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wih and att wneveniy Derian reached Washington, oMc were surpriped and were unwilling to put faith in it. The report of United States Consul Frost of Queenstown disponed of thie incredulity, and brought the Administration face to face with the potentials of another serious German situation. Consul Frost's report was sent im- mediately to the President at the White House and to Secretary Lan- ing at bis residence. ‘They made no comment, and it is understood that the President intends te follow his usual course of issuing and had not been instruc me it until full reperts are re- a am vessels before attacking them. German Ambassador Silent Heved that the marine warfare thereafter would ed along different Mnes, ines. It Is believed here that Count vi been advised of the chan, Count von Bernstorff, the German | lic, Marine exploit—sinking the liner Hes- perian #0 soon after his written Promise that murderous sea warfare against ocean liners would cease. NO GUN MOUNTED ON THE HESPERIAN, Dr. ‘Ip the Ambassador in town?” asked. ' “He was here, but he has gone out Row," replied Dr. Wadler. “Where has he g: “He ts motoring. $e German diplomatic circles the favorite Nnon-committal reply con- was oMelal of the Allan Line, concwrni the despateh of th that the liner had @ 4.7-inen mounted astern. “We have no guns mounted on a taken over by the Government for u as transports. the Berlin Government containing formation that might be made bub: } from Vanden is ¢ THREE U.S, SUBMARINES |TURKS GLA MI GAINS SMASHED 1H COLLISION Ft, F-2 and F-3 Are Out of Com- r ‘ “mission when the U, 8. steamer Supply crashed into the flotilla while docking The vessels damaged were thy 2 and F-3, War Office conceruing fighting at Dardanelles if Oak Fe sn tne water tin “In the Anafarta sector our recon- . ey 2 wi eo water ee and me i ict 1 if er. tne hulle Of the other boats Were dented |Nollering detachments made some pagne District. m a celdent. ful wht tlacks, » hn . , GUILFORD, Co wept lmapaig al il rable booty. SMVUEE) PARIS, Sept. 6—Violent artillery Phi sie or Creat Hill, @ LOST ON FISHING BOAT Ari Burnu artillery fire and] fighting continued last night in the | ty ity te-any, S waderas ane * |bomb throwing continue. At Keddul| vicinity of Arras, Roclincourt and|tonio Coral tn the road. ‘The mante . wr enemy artillery fired inte: mit- | pretoncourt, both German and French ‘ | | Brotencourt, both German and Fre head had been battered In and the body mumnener te Wrecked by Weet tne) tently without audoass on the Alou) So iioties taking p There were | had been stripped of shoes and trousers, dian WH | . —_> alxo artillery exchanges in the Cham. |{¥4 | MOBILE, Ais., Sept. 6.—The fishing | parwin &, Bardwell, Stricken, Dles|paxne district, according to the of-|inga with him, and they believe te ‘was schooner John G. Whilden was wrecked | on the Street, ficial report given out this afternoon | killed for his money: with the loss of eight of her crew near| Darwin 1. Hardwell, Superintendent| by tho French War Office. The re. * appammetin RY cy Springs by tho West Indian of High Schools of Manhattan, left his! port ready un follows; Bankers Gather o. bh hat struck the Florida No, 131 St. Mark's Place, New| POrt Fea ae SEATTL 6.—With the arrival g eogat turday. ton, & n today’ th take | A miaticet wilneeass a Vielen arr | to-day of several special trains ap- "7 alle In fre mt of w viiet | tillery bombard ent in which t mately 1,000 delegates had arrived relict Sigh With No Signs of ct wale . a { | proximately * had arrived pe Life. au nonete ae aan weneres | cytes both French and German, of | for the forty-second annual convention i (pam ey Make calibrea took part to the north and |of the American Ban Assoctation, HONOLULY, T. H., Sept. 6-—The fell. A’ neighbor, Blake ITM; all calibres t . . Gritish steamér Indradeo, which has Dr William K Juneway,|to the south of Arras, of Roclincourt | W sensions here this week, begin- » 4 who found that Mr. Bardwell had di ning to-day, will deal with pressing arrived here via the Panama Canal, | instantly Mr. Rurdwell hud served | and of Bretencourt | i ia ; reported having sighted ut sea the | many years o Super Intendont of Public aehere w ne sib fatrly apirit j can | problemas fas ay ne ie doreinant part P- 8 ns of Slaten Island, and he was! nonading in the Champagne district |now being taken by the United States Peruvian bark Mercurio, a water-|t thar of several text books "on |{w the vicinity of Auberiva, In ‘world-wide finance ‘as a reault ot lomyed derelict without signs of life minat, Re underwent e serious on-| "on the Argonne there. Was fighting | European war conditi eeare «The Mercurio sailed from | sration five yoara ago, | with mines at Courtes Chauss KBureke, Cal, July # with a cargo of /pee)h had mol bean re “French aeroplanes have bombarded | ) Swit & Company al Bhe carried « crew of fifteen the barracks at Dieuge and at Mor- ba, duai'ss ’ 0," Preeident Wilson was greatly re- and appeared to be aatsied German Government was aincere in its statements that the sub- reports have displaced the feeling of relief with great un- Bernstorf wili offer one of two ex- cuses as © result of the attack upon the ship-—that she attempted to es- cape or to ram the submarine, or that the submarine Commander bad n of policy, to warn ' ‘on Sinking of the Hesperian SAYS LINE OFFICIAL American Consul of our ships, unless they have been 1 feel certain that contradiction sent AT THE DARDANELLES EVENING WOKLD, MONDA,, RET ee te belewen the nent one “ BBRTISHF L— oo STILL INTALT, e way there ter the bapt iPerte 2° QUITO SEAAGAN eubrmerine end wom: of t od oe & “vv a ae dward the lookout © low due 4 > . om “or . ibe 4 averter’” Battle Scarred Lion, Tiger, (Queen Elizabeth and Inflex- ible in the Line DESTROYERS ON GUARD overturned, the cocupante being by oe " thrown into the water Bome of (he "| 4 Harres bimaelt maw nothin | - — Hoyle uglier, wen in ah eosin 0: enn of the tte J ane mato was woing | Unprecedented Procession of boats stopped Hi leak by re e. wher ie ran moving « Tetaas ohd ates in t on ae sand mow 0 bop Naval Power Led by the inte the hole. Three Gisters of | hannine he davite by one fall Ltn Crulaans Morey were among the last to de: | ite eters \iailing In the water p ight Crufsers. pert from the Hesperian, One of bea he © seat, Was 4 baby, w ” the passengers asserts thet sixty | hey od The bow whick he po were crowded inte a life | y from the ship picked up two! LONDON, Hept 6 (Delayed tn on end two men who had been | herr " Jruring bie vinit to . “wn ip omen the Hritieh battle fleet in the past Sengers were more than one hun 7 two American stewards are | WOCK, & correspondent, after boarding dred women and children 4 Dallas from Buffalo, and Mo. | #! of t Wt ie reported here that it Allister, from Grand Hapids, Mich. |Meaned « in torpedoed abo The Hesperian also had on board “ the whole fo the Hesperian. 4,000 sacks of American mail, Office * on Viee-Admiral Mie David The Hesperian left Liverpool Friday! “I Joined the Hewperian at Liver. | Beatty's Pp, the Lion, whieh has afternoon carrying « light cargo pool Fri suid Dallas “I was Peart ae the rf veg handling tn She had passed well out of what! gaged in the rage, where the w re ; . Paid. iritieh ship now Was considered the submarine danger) en and children had all gone to bed | “MOG teld of the dimouity they had fone when attacked. Most of the| when the explosion occurred. They |'% Bersuade the young commander to Passengers bad just left their dinner! poured out into the alleyway tn thelr Ica ye , the opening of the action and were promenading the decks in| night clothes. The stewards did wil | OM the bridge he had an un the fast settling darknons they could to cain their fears, but | bampered vin armored pro- BIG HOLE Ai © IN SIDE OF ween i Heces oa that faa ship [tection of th ne towe THE LINER, pad tee ena we wot them on) They gave a Chrilling account of The torpedo ripped open the tiner’s boats the success of destroyers in foiling all efforts of submarines to reach the crippled Lion as whe wan being First Report Aroused towed home at five knote an how after sinking the German cruiser Much Fear in Washington)": . The places in which the Lion was WASHINGTON, Sept. 6,-— When When Germany's disavowai for the | bit during the North Sea battle were the first unofficial report of the| Arabic « was handed to Hecretary | not discernible in some instances, explosion that crippled the Hes-|lansing by Count von Hernstorff | owing to reconstruction of the section where the shells burat. In other casos the location was evident, patches having been placed over the injured pla A very small percentage of the German shells hit at the 18,000+ yard range of the early stage of the battle, officers say, but the screams of passing salvos and the crack of their own guns caused an Inconceiv- able tumult to sound in the ears of those stationed on the bridg The Tiger, sister battle cruiser of the Lion, had fewer scars to show as @ result of the North Sea battl On the Queen Elizabeth the only signs of her experiences at the Dar- danelles which were visible were a ction of new planks on deck, where @ shell penetrated, and a dent from @ glancing #bot on one of her 15- inch guns. The inflexible, the flagship in the be Ho replied that there was no| Falkland Isiands battle, suffered lea» » had nothing to say to-| news and nothing to be raid to-day, | Jury there than at the Dardauelles; day about tho latest German sub- > where #he was struck by a mine and Was under heavy fire from shore. A piece of the mine is kept in the ward- room asa Veulr and all the ships Which have been in action hud trax ments of an shells wet in mount. Ambassador's secretary, ings, as my toes, Officers referred The fer {oF 7 to the manner in Which the necessity Rh. Edler, at aking nah wy pommer ea MONTREAL, Sopt. 6=—"L am proc bed been foreseen in British navol at jtieally certain thore was no gun baracivas for taxing care of dai face v ¢ 0 iris : ees. Bn Beontioney wil have 20} mount Jon the Hesperian,” was the Sew roi tattle, "Chua Ship fee - | statement of Andrew MM. Allin, an ‘ turned injured in action, “But we had few repairs to mako, and our energy and resources were given to the rapid construction of few fighting units, which continue to Increase our preponderance o' the German fleet," one officer re- marked, Tho correspondent heard aympathetic references ne un ny repeated aoe to the % natorte’ =| sacrifices and hardships of the army gorping Count cafe e ety a | “Our passenger lines are not armed} during the grilling of war, while Abouty is that he Is “motoring. "iin any Woy and When the Meaperian| {M8 battlesliips marked time in their névera) critical occasions when the long wait. Ambassador was absent, notably Buse Fra Montreal she certainly} “fur it battle comes for us it. will ed no Kun. She was in port in| pot last long,” an officer maid, when the Lusitania was sunk, he was Md for & week and we hive no! day's waiting only sharpens our eag- officially reported to be “motoring.” nation whatever that during| erneas.” On some occasions the statement hus jthat tine anything was done to her! White the, correspondent was on in the way of putting on a gun, Al} board the flagship of Admiral Bir Pree Yank he was "motoring in ine |4.7 is @ pretty big Kun and in order | John Jellicoe, « message was brought eareypts The Count frequently |ig mount one of them on au liner}/to the commander-in-chief, who visits Ariends in tho Adirondacks the whole of the inside of the ship|calied a secretary and spoke’ briefly Dr. Edler was asked whether any | Would have to be braced up, tlto him, Word was passed around despatches had been received from aol rasible teat f that the whole fleet had been ordered have heen put on the Hesperian and ood to welgn anchor and to sea. wts on board a destroyer at the mouth of the harbor watched that unprecedented procession of naval power make its exit, led by graceful ligtit orisers and flotillas of de stroyers. “Mut are not German submarines waiting outside?” was asked “No doubt two or three are always the an officer replied, “but thi stroyers know how to keep them | Successful Night Attacks in the] of mission as Result of Accident in | Anatarta Section Are Re- Honolulu Harbor. ported, ARTILLERY BATTLES HONOLULU, Sept. 6—The three | CONSTANTINOF i, Sept. 6 (via ON THE FRENCH LINE Marines of the F group remaining since London).-The following statement — eho lose of the F-4 were put out of com-| 1, ivsued to-day by the Turkish aris Reports Violent Encounters Around Ains and in Cham- the a a ty ose tat ceuseniaamanenanunentaieaamstshas aimee! BPTEMBER 6 191d. Allan Liner, Crippled by Mine or Torpedoed PATS enn *\* t aw wars! Balth on So Ce sake Turk farta ing and forte adval they and went soul had ($40) FO Gait cor and fifteen miles wide. BERLIN, ography to Tuckerton, N. J.) German Overseas News Agency, splendid victory of the Turks at Ana- “The War Minister replied, thank- ing the Crown Prince, and express- would bi BREST-LITOVSK RAZED BY RETIRING RUSSIANS; 53,000 INHABITANTS GONE }evmnasiu ROTTERDAM, Sept. Litovsk, inhabitants, exit correspondent of the Rotterdamsche Courant, “The town the clearer it was shown that (he Russians had done all they said a sea of fre. one street saved, “We were unable to find a living father and mother with their children in an open spa: the town was empty the Russians ordered the houses de- stroyed,” tere be tetee beeen reseoors +otroerororne GERMAN FLEET ~- eee BRITISH SUBMARINE AGAIN AT RIGA; SUNK: CREW OF 28 RUSSIANS FLEE|CAPTURED BY TURKS Dago Island, at Mouth of Gulf of Finland, Is cuated by Slavs. NIAGEN, Sept. 6-—German hips have again entered the Guif of Riga, compelling Russian ships to fleo before them, according to advices received here to-day. The Slavs are reported evacuated Dago trance to the Gulf of Finland, Dago ts a Russian island in the to Island at the en- have ¢ about thirty-four miles long The popula- of about 18,000 is chiefly em- ployed in fishing and raising cattle. ——.———_ ‘TURKS SOON TO THROW ALLIES INTO THE SEA,’” Sultan's War Minister , Tells yerman Crown Prince, in Message of Thanks, 6 (by wireless tel- "The suys the ent & mos- congratulating Enver Pasha, the ish War Minister, on the recent Sept. Crown Pring jn the Dardanell the hope that the Turks soon able to throw the British French into the sea,’ 6. —"Brest- which was a city of 63,000 sno more,” says the who entered the Russian cus With the Austro-Hungarian nee guard which captured tt, hearer we approached the The whole town was Although it was bot dangerous amid the flames, we forward to see if there Was not but there was none. would do. in the flaming city except a ve. ‘The man sald he paid a Cossack sixty rubles to be allowed to remain, When of inhabitants i UND MURDERED IN ROAD. Man Helleved Vic- ford, Conn Constantinagle Reports Loss of U-Boat in the Dar- danelles, CONSTANTINOPLE, via Berlin t. 6 (by United Press).— A British submarine has been sunk in the Dardanelles, it wis officially announced here to-day. Three officers and twenty-five men of the crew were captured. Enemy torpedo boats attempted to aproach, the official statement said, but were forced Fe, retire by our bat- teries. wirele A Berlin wireless despatch last night carried the report from Con- stantinople that a British submarine had been sunk off the entrance to the Gulf of Ismid, in the Sea of Marmors It stated that it was impossible for the Turks to save the crew. Pre- sumably this is the same engagement, later despatches reporting the capture | of members of the crew, Athens de- spatches to the United Press on Saturday reported a British sub- | marino had entered the Gulf of Ismid and had sent ashore « landing party te destroy a railway bridge. DANCING IN THE SCHOOL CAUSES KICK IN QUEENS Dutch Kills Residents Say Manhat- tan Man Has Seized Privilege and Charges High Price. Residents of the Dutch Kills section of Long Island City decided at a meet- ing yesterday to protest to the Board of Education against the use of the of Bryant High School as a public dance hall, Permission was obtained long ago by alumni of the school to hold dances there, It‘was intended that only former and present pupils should attend the dances, Five cents apiece was charged, to pay the musicians, But it was charged yesterday a danc- from Man! wot the nees, and apes and ofhas the he 1s sons. AS fy (thie 2 dancing permitting any on price, It’ is asserted charging for giving dai no rent is charged and for the lights, if Ls sal teacher has a ‘good thin ACs ala 10,000 Men March at Syracuse bration, SYRACUSE, N Sept, 6.--About 10,000 union men took part in probably the largest Labor Day : history of Syracuse. | a picnic at Long Brane trial Commissioner John Mitehel spok Peace a ET ! How many persons one sees storming and fuming about for the lack of a better position, worker, home, invest. | ment, bargain, etc, It |s the endless chain of “little troubles” such as these that upsets one | completely and makes one feel at war with one’s self and with the world at happy endings when World ads. are brought into play. 834,641 Separate Want-Filling Advertisements were Printed During the First Bight Months of This Year in One Lye satorio | 423,449 | More Than in the Herald. Peace Ofjerings Worth Heeding! OPETT VASE UOOHhe® % »} ever, "But such struggles are brought to! ee sone MAKE APPEAL FOR AID. Beaten in Fight to They Ask for Refuge in City’s Home for Aged. Two faded old women, worn but neatly patehed and well brushed clothing, approached — the desk in Harlem Police Court as the morning aring & close anion Was POPP POd POOF FOOO1 1 OPOODOOELOOO000000 200000 | MOTHER AND DAUGHTER arn Living, dressed in Without Warning, Which Sank Early To Day A a eee heed | ‘RESTORE BELGIUM BEFOREPEACE, SAYS BRITISH LEADER Labor Head Urges Union Con- to-day and asked a court officer if ‘ = they could’ speak to Magistrate! gress to Stick to Govern- Koenig. They said they were Mrs. P Mary Cole, seventy-flve years old, ment in War. and Helen ®, her only daughter, aged fifty-five, of N 223) «East a Eighty-ninth Street, The daugh BRISTOL, gland, Sept. 6.—The who is @ cripple, looks 4s old as the] forty-seventh annual Trades Union mother, Congress, which Is expected to be one ‘We want to be sent to the Home| of the most important gatherings in for the Aged and Infirm on Black-| fHr.tieh bor history, held its first well's Island.” explained Mra, Co! session here to-day. “We came over her to ask the judge to commit us there," Magistrate Koenig, after hearing the story of Mrs, Cole and her daughter, told them to return to-morrow after- noon, In the mean time a probation officer will investigate their case, ey have not u relative in world, according to Mrs, Cole, Com- the ing here from Utica eighteen yearst female labor would, ago, they built up a prosperous dress- making business, but the daughter, | who was the active head of the bi ness, fell and broke her bip thre age and became hopelessly sald been supported have |by the Association for the Improve- ment of the Condition of the Poor and Mrs. Cole, “we In his opening address James An- drew Seddon, the Chairman of the Congress, discussed the probloma of the y. giving chief place to those arising from the war, Such complex questions as conscription, the exploi- tation of food products, the regula- tion of labor under war conditions and he declared, teat the nation to its foundation, and de- manded immediate and unambiguous answers, | Chairman Seddon urged the Con- | Kress to prepare for the time when there would be a resumption of world- wide oneness in the contest between |capital and labor, j by Father Quinn of the Church of St.| “1 feet confident,” he added, “that Ignatius Loyola at Eighty-fourth carry the great bulk of this Con. Street and Park Avenue, but they gress with me when I say we offer can ald us no longer. pe ei aioli PORTIA SAVES HUSBAND FROM FINE OVER A DOG Attorney Mary A. Coleman Scores} Policeman for Arrest of Terrier. Becaune the muzzle of the fox ter- rier of Frederick Hardenbrook hung around his neck instead of being on| summoned hefore Magistrate Koenig in the Har- his nose the owner was lem Police Court this morning. fragette, and present as a witness, Attorney Coleman had some harsh our sorely stricken Belgian comrades our whole he: and, if , our determina- fair land shall be the people of Belgium be to lay down the sword,” ee ‘ROW OVER CAR SEAT STARTS RIOT OF 300 \Monolsky, Who “Held Place for Friend,” Battered—Man and Two Women Arrested, fe A trolley riot in which soveral per- Mr. ons were hurt will be threshed out Hardenbrook was represented oy hin wife, Attorney Mary A. Coleman, suf- the fox terrier was to-day in the police court at Rich- mond, Staten Island. The only per- son seriously injured was Louis Mon- olsky, forty-nine, of No. 2143 Second BA's Avenue, Manhattan, who is in the Hath ite, 683, SRA, POL OOAD aes Smith Infirmary with cuts on the ger of the Wes! oa clita in“) face, head and body, and with in- Fifty-second St station, She said that the terrier had a wart on his nose and that when the muzale the dog removed the He had just swung made it bleed, muazie himself. it to his neck when Pollceman Gloger appeared, The fox terrier jumped up on the witness stand and showed his nose to the Court, The policeman, he said, was clearly within his duty, How- he concluded, the muzzle was evidence that the husband of Portia had intended obey- ing the law, and he dismissed case, spellbinding this week scheduled nightly for “ are on for the week end, Chairman the Hrone Progressives that five strong vote made a demand for the Romination against. the Mi anne etters Congressional Republic; tle, palsotion bls pean, the presence of the etings are the different ctlons and some big hall meetings August Schwartzler of nces ave Only one Progressive designation has been announced for the coming The to announce the , | ternal injuries. According to the police a crowd from the Jewish cemetery arrived last evening at the trolley terminal at Richmond. When a ear came in there was a rush to board it by the crowd, which some estimate to have numbered about 300, all returning to Manhattan Monolsky, it is said, got aboard and tried to hold a whole seat for his riends. Louls Burger, who wanted a place for himself and wite, objected, je and Monolsky started a fight, in which scores soon were involved. Children and women were knocked down and trampled and sticks and stones flew in every direction, When ere Tee four bicycle policemen arrived they BRONX POLITICAL NOTES, |rouna women and children screaming, and in some cases helpless on the — ground, Burger and his wife and With primary not far away cam-|Srs, Virginia Liberman of Manhat- palgn orators for the various fac-ltan were arrested as Monolsky's as- tions embroiled in primary fights |satiants, through the Bronx will begin their scramepaae TAKE SEVENTH HW HAITIEN PORT. United St Marines Now tn jon of Jeremie, WASHINGTON, Sept. 6.—American control of Haltien customs has been! extended to Jeremie, It is the seventh nominee. Thomas Whittle and ae worth Healy, Democrat, Schwartzler port to be taken over. Only throe h sued a denial to the that {new remain under Haitien control, | the Bull Moowes have indorsed Wit. [Six companies of marines and a navy paymaster are in poi “Paul Kelly's’ primaries, that of William’ s. Gere | Among the pritonera for the police main, for Alderman. He will enter |line-up at Headquarters to-day was Ni- the contest against Alderman Schwei- |colo Vaccerelli, a brother of Paul Vac- wert cerelll, better known as Paul Kelly. Bronx Republicans, it has been of- | Ho is charged with having held up and ficially announced, will favor thi the ieee bY saloon- intment of George Neate a, the P*accerelli said he as a manager office of Corporation’ Counsel, living at" No Work Mprty-feal Street. the address of Paul Kelly's gar- nd genled hat be knew. Pay 180 from op | tire CZAR WILL FIGHT TEN YEARS TO WIN, SAYSDUMA'SHEAD Radaanko Declares Russia Has 12,000,000 Soldiers, Who Won't Give Up. GERMANS DRIVE ene Great Battle for Port of Rig Continues Without De- cisive Results, AHEAL | PRTHOGRAD, determined w Rept fent necensary,” —Rw five, even te declared 3 of the Dum “If it show happen that we are forced to give w tyograd and Moscow, we will w to the defen of the Ur Mountains and continue the war, “Russia has twelve miltion eoldie who will fight to the last drop + blood, They will not think of peas while & single enemy soldier rematt on Russian soll.” LONDON, Bept, 6—Fighting o both wings of the Russian front pre ceeds with much greater vigor tha the struggle in the centre, where tr inv ‘* apparently are having diff culties In thackless swamps. In ti south, near the Galician border, fo; tune fluctuates, firet one side ar then tho other claiming successe The main offensive still Hes with th Austrians and Germans, On the north flank Field Marsh von Hindenburg now holds the Dvir bridgehead at Friedrichstadt, b has lost that at Lennewada furth down the river toward Riga. The battle in that region continues with out decisive results. Russia has corrected earlier re- ports concerning the attewpt of the Germans to make a landing at Per- nau, confirming Berlin's statement that instead of losing vessels as the result of attacks by the Russiang, the Germans intentionally sank several small steamers to block the entrance to the Gulf of Riga, The deduction will be made that he Germans feared the Russians would land there sut- fictently strong forces to threaten Field Marshal von Hindenburg’s left flank. BERLIN The ry to emident in an interview to-day (via London), German War Sept. 6 Office this after- noon admitted that the Germans have made no Important progress toward Riga and Vilna in the past eight hours, describing — the situation from the Baltic to east of Grodna as unchanged, ae 2,000 ATTEND MEETING OF HEALTH ASSOCIATION | National and State Authorities Pres- ent at Opening of Convention in Rochester, ROCHESTER, N. Y,, Sept. 6— With nearly 2,000 delegates present, comprising public health and gani- tation authorities of national and State reputation, the forty-third nual meeting of the American Health Association opened here to-day. Avementing the attendance of health experts at this meeting are delegates to the fifteenth annual conference of the sanitary officers of the State of New York and the seventh annual * meeting of the New York State Sani- tary Officers’ Association, which also conve to-day, Registration and preparations for sectional meetings were the main features of to-day's programme of the American Health Association, To-night the members will be the gucsts of the health officers of New York. The speakers will be Dr. Herrman M. Biggs, Commissioner of Health for New York State; Dr. George W. Goler, Health Officer of Rochester, and Dr. W. C. Gorgas, Surgeon General, Washington, At the sessions proper, which will open Tuesday morning, a wide range of topics from mosquitos to tubercu- losis, and food supplies to sewage disposal, will be discussed, DISFIGURED SKIN MADE SIGHTLY BY POSLAM the eas m o skin affection, — Tt is ind of remedy that through real gains and hope enthusi hat is why | bein, the Kin merit | frien so man; users of Poslam are created throu a wit | recommendations of others, jers to heal diseased skin “a in proven; one overnight application wil Show results in Eosema, Aoue, Pimple: {all forms of Itch, Rashes, Sunburn, Chafings, Abrasions, 4rrita. tion, Inflammatica |" Use Poslam Soap daily, for Toilet jand Bath, partionlarly if skin is tend and other soaps frritate, For samples, send 4c stamps to Emer- Serie Laboratories, 82 Wet 25th Bt. lew York City. Sold by all |