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DTH DEAD BY GAS, TINY GIRLS FOUND ~INMOTHER' ARMS 4 Sisters Discover Bodies of Mrs Esther Wallach and Daugh- ter in Rooming House. Not until they broke In the door of her room on the top floor of the lodg- ing house at No. 332 East Fourteenth Street to-day and found her with a beautiful little girl clasped to her Breast, both dead from gas that filled # Me place, did the landlady and other boarders learn the identity of the quiet Woman whose exclusiveness had ¢aused so much speculation during the , five weeks she had been in the house Her preparations for suicide had been complete. At sight of her and the child, two women who had been waiting at the threshold of the room screamed that She was their sister, Mrs. Esther Wal- lach and that the child was Bertha, her seven-year-old daughter. Almost immediately the two women became hysterical, throwing themselves on the Ifeless forms and begging the dead to © speak to them. ‘The police learned the two women} were Misses Kate Ginsberg of No. 1720 Bathgate Avenue and Ann Ginsberg of No. 1953 Second Avenue, but the Women were too overcome to offer any explanation of their sister's act “L tald you she'd do it,” they screamed almost in unison. Finally Kate Ginsberg's condition be- | came such that she was removed to Bellevue Hospital. Her sister was cared for by other boarders in the house. Mrs. Zawar, proprietress of the house, as well as the other o a pants, were surprised on finding t child with her mother. Bertha had not been to the house before and their only explanation was that the child had been smuggled into the room last night. The dead woman left three sealed letters, one addressed to her fi in-law, 8, Wallach, No. 780 East On Hundred and Fiftieth Strect; one to her husband, W. Wallach, which was unaddressed, and one to the “City Undertaker.” The spaces under the door and about the win- dow had been stuffed with cloth and the gas was pouring from a jet just above the bed where the bodies were found. The tragedy was discovered when the sisters asked if a Mrs, Wallach was stopping at the house, It ix believed Mrs. Wallach wrote a letter which brought her sisters to the place, The father-in-law said Mrs, Wal- lach's husband was studying medi- cine at the University of Missouri Nine cents wus found on the body of Mrs. W. by working in an east side waist fac- to NEW POSTMASTER ON JOB ATSA.M. STARTLES FORCE Consternation When Patten Arvives Early—Dinner for Him and W. H. Edwards - Thomas G. Patten, newly appointed postmaster of New York, took pc sion of his office this morning. The new Postmaster got on the job so early to-day that there was con- sterpation among the old employee Nobody expected him to show up be- fore 10 or 11 o'clock, so when Mr Vatten arrived at § there was no one on hand to receive him A subscription dinner is to be given at the Andiron Club, No, 1 Seventy-sec West ay tre THE. EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, MARCH 20, 1917. “Our Bodies Are New at Accompanied by the twin angels of Hope and Cynicism, 1 had tracked Mr. Gaze to the Hotel question him as to the “Science and Practice of E which he has lectured all over Am- ertea, On the principle of the antique tress who tells other women how to preserve their beauty when she has YOUR FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH is sia “Have you succeeded where Ponce|> “On. ne de Leon failed?” I began. “Have youl once t “Ww isn't in Florida, ni men and women may not find. death. The fountain of youth, like the |WE CIE BECAUSE WE HAVE GOT kingdom of heaven"”—“and all women know the two are synon- “Science and religion are reaching ymou lach, who supported herself in you. age is a disease. We Only we forg bodies are so many years old, On| “He that li and we peatedly of that tru(h, Also, we|in the Bible. The should tr better than the old, to bulld happy cells. “One reason why we because the thought of age, thought of death, haunts us. It's al most Impossible to get away from| very few old men in this city,” that thou azo I lectured at a New Thou meeting in a downtoy The Fountau oF Yourn it wer FLonipA— Seventy,”’ Says Harry pa Gaze, Who Hopes to Live Forever— “New Yorkers Age Because of Tendency to Settle Down’’—Learn “Classic Dances and Become Vegetarians.”’ | Marguerite Mooers Marshall. “Growing old is a disease. Dying is an unnecessary habit. Why do either?” The blond dis- | coverer and! Prophet of Life Culture, Harry Gaze, gazed at me blandly, tri- umphantly. a am ashamed of this infantile pun, but I doubt- less cn live it down it I am to live forever) recom wantato keep young?’ t aaked “First, there is the physical effort,” he replied briskly. “I ad- vise the classic dances and other rhythmical exercises for persons . who want to retain their youth. ernal Youth,” about) Aigo, it is wise for them tq be- come vegetarians, even, far as Possible, fruitarians, Mertally, men and women should resist the suagestion of old ane, even of maturity. They should hold to Sndicott, to irreparably lost her own, I expected} the thought of our ever-devel- find Mr. Gaze a kindly old gen oping youth, and should not al- tleman with a cane and plenty of| tow themselves to be talked or crows’ feet. 1 wi pointed, I'm not going to t Just how old he is, but he has been lecturing for sixteen years and he! selves as machin doesn't look a day over twenty-seven. go just so long. happily disap-| laughed away from any pleasant you} pastime of youth. Also, they ould stop thinking of them- wound up to possesses a clear, unwrinkled “They should feel that they are ex- |skin, thick yellow hair, unfaded blue] pressions of'—— eyes and a pleasing air of broad- shouldered vigor. Also he owns what |I have never discovered in any other} infinite ovr cultist—a perfectly good little senss| which the of humor, [ suspect this has done its| they should remember that, the share in keeping him from the sere] RY Marts of infinity, | If T ¢ and yellow. rpetual motion,” “8.” ae smiled, 1 suggested. ‘or of life, with an an of life around them on may draw, Spiritually, are mpare myself with another individual, | may feel old. If 1 compare myself with ail ation I seem supremely young.” “But how long can this sort of thing WITHIN YOURSELF. go on?” I inquired curiously. “Don't you belleve that we myst A voit pas la ‘necessite,” was calm French reply to the really found the fountain of eternal) Pie# “a man must live.’ Mr. Gaze soberly declares that he does not see the necessity for dying. More, hb believe so,” he smiled. Doints out that in the recent book, “The true fountain of youth | “How To Live.” published by the Lite I ien't in Califor- | conservative physicians, it is admitted sn’t in any place which all |that there is no necessary cause of INTO THE HABIT OF DYING. same conclusion ase can be ¢ he summed up. quered, and old simply have got 1 interrupted—"is with- | - “- ips I may make myself more habit of dying. We are not x sontinueds Meet compelled to die, any more than we clea he continued, it point are compelled to grow old. physical fa ntly renewing themselves, con- | altogether consoling,” I remarked. he ous parte, | Have no designs onthe life of Kaiser thelr various parts.) \Vithelm, but I should be in despair if that. We think, when !y idn't think he were going to die some tre forty, fifty, enty, that our | ume," uy es by the sword shall perish by the sword," Mr. Gaze quoted sententiously, “and that is a coldly scientific statement even if it is found ame force that * youth will blot ‘ary, our bodies are new, should remind ourselves re- he new bodies | Preserves and prolor out und rable lif Just here it occurred to me that the conversation was tting beyond ow old is cven armed neutrality, so | sald has- fe thia tt "Do you tind many old people in ke the | New York?" “There are no old women and to make 1 ht, Why, just bout a year! smiled Mr. Gaze. “It is becoming t| impossible to tell the grand- mother from the granddaughter. | Women of all ages who adopt the evening to aster Patten and jyusic was contributed, and after I| short-skirted, youthful modes of William H, Edwards, recently ap- yadefinished my talk on eternal) the moment are following the jointed Collector of Internal Revenu ith" fairly chuckled Mr. Gaze, “al tfv@ philosophy of eternal youth. ta members of this club.” The 1 t The reason Why many women baad Rt saul old gentloman with a plecolo seem younger than men of th ainn committee is headed by ex tood up and began to play, ‘Darling, same number of birthdays is be- Justice Morgan J, O'Brien, Members y 4: Growing Old.” | cause there is an individual and «f the club are at liberty to invite tviends who are not members oe Wilson Playing Golf. IINGTON, March 20.—The Pres- w foent's nproved to-day that his physician, Admiral Cary T. Grayson, permitted econd golf game in two du r President went to links before 8.20. Bayer Tablets Aspirin It was then that I convictec Gaze of a sense of humor, and that L| guard against is the tendency te i gift HERE'S THE WAY TO ATTAIN grave is the wat condition was so much further Mr.| Social taboo on feminine old age. The thing New Yorkers must decided to appeal to the practical] ‘settle down into middle sense which usually accompanies this | Don't ever settle down! As som one has cleverly said, the only difference between a rut and length and breadth IMMORTALITY has ti acca Chet Vou Abe aman “What specific methods do you/|to liv yever and be forever youns If T sald that 1s ribly egotistical “Put it this wa id sound hor- rried Mr. Gaze, do believe that There is But One | ">": oftred the in Genuine Aspirin |}: Tg aE a the im Counterfeits and substi- FS > be ineffecti and even harmful, Refuse (ea (TALIANS AND AUSTRIANS them. Protect yourself by saree Re IN MANY AIR FIGHTS Tablets of Aspirin. ; Ron Too, Reports Dro The genuine have “The Bomb Several Important Bayer Cross” on every ‘ package and on every } tablet. ROME, M 20.—Reetpr ui “The Bayer Cross . . plane attacks by Austrians and Ital of —Your Guarantee fans are reported in an official state of Parity” nt 189 4 by the War Office m text of t Pocket Boxes of 12, Bottles ‘ ‘Our a raid of 24 and Bottles of 100 BY on Pola ' ‘The trade-mark “Aspirin” (R. arsenal enemy airplanes, ¢s U.S Pat. Office) 13 a guarantee f corted by deatro attacked ou that the mononoeticacidester of machines, bat were driven off sallovtionaid Rime ue ee f French airplanes which were sup- Sporting ue "On Marolg 19, shortly hefore dawn, enemy seapianes hombaried Grado and ¢ Via ery to east o¢ end to the man or woman who | |cupled by us. There were no victims | done was insignifi- tely afterward a squad- uplanes bombarded ron of our # hines returned safely —___>—— $10,000,000 CONT FOR SHELLS FOR U. S. NAVY e TmatGily the Cossacks joined!*t the retrial of Rae Taner, who is the crowd, and the revolution wa RAGT LET Company Takes | practically over. | itatea Dinvet Couse th am an ge Moscow were only four, It was the| States District Court, | Huge yy ori ae From Governor who held out the longest,| “You say Miss Tanger didn't know overnment. Mass, March 20.—Contracts C#pitulated. for $10,000,000 worth of shells for the United States navy have been award. the last resisting Russian, There are | mistak difficult problems ahead, but the faith| “Yes, | The witness said Miss Tanzer had| going in after a drink. He also was ed to the General Blectric Company. The General Electric Company on of the people is still strong. Saturday completed the last of a $15,- 00,000 munition order for Russia and ™onized tn the Orthodox Churches | that he wasn’t others of the Allied nations. suid to-day the shells for the United States will be shipped to the du Pont It was Inspectors Find No U. S. Stolen—Think Act a Protest by ‘The Russians are Men in Crew. ers will of the Emperor, Letters wth, was at Heart a real Russlan,| Miss Sadie Rosenberg, Mr. Splelborg ; norally certain of| stenographer, testified about the mak-| past 1 o'clock, or just about twelve The| ing of the alleged recantation. ch had” long centred| | Harold Spielberg testified that when | dictments for robbery in the first de- : ‘ Against her makes all the more re-| Miss Tanzer visited his home she In-| gree against all three men ons ati et bes ve hae gerrer setkable her present personal sa¢ety| slated she had been mistaken tn her ment who investigated the opening of at the hands of revolutionary troops, | identification of James W. ome. ate killing of the monk Raspatin| He suid he told hee thab if sho were NEW YORK TRAIN HELD UP. | liner Saxonia on her arrival here yes. was an action of the noblest families| honestly mistaken nothing would b as a protest against the existing cor-| happen to her. Armed ruption at court. Rasputin was only Se . & neurasthenic mystic, but people BUFFALO some of the crew who had protested believed the worst, It {s certain SANK MORE SHIPS IN MONTH ainst having to load and unload tho| that if the dynasty ts lost, the York Central fast freight at Athol bags of mail which the ship car- |™anoffs can thank the plans of the THAN BRITAIN BUILT IN 1916 Springs, twenty-two miles from here, | the Post Office in- | VPres* __ drove the crew away at the point of Extension Institute and sponsored by | twenty-six mail bags on the Cunard terday have concluded that the b were not opened by thieves, but by at our bodies are| “I'm not sure that your philosophy is spectors have been eble to ascertain, no mail was stolen, The position of the bags, the man. ner in which they were ripped open and the fact that no effort was made to open valuable registered pack: indicated, in the view of the inspect- lors, that those who opened the bags | were Inspired by anger. Government mail at interfered consular last night Inspectors Jacobs and|f arme | Vicks remained on hoard th |questioning the crew “TS LONG W Warning that yme when the Germans from Bapaume t eville urged employ amalgamation and of thelr resources #0 that be sent to the front. ALLIES SA rs to con VING DAYLIGHT. Ahead and mhavded AMSTERDAM Frankfort-on-the-Main one of which eligi ‘Growing Old Is a Disease; Why Do It? BLAME |§ PLACED True Fountain of Youth Is Within You,’ Declares Prophet of Life Culture German Ministers the Masses Hated. in Now Yo PETROC traditions have disappeared, reappeared, The common belief abroad its new freedom, only bloodshed attendant upon casualties were leas than 3,000, E where the change was simply cepted without resistanc near Me ne alin end Erencn Spectators soon gathered, Cossacks shed out from the tnclosed city the | within the Kremlin. Unmoved, ON EMPRESS FOR Courriaht, 117. Wy The Lege Eublishing Oo, were Ralph Della Paolo, a man RAD, March 20.—Russlan The new order of things ts accepted calm- ly, Dally life has become normal once more, The newspapers have that | [Russians are held together by the Imperial {dea of the divine right of Kings is shown to be obviously ab-|' surd in the light of the collectea |‘? Reno manner in which the country faces she could have her eight-year-old Proot of the general understanding that this revolution was to be a com-| she was interrupted by Randolph M. gold watch and a Masonic emblem. plete rising of the entire country in| Newman, attorney for Wetmore, who found in the fact that practically the| {sisted that Miss Gross was going the}the jury against Wetmore. That Nothing was taken from Volke' Process of overturning the old order | question it was hinted was in Petrograd. Here the total | diffe |how the revolution was carried out |in Moscow, starting on Tuesday noon after it had been accomplished here A hundred students marched into the ; Red Square of terrible tame in front | Mrs. Spielberg Says Miss Tanzer he/of the Kremlin, where @ thousand The casualties WETMORE DIVORCE HALTS AS SENSATION IS wren THREE CAPTURED | Into Lawyer's Life. | wealthy lawyer, against Jeannette G. Wetmore came to an abrupt end to- She Retained in Power Pro-|4ay when Supreme Court Justice Daring Holdup in Bronx Newburger withdrew a juror and de- anit clared ® mistrial just as the case! Saloon—Lone Policeman promised sensational developments. | . ‘ ‘The three corespondents mentioned Averts Flight in Auto. named Hotchkiss and Ruby Weller, A taxtesb driven by a negro A shoe merchant and theatre ticket "topped at the saloon on the south dealer east corner of One Hundred and After Justice Newburger ordered Stxtythird Street and Third Ave- the charges dismissed as to Della 8U¢ three blocks from the Morri- Paolo and Hotchkiss, Nathan Burkan, "8914 police station, early to-day counsel for Mra, Wetmore, called her &Nd its five passengers went inside, sister, Misa Juila Gross, She wae Willian Volker, the proprietor, wan asked if Mra, Wetmore had not tried WIKing to two friends Two of the hgh i ets drew rev a toreed pa. sd pubta ard eee ee rang Volker and his friends into the wash- nd ee a divorcee, provid room. wnt, One man covered them with a re Phere was something in Mr, Wet. Yolver while another went through Included in three dollars in eiiver into a question that would prejudice W&# & new 50-cent piece, marked rerned racial friends. ces between Wetmore and his Meantime, the other thre Wife, A colloquy ensued—which ended gon the cash» her ee pin Mi in the « laring & mistrial Tom) the Caen register, The Sey aeons warned thelr victim he would be “ ” killed if'he made any noise, and hur- An American eye-witnems recounts | JAS, W, OSBORNE “AGED red out, There have been several similar! robberies in the Hronx recently, and Y A E Policoman Wilkeaman of the Morri- sania station became suspicious when ae he saw the men running for the t the of which had *kept going. He drew his revolve xi Then That He Wasn't leaving. While he was rapping for Mrs. Rebecca Spielberg, wife of At-|th® other aide of the taxl and es twenty- ant Chanler, attorney for the defense two No. 112 Street, and John ¢ No. 462 Hast |charged with perjury, before Judge) ‘The police s in| Van Fleet and jury {n the United) watch and tw floor of nswering the hty-elghth Street they fo » and mone Iption of taken from Volker, including but finding he had no authority, soon| You as Mrs. Spielberg, but that she| marked 50-cent piece, and the Ma- yesterd imp tem of all references to ul part of the revolution, wishes to. Everything in the situation points| house was because she realized her! tween 2 and 6 o'clock to-day burg- to ‘the’ belie that the Ginprece eras! mistake and didn't dare to go tell “the | lars had taken twenty-four bottles RIPPED OPEN FOR SPIT responsible for retaining in power, Slade boys,” after letting them proceed | of champagne, 1,000 cigarettes and ' Sturmer, Protopopoff and others who| 0 far. were in popular disfa raga’ the disaffection of the Empress, feeling whi “8 a |HOLEAND WILL ADMIT $ ever, Is Still Prob- lematical. ment officls the tt 7 ny Until Holland's att thelr equivalents are barred |Terrible Losses to English When | Outer port Germans Make Last Stand, Predicts Chamberlain, well as American warships, woul freely admitted to Dutch ports as}1916, which amounted to only 680,000 ist | tons. long as a state of war did not betwee the United jont assembl nBolt ynvens more O YEARS before a building at No, 1 Cherry Street was occupied as the Presidential Mansion (during In session of the First Congress) murat Carstairs Rye was known to those prominent in social and civic life And today it's better than ever Lon- recetved here from #3 Carstairs Rye tly damaged the root The cutting out of the mass cere- the}, "5! rial family 1s considered an in- | “that The Emperor, instead of joining the| he had a hair dr r Company as soon as finished here. imperial family at Tsarskoe-Selo, | Would look old. $7,500 ball each started toward Crimea. He is en-| Harry Bern tirely free to travel anywhere he| retar the Ro- Her Attitude in Time of War, How-| BERLIN, March 20, (via Sayville.) | por THE HAGUE, March 20,—Govern. | Were destroyed in February as a re- ire hard at work on|Sult of war measures of the Central blem of the admisston| Powers, Berlin newspapers say the nerchantmen to Dutch |#lnking of only 600,000 tons per month Sa ports, but no official statement »}had been thought probable, and that ance MO een nae ah tnabie te. [this estimate was bused on the sur- was obtainable to day. It is understood that so far the AY T0 BERLIN,’ is no divergence from the stand- | British Isles, ’ point laid down in the neutrality|, Neutral trade with Grent Britain | SIR'NEVILLE WARNS BRITAIN 0 S070 Nant fr American armed merchantmen, ates and Ger- | 7 many. In the event of war being| KILLED BY SUBWAY TRAIN. bringin® geelared t ttitude of the Duteh chauffeur said he was Alfred Lofton of No, 698 Courtlandt Avenue, Bronx, and that the men told him they were asked Mr. Chanler. replied Mrs. Spielberg. kept saying first that James W. Os: | arrested borne was “Oliver” Osborne and then In Morrisania Court Albert Hage- rn of 911 Brook Avenue, who was tn his saloon the night | . identitte use lof the men who had robbed him. suid,” declared Mrs. Spielberg me one had told her James V Osborne looked older in court bec | the son she came to Splelberg’s| p discovered that some time be- hours after the robbery, returned in- ——__— Mareh 20, shotguns and locted the cars. ‘Three of the robbers apps cabuose and covered th Aggregate Gross Tonnage of 781,- Exceeded Expectations. engine was detached from the train Th trainmaster's office here re-/ that no estimate of the amount) of merchandise ato! Commenting on the Admiralty an- nouncement that merchant ships of}on tts way went. an aggregate gross tonnage of 781,600 mise that only part of the neutral would cease trading with the | shipp To Make having been Interrupted almost en- tirely, the estimate on this basis or} would be 525,600 tons. Consequently n| the result obtained, as announced by the Admiralty Is fifty nt. higher than mnight have been expected. a8 | rhe tonnage sunk in February ex be jceeds British shipbuilding for all of by m to Track | and a sandy mustache tinged with gray | entered the southbound station of the! or 3 Evening Prevorated in New Comatitution, | MOCITAY sitet vat’ noon iardsy, end both editions. n the; tA Maret One of the most Jumped to the tracks, ew amon gs bei in yiatform on ; ne populace of Petrograd just 1 due despatch, fom Petrograd whevie. “Te was dea when taken out | Uptown Office, Uiftrage: will be Incdrpars | pockets, but no papers. ‘Thats were fo Harlem Office, ntitying marks on hie clothing. | The ndy was taken to the Harlem Morgue Bronx Office, only. |Vo other made at this rate for delivered. those who serted He Was “Oliver,” and prevented the chauffeur from help three of the men jumped out of caped, Wilkesman and Detective {crowd simply swallowed them up and |(orney Harold Spielberg, was cross- Barrowin arrested two, who described told them the facts of the revolution |®%#mined to-day by Lewis Stuyves-| themselves: Highty-ninth Hahan, twenty, 1 Volker's pvolvers ob went to your home, a perfect stranger | sonic emblem, on Ruddy, They say ‘The Emperor's abdication won over|#nd told you she bad made a terrible] Volker identified both men. The 1 Callaghan as one rfix him up so he| The three prisoners were held in . Mr. Spielberg's aec-| The steward of the Schnorrer Club, testified that Miss Tanzer said) around the corner from Volker's | liquid-food in 300 cigars from the bar. Tho pollee t Mrs. Mollie Middleman, who was at! believe the pebeery, to be the work Deiat tee] the Spielberg home at the time, and/of the same band. eR ed ‘The Grand Jury, reporting at halt early to-day held up a west-bound New ed at the| ew. The ARMED AMERICAN SHIPS 500, Destroyed in February, trainmen filed out and were, led down | n had been ob- tained. Tho train later was reported TAX ON OUTDOOR “ADS” URGED ON ASSEMBLYMEN Representatives of New York Or- ganizations Favor Mills-Marsh Bill Before Committee. (Soectal to The Evening World.) ALBANY, March 20—The Mills« Marsh Bill, authorizing cities to im- pose a tax upon outdoor advertising, was argued to-day before the Cities Committee of the Assembly, The bill is advocated by the Conference Com- mittee on Outdoor Advertising Condi- tions of New York City, and among eared in favor of it were Albert S. Bard, for the Conference Committee; Walter T. Arndt, for the City Club; Bruce M. Falconer, for the Fifth Avenue Association, F. P, Doyle, for the Real Estate Board, and R. E. McGahen, for the Citizens’ Union. “This form of taxation,” said Mr, Bard, “was recommended, to New York’ in 1913 by the Commission on New Sources of City Revenue and the Mayor's Billboard Advertising Com- misaton, “It Is generally conceded that the further burdening of real estate hould be avolded and, In selecting new subjects for taxation, outdoor more's life,” began Miss Gross, when Volker’a pockets and took $86, his| advertising would appear to be espe- clally appropriate. This bill leaves the amount and basis of the tax to be determined by each city.” To Relieve Caatrrhal Deafness And Head Noises be giad to ferers who could thelr hear that the t ble seven There troubled cut out thie formula em and you may ha’ of saving some poor away from either w of someone who mint (Double Strength) 75 cents worth, Take this home and add te It 1% pint of hot water and 4 of, of granu 1 suger; atir until diasoly Take one tablespoonful four times a day. Parmint is used in thie way not only to reduce by tonto action the inflamme- tlon and swelling In the Eustachian Tubes, and thus to equalize the alr pressure om the drum, but to correct any excess of Qecretiona In the middie ear, and the suite It gives are nearly always quick @ affective. Every person who hae catarrh in any form should give this rectpe a trial.—Advt, with a child who is rundown, has chéeks or thin blood, who wi besarte to give that child the ve: itneeds to start it growing and os going? For over forty years theconcentrated been changing thi Bs iat inging thinness to plum changing poor blood to by blood. There is nothing better for growing children—whether they are weak o: well—than Scott's Emulsion, but see that Scott’ "PafSieteeeNomana Ke to . Mustard America’s Standard | i Money Until further notice, The World will pay for old copies at the rate of: 1c for 6 Daily or 6 Evening Worlds, or 6 of both editions. 1c for two Sunday Worlds. tor of Nat onal § riety RUSSIAN WOMEN TO VOTE, A ins of middie suo sith, sandy batr| 1c for 1 Sunday World and 3 Daily Worlds, or 3 of When delivered at any of the following places: 13 Frankfort Street. 1393 Broadway (38th Sc.) 155 West 125th Street. 410 East 149th Street. Brooklyn Office, 317 Fulton Street. This is done for th old paper stock to be us } of The World’s paper supply at its own mills. Tell your friends to save The World for you. 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