The evening world. Newspaper, April 18, 1917, Page 2

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REI ie SET car DENS eI fay EEE. 4,000,000 MEN U.S. AMBASSADO GERMANS WROUGHT Roads Blown Up, Wells De- stroyed, Fields in Waste in Territory Given Up. WASHINGTON, April 14.——More orgy which at- tends the German retreat from Northern France are contained in ® report to the State Department from Ambassador Sharp, who writes of |p. Wilson, Chairman of the Executive nal observations and quotes | Committe |cob HM. Sebift, Otto H. Kann, A t distress prevails throughout | Belmont, Chauncy thone districts,” the report said, "be detatis of the vand his pe from “Gre erman accounts, cause. of the very wantonnes destruction of everything whic would e+ tence of the From « local German 4 Ambassador quotes a d vouch for its entire accuracy “All in a desert,” says the German ‘across which the road 1s the last vestige Sf a vanished civil! ace unt, gation; and the road itself will dt ppear in a few dys, The cro are at work In the fields, them Impassable for the ene artillery and convoys. march pass w left nothing in the been burned or smashed mer quarters useless remain will | sives. Even ¢ up. methodically.” Anaemia Our blood is composed of red and white corpuscles—the red tonourish the body, the white to fight disease, In Anaemia—or bloodiessness—the ted corpuscles are more or less de- ficient. Thus the blood cannot pro- vide sufficient nourishment for the body. Therefore the face becomes white and “pasty”—the eyes become dull and “heavy”—and a feeling of intense weariness pervades the whole system. To overcome Anae- mia, the blood supply needs recharg- ing with red corpuscles, And it i here that be y possesses such wonderful power. Because being a blood-maker, ‘Win- carnis’ can promote a wealth of new rich, red weak which brings ¢t jow Of healti back to the checks —gives a sparkle to the eyes—and recharges the whole body with new. vitality. That is why Over 10,000 Doctors Recomm: *Wincearais’ Wincarnis is an admirable combination of ghoice Wine, prime Extract of Meat, finest Extract of Malt—each ingredient elected with scrupulous care, and blended by @ special process whereby the valu each ingredient is intensified, thus prod ing adelicious lite giving’ preparation. Begin to get well Free Send the Coupon below for a free trial } bottle of “Wincarnis'’—not mere taste | but enough to do you good. |. Askyour regular dealer for “W: nis.” Should he have none in etoc can easily get it from his wholesale Prepared in Norwich, England, by , Coleman & Co., Ltd, Contractors to Hie Majesty's Forces and to the Royal Army , Medical Corps. Sold in Greater New York and surround. ing avin hh two fe, seen |e and $1.50 per Park & Tilford a. Wine Co. Charles & Co, United Wine Stores Aaron Ward & Sons James Butler Stores @ Acker, Morrall & Condit CM, Decker & Bros. and by leading family wine stores, licensed druggists and grocers. For List of Dealers Elsewhere Write EDWARD LASSERE, Inc., U. 5. Agents 400 West 23rd Street + New York Edward Lasser, Inc., U. 5. Agents 400 West 23rd Street, New York me the free trial bottle of Win: ‘and your booklet to get well FPnclose Ieconts coin or stampal tocover cost of peceine and forwarding. (Please write plainly, N Sa Addr esa City. World, April 18, "RECEPTION COMMITTEE PLANS | omiasaries to this country met to-day | but no definite information could be! the Balfour-Viviani parties. It is ex. pected something definite will be known soon | The meeting was attended by Ge |N. Seligman, Ge of the | leigh, Dr. William M. Polk, Cleveland retreating army in carrying out the| H. Dodge, bute to the bare exis | ting, Fire Commissioner Ad ypulation and also of|Job| Hedges, John B. § every means of earning © livelihood.” | William Fellowes Morgan, H. Outerbridge, Willlam N. Dykiaan, Charles Steckler and Dock Conunis- eription of | sioner It. A.C. . the scenes and states that from his | own personal observation he can | per the | s are mined and the mine cham- bers charged. Motor drfven plows Net Low, Laat. ob es ‘ “ i” Sh Hooomonste dm: ic ~ 8 ‘atm, Malt ‘Yat : rendering ny’® Troops on the ) wagons Inden with provisions and utensils, They have places evacuated, What has not been destroyed has! Soldiers have blown up their shel- ors and rendered their wells and for- The wells that destroyed by explo- lars have been blown The work han been carried out * M4 M ot oh 10% BY Fy a ter ui Kab aS Ketseora [Re Goal Oo. ci Con. Comper Headin ep, Atoel Minctair oil poo a CHICAGO WHEAT AND CORN | directors decided to. defer action in | President. Catchings that earning: | used in developing the properties and | securing fullest possible operation, | al dividend of 3") | 3.—-Grow | aiareagainat & GREETING FOR WAR ENVOYS Entertainment The Executive Committee of Mayor Mitchel's Reception Committee to ar- range for the official groeting New York City is to extend the Allies’ war tn € wa ty Hall, The State Department unt with by phone, obtained concerning the arrival of A Finance Committee, with Henry P. Davison as Chairman, wes choven Cornelius Vanderbilt, M. Depew, I rego W. Wickersham, . George W. Bur- nry P, Davi Ke Cormack, Brig Appl Borough President Aldermanic President Do anofield, cugenias Smith _ With net changes from previous closing. Am Sa, & Ket Au, yy a it, Am, Woolen Co Avaeonda Mimi Ht we te oem ‘ Wlantic Galt wt. lube . hh Lneamasti@ BA oy . we ae * s ' is * 3 ae | a | oe Sie WR hy Rt Co ee a Cone Visa: MR thy Sb Yt larine cle yd. ott ed rubeam Aik Atiaoo8 Whiee Bhetfield Compan 3 id Ave i 1 acy Pied, | H ton Peoitie iy + 1% %. tn, Awohol.. 140) 46 R. Rubber ay S| Ko nmelt «ket BAe g ted > ® ia Cuvee, io * a N 4 4 oy t+ 48 + 4 ae 408,700, MARKET, WHRAT stay Que ues quy il hea. 107 Hi, MED e's July 1A ITEMS FOR INVE Sloss-Sheffield Steel & Iron Co, common dividend following advice of be Bankers ‘Trust Co. for purpose of |aqualizing book value of stocks of t two companies in wer of the Trust Co. w e declared a r share payable to Mock of record of Bankers ‘Trust. Co. April 2, Allie Chalmers Mf. Co-Year ended Dec, 31—Net profits $8,165.020——Hqual to $19.18 @ mhare of preferred stock. compared with $4.58, earned in 1915, Columbia Gas & ctric—Three | month’ ross earnings, $3.188,665, tn- 490.077; surplua $i,178)¥74," in- Crenne $614,287 ‘ Miami Copper & me ended Dec. salei 72.440, incroase $5,~ 809,866—Net profits $7.884,196, Increase h: 927.64, and equal to $9.si a share earned compared with $4.56 in 1915, ‘opper Co. z M.—Orora oes nue $4,- Wan’ increans $iBARL MR Net profits A828, Increase £9,629 768—Halanc er reserve $1 060, qual to 87.40 3 earned per share 1918, _—_—__ $250,000 Worth of Selsed Liquors PT ml to Th: Rvening World.) ATLANTA, April 18.—More than $250,000 worth of contraband whiskey. wines and beer seized in raids » sme time ago war fed toa huge bontire at Girard, Ala, to-day by Sheriff It Tindsey Aske ra ——_ Aariegitaral Army" of ‘900 nh WASHINGTDN, April 18.—Ropre sentative Bathrick of Ohio to-day in- uced @ bill authoriaing the Presi- to resignations from the Austr CLOSING QUOTATIONS. Cabinet, since the Minist Austrian censorship is concealin considerable anti-German feeling two men belonging to German pollti- HUNGARY PREMIER | OUT, BREAK, 100, IN = AUSTRIAN AN CABINET lig “German Party” Members Quit—Significant in View of Separate Peace Talk. LONDON, April 18.—An Amater- dam despatch to the Central News ‘® that the Budapest Soctallat pa- per Noweszavk announces the resig- nation of Count Tisza, the Hungarian Preinter, BORLIN (via London), April 1%.—| Resignation of Austrian Minister of Commerce, Dr. Urban, and of Dr, von Barnrelther, Minister without port- | folio, was announced tn Vienna de- spatehes to-day. Both are vv tles, rbers of German par Great significance may be attached 8 were members of German parte It is posnible that the German and Austria and that the resignations of | parties is due to this cause, Other reports, from sources not at fected by the Teutonic censorabip, be sted in rumors that Avstria is seeking @ reparate peace, There have been several recent tesignations from the Austrian Cab inet, Early in the present month t Ministers of Justice, War and Fi-/| nance surrendered their portfolios as | the result of @ graft scandal itn con- nection with army foed supplies, ‘he iperor refused to accept the resig- nation of the Minister of Justice, von Schenk, Shortly afterward Gen, von Krobatin, Austro-Hungarian Minis ter of War, resign Bh + WILSON AT CAPITOL TO PUSH ARMY BILL DRAFT PLAN WANTED (Continued from First Pa ferred over 4 plan to use conscription after « call for volunteers appor- tioned among the States to be oM- cered in the same way as proposed |r the Administration (bill Chairman Dent made this state f rhe committee agreed to put in the bill provisions for a call for 5,000 volunteers in the first instance and for 500,000 more if the President nts, the number in each case con- templated in the Administration bill for conscription The committee has not yet fixed the military age, but it probably will be between twenty-one and forty, in stead of the nineteen to twentyefive contemplated in the Administration mens The President is authorized ed with enrollment or regis tration of men between the military ages, immediately and on completion of the enrollment and registration the President is authorised to decide which he will proceed with, the vol- unteer or draft system, But mean- while the volunteer system will have been In operation and the volunteers | will be coming into the service in large numbers.” If the conscription Dil! passes it ts the war department's plan to ha half a miltion recruits sent into train- ing camp on August 1, to be fol- lowed by three successive drafts of half a million each in four to six months’ intervals, according to exi- gencles, Senator Calder telegraphed Goy- ernor Whitman to-day asking him to defer starting the State system of enroliment until decishk had been reachel in Congress on the pending bill, If conscription is passed, as expected, then the Federal and State enrollment can be done as one job, preventing dup The War Department is working on plans for registration of all eivil- jans, One suggested plan Is to use the election machinery and order every voter, regardiess of age, to re- port himself to the voting place for registration In his proper classifica- tlon,! Two strong champions of universal service have developed among new members of the Senate—Wadsworth of New York and Frelinghuysen of New Jersey, They are fighting vig- orously for unqualified support of the army bill, In fact, the President has been obliged to turn to Republicans for support in his most important war policies, His Democratle leaders in both houses have fatled him on dec- Igration of war, on military service and on unquestioned delegation of Hxecutlve authority Thomas F. Smith, Secretary of Tammany Hall, made his first ap- pearance in the House to-day to be aworn in and was greeted — with to proc ation cheers, ‘To The Evening World Smith said It has required but @ single day's glance to see what course [ should follow it is unquestioned an un- swerving support of the President tn dent to raise sariou} ural army” of 300,000 men i would be enileted end paid under re ulations to be the Preside: women. They | @ firm and aggressive war policy, I mean to do all 1 can to back him up," |e Given the unusual honor of ai THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 18, 1917, IN GREAT BATTLE ON THE ‘FRENCH FRO ‘ROKN PRINCE'S ARMY FAILS IN DRIVES 10 REGAIN LOST GROUND (Continued from First Page.) MISS ONE. O'NEILL BECOM. THE BRIDE TO-DAY OF WILLIAM H. TAFT 2D three counter-attacks of the en- y upon our positions at Mont gained nothing, “Artillery fighting has been vio- jent along a large portion of the The war material the territory main force from cludes @ considerable number of front attacked. the enemy trench mortars, ‘The enemy drew n@ positions his heavy artillery as weil as his hree heavy pieces. Most of these the Champagne MARGUERITE ‘TEMPLE PHETO By ROCHLITE | unwounded isoners taken by Us since April intermittent tillery fighting and encounters jong the remain- wehter of Mra. h, is to be married at the home of her mother to William HowArd Taft 2d, son of Mr Henry Waters a nephow of the former Pres the United States. member of Squadron graduated from Yate In 1900 between patrols « der of the front.’ FRENCH GAINS MADE OVER A CLAIMS REPULSE OF WELL PREPARED ARMY. » French mode their gains yes- terday against ‘aft of this ¢ that ex- pam 7 i blows and had massea| Announces That Number of Prison- The ers Taken Was Increased to nillion men aro probably en frdnt now tn patriotic in the sectors where the French|terday over a twelv No previous con-|German War Office 6 flict has ever seen this spirit and genuine by such @ tremendous of|Moronvillers and Auberive was committee comprehensive announcements rating of @ ‘Among the persons « xempted from service are government ligious sects having ¢ German Crown creeds trains | expecting an offensive, of unfavorable weather, the Crown found to be necessary to the nance of the or the maintenance of national inte est during the status with respect to persons depen y establishment who commands the sy armies of the right centre had been| quiet except on Beaulne ridge, un the planning the attack for several woeks|Craonne heights and northwest and had left nothing to chance, verything was renders their to married men Department discretionary authority on the question of marriage Soissons and Their “The enlisted requir maximum leg: ised by voluntary enlistment diers were carrying prisoners by setzed Mont Carnillet, rests com- the hun- raised or maintained then by selective , and all other forces hereby au- Haut and all the manding the region, HAD REGARDED THE POSITION AS ALMOST IMPREGNABLE. ‘om their new positions the French upon Moronvilliers Moronvilliers of hills was regarded by all French soldiers who had ever been in the section as virtually impregnable and its capture caused the liveliest satisfaction followed up the Infantr: tained by selective draft « Such draft shall enemies who have declared thetr the ages of nineteen and twenty-five maintained under such regu the President The bill as presen’ fUng the National pportunity to fill up their nd that of the regular rr r strength by volunteering before drafting is resorted to. diuonal army of half a million d bodies of the enem. with the object and decimated them, to onlookers such second army RUSSIAN ARMY, LOYAL, CONFIDENT OF VICTORY Premier Asserts Conditions at the Front Have Vastly | made especially good progre: In the section Hill 112 was stormed, as well a8 a small wood east of the was @ regular machine-guns, At certain points the advance was! ‘The position consisted of a village close upon four miles in depth, news reachng Paris says the battle continued well tnto the night the Germang counter-attacking with- and the French recon-|stone in treacherously dug quarry structing the trench systems under/excuyations and shatts. ‘he Ger- mans hag stationed their machine 6 Sirongy fortified In the rock, which French artillery could not of Auberive. Vaudesincourt, LONDON, April 18.—-A despatch says that Premier Lvoff and visiting army headquar- v rs eada was conditions at the front improved, especially supply of the principal food had conalder- the cover of thelr artillery. eee HAIG DRIVES FORWARD TOWARD CAMBRAI AND transport conditions are satisfactory. unrest which had showed during the first stage of the revolu- tion had completely disappeared, said that tho fighting spirit was in- ing daily, that the troops were to encounter th were confident of the outcome. ph I ha HAVRE DE GRACE RESULTS. enemy and Twenty-Three Miles of High Road to St. Quentin, show. $2.80, won; Beautiful Kathryn also ran thrust to-day was toward Cambrat, ‘During the night,” he reports, made further progress southeast and cant of Epehy (captured yesterda: and this morning captured the villa -Guislatn with some pris- from the We also improved our posi. atep deeper WASHINGTON, 500 of the 16,000 experle ship carpenters neoted by the Shippin Board to build ite hi vessels have been ment of Labor in «wo , igoment to two leading committasg tonwide Inquiry, t Meet of woot ya of !te one many | use in the neighborhood of Lagni- court, Heavy rain is again falling.” By the capture of Villers#-Guistain the British have pushed another wail of steel paraliel to the artery of Ger- man communications between Cam- bral and St. Quentin. Like Epeay, Ronssoy, Villeret, Le Verguier and Maigsemy—all of which villages lie to the south—Villers-Gulsiain is approxi- mately two’ miles distant from the Cambrai-St. Quentin highroad. Tue British now parallel the bighroad for @ distance of fifteen of the tweaty- | two miles between the two towns. ‘The drive which enveloped Villers- Guislain was from the direction of Epehy, indicating apparently a defin- ite plan to parallel the Cambral-St. Quentin line by British forces which may at any time strike suddenly somewhere along this twenty-two- mile stretch and sever the artery, WITH THE BRITISH ARMIES AFIELD, April 18.—Captures by the - itish army sin Apri) 9 in Ite at push reached the vast total of fih00 non and 227 guns to-day. There aro still more streaming back con- \stantly from the front. Around Lena and St. Quentin Field Marshal Haig ts stretching 4 tight noose—and increasing the pres- sure every hour. Between Gouzeaucourt and Villeret | the British made a slight advauce to Wancourt Tower, in which the Ger- mans had regained a footing in bit ter counter attacks, was again cap tured ——- BERLIN WAR OFFICE FRENCH IN CHAMPAGNE 3,000 Officers and Men. ttacks in the Champagne yes mile front, the ement says, were prevented from piercing the Teuton lines by the German barring tions, Part of the wood between wrested from French Colored Divi- ch troops |sions which had reached there. Dur- the |ing the fighting on April 16 twenty- de-|six of the numerous French armed Paris to-day. Prince has been ‘The French| the Germans on the French battle |had postponed it a number of times] ¢ront yesterday, according to the In| official statement issued to-day by the Prince|Gérman Army Headquarters Staff, massed gigantic reserves to meet the| was increased to more than 3,000 of- expected blow.” The general motor cars were destroyed The number of prisoners taken by ficers and men. n the Aisne region, the statement erday was comparatively ft Ville-au-Bols, where French attacks, made by infantry in waves, were re- for and | pulsed. the chiefs under him had nothing to] In the Arras sector the artillery do but follow his instructions to the|Mmhting again increased at some pints: PeGerman forces in Macedonia, the As soon ay the result of the battle | German official statement says, drove s was|the French from poaltions one kilo- to at-| metre wide on the Crvena BStena, Punctually at 4:45 the French ‘went over,” well supported of artillery .y swept forward in mogniteent | ALL GERMANY'S HOLD and 1 1 ics tigi ce'ton| NOW BEING MERAGED which were captured by the French last Mareh. Millions of Shells Hailed Into Ene- Lines for Days Before the Advance Began, WITH THE FRENCH ARMIES IN THE FIELD, April 18—All of Germany's hold on France was menaced to-day by the world's most titanic offensive. It is a struggle be- tween von Hindenburg and tho mas- ter strategists of the Franco-British staffs, on a battle scale undreamed of before. pidly and] France's part in this greatest of all They caught] drives was preceded by the greatest massing | bombardment in its history, The of making a dive artillery roar began Friday. Mtl- According ||ions of shells hurled over the ines carnage had not} daily. ‘The French marksmanship been seen since the action of Charme | was so deadly that the first German Gap at the beginning of the war. On the right wing the struggle was | sweep forward declared of thelr com- the advantage of the|pantes of 250 men the average that Auberive, on which the left | survived was only eighty each. wing of the Champagne offensive of France's onslaught is on too gigan- 1916 broke, fell speedly as well as all|tic a meale to permit any one to |the surrounding works, The French | visualise the struggle in its entirety. north| But from the creat of one bill t of {could be seen an incident that prisoners caught in the Infantry strikingly reveals the French strat- ‘of |e@y no less than the reasons for the German's tremendous losses, surmounting a precipitous ravine. The bank of this ravine was honey- combed with caves hewn out of solid guns the plerce, From the impregnable quar- rieg below the village the German In- fantry waited confidently the ex- left, the| "Not until both these columns imultaneously approached the out- skirts of the village did the Germans hidden in the guarry—etill awalling that frontal attack—real hey bi the| been “out-Hindenburged. French were consolidating the gains} Instantly they rushed out their made yesterday on thelr extended of- fonsives east of Rheims, the British pushed forward north of St, Quentin. BPA: patran Rreatest | rey, Gil not relish an’ attempt to machine guns in a desperate a! ing columns met cut their way through, They bur- “welnedly returned to the protestion of the rock cavem And the French | columns, ignoring their existence and leaving their ultimate aapture to eo German line, BERLIN, (via London), April 18 | pected frontal attack from the CAPTURES NEW VILLAGE] ‘is" come or Prench,totantry ment from the right and from the Two columns of French infantry tempt to cover a retreat, But they other troaps, swept on to the east ‘age, Aa geneireting at overy ine, | OFFENSIVE. IN ITALY FORECAST BY REPORTS Intense Artillery Duel on J itian | mt and Great Activi! Elsewhere. ROME, April 18.—Increasing activ. {ty on the Austro-Italian front is re- ported by the War Office to-day. In- tense artillery fighting ts In progress on the Julian front. Infantry encou ters occurred in other sectors, 1 statement follows: “In the Lagarina Valley our artil- lery renewed the bombardment of the station at Collano, damaging the duilding, putting trains and motor) troops. Encounters aiiong smal | groups of infantry are reported. We | repulsed the enemy, taking prisoners | and capturing rifles and munitions, “In the upper part of the Aravi- onodo Valley in the midst of a heavy storm an enemy detachment made | fa surprise attack and penetrated one of our advanced positions west Lake Bocete. He was promp' driven back to his own Iines, Under protection of @ thick fog an attempt of the same character was nade against our positions in the Passo Disondogaa. It was repulsed and we inflicted setous losses on the enemy. | “On the Jullan front the artillery fighting was more intense in the vi- cinity of Gorizia, An enemy airplane | over Ternova.” ———- BERLIN BLAMES THE U. S. FOR BREAK WITH BRAZIL| German Newspapers Declare There Was No Justification for the Action. AMSTERDAM, April 18 (via Lan- don).—Most of the German news papers take Brazil to task more or loss severely for breaking off relation with Germany, The Tageszeitung of Berlin asserts there is no justifiea- tion for this act and can see only one reason for Brazil's pollcy—pressure by the United States and the Entente. The Kreuzzeitung endeavors to allay fears generated by reports that a million Americans are coming to Europe to fight by calculating that their transportation would require 12 tons of shipping per man and that the © 12,000,000 tons would be needed. Inasmuch as America has only 1,000,000 tons of ocean shipping, it says, the enterprise Is Impossible even with the greatest acceleration of the shipbuilding programme, we SUED BY GIRL FOR $50,000. Accused by Former As jatant of Jilting Her. That he gave her Mterature with which to instruct herself in the rules of his church and then refused to marry her after promising to do so is the alle- gation made by Miss Gladys Teed of No, 157 Madison Avenue against Dr. Francis D. Griffin, a dentist, of No. 164 West Seventy-third Street in a suit for $50,000 damages for alleged breach of promise. The charges became known through a motion for a@ bill of particulars mas to-day. Mirab Tee Towne, Miss Dew Teed'a cou said his client did not want damages if the defendant would marry her, Mise To was formerly istant. Justice Gie Dr. Grifin’ the motion wa: eried, before who' argued, reserved as BOL bl Government Be Poisoned. SYRACUSE, April 18.—Ten horses | weer found dead and @ large number seriously Hl when an eastbound train- Jona of 900 animale for Government service was stopped in the Dewitt | yaris of the New York Central Rail alro, ‘There is grave suspicion of polsonin Horses tt THOCO~ ne Ip sufticent niree of nite sess 4 BARCLAY STREET 6.80 p.m. Bat.10 p.m, ORTLANDT ef er © oe th pm PARK ROW 4NA! Closes 12 p.m, Daily 400 BROOME STREET jooea T p. wm. Bat. 20 p.m, EAST 30 ern er one 10 yy ee ATH GERMAN SHIPS SEIZED BY ARGENTINE OFFICIALS OF SERIOUS FIGHTING |. rwaly 1 Sed WE mission to Washington, It” Is Reported. BUENOS AIRES, April 18—Ar- » formally took all German in- “into custody” to-day. ‘The officlal explanation w to prevent German crews from damaging thelr vessels, 3 JANEIRO, April 18—Bra- « stirred to resentment to-day by receipt of a note from the Chilean Government “creates a deplorable y lorries to fight and dispersing | Br and Germany soon will Dee = ‘a | Bese is the belief here follawt | American country has virtually com-~ arrangements for commission” on co-operation with —_—-———- WON'T CONFIRM HERVEY. Appointment revice Comminsto: ~Mombera of the Committee gave the ‘low when they t for coufirmation the appointment of Charles 8. Hervey te be Thompson are understood to a kely to Com- was brought down in an aerial fight | Wicks » to-day reported a the life of th investigating the MALT EXTRACT Taken With Meals cribable flavor to strength, flesh food, make: blood. Refuse substitutes. Anaemice Should Take Freely For Sale Everywhere UNIFORMS & EQUIPMENTS For Army, Navy, National Guard and Reserve Corps RUSSELL UNIFORM CO, ages TRAMP. £160 noward, no No Extra Charge tor It. 1° ic) may fe, Be Advertisements tor aera, Viairict semaaier POUND PROFIT City Bred Ladies Dressed Like Country Lassies in Sun Bonnets and Ging Aprons Will Serve You on April 20th and 21st. Loft Milk Chocolate Days. HE boys back of the Soda Fountains will be dressed will serve many new and ing Milk Chocolate Soda and Sundae specialtie: TIRE LINE OF MILK CHO. COLATE SPECIALTIES WILL BEAR 4 ING PRICE REDUCTIONS, WATCH OUR NEWSPAPER ADS. Mertdean velvety Chocolates, <iiiey, leave nothing to POUND BOX 206 BROADWAY Closes Tv. m.; Ba 1) EAST 420 Sire D, ST 125TH STREET «11.800 m.: Bat.1 200m, 23 "West STH STReeT t Closes T p.m, 430 ee 167 MARKET 8T., Ne Closes 11,80p.m.; Batt 30 P. M.—Saturday 12 tainer, “e? “ihe omokowya’, Snore etre

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