTH”| FIGHT IN AILLY FOREST. | French Troops Capture a Ger-| man Trench, but Are Driven Out Again. ¥ “Germans Strive for 48 Hours | te Win Back Positions * 5 They Had Lost. PARIS, July 12.—A furious German attack south of Souches, in the enemy used thousands of ing bombs, forced the to evacuate the Boucher com- etery ané portions of adjoining trenches, tie War Office admitted this BPRLIN, July 12 (via London).—| ‘The German Army Headquarters Staff gave out the following official state- ment: “On the northern slope of Hill 60, to the nouthwest of Ypres, a part of | the English position was blown up. “A battle at close quarters on the western boundary of Souchez Is pro~ greasing. “The much-fought-for cemetery to | the south of Souchez, aituated on the | road to Arras, again ia tn our pos-| ‘White the enemy was reforming for|#esston. It was captured fast night | ‘Bie second attack the French works! by storm after a flerce struggle. Two | heavily shelled. A Inree part) French officers and | the projectiles gave off asphyxiat-|taken prisoners and four machine attack by the Germans | failed. The French responded to the German charge with a bayonet coun. that swept the Teutons ‘upon their own trenches. 153 men were) ry Ome paces thet hung over the ceme-* guns and mine thrower were cap- tery in @ calm night and rendered! tured. ‘the French positions untenable. The} “At Combres and in the forest of ips therefore withdrew to the rear from which they ie enemy with great offec- Ally the enemy commenced at attack | last night after strong artillery prep- | arations, Near Combres the enemy succeeded in penetrating our line, but was driven out aguin. In the forest of Ally an enemy infantry attack broke down under our fire in front of | our positions, north hills, in the Ban-De- section of wood was cleared iH i y-elg@ht hours the Germans continued their attempt to re- eapture the “labyrinth” southeast of Neuville, They are attacking with @renades and bombs, the same by which the French cap- cellars tuno neve ot ed nee sp hed ‘At Ammereweller, northwest of Altkirch, we made\a surprise attack on an enemy division in their trenches. An enemy position was captured over a width of 600 yards. Our troops finally went back into their own line of trenches, in accord- ce with our plans, taking a few ners wigh them, unmolested by nem y: farm (south ras) and around Neuvron,” said afternooi's communique. “The bombardment at Fresnes il was followed by several attacks, _ whidh were repulsed.” ann TO NORTH POLAND EXPECTED BY RUSSIA _ Check in South Not to Halt the German Drive Against Warsaw. |, July 12.—Following the which the army of the Aus- 3 Archduke Joseph Ferdinand re- from the Russians in its ad- the CONSUL SAYS ITALIANS HAVE INVESTED TRIESTE Believes Epidemics Will Sweep] Through All Europe Before the Autumn, John E, Jones, United States Consul General to Italy, arrived to-day on the steamship: Duca Degli Abruzai trom Genoa, bringirg his little son and two daughters. He is going to leave them &t his home, Roslyn, Va., because he believes thére will be a widespread epidemic of typhus, cholera and sim- Har diseases throughout all Europe before the autumn, “I have some news from the front,” said Mr. Jones, “that has not been »|given out yet in Italy. Trieste has ‘A despatch to the Morning Post|>*n practically invested by tho Ital- _ fem Petrograd indicates that military lan army, and they have battered there are inclined to believe Tt will Kk or 80 ‘Wiss Hittle more in the way of a drive ‘Then the until the city Italians will ha’ '# most im- portant po: The morale of the Ital- army {8 excellent. The officers men are full of fight, 1 wonder if it 5 ponerally known ie much ieee Dock Commissioner, A.C. Bmitl last fall to bring Hee Americans home from Italy and Bwitzerland via ltaly? 1 suppose ‘ou know that he chartered a ship for them; but here's something you robably haven't heard of before—he jeft with me $10,000 cash to lend to Americans to help them pag ot Bite |, between the Vis | 24 GERMAN SHIPS, TIED | UP SINCE EARLY IN WAR, _ ourt NORWEGIAN PORTS. a OROZCO JUMPS HIS BAIL. Muerta Vollower Fails to A ports, especially Tromso, - Mately left for unknown destinations. —_~>_ Out of Work, Ends Lite, Bolomon Shafits, a brewery workman from Milwaukee, out of work, committed ear » July 12.—Gen, Pas- 97,600 bond was declared forfeited to-day when the former Huer- tista General failed to appear at the Preliminary hearing before United Stats Commissioner George Oliver to answer to a charge of violating neutrality, Four others waived preliminary hearing on tho same charge and were held under id to the Federal Grand Jury, which meets here on Oct. 4, Orozco's' wher: abouts remained a mystery. He har bs een since he escaped from bis cy jarcelo Garaveo, Jose C. Zosaya lke and Frank Alderete, in re Walving the | preliminary hearin, tained @ reduction in their bonds, but to produce the required detained, 4 still enjoy- ing the hospitality of Wort Bliss, aware. ing the report of the Federal Grand | Jury, which willl meet in San Antonio next’ December SKIN COMFORT ALL SUMMER ——— ee Naber, undue red- tthe prompt an use of Poslam, the 'e skin remedy. id all soreness and the sfpected suslsony surface, tion of eczema, acne, tog diseases, Poslam accompanied by his wife and | 6 Infant, was @ passenger aboard the steamer Montevideo which arrived here to-day from Cadiz, Spain. They went to the Huerta home at Forest Hills, L. 1 Mr, Huerta declined to say any- ‘hing about his plans. Feared Operation; Killed He POUGHKEEPSIE, N. July Fear of an impending surgical operation caused M: Witte, # Southwick, thir- ty-two year take her own life ¢. her ome here wy inhaling iMuminat- this cause at the strait, bey are the only two vessels of the 42 SHIPS CARRYING GERMAN SUPPLIES TAKEN BY BRITISH Sir Edward Carson Asks the Prize Court to Condemn Four of Them. LONDON, July 1 the Crown the Attorney General, Sir Edward Carson, to-day asked the Prize Court to condemn the Norwo- ian steamers Alfred Nobel, Kim and Bjornstjerne-Bjornson and the Swe- dish steamer Fridiand, which have been detained for some time by the British authorit The Attorney General asserted these veasels had been carrying absolute and condi- tional contraband from America in- tended for German consumption, In opening the case Sir Edward said 38 other vessels with similar cargoes On behalf of had been captured. Copenhagen, he declared, had virtually been turned Into a depot for feeding German troops, The cargoes in question con- sisted for the most part of farm prod- ucts, meat from the great American packing houses and lard, which ts used extensively in Germany in plac of butter, There were many cases of products used in the manufacture of | German sausage, Altogether 23,274,- 580 pounds of meat and meat prod- ucts were included in the cargoes On the Kim Fridland were quantities of rubber, listed as gum. > — TURKISH SHELLS HIT BRITISH BATTLESHIP Of the Lord Nelson Type, Says Constantinople—Conflicts With Own Earlier Reports. CONSTANTINOPLE (Via Berlin Wireless), July 12.—A British battle- ship of the Lord Nelson type was shelled by Turkish forts near Gaba Tope Saturday night and forced to withdraw, it was officially announced | to-day. Several of the Turkish projes- tiles exploded over the warship's deck and are believed to have done consid- erable damage. The enemy battleship, accompanicd by four torpedo boats, opened fire on the Turkish works, hurling at least 200 shells, but doing no damage to the forts, The Turkish casualties consisted of one man killed and two wounded, Official dispatches discredit repoits from enemy sources that there has been any violent fighting 0 Gallipoli ninsula, since the last attempt by the Anglo- rithia was beaten back wi and The Turkish report that a battle- ship of the Lord Nelson type bom- barded the Turkish forts conflicts with stories coming from Constantinople and Berlin several weeks ago that both the Lord Nelson and the Agamemnon, two of the largest British battleships had been destroyod. word Nelson type in the British Navy. pds DSi tall, 136 AIRCRAFT LOST BY ALLIES TO JUNE 22, GERMAN FIGURES SHOW. BERLIN, June 28. — According to the German official figures, supple- mented to some extent by foreign newspaper reports, the Germans, Aus- trlans and Turks had brought down aircraft up to June 22. Of largest number, namely 57, oat by the French: ‘the English 47. The Russians have fewer planes than their allies, hence fF losses reached only 26. While most of the aeroplanes were ght to earth by artillery or ma- chine gun fire from the ground, al- most one-fifth of the French losses resulted from battles in the air. BODY LIKE FLINT ROCK. jecret Process “Mummifies” Corpse of Rich Chinaman, PITTSBURGH, July 12.—After havy- ing been put through mysterious pro- cess known only to the Orlent, which hardened it to the consistency of flint rock, the body of Mee Sun, a wealthy resident of Chinatown and loader of the by Leon Ts 8. Was shipped last night to San Fran) where it will be placed aboard a ste: r for H Moe Sun died six wee! body was at oan under= , Where the process was begun, ‘The body was the first ever shipped from here after having gone through this process. It, required $8,000 to prepare he ra remains for the long { Galveston. 2.—The United Biates army transports Kilpatrick, Mo+ \Clellan and Bufford, which, it was an- Rounced, had been ordered out of com- mission, will be retained here for an tn= |defnite time, it was learned from army to-day. While the crews will \bee dismissed. the Captain and other of- 2 ON to Fight ‘The atsarpabip Ve Line sails to-day with sixty-one eabin Dansannert and 692 stoerage, oung Iallans going to gh trans. | Bnew anchor ¢ erty and take on 600 horses for the italian Army: ooremmenenttipeerresensent wae followa: is the third suicide city within one wi |the women members of the summer col- | be extols Muenter, whon. BAR HARBOR, Me., July 1 Jobn Jacob Astor, along with ni ony here, has pledged herself to sew skirts, surgical bandages and other ar- ticles for the allies for at least one hour ja week. At a meeting of the recently formed SHIPS WARNED OF BOMB PERIL SEND NO WORD FROM SEA (Continued from First Page.) of the threat against it orders would be sent to have it return to port. Interest in the Pearco letter re- ceived by @ local newspaper was in- creased to-day when It becamey known that the writer said it was, Muenter who spread broadcast the| warning when the Lusitania sailed that she would be sunk. The letter declared Muenter had called person- ally on Charles Frohman to warn him against taking passage on the Lusi- tan Polleo c t officials, however, Investl- | gating the “Pearce” letter to-day] hinted at signa that indicate the matter “may not be as serious as first thought.” Unofficially, some of the detectives assigned to the case frankly declared their investigations have unearthed unmistakable signa that the letter may have been written merely for the sake of the sensation tt m create. Despite these leanings, however, police vigilance was not relaxed. Officials were more determined than ever to run the case down and pun- Ish the writer, even though he may prove to bo a practical joker. Halle, now under arrest, was re- t 0 y b Halle is mentioned in “Pearce’ letter as having “failed completely.’ Before Halle was acquitted in Federal Court on a charge of having con- spired to ship explosives the State had tried unsuccessfully to convict him on a charge of having explosives in his possession. “Pearce” orders the newspaper to which the letter was sent to refrain from abusing Muenter editorially. “I cannot bear to see him dragged in the dust by persons that cannot com- pare with him in intellect, courage or martyrdom,” he writes, “Pearce” asserts that Muenter went to Glen Cove with the purpose of f t r he refers to as the “Ambassador to Hell.” Hoe says: “We have tratled Spring-Ri for ks and we are going to get him yet.” A sample of the manner in which he swears barbarian—a crank. He was one of the best men Germany ever produced. He was human—not only human, but humane. He destroyed property and took lives when ho knew that good would follo’ rw otherwise, Ho taught me his principles, his ideals, and as I said before, I glory in }is leadership of the past.” The man asserts it was Muenter who addressed telegrams to Vander- bilt and other passengers on the Lual- trip. He says, further, that Muen- ter went to Charles Frohman and warned him against boarding the Lusitania. “Just as Muenter appealed to Froh- man, Vanderbilt and the others not to sail on the Lusitania, so 1 now appeal to worthy Americans in this country not to sall on British mule ships leav- ing this port,” he writes. —< ee DENIES FROHMAN GOT PERSONAL WARNING OF LUSITANIA’S FATE, The attention of Alf Hayman was called to-day to the despatch from |, New Orleans telling of & letter sigued | will be the office and workroom each day from 10 to 1 a member of the society will be in charge, newspa| Alabama at direction of ship hore. rhe Street and Broadway. killing Sir Cecil Spring-Rice, whom |* Court sue in the Supreme Court today declared the act Compa: tania warning them not to make the | 'y 1915. Widow of Col. Astor Now Sewing at Bar Harbor for Men at Front. |. | Bar Harbor Relief Committee yesterday afternoon the work the same lines as tho: at Aiken last winter, outlined along that prevailed A room in the Bar Harbor High School and PRUSSIAN CASUALTY LISTS SHOW 1,504,523 LOST TO END OF JUNE ‘ LONDON, July 12—The last sixteen Prussian casualty lis contain the names of 94,747 of- ficers and men killed and wounde making the total Prussian losses to the end of June 1,504,523, ac- cording to a Berne despatch to the Morning Post. This does not include 164 Saxon casualty lists, 198 varian lists, 211 Wurttemberg ind 36 naval liste, Of 40,000 German national sche: teachers under arms 4,900 have been killed in battle, “Pearce” in which it was stated that Ci Muenter not to sail for England on the Lusitania. harles Frohman was warned by Eric “Mr. Frohn received no warning of any kind,” said Mr, Hayman, “save he warning notice published in the ‘8 by the representatives of he German Government. He received no telegram and was not accosted on| he pier or on the ship by a person or persons advising him to remain | ashore." —_——_——— WIRES CAUSED U. S. SHIP FIRE Electric Strands on Alabama Got Gromed and Created Alarm, Navy Yard of- ay, the fire that esterday aboard the batt bama beneath the forward tht urret Was caused by crossed electric cently acquitted of a charge of con-| Wit Prompt action by the crew prob- piring to ship explosives on an in-|SIY saved the Warship from serlous oF spied “ damage. An ammunition holst leading Motalato OBIE 8ts > the magazine was directly in. the path of the Five hundr all without. the slightest confusion. nage was trifling Hotel Clerk In Held, rkville Police Court looked like y to-day. More than one hundred actors and actresses from he variety stage were present to tes- ify to the highly reputable conduct of he Hotel Normandie, at Thirty-seventh Four detectives rom Police Headquarters testified that hey had regis with same women as “and wife several times in th early mornings. istrate atrick J. Quinlan of Jersey City, in the Grand y 2k 00 bail fax Uph Arkanans LITTLE ROCK, » duly 12.—Fine ally disposing of the questions at ta- Sawyer Racing Bill, the . passed by the Legislature, which to avenge, is contained In the follow-| Would nave permitted racing under & ing paragraph: State Commission and pari mutuel | “This country conalcors Muenter a| Petting Ip, connection therewith, » Court Cireult . We he Supr wetsion of ruled. that had vetoed the bill — Conpon Men Convention, ‘The first convention of members of ‘ourt Hayes | the United Profit Sharing Corporation in| connection with the United Cigar Stores met to-day at the company’s building, No. 44 Weat Bighteenth Street Forty manufacturers were pr discuss general plans for the di re business, ‘There will be a| night at the Hote! fon will last PATUS, King Victor Fmmanuel of Italy to-day bestowed up- on President Poincare the Order of Annunciade, The insignia was pre- sented to the President by Italian Am- bassador Tittoni at a public gather- ing this afterni Auto, Mich nerlower, seven, of No. 535 West Fifty-seventh Street, struck to-day by an automobile owned by James H. Otller of No. 29, We Fitty-third Street in front of 3 West Fifty-seventh Stree removed £1 pulseliale Hospital, in pally index ASQUITH DODGES TALK IN COMMONS ~ OFACABINET SPLIT Refuses to Answer Questions of Liberal Members About Kitchener and Lloyd George. LONDON, July 12.—Premier As- ‘quith, in Commons this afternoon, re- fused to be drawn into a discussion of rumors of dissension in the Cabl- | net or of a split between Lord Kitch- Jener and Gen, French over the am- | munition question, In reply to queries put by Liberal members, he declared that™any public discussion of the conduct of the war “would serve no good purpose at this time.” Notwithstanding this statement, several members attempted to draw | the Prime Minfster out on the contro- versy between Minister of Munitions Lioyd George and Viscount Haldane, | close personal friend of Asquith. Tho Premier was asked pointedly if he agreed with Lioyd George's criti- jcisms of Haldane, contained in an open letter that gave rise to reports of trouble in the coalition Cabinet. “I have nothing to add to my for- mer statements,” was his only reply. ‘DRIVE AUSTRIANS FROM VAL GRANDE TRENCHES Italians Report Small Successes at Several Points—Night At- tack by Foe Fails. ROME, July 11 (via Paris, July 12). | —An official statement issued to-night at the headquarters of the Italian General Staff says: “Heavy artillery opened fire on the defensive works at Landro and the advanced works at Sixten(?). Et- forts against Val Grande continue. At break of day Sunday thedtallans took the offensive and drove the enemy from their trenches with appreciable loss. “In the Isonzo Valley the enemy again attempted a night counter at- | tack which failed.” COUPLE ASKS PRIVACY BEFORE ENDING LIVES! | “Kindly Do Not Expose Our Bodies to Public View,” Writes Suicide Pair, Leaving a note to the police saying: | "Kindly do not expose our bodies to, | the public view,” Gustave Koch, fitty- | |#ix, and bis wife Elizabeth, the same jage, committed suicide to-day in the . July 12.—Ac- | bedroom of their home on the second | |floor rear at No, 283 Furman Street, Brooklyn, by inhaling gas, The double suicide was discovered by their son, Lester, No. 19 Furman | Street, who called there at 1.0 o'clock He says that his father had not worked for four years, jand that he had been ailing, despond- ent and short of funds. poset ao ll KNOWS MOTHER BY VOICE. Blind G Who Gets Sight Parent for Firat Time. LOS ANGELES, July 12.—After twen- ty-one years in utter darkness, Miss Tomsina Carlisle saw the face of her mother to-day. ‘The girl was born bling, A surgical operation recently gave her sight, She was returning from Berk- eley, where she 1s a student at the State university, when she walked down the gangplank of a steamer to-day, Scores stood by, in silence, with heads bared, as the girl, still uncertain In her walk, came tremulously down toward the walting crowd. Her mother moved for- ward. but there was no sign of recognt- tlon Until Mrs, Casliale spoke. Then the girl sprang for to. embrace mother whos Seen Y familiar since It first crooned twenty-one years ago over a darkened cradle. Miss Carlisle to-day met many friends, whom she recognized only by their vo with our incomparable Special for Monday. CIDULATED, FRUIT TABLETS rystalline ot pane loc inty | es wit ing ReeehSona! ee = her submarine policy. further study, front. trenches, of the shell controversy would be the nation. to the R jan statement, but their and east. for Long Voyage to Straits. MANILA, July 12—Persons who formed:into transports to carry Rus. sian troops to the Dardanelles. ‘The passengers are transferred and the freight unloaded. The ships then | Jare sent to Vladivostok to take on’ | troops. There have been no previous reports | of an authoritative nature to the effect that Russian troops would be sent to pall sistas GOSDEINE BOAT BURNED, Big Fr ter Catches Fire When Engine Backfires. HASTINGS-UPON-HUDSON, N. Y,, | July 12.—The big gasoline driven boat ‘Albatross, of the type that is being used for freighting on the river, burned early to-day in the Hudson near the Piermont flats, John Lange, ja Dobbs Ferry fisherman, heard an Jexplosion and saw the boat, which |was about seventy-five feet long, | burst into flames, Two men who we on board reached land and caught a train for New York The men told Lange the flame had been caused by the backfiring of the motor. The hull of the boat ig still floatin, It Was owned T, Howard of No, 1 Broadwa i ilatinat: tan. The Captain was W. and the engineer W. Gaffey GY pi Ait UL, FIND DYNAMITE ON RAILWAY, Four Hundred and Seven Sticks Sei ered on Reading Tracks, PHILADELPHIA, July 12.—Four hundred and seven sticks of dynamite were found early to-day scattered along the tracks of the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad at Flat Rock um, a suburb, The police are with- out @ clue as to who placed the ex- plosive or the motive behind ft. he dynamite was stolen from the sheds of the McGraw. Construction Company. ‘The roadbed of the rall- road was being rebullt and the dyna- mite was used for blasting purposes. Extra Special for Monday and Tuesday. | Chocolate Covered Sair Dates The choicest, full grown, full flavored Persian Dates, brought to per- fection under the sunny skies of the Orient and generously covered late, unexcelled in Fragrance, Purity ts are the delight of millions of As a rare treat for Moncey ape UND BOX sod I 5c Special for Tuesday. TREC ih took Hien rrult’ Paste, excul owe S540 Ser at cosh ae keh ae on ee weight includes the container in sack case, Far Eastern traffic are being trans- |the pri the Gallipoll Peninsula to assist the | | allies in the operations there, BRITISH DRIVEN FROM PART OF HILL 60, BERLIN REPORTS « WAR NEWS IN BRIEF. Berlin has offered to allow several great German liners to fly the American flag as a further concession to the United States, but sticks to President Wilson is holding up his reply to the German note for Heavy fighting in several sectors of the front in France has resulted in change of ground at one important point. the cemetery at Souchez, possession of which has long been contested. German Headquarters reports a surprise attack near Altkirch in Alsace, resulting in the capture of a Ffench position along a 500-yard The captors ultimately retired voluntarily to their old line of The Germans recaptured German attacks which followed violent cannonading in the Woevre region were repulsed, Paris reports, succeeded in penetrating the German line in an assault near Combres, but declares they were soon driven out. In the British Parliament Premier Asquith declared that a discussion Berlin concedes that the French detrimental to"the best interests of Petrograd reports continued fighting along the front extending from Josefow on the Vistula to Byehawa, approximately thirty miles to the eastward. The Austrians have again become aggressive here, according attacks were repulsed. Unofficial despatches from Austrian headquarters contain the state- ment that the Teutonic forces halted north of Krasnik because the object of the campaign against Lemberg had been attained with the recapture of that ¢ity and the establishment of strong defensive positions to the north Several successes along the Austro-Italian front are reported by Italian Army Headquarters in the districts where the Italian forces are engaged in the effort to clear the road to Trieste, Counter attacks by the Austrians in the Isonzo Valley have been repulsed, it is declared. The Turkish War Office records the bombardment of Gabatepe, near the tip of the Gallipoli Peninsula by a cruiser, presumably British, which, protected by torpedo craft, fired 200 shells without success. The warship was hit and forced to withdraw. /RUSSIA IS SENDING ARMY TO DARDANELLES, |*=~ <ters sete PERJURY [IS CHARGED. ‘The trial of Walter Peck, a law clerk Troops Put on Ships at Vladivostok | at No. 309 Broadway, indicted for eub- ornation to perjury, was begun fn the Bronx County Court this afternoon. When James Fletcher, a laborer, was burned by a live wire on Oct. 29, 1913, so that he died not i afterward, his Felatives accepted $20,000 In ettiomen have arrived here from Saigon, capital |from the New ‘York, "New Haven an of French Cochin China, report that | Mitford all vessels belonging to the Messageries | oner Shon; Maritimes which have been engaged tn | ‘"¢., New. lowed an iocyest, before Cor. hongut in which t declared laven was wullt pet, criminal ce. Since then John J, Breen, ipal witness to Fletcher's death, has confessed to the District t At that his story wa: charged, that Peck ‘grange the Ths testis Murray. mony of hi himself and Deni SILK STOCKINGS THAT WEA GOTHAM Goin Stripe REGUS PAT.OFF THE GOLD STRIPE STO! GARTER HUNS.” 400 DIFFERENT SHADES, AT YOUR DEALER'S anp GOTHAM HOSIERY 27 WEST 4TH BT. gHor, —_—o__ DIED. MORGAN.—At Boville, on July 8, 1915, GEORGE DENISON MORGAW, son of the Inte George Hale and Geren Bpencer Morgan. Notice of funeral hereafter, Now She’s Happy As Can Be! This dainty Miss came to the city to accept a position. But, like most strangers who visit New York, she did not know which way to turn in her search for a place to live and board, Fortunately for her, she bought copy of THE MORNING WORLD and her troubles were at an end, Through its maze of advertising pages she found a beautifully furnished room in a home. like boarding house, where the home cooking made her rejoice and where the congenial acquaintances she met brought many happy hours into her Hfe that might otherwise have been spent im lonely solitude, 24,770 ii World “Boarders Wanted” and “Te Let” Ads Were Printed Last Monthew 14,686 More Than the Herald. SEVEN-TIME WORLD ADS MOL) RESULTS) ih

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