The evening world. Newspaper, November 18, 1915, Page 3

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VINCENT ASTOR PICKED THE WRONG MAN AS A THIEF —— Loses Wallet at Theatre and Tries Rogues’ Gallery for F Man Who wig Him. IDENTIFIES A PICTURE. But When Arrest Is Made It Proves He Had Made Mistake. Barney Weinstein's chance for great | fame In his chosen profession of pick- pocket vanished to-day when Vincent Astor looked him over and decided he ‘was not the man who had atolen his ‘wallet containing $230 at the entrance to the Belasco Theatre on Tuesday night. Mr. Astor picked out Wein- stein’s picture in the Rogues Gallery yesterday as resembling closely the man who had picked his pocket, but when he saw him to-day he said he could not recognize Barney as the man. ‘The arrest of Weinstein brought to Nght the tale of tho thievery wh oh the police had endeavored to keop quiet. After Mr. Astor failed to ideen- tify him he was taken before Magis- trate Cobb in the West Side Court and discharged, Barney hurried out of vourt immediately, glad to escape pickpocket fame with a prison sen- tence attached. With a party of friends and ac- companied by his secretary, William Dobbins, Mr. Astor attended the per- formance at the Belasco. They moved out with the crowd toward the en- trance at the close of the performance, As they reached the street there was @ commotion back of them and OSCR Se TPE THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 18 Woman Head of Women’s Medical College and Hospital, And Woman Professo rin Same Institute Differ As to Allowing Defective Chicago Baby to Die inmnesiiaine Dr. Addisone S. Boyce says: Dr. Cornelia C. Brant De- “Any physician who is convinced that nies Right of Physicians || an abnormality in a new-born child will to Decide Who Shall Live and Who Shall Die —Duty to Preserve Life as Long as Possible. result in physical or menta coming the passive agent Dr. Addisone S. Boyce Thinks Chicago Doctor May Have Been Justi- din Refusing to Make Effort to Prolong Life of Defective Child. They Agree, However, Human Judgment Is Fallible and That “Life and Death Decree” Should Not Rest With One Man. Dr. Brant Wonders That “Civilized Mother” Should Consent to the Death of Unfit Child, Like “‘Woman of a Sav- age Jungle Tribe.” By Nixola Greeley-Smith. @ man who seemed to be pushing his! way out stumbled against the young millionaire. He almost fell and then recovering his feet stepped back. He was all apology. Indeed, so earnestly was he reiterst ing that he was sorry for what had ocourred, that both Dobbins and Mr. Astor turned and assured him there was nothing to apologize for. Inci- dentally, they had a good look at him. With his hand still bobbing his hat like an organ-grinder’s monkey, he backed away through the crowd, , Very shortly thereafter Mr. Astor felt for his wallet and discovered his loss. Just before he left the theatre he knew he had it, and then he recollected the apologetic stranger. —_—_— FATHER OF SEVEN A THIEF. Jobless, Penn’ jens, Man Grabs Wal- let From Safe, but In Caught, Out of work since August, penniless, with a wife and seven children, Fred Bailey of No, 231 East Fifty-first Street entered the saloon of Walter Barten- berg at Bleecker Stre and West Broadway to-day in search of a job. Finding none, he stopped for a free luneh Ralley saw a wallet in an open Deslde the lunch counter. F which contained # rol e place Into the # tective Rott! at the door. up, charged with larceny IF BACK HURTS TAKE SALTS 10 FLUSH KIDNEYS Says Backache is sure sign you have been eating too much meat. Uric Acid in meat clogs Kid- neys and irritates the bladder. Most folks forget that the kidneys, like the bowels, get sluggish and clogged and need a flushing occasionally, else we have backache and dull misery in the kidney region, severe headaches, rheu- matic twinges, torpid liver, acid stomach, sleeplessness and all sorts of bladder dis- orders, You simply must keep your kidneys active and clean, and the moment you feel an ache or pain in the kidney region t about four ounces of Jad Salts From any good drug store here, take a tablespoonful in a glass of water be- fore breakfast for a few days, and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and is harmless to flush clogged kidneys and stimulate them to normal activity, It also neutralizes the acids in the urine so it no longer irritates, thus ending bladder disor Jad Salts is harmless; inexpensive; makes a delightful effervescent lithia- water drink which everybody should take now and then to keep their kidneys clean, thus avoiding serious complica- tions, ‘A well-known local druggist says he sellslots of Jad Salts to folks who be- lieve in overcoming kidney trouble while it is only trouble.—-Advt. | | | Has a physician the right of life and death over a baby born mentally and physically defective? Dr. J. H. Haiselden, chief of the German-American Hospital of Chicago, has raised a question which will go around the world by refusing to perform an operation which might save the life but could not restore to physical or mental normality the five-day-old baby of Mrs. Anna Bollinger. The mother has acquiesced in the doctor’s decision not to operate, But other women take a less detached view than the mother of the extraordinary problem. Miss Jane Addams has denounced the Chicago doc- tor’s action as a crime against the race. Dr. Cornelia C. Brant of New York City agrees with her. Dr. Brant pital for Women, the only college hospital for women exclusively in New York State and one of two in the entire country. “Because of professional ethics U hesitate to comment on the action Of} 6), of i1fe, They are the tenders of another physician,” Dr. Brant told m°/ tne flame. And as a woman and as yesterday in her office in the medical! a physician fay voles would always college, “but I can conceive of MO) sneak for the preservation of life Ir- situation in which it ts ever right fOF| respective of mental or physical un- a physictan to take human life. The jfitness up to the last possible mo Lord giveth and the Lord taketh ment. Human judgment is fallible away. No man has a right to USUrP/and no human knowledge should de- this omnipotent power, Tt Is the cree the doom of a human being. We physician's duty to preserve life tO} should leave life in the hand of the the Inst possible moment. That 1s the| giver—Nature, God—T don't care what by the physiclans policy practic you call it—the Life Giver. and nurses in this hospital, That 's) “you must understand,” Dr. Brant w js taught the students of the/,qqeq gently—she is a very gentle woman with a soft voice and tender eyes—"that I speak for myself oniy in this matter. I am not the voice of the college, I cannot say that every one of the professors will agree with me. They have their own opinions ai ! follow them, but T am sure that the purpose and practice of this in- stitute is solely to cherish and pre- serve life.” It seemed to me that Dr, Brant had expressed perfectly the humanitarian view of the case we had discussed, But could not something be said for Dr. Haiselden of Chicago it I invaded the super realm of sctence, touched thy polar heights of pure Intellect which rise beyond good and evil? So 1 asked Dr, Addisone 8. Boyce, one of the most noted women surgeons in New York and the Professor of Gynecology in the Medical and Hospital for Women, to give me her opinion, Dr. Boyce was about to enter the operating room, but she paused 4 moment to make this state- ment: “Any ysiclan who is convinced | that an sonormality in a new-born child will result in physical or men- tal uniitness to live ity life with any degree of usefulness or comfort is certalnly fustified In becoming the passive agent in permitting the child's lite to become extinct. 1 realize, of course, that itis etimes difficult ty determine the exact line of de- markation between fitness and un- fitness. college. ‘The conscientious physician cannot view life on a strictly animal basis, which is what would have to be done it & defective baby were to be destroyed like an injured dog or @ superfluous cat. Human problems ve their Intellectual and spiritual side. And the Intellect and the spirit forbid the taking of any bumen life. “In my opinion, it is impossible for any physician to say absolutely that any human condition is beyond cue or at least improvement, ‘That beliot is embodied in the popular saying that while there is life there ts hope And while there is hope everything must be done to preserve life. A great deal of mystery wraps this case in Chicago. I would like to know what is the matter with the child and what the nature of the operation would be that might save its life, And I doubt if it would be possible to reach an ab- solute conclusion about a baby five days old. “In absolutely ha hopeless cases such as this is :\ld 1, be Nature often takes care of the matter, The baby dies. ‘These questions, in my opinion, must be left to Nature, or you may say to God—the power that makes for righteousness in the world.” was glad that Dr. Grant put so forcibly the spiritual asp world-old question. Becaus strictly natural plane, the Chicago doctor has all the arguments on bis side. And Mrs. Anna Bollinger, who}trom an ethical or a acquiesces in her baby's doom 1s) po ne OF Nia, JOE Bae Oe merely following the instinct of the] sicuid always be @ consilltat lower animals which prompts the dog|” Dr, Boyce's view is that held by or cat mother to nose away the de-| many other physiciaus--by many fective member of her litter, to refuse more than are willing to make their opinions public. But from what group to feed it or warm it and so to let it] oP P p die, 1 tried once to revive a puppy of supermen would this Board of Life whose mother had rejected it in this and Death be recruited? To-day no sovereign of the civilized world has the milk bottles in the world did not avail against the stern decree of that utterly natural parent, It's a funny thing, by the way, that the natural mother of the jungle and che un- natural mother of human civillzation are one and the same, “It is peculiarly revolting to a woman physician," Dr Brant said, developing her argument, "that human life should be looked at from a purely animal basis. As | woman, even more than a de. , I reject the sug- gestion that it is ever defensible to permit a helpless little baby to die, Women are the makers and preserv- professior phys There cable honor, so that by a word they could put out the flame of life which every mother must bring back from if such beings could be found society would be greatly benefited by their decrees, There would be no more epilepsy (Napoleon was an epileptic), 10 more cripples (Alexander Pope was a. crip ple), no more invalié women (Bllza- beth Barrett Browning was an in- valid), And the world ‘would be peopled with football players and Apnett. Kellermanns, But first let us find the members of the board, When we do find them and they are able to qualify they will not be men, They will be gods. live its life ts certainly justified in be- the child’s life to become extinct.”’ is the dean of the New York Medical College and Hos-} College | It is therefore not desirable, | they give of infallible wisdom, impec- | « an inferno of pain? Let us grant that) j Dr. Cornelia C. Brant says: “In my opinion it is impossible for any physician to say absolutely that any human condition is beyond cure or at least improvement. It ts the doctor’s duty to preserve life to the last possible mo- ” 1 unfitness to in permitting DR: CORNEA Cc BRANT. JURY OF DOCTORS T0 PASS ON | HAISELDEN’S ACT IN CHILD'S DEATH of habitual drunkards, father and mother are #9, #t us reproduce ourselves in 100 cent. fashion, so that by the weed- out of our undesirables we de- when both (Continued from First Page.) p ing Sho desired it this way, saying that \Cgor the sake-of ott littl that crease their burden and our {for a other little ones that] thy foundation nor imay come,” she thought it best not to] which would ure look upon the body, She merely was) fom now. Le men saneasa f reer wae] With Soul and sense, Instead of dese- told that the baby terribly de: erating it with crumbling tradition formed and would be a mental and] and mindless sentimentality.” moral defective. ‘The details of Its| Dr. Haiseiden, who has been almost Metoiseitiaal will netehe toate without sleep during the forty-eight Me HUAge he told her. hours preceding the Bollinger infant's Allen Bollinger, the father, was told] death, was busy in-the operating room of the baby's death early. toce of the German-American Hospital to- Tam thankful it is all over,” ney. aisciden is a bachelor, Ho | sald to friends as tears coursed down| hay two adopted daughters, one it. his cheeks “I am thankful for the|teen years old, the other seventeen child's sake alone, Both my wife and|months, One was abandoned by her myself wanted the baby to live, how-| other in a hospital where Dr. Iden visita, ‘The other is a New ever much its little body was cramped and bent, but it was a selfish want { more children from We finally realized that it was only| time said the physte the selfishness of parent love ‘hat! “and bring them up the beat I kn could make us want our baby to tive! o(Prore every corner of the L st a life of constant misery simply tol gun have him with us, In a signed stat Haiselden his case ams came to Dr, to-day expressing the thought pliysicians, social workers, prominent women and men on the case. “I say again that it is our duty to co BYSTH AVE. C0 FOR PROPOSED ROUTES nd add to our burden ane Has Plans for Bus Lines That ment to-day Dr ave we among us, our problem. ts our duty “Farmers reproduction; All conscience says it) | best stock for the best seed, without rust or other disease, for sowing. “Poor humans rely only upon ch and defectives are as wel co as any to enlarge families Think of it “And only the mother after the idiot child. select the wil took! It Is Claimed Are Advan- If the mother | 80 father aud brothers and! | sisters will not care for it It pitched into an institution forthwith and there the burden of the poor un rive fortunaate is weighted down Institutions are |'To herd the insane fect like cattle, as is done, Is a) a crim nda sin. And to make mat ’ y ters worse, this unfortunate cla The no attraction that is going to draw| i 1 hus the he guard, the who eve ta of it, kindliness. Those who the insa » many of them, feeling, neglec and indif-|/ ferent | And yet I | hild to live, I feel toward some of my critic i would toward one who would willing ly allow a hydrophobic dog to run in a flock of sheep und do as impulse d rected, because this one shrank from hurting or crossing the de “If children of som of wore kille r injured by « they would » & good re hecking the supply of the the world “T have talked to ‘ous to City, Witth Avenue tompany, even | forty per cent Int BU to the n vugh Rapid Tran ynitted a brand ne an abomination. nterest hee orane: or the lesser to buses ti Man ittee of luid Franchise ¢ dy out routes to gr care of| grow un-| wre at take unkind, Ain asked to allow thin wet a 1 Avenue Coach thet Ja any ent to the city rothe Firth y pa low $75,000 hy estimates that present would and tha Urn to the city prog will he not far from $ Tt will seem that this pro | po f the company, which if ac » toa ny mothers |Cepted will bring. the total of “pe swayed. ia. my | tt least 81.125,000 tor the n Years Many Gemelt f the contract, is considerably than the terms offered by its the New York Motor Bus Com mony, ‘That apany's Maximun the fifteen years wa knowing what L imow ny critics lefective son for latter in or 1 basis ‘One woman | know has a son who quite subnorimal, He is cellent swimmer and delig! exercise, One T.said to her: SUPPOSE SoMetiin should drown? And the mother with promptness an swered; ‘Wouldn't that be a. bless- ing.’ ompany in the new con- ses a uniform 1 aster and submits ipplication # proposition to opey about fifteen miles of new lines. The proposed crosstown lines through t well as con Pennsylvania station and the Central Terminal, he he the mother, T knew, did not pray or ask for the boy's drowning, But at least she did not hope against it So let us be sensible, Let us ap- prove the sterillzatio Insane and the defective, and of the chikiren t Grand MRS. HEATH FACES HOUSEWIVES WHO SIT IN JUDGMENT |Appears Before New Jersey | Branch of League, Which | Criticises Her Methods. OFFERS TO EXPLAIN. Much Sought Constitution Produced—Mystifying Arguments Follow. (Special to The Rraning World.) NEWARK, N. J,, Nov. 18.—To tho surprise of the delegates of the New Jersey Housewives’ League, assem- bled here today to investigate tho affairs of the National body, of which Mra. Julian Heath of New York 18 President, Mra, Heath walked in on them in the midst of their deliberations. Mra, John H. Yocum of East Orange, President of the New Jersey League, was in the chair. 1t was while Mra, Chauncey Marsh of Montclair waa reading a long re- port explaining the difficulty of the New Jersey organization to aet a copy of the National Constitution from Mra. Heath that the National President entered the room. After the committee on constitution had ben read the housewives began a series of arguments ns to what it was all about, Some knew and others did not, and Mr. Yooum had to ex- ert all her ability as a pariiamen- tarian to keep the peace. Mrs, Heath sat smiling through- out the discussion. She said to a delegate beside her: f there is to be any criticism of my work as the head of the national body I will not be backward in re- plying.” Mrs. Rose H, Sargent of Newark, in discusing the work of the constitu- tional committee, explained that there were several interlocking organiz: tions in the National League which had been organized by Mrs. Heath and the workings of which she alone knew. It was suggested that some of this burden be placed with the Executive Committee, Mra, Heath demanded recognition, but was informed that she was not a delegate. Finally upon a vote of the delegates Mra, Heath was permitted to say that already untruthful state- ments. had crept into the meeting and that she was present to assist the delegates in their work, Mrs. Henry P. Caraway of No. 210 Riverside Drive, who resigned as first Vice President in October, gave t convention another surprise by Intro- ducing a certified copy of the con- stitution the document the Jersey housewives have been vainly seeking for many Explanations of sections of the constitution were as clear as a description of the fourth dimension by a half witted Eskimo. In the middle of things half a dozen elderly ladies occupying front seats and who had been striving hard Jiearn the discussion was 1 jup. One of them add jusking what was und Told that {it wa moons nvention they « xolalmed in the wrong {aca this was the cuss dower ‘hey fled. NEW ANTHRAX VICTIM, | DIES AT BELLEVUE Another Case of the Dread Disease Has Fatal Result Before Serum Can Be Used. Too late to administer remedies that might have aided her, physicians at Hellevue Hospital to-day decided that Miss Sophia Rosen, seventeen years old, of No, 219 Seventh Street, who died at the hospital this morning, was \ victim of anthrax, the dreaded dia- ease that has claimed three victims here in the past few months. It was hot until a few minutes of her death | Chat @ blood culture revealed that al Was suffering from anthrax ho girl was beyond the ald of the jovernment serum, the discovery of which was made public when Judge Stackpole of Riverhead, L. 1, was figiting (he disease at Bellevue, when the nature of her became known Miss Rosen was taken iI at hall We meeting to dis. rights of women.” And disease work three Weeks ARO. Yesterday she was taken to Bellevue. Last night a sight eruption was noticed and a cul- ture test as decided on, After an examination of the cul- ture Dr, Charles Norris, head of the pathological laboratories, decided the «irl was afflicted with anthrax, Dr. Leslie L, Ross of the State De- partment of Labor visited the hos- pital soon after the cause of the girl's th became known and said an in ate investigation of how she contracted the disease would be made, —— SAILING TO-DAY. . 122M, Esperanza, Sixaola, United States Colon, Colon. C. of St. Louie, Savannah HALT P. $. BOARD REPORT FAVORING GAS AT 95 CENTS, Williams, Before Thompson Committee, Admits He Decid- ed for Brooklyn Monopoly. ALL READY FOR VOTE Hayward Declares Democratic Member Gave Immunity to Third Avenue Line. The Thompson Legislative Com- mittee called a sudden halt this after- noon on the Public Service Commia- sion, which was about to render a decision in the long pending fight made by the citizens of the Thirtieth Ward, South Brooklyn, to have their kas rates reduced Commissioner Williams had pre- pared an opinion in favor of the Kings County Lighting Company, al- lowing it to continue to charge 95 cents “er thousand cubie feet for gas while all the reat of the city pays only 80 cents a thousand. The people of South Brooklyn, aided by ‘The F World, have been flehting for years. vening the rate Commissioner Williams was on the stand this afternoon, continuing the high rate. He did not deny ft, Senator Thompson sald: “Tt wish you would notify the Com- mission that we ask that they do not TS rt re ere The committee learned that he had drafted a report to one voted to give the rafiroad com- pahy an extension of time to do the | required work. Senator Thompson ordered that lists | of stockholders‘of both New York and | Brocklyn gas and electric companies be produced for inspection. Attor- neys for the companies demurred, but Thompson was firm and said that if the lists were not forthcoming volun- tarily he would subpoenas officers and books, Secretary Whitney of the Public Commission submitted an old list of the ten largest Kings County Bleetrie Light and Power Company stockhold- ers. This was as of Deo, #1, 1908, Af- ter that date the commission did not require names of principal stockhold+ ors to be filed. Inquiry will be made why this concealing order was ts- sued, The Kings County Electric Com- ey was the one in which Chairman McCall held stock. His companies in 1908 were @ galaxy of financiers and politicians including Anthony _N, rant, Garret A. Ho- Murphy jr, all now and Seth L. Keeney, Stas B. er, John D, Jackson and W. W, Freeman. Hobart Was Vice President of the United States, Grant was Mayor of New York, Murphy was United States Senator and Dutcher was an up-State Republican power, The Kings County Lightnin pany, which charges 96 cents for sam is trying to keep secret its list of stockholders, All dts stock is held by | @ voting trust, of which the trustees are C, K, G, Billings, Fredertok John~ son and J. The names of the individu ordered produced While bending to adjust a wash line lon the fifth floor fire escape at No. | 227 Bast Fifty-third Street, to-day, John Mullins, ears old, of No. 430. Third to the rear yard CURED HIMSELF OF DRINKING Los Angeles Man Gives Out a Simple Home Recipe That Banished His Desire for Liquor. Pass finally on this case until our in- Vemtigation of it in concluded, Mr. Kart A. Smith, living at 6116 9 Mr, Willlams ay sitting commis-| Grant Avenue, Los Angeles, Calif., sioner, had taken all the testimony | CUFed himself of the liquor habit arith in the matter and had with him on tho | § sins Loe srefi me It stand a long typewritten report which | tw high priced treatments for m4 he was to present to the full com-| liquor habit, both of which failed. mlasion to-morrow for its approval, Counsel Lewis, for the investigating committee, cross-examined Commis- sioner Williams at length to find out on what he had based his decision, and attacked his figures aud his con- € ona. Mr. Williams admitted that he had spent four or five evenings in Then 1 beard of the following simple recipe, which I tried. It quickly ban- | ished my desire for lic juor and greatly benefit my health. To 3 ozs. of water add 20 grains of muriate of ammonia, « small box of Varlex Compound, and 10 grains of pepsin. Take « teaspoon- ful three times a day. It is perfectly barmless and as it has no taste, color preparing his long typewritten de- Serta atte re ta hoe iven —y Bo cision, It was also developed that tho| fetch Pu up, this Tribe a veer Et Kings County Lighting Company has |—Advt, an application pending before Com: missioner Williams for permission to increase by $500,000 or $600,000 its Issue of bonds. Public fam Hayward turned on his fellow Commissioners, McCall, Williams and Wood, to-day at the Thompson Legis- lative Committee investigation and made charges against them of fav- oritism to the ‘Third Avenue Railroad | Company and aucrificing the city's rights, “By the tion in the meeting of Oct. 27 last,” sald Hayward, “voting to give the company an extension of time in which to comply with an order they not only wiped out the city’s right to institute legal action and recover penalties of $5,000 per day, but they also gave to officials of the company Immunity.” The case under consider an attempt on the part of Commis fon was Service Commisstoner Will- cost, and it is a wonderful remedy.” 8 Visits for $ Teason why many people sulfering from ppatien are oe sare eat ete eg to tecelve of the nominal, fan bat NS i ithe a the tari ba 3 is sven at at ie ie th a ee rors Taae how veroe sorte, have a will aller. wl o Atlee. DR J. C. Mct McCOY, Candler Building, 2 20 W . 4adst. r sioner Hayward to compel the Third |» Avenue company to repair tts tracks, | particularly» in West Morty-second Street, and to comply with an order previously issued requiring certain improvements, re were many complaints against the company ant the theatrical managers of Forty- second street were insistent that who are languid, sleepless” something be done, “They were on my back all the Hayward said: to do what it had promised.” According to the testimony, Third Avenue company stalled on its] repairs and paid little attention orders of the commission, accepted an order requiring certain work to be completed by October 1, and then did not do it. Hayward then sought to have the commiss to institute legal proceedings again the company and enforce penalties. At the meeting on October 27, whea this resolution was brought up it was n vote defeated through McCall, Williams and Wood voting against it and only Hayward favoring it, Commissioner Cram was absent, Then, the commis- sion by the same alignment of three BEAUTY DOCTOR TELLS SECRET Detroit aacis Danie: Doctor Gives Simple Recipe to Darken Gray Hair and Promote Its Growth. Miss Alice Whitney, a well-known | beauty doctor of Detroit, Mich., re-| cently gave out the following state ment: ‘Anyone can prepare a simple mixture at home, at very little cost, that will darken gray hair, promote iis rowth and make it soft and glossy, Re a half pint of water add 1 oz. of bay rum, a small box of Barbo Com- und and '4 o4 of glycerine. These ingredients can be bought at any drug store at very little cost. Apply to the hair twice’ a week until the desired shade is obtained, This will make a gray-baired person look twenty years younger. It is also fine to promote the ay of the Batty relieve itching and disease, and cellent for dan- out and falling bait, Adv 1 ' a time and [ was trying to get the company to} It formally and physically run-down, get immediate relief and lasting benefit from the regular use of SCOTT’S EMULSION after meals, Its chief constituent is Nature's greatest body-building force to strengthen the organs and nerve centers, grain by grain, to reine physi- _cal and mental Paphadl No alcohol or opiate in SCOTT" 8." Retuse Substitutes, Scott d Bowne, wlleld, Ned BELL-ANS Absolutely Removes Indigestion. One package proves it. 25c at all druggists, pea etaalitettiiei at Crandall’s Baby Carriages “ii Fo arg Bhosle oF to All lost or found articles ade! vertised in The World will be Usted at The World's Informae tion Bureau, Pulitser Building Arcade, Park Row; World's Uptown Office, northwest cone ner 38th St, and reehwiae World's Leggy ad rent West 125th age

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