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y Se RR ETT SAYS WIE LEFT -BITOF HER HEART WITH A FREERR “i aed ° "Court Reads Letier in Which German Aristocrat Accepted Little Corner of It. “THAT DEAR ENGLISH!” It Won von Freiburg as It Fell) by From Mrs. Breitureser’s Lips, He Wrote. Fretherr Friedrich von may be chanting the “Song of Hat im German back !n his home town of Danzig, but when it comes to the English ianguage as it is spoken by Mrs. Leonore Breitwieser, daughter of @ milionaire typewriter manufac- turer of No. 48 East Eixty-ninth Street, there ts a charm about the tongue he cannot escape. ‘The story of the Freiherr’s intatu- ation for the enemy's language came to light in the Supreme Court to-day when Justice Platzek signed an order giving Hubert F. Breitwieser, a wyer, permission to see jis son and daughter, Hubert jr. and Barbara, ag often as he pleases and to take them out for pleasure jaunts every holiday. For more than a year Mr. and Mrs. Brutwieser have been living apart un- dor @ separation agreement. After the separation, Mrs. Hreitweser closed her New Rochelle home, a wedding gift from her father, and went to Europe, While his wifo was travelling abroad and through the West, Breitwieser al- leges he found a number of letters from men his wife had met in Ger- many, where she visited her sistor, the wife of a German army officer, One of the letters, Breitwieser alleges, was signed by Freiherr von Freiburg. When he taxed his wife for an ex- planation, the lawyer asserts, she told him there was nothing in their ac- Quaintance that should eacite him, Here are some of the passages in the letter submitted to Justice Platzek: “Yes, doar, I will take the little places in your heart you offer me. “Yos, the little English girl is rath- @ nice and good looking, but the vadeest thing about her was that she spoke your language—the dear Eng- lab, which ecems so nice and melo- dious since I have heard it from your mouth. I never thought when I learned Mt at school I should like tt @o much.” Breitwieser accused bis wif: of ex- ebenging photographs with the Frai- esr and some army officers, but this Dd tly denied, And as to Staempfli, a prominent whose acquaintance Mrs. wiewer made on th» steamer re- turning from Europe, she denies she ‘Was op affectionate terms with him, but says she accepted his acquaint- amos because she was “proud to do on “\ letter Breitwieser says bis wife from Dr. Staempfil, which he says was a friendly greeting, fol- 7 “You shall not Baye 9 Sird place ia heart, dearest love, but a big 4 you shall stay there all my fife long. Don't think, dearest, that acted badly. We could not help each other. If we sinned in more than in deeds, we are be blamed for it Dearest is never terrible but life is. . Brettweiser told the Court her 's anger at her was aroused at Long Lake, the summer camp of Mrs. Broitwieser’s father, he her of violating her marriage and her father, past eighty, ly ordered him out of the ‘Another reason,” Mrs. Breitwieser “for RA Roabens'e feeling against me is vat juring our mar- Hea Hfe my father epent $30,000 on my husband. He ts of a very jealous 4 eal Hy. ieposition and showed it when T danced with his own brother. He was enbearable.” ist in 185 to his pa it beeam 825,000. otherwise to make Fraiburg | OLD FASHIONED FAMILY REMEDY FOR COLDS AND BODY BUILDING Father John’s Medicine Builds Up the Body Without Use of Alcohol or Danger- ous Drugs. A Doctor's Pre- scription, 50 Years in Use. Absolute Truth of This Story Attested by Guarantee to Give $25,000.00 to Any Charitable In- stitution if Shown Otherwi i Father John’s Medicine is a physician's pre- scription Preseribed for the late Rev, Father John Over of Lowell, Mass., by an eminent special- Father John reconimended this prescription This story is true and» Father John's Juin coughs, colds, and throat and lung troubles, and| And they think they have immortal | TIVE BROM ‘BUCHANAN ARREST RAISES A PROBLEM FOR ATTORNEYS | — > | Justice Department Consider- | ing Congressman’s Claim to Immunity. | WASHINGTON, Dee, 20.—Service | of the warrant for the arrest of Ret | resentative Frank Buchanan of Ile nols on indictment charging conspir- | acy with seven others identified with | labor's {6nal Peace Cownell to foment strikes in American munition plants, was held up to-day while De- partment of Justice officials consid- ered whether Mr. Buchanan, as a member of Congress, waa immune from arrest. ‘The warrant, sent from New York was received to-day. In addition to| Mr. Buchanan, it calls for the arrest | of former Representative H. Robert Fowler of lilinois, H. 8. Martin and| Herman Sohulteis on the same in-/ diotment. Whatever the decision with respect to Mr, Buchanan, it was said the other three arrests would be made if possible. Theso men have announced thetr intention of fighting removal, A representative of H. Snowden Marshall, United States Attorney at New York, brought the warrant and conferred with officials in charge of the prosecution, There were intimations that if Bu- ohanan resisted arrest after it had been decided upon proceedings would be taken in the House looking tp his expulsion. United States Attorney Marshall does not fear any trouble over the arrest of Congressman Buchanan on the latter’s claim of immunity, but realizes that it may be @ question of time when he and the other defend- ants will arrive in New York. It took 16 months to get David Lamar within the jurisdiction of the United States District Court, but the conditions Wore different from those of the pres- ent time. Another special Grand Jury will be impanelled In the United States Mis. trict Court on Jan. 5, United States Attorney Marshall having signed a certifioate for the body yesterday. This will be in addition to the regular January Grand Jury, which will be called on the fifth or sixth. The Goy- ernment makes no secret that its in- vestigation Into the German propa- ganda is by no means ended. It is expected that there will be further indictments before the middle of Jan- uary in the widening scope of the ins vestigation. —__———_ FORD'S PEACE MISSION MAY COST $1,000,000 sxpedition Will Go Ahead Re- gardless of the Austro-Ameri- can Controversy. STOCKHOLM, Dec. 30. — Henry THE EVENING WORLD, T sy “I Resolve Not to Bea Snob!” Is the Most Im- portant of Them—The Social Snob the Lowest of All Created Beings. Good Resolution No. 2 Might Be: “Read a Newspaper Every Day” to “Open the Window of Your Mind.” Good Resolution No. 3 Is “Study Your Job’’ and Be Better Fitted to Do the Very Best You Can. | never before. this request. within my own heart. To me the most the world is the women, their patience with failure, their belief in those they love. The hearts of women plead always for the feeble and the helpless, for the old and the defeated. Without their intercession, without the mitigating tenderness of Ford's peace expedition may cost him more than $1,000,000 if the conference at the Hague is long drawn out, Business Manager Gaston Plantift made this estimate to-day before the delegates left for Copenhagen. About $25,000 of Ford's money was spent here. It was reported before sailing that the Ford managers were consid- ering giving 910,000 to the poor of Stockholm, The pilgrimage will be continued regardless of the developments in the Austro-American contro. osy, Ford's secretary, Louls P. Lochner, scouted the idea that the delegates might not be willing to follow Mme. Schwimmer, the Hungarian peace leader, in event ot @ break between Austria and America. Tho delegates, however, are becoming increasingly hostile to her. Both the Norwegian and Swedish elegations to the peace conference have been completed. Their identities are being withheld, but it is under- | stood they include few persuns of ‘ prominence. arishioners and friends and in this wa, e known as Father John's Medicine. i » to give 0 to any charitable institution, if shown mercy of their attitude toward life, there would be to-day no world struggle against Prussianism. Be- cause the worki itself would be one vast Prussia, organized remorse- lessly by the strong and for the strong, for the Prussian principle ty the male principle. SEX STANDS FOR IDEALS OF MERCY AND TENDERNESS, It 4s the mother in man which de-| mands that weak nations like Bel-| gium and Serbia shall not be op-| pressed by “the strong, as it 1s the mother in woman which loves and cherishes most the crippled child and! protects it against its lustior brothers] and sisters. But while we stand as a sox for the great {deals of mercy and tenderness, as individuals we are often cruel and narrow. And perhaps the best New Year's resolution any of us can make ig this: 1 Resolve Not to Be a Snob. Snobbishness was well defined as a mean admiration of mean things. But that definition does not convey all the shades of snobbishness. Wor it is possible to have a mean admira-| tion of fine things. | The social snob is the lowest of ail created beings. And surely the most corrupt of human creatures is the mother who instills envy and preten-| tiousness into the only perfect democ- racy to be found on earth—the heart of a little child. I know of mothers) who tell their children not to play with Johnny or Susie Jones because the Jones children go to public school. I know of other mothers who! discuss before their children the so-| cial availability of their playmates and do not disgulse from them the fact that the possession of wealth is in the maternal eye the gr t of es Medicine is recommended for | fles} Does not contain and strength, alcobol or poisonous drugs, | RESOLVE NoT To BE a SNOB By Nixola Greeley-Smith. On the edge of the New Year a woman reader has written me to say that she hopes “Little 1916 will be a girl.” “There have been 1,915 years since the beginning of Obristian civiliza- tion,” she says, ‘and every single year has been @ boy and has been run for boys. the world are fighting each other, surely the time has come when women should make their influence felt as We must make 1916 the Woman's year. Won't you suggest some New Year’s resolutions for) women so that we may make ourselves more worthy of the work before us?” It is with humility that I shall try to comply with And it must be also with the preface that there {s nothing I find to criticise in other women that I do not know to be within myself, more that is good and beautiful in them than I would wish to discover Now that half the males in And there is tenth his 1 ————— time to such petty tunes as these? And while we all know that the petti- nesses of women are in some measure due to the littleness of their lives, surely we must realize that we would do well to study our brother man for the largeness of his social outidok, the simplicity and fellowship of his manner with other men, For men— whatever else they may be—are not snobs. The male snob exists, of course We all know him and despise him, but generally it is to some woman— mother or wife or sweetheart—that he owes his downfall from democ- racy. So let us resolve to be socially simple and kind, as most men are, and to let the children play with the garbage man’s children if that is what they want to do. READ A NEWSPAPER AND STUDY YOUR JOBS. There is a type never reads of woman who nything. She says abe is zy about books, but simply has no time. And if you speak to her about the Ancona she thinks it is a new color or a new disease—both subjects of passionate interest. — If you are that type of woman resolve to make the new year memorable by reading one newspaper a day. It {s the only way in which you can open the windows of your mind and let a little fresh air from the larger world sweep through the prison of your routine life. ‘Thoughts may be over. thought, lives overlived, loves over- loved if we do not keep an open mind to which the winds of the world may brin h energy and knowledge, There is another thing which many women should ponder at this and that ia thelr tendency to 4 e-down opinion. For very woman should be intelleotually self- supporting. She should not have to g0 to her husband for a new thought or the solution of a new problem, She should not fll the treasury of her small change of ub vy superticlal leetures. ' her own thinking, no mat- ter how badly she does it, form her own opinions, make her own mis takes, sin her own sing Wh we need to resolve most 5f all perhaps is that we will study our Jobs, whatever they may be, and do the best we can by them. Are we not all of us a little lazy, @ little prone to do things well enough, Is not the married Woman rather apt to take advan of the fact that she can't be discharged from her Job? Is she as good a mother, a wife, a f she did’ not hay her husband's earning | RESOLVE TO READ ONE NEWS PAPER A OAY | RESOLVE To BE INTELLECTUALLY SELF- SUPPORTING * ReSOwEe To Stupy my Joe INTERBOROUGH TO EXTEND AGROSS HARLEM RIVER Agreement With N. Y. Central Will Be Discussed at P. S. Hearing Jan, 10. In accordance with the dual system contracts the Interborough Company has made an agreement with the New York Central Railroad for the use of the Putnam Division Bridge over the Harlem River at Eighth Avenue and One Hundred and Fifty-fifth Street. At present the Sixth and Ninth Ave- nue elevated lines terminate on the Manhattan #ide at this point, where there is @ joint station used both by the elevated trains*and steam trains of the Putnam Division running to. points in Westchester County. ‘The elevated lines are to be extend- led across the Putnam Bridge and | through East One Hundred and Six- ty-seventh Street in the Bronx to a |Junction with the new Jerome Avenue Rapid Transit Rallroad at One Hun- dred and Sixty-second Street aud River Avenue. The Interborough to- [day submitted to the Public Service minission for approval the agree ment which It proposes to make with the Central re- ceived mn a petition Jasking permission to discontinue the Putnam Division at One Hundred and Fifty-fifth Street and Eighth Avenue, | Manhattan, and to join the Interbor- ough in the erection of a new station on the Bronx side of the Harlem River at or near One Hundred and Sixty-second Street. The commission set both matters down for a public hearing on Monday, Jan. 10, 1916, at }10,80 A. M. WOODLAND HEROES STAGED, Gorgeous Spectacle at Lexington Theatre Will Ald Two Hospita Peter Rabbit himself and all the little rabbits, Reddy Fox, Buster Rear, Old Man Wolf, Danny Meadow Mouse and all the other woodland creatures with which childhood stortes teem have been brought together and personified in the 7 Ww | fi | in real totalin: and a tt furiiiar Broadwa. | faces, # new and set to vei with or lyr “nd some tune new 4 bewildering array of Comtumnes, ow on and ind: the Le * divid denham | both well known an: whoxe activities have acce world of good tn the upper e JOHN N. BOGART DEAD. Ex-License Strick John N. form £0) Commissioner of New York City and Rogart r License all human qualities capacity with Immunity for all negli-|® Well known Inbor leader. tn dead tn aa ences save one Vy er we may | Saugert N. Y, of pneumonia. is AND THESE "THINK THEY HAVE | think of our jobs, whether the fatal illness was sudden. IMMORTAL SOULS.” jobs of the outside world or in the) Mr, Bogart wax appointed License I heard once of a young girl, a pupil | home, let us resolve to make the best | Commissioner by Mayor McClellan in in @ private school which was a hot-| ¥€ can of them in 1916, December, 1905, and held that office bed of snobbery, who announced that] ) juntil January when he was a silly sorority to which she belonged phere . Mr. sat succec ded by Robinson, an “ d the ellgiby ce alee i, +hibl- | appointes of Maye ynoi Seermined ithe: vellmitality’ Of RW cn dation ion will be held He was formerly State Organizer pupils tor election by examining the | jy, EE THe A toaflehn udaretlon ee cance tailor’s labels tn their clothes. | know | noun SHA Hae GKVARA Wine a lAber a a t nine t | at 6 of women who are thrilled by the re- | onymitten. § writer fur a New Y eption of a dinner invitation ar Scaieeaeecaan } active in cast into outer darkness if they are | s and 7 ine That Does Not Affect the Hy Presidential cam - omitted from those bidden to a dance. | 74g Quinine 1 tale oend inatiee etiece rere ir. Fide ee te, popalens we 10 QUININE can be taken by aay |'gon Workingmen's Club of New York, souls! Is it not a dreadful thing that | gue, without causing nervousness a He had recently been a proofreader on fest Phere fe enly one. the puluobents of oternity suousd keep Bw, GuOva'S slgsaute’ on @ morning newspaper in ‘hs oly, HURSDAY, DECEMBER 30, Little 1916 to Be a Feminist; Here Are Resolutions for Her MARQUIS'S CHILD ASKS LAW TO SAVE HER FROM Georgiana de Teixeira Says He Tried to Send Her to Madhouse. GUARDED AT HER HOTEL. Wealth of Brazilian Dazed Port Jefferson, but Girl Says She Signed Checks. Dom Faria de Gonzales de Teix- cira, Marquis de Algula Branca, was summoned before Justice Dreyer of Port Jefferson this afternoon and subjected to an inquiry regarding the statemonts of his twenty-four-year- old daughter, Georgiana, The girl,| present his accounts to Pet Olney, appointed Sp who is @ Brazilian beauty, has been| this ¢ on or before Jan, 1a at the Townsend Hotel in Setauket for three weeks under the care of her grandmother and Deputy Sheriff John as her Greene Oviatt, who was assigned guard by District Attorney of Buffolk County Senorita Georgiana was taken from her home by her grandmother and Mrs. Temple Emmett of New York, sister of Robert and Lewis Stuyvesant Chanler, Sunday three weeks ago, after the grandmother had been as- mured by Justice Dreyer that the young woman had the legal right to leave against her father’s will She charged that her father was us- ing a fortune inherited by her from her mother for his private enterprises. She wae persuaded to algn checks for household expenses, she said. When she persisted in asking for an ac- he made an affidavit saying feeble-minded and got Justice Dreyer to appoint two Port Jefferson physicians as commisstoners tn lunacy to examine her, They found her per- fectly sane and ao reported to Justice Dreyer. District Attorney Greene and the Justice told De Teixeira this after- noon that unless he made an account- ing to hig daughter at once his re- fusal to do so in connection with his lunacy proceeding might be made the basis of a Grand aMdavit in the Jury action against him De Teixeira insists that his daugh- ter is under the influence of persons in New York who seck her fortune. His daughter Caroline, to whom Georgiana says she was forced to give & power of attorney while she was kept a close prisoner in her home, sides with the father. Though his affaires have been in the newspapers but little since 1899, the North Shore of Long Island has in that time put together a queer chron- iclo of the doings of the Brazilian. Soon after the smash of his real es- tate echemes in New York, having freed himself by a Dakota divorce from his second wife, Carmen Do- mingo Lorens, he went to Setauket and married Miss Leona Hand, a beautiful and cultured girl, whose parents were in the humblest cir- cumstances, He took the tiny Hand cottage and FATHER 'HAMMERSTEIN NOW OPEN TO CLAIMS OF $140,000 Receivership Vacated by Couft, Oscar Faces Suits of Various Creditors. The estate of Oscar Hammersiain was to- thrown open to his ored- ttora to levy upe ments long out it and satiaty judg- nding agatnat the impresario, For nine months the af- fairs of Oscar have ben tied up and he has been judgment-proof by the act last March of Judge Hough in |the United States District Court in appointing Attorney Irving M. Ditten- hoefor as receiver for the theatrical man. To-day, after consultation with Judge Hough United States District Judge Learned Hand vacated the order of the former The receiver was appointed in the eauity suit brought by the American Seating Company which had a claim of more than $6,000, The profession Wis made that the purpose was to conserve the property of Hammer- stein, ‘The Court declared that 1 matter what the moti been in having the receiver appoint ed the effect was to protect the de- fendant from his erditors, The motion to vacate the receiver: ship order was made on behalf of ite Le BF. Coudert, who demands ecution on a judgment agai The reciver is dir might have impresario, liabilities of H ing against him and the atanding unsecured claims for a simi lar amount, The theatrical man holds $500,000 of teh eapital stock of the Manhattan Opera Company, owning the Manhat- tan Opera House, on which there is 4 mortgage for $360,000, Hammer- stein also owns the Laxington Opera Houre on which there in a mortgage ot $800,000, TO GO TO TRENCHES FOR ENO WILL DEPOSITION » are out- Late Banker’s Yalet Fighting in France; Court to Name Com- missioner to See Him. Following the disoovery of a new will made by the late Amos F. Eno, contestants of the will offered. for probate to-day took prompt action in the Surrogate’s Court to obtain the deposition of Edmund Bigant, for many years valet and personal at- tendant of Mr. Eno, Bigaut is now a soldier of France, stationed at Rodez, and when attor- neya for Mra, Florence C, Graves, a niece and contestant, told Surrogatn Cohalan that the former valet was in grave danger and lable to be killed at any moment, he signed an order directing the appointment of a court commissioner In France to take the deposition. Up to within three months of her uncle's death, on Oct. 24, 1916, Bigaut was constantly in the company of Mr. Eno and had an intimate knowl- edge of his habits and physical and mental condition at the time the will was made. Without the soldier's testimony attorneys told the Court, it might be impossible to prove the con- testant’s case, Ca DR. RAINFORTH GETS CITY APPOINTMENT Named Physician of Street Cleaning Department; Three Medical Ex- aminers Also Appointed Commissioner J nn T. Fetherston had it moved to a fine building slte}of the Street Cleaning Department on which he had taken an option.|announced to-day that he had He declared ho meant to make the|lected Dy Httle old house the heart of the t ; ; new position of physician to the grandest mansion in A merica It b artment. Dr. Rainforth for two sounded good to Setauket. So did) years has been connected with the his announcement that he was to|Vresbyterian Hospital make Setauket and Port Jefferson the] ‘The salary is $4,000, greatest brick-market in the world. | ietherston announe ; ‘Teixeira, when he came to thiscoun-|ment of three medical examiners of try with his mother-in-law and two the departm 58. ¢ ‘ of $1,800. little girls in 186, did not deny that ]of $1800. 7 Parte auth he had estates worth one or twolgireet, Dr, Leroy J. Smith of No. 129 hundreds of millions of dollars. He fitted up a gaudy “palace” at No, $18 West End Avenue in which he gave what he called a way In which a Portuguese nobleman entertains, He also had place at Bound Brook, N. & country J, where there were parties more conspicuous for flashiness than distinction, A loss, estimated by cold-blooded real estate tors who had dealings with him than $32,000, wiped him out Credentials as a ¢ oper mmissioner to the Pan-American Exposition at Buffalo were Issued to him and he male a brief display of extravagance there which was a weak former eftort Nevertheless those ideas about je $100,000,000 Brazilian estate sull recur to bim. He was explaining to an impatient Long Isiauder just summer that he was ab ibarrassed Hnancially be caaise t ward of Brazilian prop erties had defaulted with the year’ receipts, $300,000. Of course, you're going after him, said the dazed Long Islander exhibition of the reflection of his | and Dr Bridge Went | Sixty-ninth Russell P. Morrison Street, Brooklyn, } the Gattle collection. OWNERS INDICTED FOR 3. DIAMOND FACTORY DEATHS Manslaughter Charges Are Found by Kings County Grand Jury. Four indictments charging man slaughter in the first degree and sec~ ond degree were found to-day by the Kings County Grand Jury in connee- tion with the fire at the plant of the Diamond Candy Company, No, 286 North Sixth Street, Willlamsburgh, on Nov. 6, in which twelve persons lost thelr Ives, Those identified are Cella TDia- mond, owner of the building; Edward L. Diamond, maanger of the candy factory, and Samuel Barkin and Samuel Simon, agents in charge of the factory of the Essex Waist Com- pany, which was in the Diamond building. Employees of both con- cerns were killed tn the fire. The three victims mentioned in the indictments—frene Tol Abraham Waltk and Rose Goldman. The Diamonds and Barkin and Simon are specifically accused of causing the deaths of these three by making « rule that a certain stair- way door between the third and fourth floors be kept locked, The four persona indicted were ar- raigned before County Judge Lewis at names of are noon, They entered pleas of not guilty and were held for trial in $10,000 bail eacl Bonds they had furnished when held for the Grand Jury by the Cor- oner's Jury were continued. District Attorney Cropsey will hurry the case to trial FINDS MISSING MOTHER IS IN POTTER'S FIELD Left Son's Home Nineteen Months Ago Rather Than Become Burden on Him. A search for his missing mother that inci iasied intermittentiy tor nineteen months, ended to-day when Jobn F, Kieran, President of ¢he Manhattan Wire and Tron Works, at No, 323 East Twenty-ninth Street, identified « photograpi in the Bu- reau of Unidentified Dead in Brook- lyn as hers, He learned that while he sought her, hi mother, Mra, Sarah Kieran, had lain,for @ year and @ half in a grave in the Potter's rae. rs, Kieran disappeared two weoks after Kieran married, June 1, 1914. She had lived with her son up to that time, On bis marriage, sho declared she would not remain de- pendent upon him and secretly left his home at No, 673 Kosciusko Street, Brooklyn. Kieran and his wife searched Brooklyn and Manhattan for his mother in vain, They finally decided sho was safe and would make her whereabouts known to them in due time. But when more than a yeur had passed ond no word came from Kieran decided to resume hi h, bolleving ilineas must have ‘allen he Hy hunting through old police records, Kieran learned that a woman whose description corresponded to his mother’s had been found unconscious on the street in front of No. 74. Met- itan Avenue, Brooklyn, July 26, She had been removed to st | 1914 Catherine's Hospital, where she died Wthout regaining consciousness. Mrs, Kieran’s body will be immedi itely exhumed, given another funeral and reburied in the Kieran family t beside her husband tn Calvary He life was insured for —_ Suddenly BATON ROUGE, La, Dee, $0.—Gov vernor of Minnexota D ‘Trip, WS. Hammond of Minnesota died 8 nly early to-day at Clinton, ‘ from accord. i Mesmage LEeOO "O30 FIFTHAVE| Je A NEW YEAR'S SUGGESTION Invest your Money Gift in some jewel from It will possess enduring value, and serve daily as a graceful reminder of the occasion. Opperite Si. Patrick's Cathedral no,” said the Marquis, smiling indulgently. “What ts $800,000? Tt ts not worth the annoyance and tne » toriety." , fF Viret Duteh nin Heaches a al BERLIN, Dec, 10 (hy wireless te [el] Sayvill The first of the h | traina purchased for the Cen‘ral el Oe TET OL enocouNE AL one plore the war she barn [ee Cc BLOC dviegates on the train were welcomed el SOPIECES 25¢ Dy crowds. | On reaching this city they were ‘al received by @ representat Empress, many prominent phystelan. and Red Cross workers and a large Number of other persons { fve of the a J O.AUERBACH&SONS NEW YORK fsfofelrlolal laine ielolele isle ley a ane Ae « a] fh re | :