The evening world. Newspaper, December 11, 1915, Page 2

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amp eonta’ of bie country In the United States.” At the time of writing the letter he was counsellor to the Em- bassy. ‘The Baron to-day called upon Sec- retary Lansing to explain the letter. The charge was understood to have explained that at the time the letter was written he was only « subordinate in the embassy, It is understood Garon Zwiedinek contended that he eas acting mot upon his own initt- ative, but under the instructions of the Ambassador, Baron Zwiedinek remained with tho fecretary nearly an hour, It was be- iieved Uat the note which the United States has dispatched to Austria- Hungary on the sinking of the Italian Uner Aficonda was also @ subject mentioned. et was stated authoritatively to-day that Secretary Lansing has not yot reached a decision as to Alexander Nuber, the Austro-Hungarian | General in New York, whose eas ie under consideration, What t the Baron's explanation might ve had upon the Secretary to-"ay Was not disclosed, Baron Zweidinek @eelined to discuss the subject. Btate Department oMciais, declined to"comment on the letier or to state ‘what disposition would be made of it, Maftus Braun of New York, who Tiga been mentioned as having rela- tons connected with German and Austrian propaganda, called at the State Department to-day. He told Wider secretaries he wanted to deny stories about himself, but he did fet-to see Becretary Lansing. To Evening World correspondent refused to make any statement that he had not been summoned subpoenaed in any of the hyphen- inveatigations. AND BRITAIN DECIDE 10 FIGHT IT OUT IN THE BALKANS (Continued from First Page.) ALLOVERBRTAN TOENUSTINARNY Stations in London and Provin- cial Cities Overcrowded in Effort to Avert Conscription. DERBY TO MAKE REPORT Women School Teachers Are Pressed Into Service to Help Keep Up Record. t LONDON, Deo. 11.—Tn a whirlwind attempt to stave off conscription thou- sands of men eligible for military ser- vice overwhelmed tho recruiting of floes in London and provincial cities and towns to-day, anxious to enroll before the Lord Derby voluntary re- cruiting campaign ends at midnigi So great was the rush in London that it became necessary tO dispense with the usual medical examinations. Medical officers merely noted the name of each fresh volunteer and will make the examination later. ‘The chief recruiting station at Scot- land Yard remained open until nearly daybreak handling the grent crowd of recruits that formed in line yester- day. At 7 o'clock to-day the offices were opened again. Outside was an- other crowd that had been lining up for more than an hour, Conspicuous in this throng were men In silk bats, dosens of bank cler!:s and many pro- fessional men. In South London the crowd exceed ed that at Scotland Yard. The same situation existed all over London. Reports from the provincial cities sald recruiting went on almost all night ae WHIRLWIND RUSH THE EVENIN World SPOTS IGE SGSF2GH9-99-459905-6-069-0999-92 09 SS 9SOS5S 08606 Sunpwangee ane A A4AOEED OED I EASED EEE ’s Biggest Gun, 16 Inches, on Its Way to Sandy Hook to Protect New FO POG HEO4 E144 4448 GEE HO0K York Harbor ey eebay Ss OTERIE Oe ee ee This gun is capable of throw’ carrying it has thirty-two wheels ing @ projectile twenty-one miles. 1 nd was made especially for the gun. t weighs 200 tons. The truck TAKE CARGO FROM ANTLLA TO KEEP FREGHTERAFLOA Stranded Off Norton’s Point With Bows Stove In by The weary recruiting officers faced thousands in the morning. Liverpool officials wired a plea for more time, reporting that they would be unable to enroll before midnight the men already besieging the recruit- ing offices. Birmingham, having dis- posed of 10,000 armiets, signifying 10,- 000 enlistments, wired a request for more. Lora Derby announced this after- noon that the recruiting offices will femain open funtil the crowds in line are enrolled, Women “school teachers were Dressed into service as. assistants to the recruiting oMcera, in Glasgow, where great crowds stood in’ the rain, waiting to be enrolled. At Leeds, 300 extra recruiting clerks were on duty. Lord Derby refused to make any statement to-day and said that no figures will be made public until he completes his report for the Cabinet. On this report probably will do- pend the decision of the Govern- ment on the question of conscrip- tion. FRENCH AND GERMANS BATTLE IN RAINSTORM Paris War Office Confirms Reports of Effective Workin Artillery Engagements, PARIS, Dec, 11—Tho report fram the War Office this afternoon fol- lows: “The night was calm except in the Champagne, where, notwithstanding the steady rain, there was lively can- Nonading, as well as several enguge- ments at close quarters with torpe- does, “Further details of the fighting ye terday confirm the previous informa- tion concerning the effective work of our artillery between the Oise and the Aisne, on the Plateau of Quen- gevieres and in the region of Ven- @rease and Troyon. Our trench guns wrought serious Hamage to the forti fications and bomb-throwing ma. the» Danube until Roumania ts fo Jet it pase, It will be neces- chines of the enemy. BERLIN, Dec, 11 (via London),— The French again have bombarded and then attacked the position re- cently taken by the Germans north- east of Souain in the Champagne re- gion, but were repulsed, the Germans retaining all thelr gains, according to official announcement to-day, oo WASHINGTON INQUIRY ON U.S. CONSUL AT CAIRO Olney Arnold Accused by American Residents of Unneutrat Utterances, WASHINGTON, Dec, 11,—Investi- wation is being made of the con- duct of Olney Arnold, of Khode Island, American diplomatic agent apd Consul General at Cairo, Egypt, on charges by American residents, which include unneutral utterances, N, B, Stewart, one of the State Department's inapectors and a Consul General at Large, who had been working in Africa has been sent to Cairo to investigate. in Egypt, Mr. Arnold's alleged un- neutral utterances, are believed to have impaired his efficiency as an officer of the United States, He was appointed to the post without competitive examination required of officers who attend only to son- ular affairs, POPE ASKED TO TELL HOF GERMANY'S STRENGTH Hold Qut Seven Years, Cardi- nal Hartmann’s Message to the Pontiff. Dec, 11—Germany is un- t Minancially and economically 1s able to continue the war for years, Cardinal Hartmann told Benedict before departing for a Cardinal prosented statistics to bis statement, He urged His ' to convey this fact to Ger- enemies, declaring they might Fealize the futility of attempting Germany out and be willing te for an early peace, 01 for Poter's pence, * Me and busily engaged to-day in taking cargo Wrecking tugs lighters are out of the holds of the steamship Antilla of the Ward Line, which was beached off Norton's Point, Coney Island, last night to save her from foundering, With high tide this af- ternoon it is expected that the freighter will be floated to her pier In the East River. The Antilla, commanded by Capt. JeR. Curtis, left port tast evering for Santiago and Gitantanamo, Cubs, with 3,500 tons '#f general cargo. She had & crew of forty-two Whd éiirried ‘no paswengers. Shortly after 9 o'clock and when! the Antilla was passing Sandy Hook at a speed of ten knots an hour, a dark bbject swung directly across her course, Capt. Curtis made it out as the last of two scows being towed into port. He quickly re- versed his engines but before the momentum of the Antilla had been stayed, she ran into the heavy scow with @ erash that threw all hands to the deck, The watch forward reported to the bridge that soveral of the Antilla’s bow plates had been stove in, Le- ports from below said that the steamer was taking water rapidly. Capt. Curtis decided to turn and run for shallow water, The huwser by which the mud scow was being towed had parted in the crash and the tug, J. 8. Parker of Providence, which ~had the tow, started after her, Capt. Curtis learned that the scow and its watchman were safo before he left the scene, At full speed the Antilla proceeded Up the Ambrose Channel, When Nor- ton's Point was reached she had sunk #o low forward that her commander decided to “take to the mud” at the nearest place. He managed to swing her into the bay oppopite the Atlantic Yaoht Club in eighteen feet of water. Wireless ¢ were sent ashore and the Ward Line rushed four tugs to the steamer’s assistance. At dawn this morning the Merritt & Chapman Wrecking Company despatched light- era to the scene, The tug J, 8. Parker had been out @t the dumping grounds off the Scot- land Lightship. with two scowloads of mud from Newark. The explanation of the collision is that the scows were on long hawsers and that the last one had veered with ‘the wind and ude across the bow of the Antilla, ——————— GEN. VON MACKENSEN AT CONSTANTINOPLE German Field Marshal Reaches Turkish Capital with Two | Regiments of Troops. ROME, Dee. 11.--Field Marshal von | Mackensen has arrived at Constanti- | nople with two regiments of Bavarian | infantry and. several batteries of artillery, according to Athens dis-| patches to-da} Berlin dispatches yesterday men- tioned that Mackensen had been received in audience by Emperor Franz Josef, but did not state on what day he was in Vienni — Con re Cross Plea to % te Germany, WASHINGTON, Dec. 11.—A state ment issued here by the British Em- bassy sa’! the London Foreign Office | prisoners More Evidence of Vor Rente- len’s Activities Pours In to Government Officials. Evidence is accumulating in the hands of the Government agents to show that the activities of Capt. Frana von Rintelen wee more far reaching than has even been supposed, Letters aro pouring into the Depart- ment of Justice and being turned over to United States Attorney Marshall's office, from all parts of the country. L. P. Straube, Secretary of Labor's National Peace Council, is on his way here from Chicago to tell the Govern- ment all he knows about the money handled by the Council, where It came from and how it was spent. From all that can be learned, more | than $1,000,000 was given out and sup- posed to find its way Into tho hards ‘of alleged labor leaders, How much of this David Lamar, the “Wolf of | Wall Street,” got is still problemati- eal, but it is sald that about $490,000 were given out by him. Those who | know the “Wolf” believe that he re- | tained (ho lion's share for himascif, Samuel Gompers, hoad of the American Federation of Labor, is expected to reach New York the first | part of the week, and will probably 1 1 the Grand Judy everything in his possession which may throw any light on the matter, | ® same jury which has been handling the labor cases may turn the Nght on the activities not only of t office of Consul General von Nuber of Austria, but those of all the Austrian Consuls throughout the country, While von Nuber is the only Aus- trian Consul within the jurisdiction of the Southern District of New York, if it can be established titat a conspir- acy of two or more Consuls existed and that part of it was carried out in New York, every Consul in the con- splracy might be Indicted here and prosecuted here for sending informa- tion of an official character through the British lin Bree iets cieeaas TEUTONS DRIVEN OUT OF LEMBERG BY DISEASE {Troops Evacuated City in Order to Avoid Panic Among the Civil Population, KIEV, Russia, Dec. 11 (via Lon- don).-A report reached here to-day that Lemberg is being evacuated by the Austro-German forces on account of an outbreak of scurvy, Owing to the spread of the disease the military authorities, according to the repart, decided on tho withdrawal with the view to avoiding panic among the civilian inhabitants of the city, This report has reached Kiev from various sources, and appears to be corroborated by Austrian and Ger- man prisoners, It 1s sald also by that the approaches to Lemberg have not been fortified, with the exception of repairs which have been mado to the old trenches, On the other hand, the Grodek Lakes and the line of the River San are be- ing fortified strongly, and from Przsemysl to the Vistula a series of concrete fortifications i» being con- structed, Saeenieoanines VIENNA SHORT OF COAL, Possibility of Shutting oft Light Is Discussed, ZURICH, Switserland, Dec, 11 London).—Reports reaching here wie from Austria say that the supply of coal in so small that the question of wll Was considering the request of the acu American Red Cross that passage | 3 has appealed. to t through the blockade lines be given t to provide coal for the munis to rubber hospit, many. The Red pas will send rub- ber to none of the belligerent coun- supplies for Ger- | as works, 80 that the capital mu ft in darkness, hi if ties of Laibach and Styria, | ported, already are without gas | \ tries 40 long as it le barred from one. \eo account of the lack of coal. $1,000,000 FUND CREW 0 FORLABOR LEADERS! SHIP TORPEDOED N FOREIGN PLOTS, TWICE IN A DAY F GREEK Lifeboats’ of Goulandris Cast Adrift by Submarine, Which Then Sinks Rescue Ship. LONDON, Dec. 11.—The crew of the Greek steamship L. G. Goulandris, whose destruction by a German sub- marine was reported on Thursday, had two oxperiences on the same day | with torpedoes. According to an offictal report, forwarded from Athens {by Reuter’s correspondent, the crew took to lifeboats after the Goulandris, bound from Alexandria to England, had been torpedoed when 150 miles west of Alexandria, The boats were towed for sofhe distance by the sub- | marine an@ then cast adrift, The men were picked up by an English steamship which, when with- in twenty-five miles of Alexandria, was torpedoed by the same submarin that had sunk the Goulandris. ‘The crews of both vessels escaped in small boats and were picked up three miles from Alexandria by an- other Brit'sh steamship, reaching port safely Submarines Sink a Br Norwestan Sh LONDON, Dec, 11,—The British steamship Busiris has been sunk by @ submarine, Tho crew was landed at Alexandria, The Busiris displaced 2,705 tons and was bullt in 1904, She was owned by the Moss Steamship Jompany of Liverpool, One member of the crew of the Norwegian steamer Ingstad was drowned and three injured when the vessel was sunk by a German sub- marine, according to a report from at Yarmouth, MARSEILLES, France, Dec. 11.— |The officers of the French steamship Harmonie, which has arrived here, report the vessel was attacked re- cently by a Austrian submarine, which fired two torpedoes without ef- fect and withdrew, The next day the Harmonie was attacked by an aero- plane that flew overhead for a quar+ ter of an hour and dropped six bombs, all of which went into the sea, cL wild GERMANS WANT PEACE, PARIS VIEW OF SPEECH Hanotaux Says Chancellor Put So- cialisis Up to Feel Ground for Proposals. and a PARIS, Dec. 11.—Paris newspapers express the opinion that behind the outspoken remarks of Dr. Von Beth- mann-Hollweg, German Chancellor, in his address to the Reichstag, muy be perceived a desire for peace, “Germany's plan is evident,” says Gebriel Hanotaux, former Foreign Minister, in the Figaro. “While the Chancellor rattles the sabre and pro- claims Germany's undiminished strength and determination to win, the Socialists are put up to feel the ground for peace proposals, through their International connections in neu. tral countries,” The Matin asserts the Chancellor has failed to hide the truth concern. ing Germany's straits. “The idea that Germany could lack anfthing suggested astonishing reve- lations to him,” it says, In the Petit Journal, Stephen Pi- chon, former Foreign Minister, draws the conclusion from the Chance'lor's speech that both sides are equally do- termined to continue the struggle. G WORLD, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1918. REAL PROSPERITY : HERETO STAY, SAY ~NSURANGEHEADS >| BOOM | War Orders in East and Nat- ural Reaction in West Its Cause. IN. THE SOUTH. Astonishing Recovery Seen There From the Depression of a Year Ago. Real prosperity ts aweeping the én- tire country in the opinion of the residents of six of the largest life $| insurance companies tn the United @ | States. thelr opinion, is due to orders from Prosperity in the East, in European nations for war supplies, but in other sections of the country the condition, they said, is the nat- ural reaction from the depression that followed the outbreak of the war, They were unanimous in de- claring that “prosperity is here.” The insurance men who were-in- terviewed came here to attend the annual meeting of the Association of Life Insurance Presidents. W. A. Day, President of the Equit- able Lite of New York, said: “That Prosperity has struck the East is shown by the extraordinary demand for luxuries. The industries supply- ing expensive but unnecessary arti- cles of commerce are experiencing a revival of business. This, however, is not an: index of the general prosper- ity of the nation, as agricultural Profits of the last year and the ac- cumulated demand of the farmers are the factors really back of the favor- able conditions, “The Eastern prosperity undoubt- edly is due to war profits, ani I fore- see a condition where abnormal prices will be demanded for commod- itles whose normal factories have been dismantled and turned into munitions plants.” President Jesse R. Clark, of the Central Life Insurance Company of Cincinnatl, said: “I never have seen such prosperity as sow prevails in America, and especially in the Cen- tral, Northwest and Southern States, It is the voicing of the accumulated demand for improved equipment and more land, and in the South it rep- resents an astonishing recovery from a depression which a year ago, ap- peared certain to be ruinous, Texas, notably, is in the midst of an era of Prosperity, and the closing of the market to last year’s cotton crop seems to have been forgotten en- urely, In no section outside the East is the situation a boom, It is sim- ply a height of prosperity which de- veloped quickly, but gradually, and 1 expect it to continue indefinitely,” President T. C, Cummins of the Equitable Life of Iowa, Des Moines, said: “Iowa farmers are borrowing money, particularly to buy cattle and horses, They also are building new schools, improving their roads and buying new, improved equipment, I know of no better indication of pros- perity. The people are cheerful and confident.” President George B, Stadden, of the Franklin Life, Springfleld, Il, wald: “The demand for loans is large, but it is a sound, reasonable need in con- trast to the feverish demand of a year 4BO. “Prosperity in the West is not due to the war, but it might be called a reaction from the depression that foi- lowed the war's outbreak. President Alfred D. Foster, of the New England Life, Boston, said: ‘The prosperity of the West is permu- nent and from natural causes, In the East the workingman may suf- fer a decline in wages at the end of the war, but I believe big business will continue in good shape.” COMMITTEE WILL SEND PHYSICIAN TO MRS, WOOD Its Own Doctor Will See If P. S. Commissioner's Mother Is Able to Testify. ‘The Thompson Legislative Commit- tee, investigating the Public Service Commission, held @ lengthy executive session today. It 18 planned to have Mrs Alice R. Wood, mother of Commissioner Rob- ert C, Wood, appear before the com- mittee on Monday, The committee decided to send its own physician to seo if Mra Wood 4s too ill to testify as her private physician reported yes- terday. If the committee's medical expert says Mra Wood is well enough to appear she will be subpoenaed be- fore the committee on Monday, OLYMPIA, Wash., Dec, 11.—The State | VERA CRUZ SANITATION IS BAD, SAYS CANADA COnsuL CaNnanoe U. S. Consul Back Home After Long Stay in Troubled Mexican Port. William W. Canada, American Con. sul at Vera Cruz, who has been at his post during all the troubled times be- fore and after the American occupa. tloh of the Mexican city, arrived here to-day on the Ward Line steamship Esperanza for @ brief leave of ab- sence. It is the first time he has been home in four years. He has been Consul at Vera Cruz for eighteen years, “Iam well.” he said, “though suf- fering from nervousness. There is some sickness in Vera Cruz, but there is no yellow fever. Conditions are not wood there from a sanitary stand- point” In spite of his assertions, the Con- sul appeared to show some physical effects of the long sojourn in the Southern republic. He was cheerful, however, appreciative of his thirty days’ leave, ‘lam going to my home tn In- dian, he sald, “and later to Wash- ington, If the consular leaves were cumulative I would be home for a year, But the State Department has been very good to me.” BRITISH STEAMER CATCHES FIRE AS SHE 1S BOUND OUT Members of Bomb Squad Are Called After She Hurries Back for Aid, The British freighter Tyningham, which sailed from this port to-day with a cargo of sugar consigned to the British Government at Queenstown, was discovered to be on fire twenty minutes after passing the Narrows. Smoke poured in heavy clouds from the hatcbway of No, 4 hold, The ship was put about and headed for the Upper Bay. As she returned at full speed past Quarantine the doctor's boat’ went out to intercept her, and was asked to call for the ald of a fireboat, The volume of smoke was then increasing rapidly. The Tyuingham dropped ancher between Bedlooe Island and the New Jersey flats and was at once joined by the fireboat Seth Low from 8t. George. No further requests for as- sistace were made by signal and it was assumed at the fire pier at the Battery that the flames were under control, Late this afternoon on the receipt of wireless messages from the ship, Federal Secret Seryice men and de- tectives from the Bomb Squad at Police Headquarters went of to the Tyningham in'a hurry, A fire in the same nold where the blaze started to-day was discovered Deo, 6 when the Tyninghai.. was load- ing sugar at the Erie Basin. The hold was cleaned out and in the debris was found a broken bottle which was believed to have contained chemicals, rire Marshal Bropny made a thor- oughgoing investigation after the fire at the Erie Basin, because several ships with cargoes controlled by the British Sugar Commission have sut- fered similar mishaps. He was unable to get any clue to incendiaries further than the broken bottle, ‘The steaming out of the flames, cleaning the hold and reloading delayed the sailing un- til to-day, —-___. ACCUSED OF FRATRICIDE, Five Sinters Plead Vainly That Pat- ersom Man Attend Victim's Funeral, (@pecial to The Evening World.) PATERSON, Dec William Wehn- ert, accused of the murder of his broth- Supreme Court aMrmed to-day decision |" 9 of the lower court upholding the validity |¢" Andrew, who was found shot in a ble near his home at No. LM Law- ——_-- of the initiative measure adopted by the | *\ 7 hvsieed Secuat a Geek wha Oe ine Ut ithe election of Novembor igre [rence Street, pleaded not guilty before 4 a prohibiting of liquor in the ‘si der day. He was com- ATHE Dee, I-A. number of | Biter Janel, ‘As @ result of the de- | mitted to the county jall without ball Greek ste * ure being detained in| cision every saloon and brewery in the| Five sisters appeared in court and ports of the Allies, the Athens news | State will have to go out of buslness om| pleaded that he be alowed to thy bayer Hvstia atated to-duy, jam Dut their request was denied, f . RES ESTATE LEFT N TRIS TO WS WHOM She Is to Get the Income—- Has Plans to Build an Hospital. —E The will of Isaac L. Rice, who ated Nov. 2, at No, 2107 Broadway, was fled for probate to-day. The petition for the probate estimates the value of the estate at more than $1 sonalty and no realty in t but Mr, [tice is known to have left an estate amounting to more than $1,- 000,000, He left his entire estate to his wife, Julla B. Rice, in trust for life, to use the income “for the support and for the education and support of my chil- dren and issue of pny that may have died, but to be applied by my wife for these purposes solely as she may desire and deem prorer.” Upon the death of the wife the in- |come ts to be divided equally among their six children. Upon the death of each child the principal of the share of the trust is to go outright to the issue. Announcement has been made that Mrs. Rice would devote a large part of her husband's estate to the estab- j lishment of a hospital for convales- nts, It was said the hospital would cost $1,000,000. SMALLEST BABY IS BORN; WEIGHS ONLY 27 OUNCES Nine Inches Tall, Is Perfectly Nor- mal Child, and Will Be Raised in Incubator. Tn an incubator at the Children's Hospital, Fifty-sixth Street and Lexy ington Avenue, lie twenty-seven ounces of tiny, red-faced, wrinkled- nosed humanity, just one day old— the smallest baby physicians at the hospital say they ever heard of, The child was born “yesterday to Mrs. Augusta Mattlo, wife of Tony 'Mattio, of Hudeon foulevard and ‘Eighteenth Street, West New York, The baby was only nine inches long; but was perfectly formed. It an- nounced its arrival by a series of lusty yells much too strong for its size. | The nurse attending Mrs. Mattlo | burriedly called a jtney bus, imme- diately after the by's birth, and rushed ft to the Children’s Hospital, where it wae hurried into an incu- |bator, Doctors say the child will | live and that it ts perfectly normal in levery way but alze. | Mrs, Mattlo has three other children, | none of whom is unusually small. | Both the parents are of normal size. —_——__ ‘SHIFTED TO TRAFFIC SQUAD. rders Captains to New Poste—Noble im Acting Comm. Commissioner Woods to-day trans- ferred Police Captain William W. Dug- |gan from West Sixty-eighth Street, to command of Traffic Squad B, in West Ninth Street, and Capt. John W, O'Con+ nor from Glendale Avenue to Traffic Squad D, in Brooklyn. Capt. q Falconer was moved from Elizabeth Street to West, Sixty-elghth Street, and Capt. George C. Licbers from Traffic D to Glenda’ Acting Capt, Philip Grosbeck was transferred from Traffic B to desk duty with Traffic D. Lieut. John Noble, third on the eligible list romotion ‘to. captain, was put In acting command Elizabeth Street. Ka ci SE SAILING TO-DA St. Louis, Liverpool. Calamares, Havana Havana, Havana Kristianiafjord, B oo. GRUBER.—Deo. 10, 1915, GRUBER, aged 54, Anna C. Frank A Mrs, Agatha Reyher and brother of Mrs, Max ort. Fu services Sunday, Dec. 12, at the Fourth Prewbyterian Church, tet et. and West End av., New York City, at 2.16 P. M, Interment private, Albany and Syracuse papers copy. ABRAHAM GRUBER— ‘The membe: Club are requ services of the! ABRAHAM please Deo. 12, at the Fourth Presbyterian Church, O¥et et. and West End ay., New York Gity, at 2.15 P.M CHARLES E, HBYDT, AMUSEMENTS. AMERICAN-JEWISH RELIEF COMMITTEE ron “pid MEETING? OEE, ” CARNEGIE HALL, 8 P. 'M. ton, Bites ie Beanmballs Wis 5. Hoa, Wm. J. stone, Biehow Hy” Greer: Hoa, 3 , ‘Comm. of Edwesiion:. Prof, Jago toap sf “Cornell Universi “A hor reserved eats write Dr. J. fa. 2d Ave. N.Y,” Requeats filled in (All lost oF found ariic! Vertised in The World ei "es fisted at The World's Informae

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