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BERN BLEED » WILSON FEARED T BREAK RELATIONS Expected Him to Hold Back to Ms ’ ‘ ’ Avert Uprising by Ger- mans in U. S, OFFICIALS DOWNCAST. Now Claim to Be Convinced t That America Wants War. “United Press Staff Correspondent swith Ambassador Gerard's Party.) © .¢, BERNE, Switzerland, Feb. 13.—Ber- Mm was astonished, officials and the “public alike, when President Wilson ‘broke relations with Germany. That ‘astonishment came because officials #rAd recently been assured by German- ‘Americans in the United States that ‘Wilson would not sever relations “fear of a German- “Phe same ‘belief was held by the Ger- man public. ‘When the American Embassy train left Berlin the Impertal Chancellor, von Bethmann Hollweg, wasadmitted- ly downcast over the situation and believed America wanted war with Germany. It was noticeable also when Foreign Secretary Zimmermann re- ceived the American correspondents shortly before thetr departure he ‘was plainly very nervous. He likewise insisted ‘Wilson wants ‘ war” and denied that Germany made ‘any irrevocable promises in the Sus- ‘sex note. ‘The submarine policy which forced the break between the United States and Germany dates back to Novem- ber. * | Writing now fro mneutral Swiss @oil, it is possible for the first time i SAYS HOT WATER WASHES POISONS | | | | Il ‘Bveryone should drink hot water) with phosphate In It, before breakfast. feel as fine as the proverbial | fiddle, we must keep the liver washed clean, almost every morning, to f vent its sponge 8 from clo, ing with indigestible material, sour ile and poisonous toxins, says a noted Ape f you get headaches, it's your liver. If you catch cold easily, it's your liver. ‘Ifyou wake up with a bad taste, furred tongue, nasty breath, or stom- ach becomes rancid, it's your liver ‘Sallow skin, muddy complexion, ‘watery eyes all denote liver unclean! tness. “Your liver is the most impor- ‘tant, also the most abused and neg- lected, organ of the body. Few know its function or how to release the dammed-up body waste, bile and tox ‘ins, Most folks resort to violent calo mel, which is a dangerous, salivating ‘ehemical which can only be used oc teasionally because it ithe tissues, also attacks the hones, 4 Every man or woman, sick twell, should drink each morning | tfore breakfast a glass of hot water fwith a teaspoonful of lmestone phos- tphate in it, to wash from the liver and els the previous day's indigestible material, the poisons, s bile and toxins; ‘thus cleansing, sw: and freshening the entire alimentary ,canal before putting more food into the stomach, Limestone phosphate does not re- strict the diet like calomel, because it cannot salivate, for it is harmless and ‘ou can eat anything afterwards, It is inexpensive and almost tasteless, nd any pharmacist will sell you a warter pound, which is sufficient for demonstration of how hot water and Hmestone phosphate cleans, stimulates fand freshens the liver, keeping you feeling fit day in and day out,—Advt, POLICEMEN ‘LETTER CARRIERS DRIVERS ‘and other workers who mast have enduring strength, take SCOTTS EMULSION to build up and keep up their thealth. Surely it will do as much for you, but insist on SCOTT'S. ‘Scott & Bowne, Bloomfield, N. J. lols = or —se GULDENS Mustard Ready to Use American uprising®| ‘" of Colonies Solf and the Impertal for ‘Treagurer, Count von Roedern, known to be opposed to inciting Aryerican intervention, 2 ‘The speech made by Imperial Chan- cellor von Bethmann Hollweg in the Reichsta® early in where FROM THE LIVER accumulates in| ening | to tell the developments which led Germany to her decision of relentless sea war, Determination to use the submarine in unlimited warfare dates back to November, It was thon that Ger- many’s internal affairs were at the Breatest crisis of the war, The clalists warned the Kaiser. unless he moved immediately for peace, Dr. Philip Scheidemann (Socialist leader jin the Reichstag) ana other Socialist leaders would head a militant move- ment to bring about peace, This move came at a time when the German people were destitute and despondent. Simultaneously the powerful con- servative land owners, controlling the food supply, andithe equally powerful group of industrial leaders, control- ling the munition mapufactures, told the Government the dnly way to end jthe war was by unlimited submarine ; Warfare. Theso interests have always been anti-American, They succeed ed in convincing’ Quartermaster Gen eral von Ludendorff. Meanwhile the National Liberals, who would welcome war with Amer- Jea, won over Foreign Secretary Zim- mermann to the submarine policy, Finally, the Kaiser's day cua- ference at German Groat Headquar- ters, Jan. 27, did include in its conferees such officials as Minister of Interior von Helfferich, Mini. Decembyr anngunced peace over over t Socialists to the any course the Chancellor mi, vocate. In the same way, the Kaiser's sub- marine blockade won o' the food producers and the group of industrial lea ‘3 to a continuance of hostilities. The Government's peace proposal united the German people. They lieve firmly they their own defens' “STRIKE OF GOAL PASSERS | AGAIN DELAYS ESPAGNE must fight on in Liner With 200 Passengers and Cargo of Munitions to Be Con- | voyed by British Warships. A strike of coal passers sed another delay to-day in the sailing| of the French liner Espagne, sche- | duled to start for Bordeaux at 10 o'clock this morning, following, ‘the postponement of Sunday. Ordinarily the coal passe 40 cents an hour. Because of the intense cold yesterday the fifty men at work were given 60 cents an hour, They remained on duty vntil 10 Pe receive 4 Modern Close-Embrace Dance Denounced By a Billy Sunday Advance Trail Blazer Good as Golf, Even Croquet. The very last time I ¢ step—and my partner tr foot—my cons lence begs asi o'clock last night, when, following an hour's rest, they failed to come bach to the ship, It was not until early this morning that the¥ were rounded up and induced to finish the job at the rate of a dollar an hour. ‘The Espagne, which is now si duled to sail chis afternoon, 77-millimetre gun on her ste with her 200 passengers, a cargo of munitions and a large consignment o math In shipp € les it is un stood she is n the Cedric of the White Star Line, which sailed yeste day, the two vessels to be convoyed to Europe by British warship: pesabtbhe et abe AIRPLANES DROP. BOMBS AT FOUR RUSSIAN POINTS Alexandrov Railway and Station the Targets—Cazar's Fly Shell Airdrome. Feb. 13 avi- 1 bombs on the enemy's tOGRAD, ators dropp adrdrome in the villug north of Narocz Lak War Office gtatement, nemy alrplhines on Pogoreltsy | Alexandroy Railway, of Luci and in the region south of Galiteh | “Northeast of Fokshant one of the Freneh aviators engaged in comb; n enemy machine, which descende rapidly, apparently having been dam- faged.”" and Drass | ‘ ¢ for Inaugural, | WASHINGTON, Feb. 13.—There will be plenty of gold braid, brass buttons and flashing uniforms at President Wil- son's second inaugural parade afte Despite the fact that most of t m the Mexican bord t, Grand M W army and b. Our of Kobyinik Says to-day's dropped Station, thi bombs on —_ oo Gold is hit dered that gents pre | | Kateer Visits Emperor Chartes, | VIENNA, Feb, 13.—Emperor William |has arrived here on @ visit to Emperor Charles, Aspirin is made by only one company. To get the genuine Bayer‘Tablets of e Aspirin see that every package and every tablet bears “The Bayer Cross— Your Guarantee of Purity The trad 9 guarant in these be quite ail right But it was not, just th the Reverend Joseph Calvary Baptist preached last Sunday on of the Dane ern dancing declares is no Use going to the Bible fc fication of it, bec te-mark “Aspirin” (Reg. U.S. Pi that themonoaceticacidester of tabteth is of the reliable Boyer ———_- —_-——— Familiarities of Waltz and One-Step Make Them Morally Bad, Says Rev. Joseph W. Kemp, and as Exercise They Are Failures, Not Nearly So By Nixola Greeley-Smith, is sinful and t THe TWO STEP j “OMIT THE MUSIC 4nd DANCING WOULD Nor BE conpaneD For A M@MENT" Tennis or danced a one- rainped on my an ® hurt mey| t always does on such occasions, ) tM 1 thoyght about Miriam, sis- _ ss ter of Mose , reli . sae ly minuet of the seventeenth century|cent we have demoralization and de- _" “saron, | dancing | and the embrace and intertwining of oration leading to the debauchery * “A on the banks of/ the bodies of the ‘round’ dance of to-| cf both sexe f the Red Sea, and| day. ‘The decline can easily be traced] “Again, the modern dance stands « } Was reassured, If| through recent years through the/condemned by the laws of health. r Miri ance, 1| Winuet, through the ‘square’ dance,|'The dance never was intended as a K , Mirlam danced, 1) through the waltz and now ‘two-| promoter of health, and viewed fd Sn 4 Said to myself,| step,’ which has been characterized|an exercise tt violates the noundest s s n't|recently as ‘a hideous: and rowdy|hystenic laws, It seeks the cove Rites cnansr-oant bs tle 7 fee shuttle,’ J ihe night and thore hours when vital- ity Is at its lowest. he foundation of much domestic ‘Many people defend dancing from the Bible, but this betrays a degree of ne samo, For} ignorance and stupidity bordering on} Misery and domestic crime 1s ae W. Kemp of] sacrilege. No instances of dancing|able to the ballroom. The track of : Bi who} 4% found in the Bible in which two] the ballroom is: strew_ wit! me Church, — Whol sexes unite in the exercises elthor in| Of character and lives. I ee the n “The Ethics or out of worship or as an amuse-| tons are engen Feecatlon ant that all mod- ment dance its peculiar fascination Ont there “hiitle can be said for the vatue| When heart beats against heart one I. of Gancing as an exercise,” Dr, Kemp| hand is held in hand there In (hat Justi- continued, “It is gering pleasure in which iy ognized on every » not spe 4 that sohools of physical culture eh hai though you words which lips da ‘ sue hom’ : far surpass the schotti: ithe| “Phe statisties from reseu search the good book from cover to chottische and the Poi hs of the we al or this purp , exer. | tell use that seven-tenths cover you will not find in it a single [yit% for Se Mier ChB eee en who go there have fallen through instance in which both sexes unted green, tennis court and golf give pae Caee 18 Ue aed eh Ge in dancing either for worship or for phy non development ry surpassing} cy) 1 und danger of sending thelr amusement | aC LP ealEeO By children ing schools a Is Hr emp, who ts preaching a se] THE “OUTRAGEOUS LIBERTIES"| cur younk peopln wyo aro alsnady, tn vi sermons ga modern sins, 1s he ineshes of this Mgr “naw free rf the way of Billy Sunday in| PERMITTED, themselves from the deadly danger, N ork. A week ago he exhorted] “Dancing masters all over the his congregation in the great gray! country have denounced the license ive Fifty-seventh Street | of present day Cancl-g, It is cone AMERICANS WW: on t y of the Theatre trary to * moral law, No man has institution of sin any moral or soctal Hberties grante OF GERMANY LOST WEIGHT This week he devoted his powers to him wit women on or off th mupelation to the modern round | dauce floor. and surely there is some wipe tee dance, and next Sunday he will ex-/thing radically wrong with any ; a . pound “The Curse of the Ca unusement wherein ethieal princt-| Describe Food Situation There as bie.” From which you may gather| ples so disappear as is the 4 pean -- that if you are looking for at | Acute—People Tired of the ot good old-fashioned heavy. theol told it da necessary for| War but Loyal. you need not search further than! dancing that the gi ? : Calvary Baptist Church. should plice tis right arm gently and | ROTTERDAM, Feb, 13, —~ ‘Two | carefully ut the lady's waist while aay uve reached her THE DEGENERACY OF THE) he tikes the lady's right Mand In hie | Americans hay aren oa DANCE IN 150 YEARS. left, his left arm should be extended the — bre: in diplo E Dp. Kemp was called to New York] and held in « gracetul curve half way |tions between Germany and th m a Scottish parish several years| between the lady's waist and #h BI- United States. One came from Be y and no more God “fearing, ear-| der. The only excuse for such cour Neb ae other aca PRKAOR EO t dominie than he can be found in| &cous libertics is inualc and motion, | the ot! iypeoate ages of Stevenson or Walter} 4nd this, forsoot makes right and|had been in Germany Mitte =m: Nt, Ho Delleven every word he! Proper” what under) other elrewin- (than a yearg and in that time ea preaches, and such is the force of his | #tances would be indignantly resent~ | |) 4. rty pounds in welght. listen to one of his sermons without | Tetons. Omit the music and mo-| Theodore Wurslin, cp ti ihe Bo AR tion and so called soctety would not alca, N. Yo ggid his experience There are two kinds of dances,"| condone the act Siig rece ment | with workingmen tn Berlin showed emp told me yesterday § at ia'¢ e 01 } at the: © tired of the wa Dr, Kemp told me yesterday in his dance floor cannot be ethically right | lm that they were tired Ae wae study ma h mee MS) on it lbut nevertheless determined to he subject we must define. You ask the | ‘Do you consider dancing ow, before we proceed further, if | out : " Lreply, ‘What kind of dane-| ¥@4 have any doubt thatewhat ha The other American ts a New York dance of polite society of | P88 vm the dance floor is wrong,| business man, who sald the food te 1ov ago 18 no more like the) POBder the deseription of the round | uation was very bad in Frankfort. ie | lay than the old stage|##hee 48 It appears to Dr, Kemp and|told harrow stories of the har *| do ke @ 12ecylinder automo. | ten ask yourself, a8 I have asked|ships undergone by the people, who, | ing covers a wide range of | @Yself, how we could possibly have|he said, were utterly weary of the pie ponduct, as ‘transportation | D! » foolish as to have all this tn-|war but entirely devoted to the mili covers various methods of locomotion, | @utty _ B« on around us without] tary leaders ‘ but ther 1 difference, ‘There ts no | BtUNS 'e solitary thrill from] Both these men asserted that tr similarity as to social and physical |! been concentrating all | break between Germany and Am¢ dd between the state- § id thoughts on watch-|had caused no excitement, » my » and keeping my elbow} Ameri in Germany we out of my neighbor's ribs and not let: | Aunt and that no appr ting my Irench heels skid on a newly|sion need be felt for the welfa waxed floor when all the time I might ha led in Bacchanalian bliss y It don’t believe It hearken to Dr. Kemp's descriptios ef dancing, » was once condemned to with n board an ocean lines lwhen t¢ way to escape such iniquity by leaping into the sea. MODERN DANCE A SIGN OF DE. GENERACY IN MAN, those left b AMERICANS IN BERLIN REGISTER INTENTION only wa Bight Decide to Remain in Ger many—Three New Yorker e have netimes been com- pelled to witness on board ship the to Leave. utter abandon of a young, beautiful \ woman to the gleaming eye of her] BERLIN, Feb, 18.—These addition partner. His breath breathing upon|al Americans have registered indi her and his lips well nigh touching fish’ oinge: her forehead, her arm almost around | CAB their fu ae ae ck, face to face they whirl, he| John A, Eckhardt, Union Hil pres to him; yet from this she | remaining; Henry Hasp r doe irink, And we are asked|er and sisters, I or eve that this shameless exhibl- | yu. gy miall : perinatal remaining; Mrs, Walter nan must surely have degeg-| Pintanureh, remaining: Re B. Ne d in tis morals when be can pi folk, Pittsbur remaining; Geor Jmit himself a@ danee in which the] Vntet and Mrs 1 von “ hodtly movements of the dancers at al (armory, Mi Now. ¥ leertain stag 1 as closely logeth ee swit Fred Voeg: as it ble to get and move, The | RUN# ye Tn panel laring of the modern dance 4 pers | TOUT, Unapeeitie: | fectly alarming eae “We k of ‘the ascent of m butlin Senate Passes BIL for Vote #0 lot these dances of the native Prohibtete of the tropics, the Bowerles and the] gppinGcrimLD, Ml, Feb. 1 rhe int. Office) Iga FA ow-down places of Paris are danced | ings oe APN f Salieylicactd 4 es J ruin enate to-day pass ols a rivate paar We calf} proldbiion in the general ele n of bul say instead of elovalion and ag, 1918, a mene EEE EIEN EEEEEEEE THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1917. GERMANS CAPTURE STRONG PONT ON ROUMANAN FRONT Machine Guns,* Much Field Material and 168 Men Taken in Engagement. BERLIN, Feb. 12 (by wireless to Sayville).—Tho capture of a strong point of support south of the Vale Putna road, on the northern end of the Roumanian front, ts repotted In to-day’s statement front army head- quarters, which follows “South of the Valo Putna road our troops took a strongly constructed point of support by storm uring 168 men, three machine guns and much field matertal, Between the Uzul and Putna Valleys there we lively artillery duels and field engag ments at many plac “In the Cerna b statement says, ° yes' y," the “our troops after ef fective artillery preparation attacked the enemy’s hill position east of Par- alovo. They took it by storm, and also several camps behind the front Our losses wero small, two Italian officers and ninety men were made prisoners. We also captured tive ma- chine guns and two min hrowers.” Dense fox limited fighting activity on the wegtern {ro In the Sommé sector an artillery duel revived during tt ening and continued at night, ri i n St. Pierre Vaast Wood and betwer Peronne, Advances of hostile reconnoitring detachments between — Ypi and Arras, the statement sald, fatled, ‘Two attacks were made by the itu slans on the Upper Sereth River, Several battalions we smployed, The statement says the assaults wer repulsed, PARIS, Feb. 13.—"The night was com ratively calm on the entire front,” suys to-day's War Office an nouncement. “A strong German pa trol was dispersed with losses by our BRITISH HEM IN TURKS WEST OF KUT-EL-AMARA Established Across the Tigris Bend, the London War Oflice Announces, LONDON, Feb, 18,--OMelal an- nouncement was made to-day that hoe British forces on the Tigris front have established a line across the ‘Vigvis Bend, west of Kut‘el-Amara, completely hemming in the Turks, The announcement follows “On Saturday the enemy's ridge at Shumran was sh A dl t hit was scored and some enemy shipping was sunk ‘On Sunday the advance on “the ht bank of the Tigris was resumed {and the enemy was driven back to | his last line of trenches in the Dahra Bend, west of Kut. By evening our line Was established across the Bend, from bank to bank, on @ frontage of 00 yards, and the enemy was com- our left.” IN GERMANY SENDS PRICES AWAY UP |Poultry Runs From $1.30 to Many Capable of Recei $1.60 a Pound—Pork and Mutton 50 to 70 Cents, | TERNE, Switzerland, via Parts, Feb, 18.—Americans who arrived here from Germany with Ambassador Ger- ard are congratulating themselves on having escaped further wrestling with Germany's food problem, Butch! ets’ windows, well stocked with as- sorted meats, such as are seen here, an unwonted sight in Berlin Moat is now #0 scarce in the German capital that tt is never hung in win- dows to attract buyers, but is speed- lly distributed without advertising. Customers keep In close touch with | the butcher so as to know when the next meagre supply will be on sale, | Practically all meat is sold on a card entitling each person to half a pound weekly, but dishes mado of kidneys, lungs and other scraps can | bought in restaurants without a! card, Game and poultry are exempt from the card system and command extraordinary prices, The maximum | are be ally active | pletely hemmod in, The distance coy. | sid scores of firemen froses ered in the advance var from 800) 1 e'une trolley rail grooves, froze rapid yards on our right to 2,000 yards on |jy*q thing for a cigarette to do. Thursday you'll know all about prices of pork and mutton range from 50 to 70 cents a pound, but $1 more Is pald at for, despite | Germany's for organization, }much surreptitious dealing prevails, Even German officials, usually mod- els of the strictest obedience to the jlaw, give hungry children the advan tage of a loose Interpretation and do not put awkward questions, back doors he rich of course suffer compara- tively little, They aro still able to | buy high priced poultry or fish, Tur- | keys, geese and chickens are still dis- | pl in poulterers’ windows and | bear label#Junouncing that they can | be purchased at from $1.80 to $1.60 a Cases have even been report- ed where @ fat goose brought more yeu pound. than $30, ‘The poorer people, especially in Berlin, aro undoubtedly suffering fr n hunger as their food is confined | mainly to bread, potatoes, turnips and w grado marmalade, It is generally asserted that in thy country districts the food problem ds less pressing than in the big cities, producers: retaining | Supplies for home consumption, In spite, however, of the fact that food is very scarce one seldom sees ty One® visibly showing marks of underfeeding. Nome elderly persons and some anxious mothers look ema- clated and reduced weight is quit {monerat A. jon QUeNLION aakec When friends meet is: “How many |ponnds have you los Physicians © writing in the medteal journals hat eliildren are now evidently under- nourished, particularly lacking fats, | yet the merry sledding throngs in the parks during tho last month . surgested lack of food, The general verdict ts that the health of the people is better than be- fore the war when overeating had imost awuumned the character of a Jnational besetting sin, Shortcom- are borne cheerfully and the ple are tly disposed to jest over the matter where the pinch Is not too keen. ‘Phe big crowds at the variety shows laugh heartily at topi- turning upon the shortage and tho prevalent tesue of ubstitutes. Men in authority, how- ever, recognize that Germany is con- fronted With a problem of growing | difficulty, ‘The next four months a regarded is ¢ tily critical becau the supply of vegetables, except po- jtatoes and turnips, is prnetically ex- ted. Even sauerkraut cannot be t 4 but is doled out. by uthorities at intervals, ‘The Ber- lin Government posted placards last week announcing that a half pound of sauerkraut was assignable for the week on tho section of the food card op general p > calling ‘ovistons, Voor ex in Poughkeepsie Keep Volunteers Basy in Cota, rovenk N. Y., Feb. 13, Four fires, the most serious of whieh wiped out a large furniture house, oc- curred here to-day, calling Into action the entire volunteér department. ‘The |mercury stood at 12 below zero nd tled up the street aggregatne loss is about r lines. The 6,000, A new ~ SHORTAGE OF FOOD U. $ ‘PUTS WATCH ON S00 AMATEUR RADIO STATIONS. ig Messages From Germany, Says Federal Chief. @ 2. Of clomont of the defensive cam- Paign being prosecuted !n army and navy bureaas in New York and in the Government's offices here is the rigid Inspection of amateur wiréless plants. Such commercial stations as those ate Sayville, L. L, and Tucker- ton, N. J. are, of course, under spe- clal supervision, but it ts the task of discovering and determining the ef- fictency of the amateur stations that comes to Chief L. R. Krumm of tho Bureau of Navigation of the Depart- ment of Commerce. Within the last two weeks his tn- spectors have visited and examined at least twenty such stations, “Ac- cording to Mr. Krumm, there are at least 600 which can receive messages from Germany. In practically every case the plants inspected were not equipped to send gommunications more than a hundred” miles or so, Wut could be attuned to catch messages sent thou- sands of miles di APPALLING LOSS OF LIFE Quick Action Might Have Saved Many, Serious thinkers tell us that war is |not Inevitable, and while we are await- jing developments it might be well to consider a grave and serious menace right here at home. Health Department figures show that Grippe and Pneumonia have played havoc with human life throughout the country since the { of the year; to Such an extent that thousands of deaths have been reported in one week. The following suggestion may save lives. At the first warning of attack, which is usually the stubborn cough or cold on the chest that nothing seems to help, procure from your druggist the cele- brated Johann Hoff's Malt Extract and take a liberal portion, preferably befoce retiring, heated to the steaming point and sweetened with sugar, For this Purpose Hoff's “Plaih’ Malt should be used instead of Hoff's Malt “with Iron.” —Advt, ARE YOUR Nostrils Clogged? _FACTS ABOUT MY LOW FEES When the first cut-rate drug store was opened the other druggists tried to convince the people that the cut- rate drug store sold Infertor drugs, and Warned them against dealing with sueh. 7 und that the drugs the cut-rate druc drug stores that charged It was not long before doing the bull dru eut-rate its and stores cl advertise. t it became 4 to Say al ld about by ple againet Wy things they ond warn, hy me. ‘The pe quickly found that my results. wer Kood #8 the oth Hsts, and that my fees were one-third what the high-priced lists charged. Kreat number of people I trest makes It possible for me to make gmoll profit on iy practice. Tam per fectly, watinfied with this small profit at thin time, when {t takes two. dol lara to serve the purpose of one dollar before the great war began, ARE YOU GOING DEAF? pveclaity ia freeing obwtracted nostra treating deafoone nowes and healing h tubes. T have spent thirty fad yt eat way todo ‘ti 1 ean free “tha nowtriia without ntti: the bones of tlie Rowe loaring thy lp thee important striicturas that we, ted by vature to atrain dist and " air, The case of Mr’ Allen will deo the value of my) method Clogged Nostrils, Dropping in Throat, Deafness and Head Noises Mr, Teobert Allen resides at No. 334 Third Avene, Now York, When he flirt. consulted me hes said: "My nostrils have been clogged for twént I got id breathe Through ‘my note could |e cop a little. while for iy Dostrila would my wena ¢ of ‘drop back atarrhal 1 visit my office “Ie will gout ett nation and advice, DR. J. C. McCOY g—220 West 42d St. (A Few Doors West of Broadway.) Houry— Mooday and, Brblay, 2 To 8 ‘Thunlay aud Ber my nothing 1 a Chesterfield nrday, 0, Sumlay, 10 ASM. | 12" poo, (0 fost or fonnd articles ade Sertised In The World will be Usted at The World's Informae Bureau, Pullizer Building Arcade, Park Rows World's Uptown Office, northwest core for GSth St. amd Broad World’ Harlem = Of I Went 125th Sty and Worlds Brooklyn Office, 204 Washinge & Dt gi Bo ot te,