The evening world. Newspaper, August 25, 1915, Page 3

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MAYOR T0 URGE MILITARY TRAINING FOR 450,000 BOYS Mitchel Returns From Pilatts- burg Camp to Make Real PRAISES THI MILITIA City’s Chief Executive Gets! a FPurlough to Attend to City’s Business, it If Mayor Mitchel bas his way on bis return from the Plattabure encamp- ment Sept. 6, the 475,000 public echo! | Boys of this city will begin « mill-| tary training next fall. The Mayor will take up the matter with the| Board of Education, and it tes under-| 100d bia views will receive hearty co-operation there. The Mayob arrived tn town early js morning from the training camp | and went direct to bis apartments at the Peter Stuyvesant, on Hiverside Drive, He did not visit the y Hall during the day, but transacted the oMcials business that brought him here at bis bome. Police Commis- sioner Woods, Corporation Counsel Polk and Tax Commissioner Mullan called. Bome time ago, before the training camp at Plattsburg was thought of, Mayor Mitchel discussed military train- ing for school boys with Maj. Gen. Wood. It was then agreed that such training would not only make @ po- tential soldier of every graduate from the New York City public schools, but would also serve to make better men of them in @ physical and disciplinary nense. The Mayor to-day paid a high tri- bute to the New York Blate milla, naying they bore the reputation of { being by far the best In the country | Hut in the same breath Mr, Mitchel emphasized the fact that even were the { military organizations of all the States in the Union as efficient as the New York State body the country would still be in an utterly defenseless state “1 firmly believe that @ certain #mount of military training should be adopted by the public schools of this city,” said the Mayor, “What I mean by military training is callsthenica, setting up exercises, a certain amount of military drilling, and other discip- } linary measures, With this training & school boy would be much more readily wded soldier than under tho present conditions. “Personally, I favor the school boy military training in use in Switzer- land, This system is interwoven with the day's studies and makes for bet- tor students in every respect. “Of course, 1 don't want to say off- Nand that the Swiss system ia going to be adupted he However, upon my return 1 shall take up the sub- Ject of part military training of school boys with the educational authori- ties,” The Mayor was asked what thought of the militia of this State whether it well organized enough to figure importantly an a defensive factor in a great commonwealth. NEW YORK’S MILITIA IS MOST EFFICIENT. “In the opinion of experts I have been meeting,” said the Mayor, “our New York State milida are recog- nized as the most efficient in the county, Part of the State militia, at least, 18 in excellent condition, Re- member, Lam not speaking as an ex- pert after two and a half weeks training, but merely expressing the sentiments of men who are real sol- diers and competent Judges. “rhe Seventy-first, S.xty-ninth and Seventh regiments of Infantry, the First and Secoud Cavalry and some ef the artillery regiments have reached a high plane of efficiency But speaking of the militia through- out the nation, I should say that tt Is far below the mark. The militia as into a real he it is organized doesn't answer the situation at all, and we are realizing it more and more every day.” “If the militia of the rest of the country was as good us that of New York State, would that bring the militia up to the proper strength?" was asked, “That would mean that we'd have only 90,000 efficient troops,” replied | the Mayor, “and that js far from | being a sufficient number. The fact | that we have well trained militia doesn't prove much, If anything, in solving the stional defense problem, The Mayor was told that he had been criticised for Absenting himself — For Constipation EX LAX The Delicious Laxative Chocolate jon, regulates stimulates the Good for Soldiers of School Children, | Previous Lessons. | eee ——— THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 25, WHAT EVERY WOMAN SHOULD KNOW! How to Keep Well, Keep Strong and K. a Perfect oomagnete A New Series of IMustrat- ed Lessons, Giving Tests, of Difficult Exercises in| TEST EXERCISE No. XV.- ROLLING. y Pauline Furlong, The Bvening World's Authority on All Questions of Womens Physica! Well Being. There are three things which | Promised you my course of exercise combined with hygiene would accom: piish, They are the follow! a | The reduction of women who are too stout. (2) The development of wom who are too thin. (3) The improve ment in health and strength of all women taking the course and not the Victims of some organic trouble To-day I am giving space to three groups of women. Hach group has benefited in one of the three ways I have mentioned. Just how much I leave them to tell you. (1). The women who wanted to duce and have done so: “I have been following your exer- Clea very closely, and the diet [ com- menced after the first lesson, I weigh myself regularly, I have re duced twenty-five pounds, I really think your tre ment te wonderful. “M, B.D” “I have been following your in- structions carefully, in order to loxo weight, [have been successful | enough to lose an average of two pounds each week. RR “I have followed your diet and ex- | ———__________-— ercinos for obesity pounds in six week: “MRS. G, D, F." “I have benefited much by your lessons, having reduced my waist one and @ half inches and hips one inch “AM.” (2), The women who wante develop and have done so: “I take the liberty of writing to nd have lost seven ticles who are followin sone are in requesting information care aid them in following for diet and erercise. tong also will to you to tell you that it is a bi learn the results of her ing to the community to have you shown by your charts. mong us. | have taken a great interest in your instructions. | was very thin and have gained quite a few pounds. | was a com- plete wreck from indigestion and have overcome that. “MRS. W. H. F.” ave been following your in- | structions with interest. | was narrow chested, and by doing the exercises that you prescribed my chest is two inches broader and | fool and look very much better, “MRS. G. G." “I am slender and haye developed my chest wonderfully within the past] 1, B. few weeks through your course ‘ think you have done a great amount of good and I know you must be pleased to know it. K, TT." “I have followed your instructions for thin people in The Evening World and find them very beneficial. M. VY (3). Women who have made a gen- oral gain in health and vitality: “I want to thank you very much for your course of exercis it has done me a great deal of good. M, A. W." “L am greatly jnterested in your splendid instructions and*have bene- fited greatly through (hem. A, M, “Your instructions are very valu. able to me, 1 am helping my little girl to get rid of round sboulders through your exercises, "MRS. J. 8." “I am enjoying your articles very much and find all your exercises brimfull of rational and common sense suggestions, oN. M. THE TEST FOR ROLLING. It is the test for rolling, the best single exercise for reducing the hips, which we shall consider to-day, To roll, ie flat on your back on the floo toes, heels and knees — presse together, your fists clenched and held just below the chin, Then, without bending your legs or your trunk, roll over, first on your aide, then on your Do them at least ten or utes each day. The midi ternoon Is the very best convenient. =a P. asks: MARGARET’ remove warts? The ele to remove the of lunar caust the wart with You Pin wa they peat if necessary. F, writes: [ all, and althou, you do, I w fo you think my lar this difference in weig! You should weigh aroun the large frame makes tl in weight. Experts allow each way, for this very have we shorter than you. write me your m¢ close to the clas: m 1 ght From sureme! M.D. writes: ‘I ° times a week to reduce vinegar, Tam 5 feet 7 ine welgh D, What shoute Will water make me fa quarts of It a day, Why twitel i in my stomach ase discontinue vinegar, soon as They will eat every of your stomach is nourishing wi You should welch twitching is probably ercising too soon after m them in the afternoon, ea or before retiring and not hours after eating, P. writes: 1 the eye the you hit o Follow hout bein 160 fp ADELE V. wrinkles a ders of Miss Furlong's ar® invited to write to her, of The Evening World, be interested to and evening also, or Just once a day tric needle ts the surest way 1y dip a stick will then turn dark and drop off in a few ned 140 and I am one inch used from x= wh Told in a Series of Illustrated Lessons ROLLING Land AMERICAN DOLLAR pry 4 ‘ONLY NATION'S COIN WORTH FAGE VALUE 0 her lex that will her rules Miss Fur- lessons as fifteen min- le of the af- time if It is Every Foreign Coinage Sold Here at a Big Discount To-Day. “What will Foreign exchange rates in Wall | Street samged downward to-day, nding the credit of all the European r and touch days. Re-| nations now at war to lower discounts as compared with American dollars. 5 feet 6 in-|The English pound sterling was measure the 140 pounds, ones cause | quoted os worth only $4.65% In New York, as compared with a normal value of $4,865. French francs and Itallan ire were also at heavy loss in exchange, though not at thelr lowest ebb. The German mark was the only foreign money that made a new low point Four marks, usually equivalent to 99 cents, were quoted as equalling now only 80% cents, The biggest negotiations pending in the financial world rolate to England's endeavor to establish a vast credit account in New York of possibly $500,000,000, France arranged to-day @ relatively amall credit of $20,000,000 through Brown Brothers & Co, to be used for commercial trade and not war munitions, Great Britain's finan clal needs in this country, however, are very large and pressing on ac rly moraing |Count of enormous war purchases within two |The heavy loss in foreimn exchange | makes desirable a huge deposit here. unless the Bank of England ts willing to release tts gold ash payments 1182. Yest, | 1e difference ten pounds, reason, [ what yout nts are very salts three and drink hes tall and 4 1 weigh? t? 1 drink| do I feel a after exer- salts and read this. f lining out the diet. It) i fattening, punds, The reals, Take at causes s when my stomach, then on the opposite side,| skin Is not dry? How can T enlarge peas dolla then, again, on your buck, Go from| my bust? Mee oe Te ee co Ar A Be aa one aide of the room to the other tn]pnin when I do the chest raising? | become the supreme standard coin of this fashion, How can I get rid of Mnes in the neck | the world, England, whose coinage Your hands are clenched in Jang fabby chin?” has been the measure of value in the order to protect the breast, To (1) Squinting the eyes; you may . sf ied beep se away from she face ind giasnes, (2) nd stampod selt past in now making ao ts foreign on the floor Nana enve or reply. ¢3) |contracts In dollars and eecks to se fore’ voginning ie Pistol 4 wack of practic is is what you|up @ large credit account in New nd to strengthen the wrists and| yo > t all payme: tt exerci When yeu san roll |Srme ‘when you can do this exorcise | <orr 0° wat all paymente can | over thirty times without dizzi- | Without the pain and when your arma | Mada tn dollars ne and with no pain in your | go not tremble beneath your weight | 'he only national credit in the world ips or shoulders, you may know | you aro letter perfect In it. (4) Fol-| to-day that is not at a diver Seu Mave unbeactie test for [PRU tro, woreee partact th tte w F nI- | to-day that Is not at a discount I» that fully. It re- [and 22 and also massago the lines, {°F the United Btates much pract! 2 J.P. Morgun & Co. are endeavoring —— oo R. H. writes: "Please tell me how | o negotiaty anglish credit transac Letters From Evening World| ‘0 £9! "4 of Diack & under my tion, T en mysterious de Keaders Following M teat and sleep will banish them, |!" andl ne over some of hor leading bankers to complete the Furlong’s Lessons. MAZIE 8. asks: "W —— best fruit to eat n of BEULAH R, asks: “Is it necesnary | evel: Bananas, grapes and api to do the exercising in the morning from the City Hall while learning to be a soldier and was asked If he had | ¥ooth Is Drowned oF een PRAYERS FAIL TO S. lich ty the! transaction, One of the visitors due to he wants to | arr is week 1 Edward Holden, ples. Chairman of the London City Bank, German and British financial agents AVE BOY, tr! each other closely in *\ their new battle for millions that is ning up in Wall Street. In German Market Slip cir is said that the hiteh in the any reply to make, " Iver. ! n Ix due to the reluctance TELLS WHY HE WENT TO SOL- _ American hankers 310 _subuoribe DIERS' CAMP: Michael Palermo, seven, fell off the ely to & proposed Morgan syn ‘s bulkhead at Market slip to-day while ute I am deeply interested in my laying in the fast River for bananas! & Prominent German financier said country's milltury preperations," sald) Pye yd fall wt unloading ening tat England secured help in the Mayor, Ich have fallen from untoading ships ates, she would be hard “The cuimp at Plattsburg is a con Jaseph Wald wily by the end of the crete expression of the movement to| shouting ona for this were given that end and a@ determination that} to the enormous drain made that preparedness be carried out. 1] prayed gliah capital in financing all the wanted to testify to my belief in the fe thed in'vatn [allies and the steady outgo of Britixh movement and t necessities that . ey in paying for supplies bought le behind it: ‘The only way 1 could) ALi properly testify was by first getting financiers retort that Ger the experionce. Hence iny presence It STEAMSHIPS DUE TO-DAY. 1 the verge of financint col camp. att use she hag greatly ex- Tho, Mayor saya he will not ikely| Mandeville, Port Antonlo...... 9A: M.| panded her currency with no forolgA init the Colty ‘aisain until, the carmb| Orion, Buenos Ayres HOALM, commerce and little domentie com pre » September 6, He will be| pri meren to support and that her back at hin desk in the City Hull,| Philadelphian, London ‘WVA.M.) gancial operations are inflated until September 6, Honolulan, Cristobal, 1A. My! the bursting point le near, . \ ) ! 14 Bcc scdllsh Mees Laadinanedtalall COURT 10 GIVE HER KIDNAPPED CHILDREN Mrs. Lillian Kuper Demands the Custody of Little Ones. Horner Dented the rieht to see her chil- dren, Helen, aged three, and Horner, aged five, who were kidnapped from Park Avenue Hotel on Aug. 9 Mrs. Lillan Horner Kuper, daughter of the late Dr. Horner, famous naval eurgean, and worth $750,000 In her own name, to-day ap to Su- preme Court Justice rn to give her back her litt Through her attorney she applied for a writ of habeas corpus, Two hours after tt was fled, the kiddies, tanned and dimpled, thet blonde hair ropped in Dutch fashion, appeared n court with their father and a young woman, The mother, who had ‘own frantic since their disappear- vnee, came upon them suddenly as they waited In an unused courtroom where the father and young woman warded off curtous visitors. Thero was no stopping Mra, Kuper when she caught sight of them, She rushed Into the courtroom, picked up both in her arms and hugged them till thetr Httle faces reddened, Her husband did not object, but rather enjoyed the little reunion Tho writ will be heard Sept. & "This was agreeable to Mrs, Kuper al- hough she asked to be permitted to take the children until the hearing he Court held, however, that they should stay In the custody of Kuper According to the papers, the Kupers separated & year ago. husband, ieorge H. Kuper, if the son of a wealthy freight and ship broker with sfices at No, 1 Kroadway From the ime of her marriage unt!) July 27 this year Mrs. Kuper alleges she om tributed generously to the household Aupport out of her annual allowan of $12,000, When the separation came feclared, the entire expenses 0 wld were borne hy her Cruel and inhuman treatment, Kuper alleges, caused her to leave her jusband. She took the youngsters to the Park Avenue Hotel, They were there only a fow days when, during her absenc hey were taken from the apartment —_—_—.—__—_ BEATEN IN SKIRMISH, GERMAN WINS BATTLE ones, Mra walls went to pleces Ike kindling wood broken over a boy's knee. Henry Kruger, pro-German, miper-| Horses falling and rolling on th Intendent of the apartinent house at| kround, other horses leaping over Hivoral4e’ Delve,.and them and landing on top of them, horses charging b 1 on into each vator int Jay wot bout the war to to be the better t preliminary engagement He was proclaiming an argument Hriston proved er and won the his vietory to another elevator & when Kruger, | who had retreated to his quarter tn the basement, sppeared, armed with 4.38 calibre revolver and a billy club. Hriston Jumped a couple of times and found himself in an apartment on the | third floor, from which he telephoned to the ourth Branch Detective Hureau. | Detectives G Pebbles, | forming neutral reinfo: via, ar rested Kruger, He w dd examina tion in Harlem Police Court and was] held in $1,000 ball on charges of felo Company at Communipaw, N. J, at ‘o'clock this morning Jersey smothered in the swamps. | charged 1,527 FEAR HORSES ST AS STORM Mounts Awaiting Exportation to Burope Spread Destruc- tion in Jersey City RLAST APTER THUNDER? ——_— Police Investigate Mysterious “Explosion” Heard at Com- munipaw Stock Yards. by the terrific the earty Maddoned with fea of morning ampede by @ which occurred 1,027 horses awaiting exportation to the battie thunderstorm into a wild and wet mysterious explosion after the storm was over, fields of Europe, broke from » corral of the Central Union Stockyards The animals overran the yarde of w Jersey the Central Raliroad of } and the Lehigh Valley One great squadron of four hundred went careening into the streets of yard fences and knocking over all obatruc- City, smashing front tlons outside the building line, Some wero drowned in the Morris Canal and in the bay and not a few were Long after daylight mounted Hee and corral horse handlers wore doing wild weat cowboy stunts through the streets of the Bergen and Greenville sections of Jersey City, aided by peddlers on grotesque The peddlers abandoned their po- wards for returned runaways. Ferry commuters saw thrilling and amusing scenes on the river, where rowboat men and the crows of tues struggled to save horses still panic. stricken to the point of preferring drowning to rescue. C. W. Cole, president and: general manager of the Central Union Com- pany, had reports at ten o'clock of twenty-five horses still loose in the city or on the meadows. Thirty-two had been reported as having been shot because of their injuries; fifteen or twenty more are believed to have been drowned, The rest have been returned to another corral, ‘That from which the stampede started was turned into kindling wood by the charge, 4,200 HORSES IN PENS; ONE WHOLE CORRAL WRECKED. Th peace time capacity of the yards was about 1,600 head of stock. It has been Increased until there ts room for nearly 6,000 horses alone and there were 4,200 in the pons last night. ‘The 1,527 horses which ran away were tn a corral five hundred feet long by a hundred feet wide. Along each side were pens built of light scaffolding to enable the French and Italian cavalry officers who are inspecting the remounts to sort them according to grades and destination, Between these rows of pens was an ex yard, which opened at the foot of Communtpaw Avenue. When the storm broke the horses raced wildly around the pena, biting and kicking at each other, The bar- riera of several pens were broken down and there were mad rushes down the long exercising Inclosure, which the guards attempted to steady by riding through the corral, singing and shouting. The guards had a double burden on their minds, Because of recent cases of polsoning and the discovery that some of the big 4x4 Inch posts of thr walls of the corral had sawed through, they were also on the for possible trouble makers the outside, He all the rds reported to the police Invest! gators to-day, that they aaw nothing suspiclous last night POLICE SEEK CAUSE OF MYS8- TERIOUS REPORT. The storm was uttering away in the distance when there sounded a report which was loud enough to have been caused by Hghtning atrik- ing in the middle of the corral, Per haps it ‘That's what the police and private detectives are trying to find out With a crackle and a smash pen cine main been er, wu was. other, horses running In almloss ovals all things drove the guards outer and then, though by @ common Impulse, all the 1,627 which were on thelr feet the Communipaw Avenue It went down as though it 1 &@ pasteboard barrier. fore the riderlesy squadron the interlacing network of ninety-four railroad tracks and spurs. these to the fences as fenc had be Out be read On many of them were moving trains ind switeh engines, Spreading out fanlike, running with tossing and no eyes for what was ahead of them many horses were crushed and nious assault and violation of the Sullivan Law, mangled, Others streamed out to the hoads | GIRL STOWAWAYS OVE. U.S. PROTECTORATE. FROM STEAMER'S DECK ONLY FOR HAYT'S 6000, AND THUS WIN/JOBS LANSING DECLARES They Wanted to Accompany No Selfish Aim in Exercising Annette Kellerman and Control of Republic Suf- Now They Will fering From Spoliation. Just ae the Ue 4 fret Com Waentnoron F 3 Re panye amer Cariile wae about te Lansing sald . for Jam ue * mo Der te he toited @ tective Joe Fogarty had « hunch, or Hayt! proposing ton yourr tip, oF clue, oF something, sad @@- control uf the island Government's cided that the life boots om the after- Anances had for te mule purpose the end of the boat deck would bear Bt- establishment of a able goverament gation. which could be entirely turned ever When he lifted the canvas off one to the Haytians themacives of the boate he found two youns| The American Charge at Port-au- women, Helen Constance, No. 216 prince has asked the Maytian Gove Weat Ninety ninth Street, and Mabel ernment for an answer to the Amer Hawtin, No. 161 Weet © NUP | con proposa day, Beormtary Lan ed and Fifth Street, sowed BF8Y ging confirmed the outline of the plan there, with two loaves of 4, 8 it Was stated In yesterday's news Dottie of water, and « box of choco- | despatehes from Port-au-rince and lates. -“ Ww, The officers of the boat were aston. | have onty one purpose—that ed, no was the crowd, and ao, @ / = tly, was Herbert Brenne irrempons revoluti Thése director for Annette Kellar hd Fane hs y= Bae they are was aboard with about @ hundred girl) Voivg nu question of principles aad aged to help her take mermaid plo-| they are ruining the country tures at Kingston. Fogarty led hi ‘While they are in progress people ving in the atroets Port because they cannot see shapely prisoners up to Brennon “Are thene kids with your crowd?” a of which abound in he demanded the country, | Things have been going Hrennon proclaimed loudly that he| from bad to worse and something ‘ache Senay: must be done. The United States new them mot Government haa no purpose of ag~ All right,” said Fogarty, “Old Slip lee Station for theirs. alico station! At that fell word the two young women broke from| their captoM) grasp, lashed to the; ral], mounted it and made two of the prettiest dives ever seon in that part of the river. When longshoremen at the opposite pler fished them out of the water they reluctantly admitted that they had been very desirous of accompanying | Mian Kellerman, but hearing that Ja- matca was @ British possession and fearing that their German parentage might prevent their getting passports they had decided to travel under cover. Director Brennon, having observed the excellant diving qualities of the| girls, made it known that he thought | arrangements could be made whereby they would be included in another batch of mermaids who leave next | week to join to-day’s consignment. When last seen the girls were in a touring car which seemed to have been wa'ting for them, A — Kreanic in prom have ne Nicholas. The Secretary added that of course the arrangement would have to be approved by the United States Ben-~ ate, and is entirely dimintereated ting this protectorate, We even asked for Mole St, of them leaped headlong Into the water, Two ran over the ties and up the high trestie of the Northwest Spur Line over the Central of New Jersey tracks, Bowlldered at the top of the trestle, they fell between the ties. ‘Their legs were broken and they were shot later. It took a wrecking - Chocolate crow two hours to remove thelr Ras pberry bodies, FLEEING ANIMALS BEAT DOWN Becnt Bar. EVERYTHING IN PATH, ‘The main body of the fugitives went straight through Communipaw Ave- nue for two blocks, filling the atreet and beating down everything in their way. About @ hundred swung off at Johnson Avenue and plunged on to scattor In Greenville. Tho reat kept together until they were in the heart of the Bergen section, Bome of them may be running yet. ‘The herd had hardly left the corral when word was sent to Mr, Cole and Superintendents Ackerman ~ and Moran, They called for polloe help. 7, one of thee new slaven mi Oe Lieut, Lynch with ten mounted pa- BTR boo nal, haves trolmen started out at once for the $2.98 to $4.98 Communipaw Avenue station, Lieut, Moran with six men from the City Hall station joined him, All reserve ‘Ths lhest Paris models, patrolmen wero ordered out to help ~ maae of Lyons Bilk them, and the great horse hunt began. dea Word was received at Police Head- quarters at half past six o'clock to- y that two horses were swimming off Liberty Island, Lieut. Ellis, tn command of the police boat Patrol, was ordered to sail to the rescue from Pier A. After a search of haif an hour the two were found, swim- ming for the lower bay and the sea side by side. A boat was put over worth $6.50 to $10 New Fall Models especially design ATERNITY and slings were put under them. | sclentifieally constructed to. au. They were hoisted aboard by a der- wrpper, Salanee rick. allo wit onary expansion val of any fastenings 6 horses orral were the ‘Tho horses in the corral were th: Nt war fee pick of the Western markets, They ranged from spirited Uttle light cav~ dandies to great bushy footed Percherons, Even among thone re- covered the military officers found many #0 badly injured that they must ected. POSLAM HEALS ALL ITCHING SKIN HUMORS The aggravation caused by Sunburn, Rast nples, Oak or Lyy Itching Feet, ste, | diately ‘stopped by Poslam ling. antiseptic, Poslam eat of the trouble; controls and es it, No remedy so value to have handy during hot weather | Should Eezema affect in any of its forms, or Acne, Piles or Barbers’ Iteh, }Poslam is unequalled in speed and | should bring you relief at once | lam Soap excels in rich, whole- qualities, Perfection for the skin, | daily, one month, for Toilet and | Differ im whoo FIN vi nept rn Na entice “Gombe EL WS clan eiecronn, me C416 25 we tiene’ Lane Bryant §2,¥st The Specialty House of National Reputation, WHEN yeu 20 0n your vaca | . : jon this Summer have your favorite paper mailed te you every day: Evening World, Ge per week Dally World, 12¢ per week Sunday Werld, 5c per Sunday You can subscribe for a week any length of time you wish, will change your address as you desire. Send remittance ¢ World, Pullt i Clty, is imma Soothing, penetrates Cashier, Ne Buildin . AM “Lost and Found’ articles ® advertined in The World or renorted to “Lost and Found Bureau.” Roo for thirty days. ‘at any of The World Advertising Ag telephoned directly to ‘The World. *\H Cali 4000 Beekman. Now York, oF Brookiya Office, 4100 Main, For samples, send 4c stamps to Emer- atories, 32 West 25th St. ew York City, Sold by all druggists YS piers south of the corral, guere some —Advt. a

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