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ferent times. First one end of the | and then sally enction sili die s tance away is sent smashing into the enemy. NEW TACTICS BEWILDER GERMA! These tactics bewildered the Germans. No enemy unit knows where fi assault is coming, and all are forced to stand in readiness under tor. rents of steel, high explosives, shrapnel and gis. A concentration at Preux for a counter-altack was observed from the air. Within a few min. utes the ground was strewn with dead men and horses, equipment, wag. ons, lorries and limbers. At Pomereuil the Brilish were held up for a tine by a murderous fire from a Seavy concentration of German machine-guns, The British waited until the advance had progressed north and south of them. Then | they swept around the town on both sides. At the rear they found a triangular cleared spac Prepared positions. The British went around them and captured Pom- ereuil Wood at the back of the triangle, thus surrounding the enemy, For hours these Germans, knowing they had failed to stop the ai- vance and realizing they were doomed, held out, firing continuously. At} length persons nearby observed they had ceased firing, The Britis had stormed the position. At Escarmain also there was desperate fighting. The enemy continues to shell all the larger towns within range, not withstanding the fact that there are thousands of civilians in them. In| addition to Denain, were there are several thousand persons, niostly | nm ahd children, the Germans have been continuously shelling Le Cateau, in which there aré many more. — 9 LATEST OFFICIAL | REPORTS AMERICAN. WASHINGTON, Oct. 24.—The fol- lowing communique from Gen, Per- hing, dated yesterday, was mile pub- Me to-day: "Qn the battle front north of Verdun We have made progress at several | curing esings of the Ecailion River at the latter place. At the close of tie day the enemy counter-at- tacked Vigorously opposite Vendogios, supporting tho infantry with strong artillery fire. They were repulsed. “This morning tho attack was re. determined re- sumed on the whole front betw eae. ap goa of m local at-|tho Sambro-Oiee Canal and tho tack in the heavily wooded and hilly | Scheldt Country cast of the Meuse our troops! “North of Valenciennes we cl 1 took the Bois Belley and penctrated| ‘he enemy from the Forest of Kais the shemy’s positions in the Bois|mes and captured tho villages of @Etfayes and the Bois de Wavrille, | Thiors, Haute Rive and Thun. There was determined jocal fighting went of capturing over 100 prisoners. "9 re Tourna) without material chy “West of the Motise Bantheville Bas been completely occupied and a our line has been ‘eviablished aon FRENCH. the fidge northwest of the villago.| PARIS, Oct. 24—-Following is the Im the course of bitter fighting north) report iweued toeday by the War of Grand Pre our troops enptured| OMtce; 76 prisonors and eight machine guns. Artillery fire has been violent on the “On tho Oive front we crossed the canal east of Grand Vorly. Despite region of tho railway north of Nesbre- court. “North of Nizy-le-Comte we enlarged our gains during the night. On the platcaus east of Vouziers there were oreased aciial activity on both sidos of the Meuse. In the course of many combats our pureult squadrons shot down fifteen enemy airplanes aad, ome oheervation balloon. Ti Our Observation balloons were Paks stroyed and six of our machines are SERBIAN. miseit Our dombing units dropped LONDON, Oct, 24.--The Serbian five tons of explosives on enemy con-| War Office statement saye: centration points. BRITISH. “After stubborn fighting the enemy was forced to retreat on the Razanj Vendegies Wood and captured Neu- BETWEEN ALLIES AND FOE, 1S ATTITUDE IN ROME HALL'S BEDDING | Press Sees Sceptre Transferred From Emperor to People in Note to Austria. ROME, Wednesday, Oct. 23.—All the | newspapers here carry columns of | comment about President Wilson's re- ply to Austria, The Epoca says that President Wilson must be the su- preme arliter between the Allies and their enemies,” adding that America, being entirely disintersted if an armis- tice should be concluded, can be con- sidered almost outside of the conflict | HUNGARY TO APPLY in which the German machine gunners retired ta | different courses of instruction will TERMS FOR ARMISTICE THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, OCTOBER bo 24, 1018, IN ‘FIRST WOMAN EMPLOYEE IN EXECUTIVE OFFICES AT THE WHITE HOUSE FORPEAGE ALONE, | ih REPORT 10 PARIS | Austrian Empire ie Now Declared ¢ ay to Idea of ‘ Full Surrender, | PARIS, Oct, MM —Hungary tnteada {o apply direct to the Entento Gov. | ernments to ascertain on what te rma! ¢ they will grant an armistice and! peace to Hungary, it is reported tn! political circita in Mudapest, accord. Ine to & Zurleb despatch t# the Joure nal Austria-Hungary already leiled to the idea af unconditional ApitWiation, says a Vienna despatch to the Frankfort Zeitung, because Vienna Is threatened with famine, the authorities are powerless and laws ure fo longer enforced. AMBTERDAM, Oct Huanarck, 4 ng to Austria is recon. 5568566856534 Baron von Promicr, to] Wilson's reply | In the House of Lords in M hie Vienna Tuesday, said that Aus- z tra Wan able to indorse the Presi- to hold a@ position in the Bx- tcullve oMeces at the White House, dent's peace programmé without fore saking deep rooted convictions, Ie | ¥etefan employees there declare. Miss declared it was a historic and funda- op hd Albee ba dil netital idea of the Hapsburg mon- archy that all its peoples should have equal rights, He did not think the President's reply would result in a breaking off of exchanges, the Austrian President suecceding a man who has gone into fervice, She was formerly to Major Charles HM, Higgins, » cons struction eagincer in New York. secretary Czech mombers declared that the | => cog plan embodied tn the Imporial mani-|nouncements will be of the U ated 0 for the establishment of a Czech | States and the Allied. Governments | state Was impracticable, acting In ¢oner HASEL, Oct. ~Vresident Wilson's A Lohdon cable gives reply to Aus note has had an! Limited as t sue for the overwhelming effect in Vienna, aes | statement that a resul eon cording to @ despatch received from | tinual céromunibalions, tho Alllod the Austrian capital by the Frank~ fort Woltung. Not only was there a violent panic in financial circles, but tho note Was considered tn politcal quarters as beng extremely humiliat- jovernments are perfectiy acquainted with and agreed upon (he terms dn. der which it will possible to enter into hegotiations for aq armiatice.” The whole front, reaching its groatost| coemy counter-attacks we hold the| its for the dual monarchy. aval “freeddm of ihe sean” had aut | intensity east of the Meuse and north} east bank. Between (he Oiso and the a ee been @niercd Into, ‘bus that Core crib aire Ser thre warty meting the| AERUAL OBSERVERS been uid ike bh ‘hatGer @ day has been marked by in- utterly Unacceptable to the wale Governments. In audition to evenpation of Rey towns to Germany, it ls thought bere the Allics will demand surrender py TO TRAIN 23 WEEKS Candidates Must Stand Same Rigid Physical Examination Re- quired of Aviators, WASHINGTON, Oct. 24.—Men of good education, sound judgment, quick perception and action and tron nerve are required by tho United Btates Air Servieo for duty as aii in the Alps (hat guard the Austrian border ahd the road to Vienna; prob- able evacuation of the whole east vast of the Adriatic and the vecupa- tion of such bases as would bottie up Austrian naval power completely in front. Plane and balloon observers in France. | that sea Possibly the surrender uf LONDON, Oct. 24.—Following isthe} “We crossed the West Morava] Gen. Pershing recently called tor thelr naval bane of Trivste might by text of to-day's report of thé British northwest of that village, taking 300 R arereeete., Romber Of opbetvers. demandes : cA : Nn r Department, on pe- | {SR 4 tte 4 enters ‘In sharp fighting yesterday ¢ve- the qualifications neceanary for the| Proce wend lee ete em, must pe nipg on the front south of Valen- Coen ee et ite Suplementary| cleared, which would require. sur- courses of instruction will be after eiennes we drove the enemy from ‘ render by the Turks of tho fortresses the candidate has been accepted. ‘The of the Dardanelies, Surrender also of Russian battleships and destroyers in the Black Sea, selzed by the Ger- would be demanded, it w and possibly the surreuder | ish war at eral ts as well, DEMAND FOR WAR POWER TO REST WITH REICHSTAG cover about twenty-three weeks. Civilians applying for work mubt undergo the same rigid physical oa- amination as pilots thought, AGREED ON BY ALES MIUTAR MUST 6D ( Socialist Deputy Declares Germany Can't Enforce Peace by Military Means. BASEL, Oct, 4, (Havas)—Afier speech of Princa Maximilian, Deputy ‘ontinued from First Page.) and thus best adapted for harmonizing interests among the Allies and for im-| poste conditions upon the enemy in accordance with the fundamental pr in- | jSiples of a reorganized: worl ‘The Corrlere [Talia considers that Springs. The management real. | is a ite quests Would be aa sted | the whole problem ix bused. upon whether the Austrian dy ty etl has eg Be bes Ume to come 6 an agroement with its) eaies, 1" a blind vén- | own peoples. erefore it is wise and) ‘The 'Tribuna says Mr. to buy from « firm of Jong | ply h yepotation for highest stand. | Emperor ‘Seer i | hands of the people ards of Cond in materiale and skilled | hands ¢ | e Idea Nacionale sa: ‘We manufacture everything in beddin, | | “President Wilson, before asking thi FRANK A. HALL & SONS | unconditional surrender of Austria to the Allies, asked of Austria her uncun 25 West 46th S:., New York City | ditional surrender by D The Imperial, catering to ison fw ap seg ey tiontels in the eas’, selected Mall's Pare Horse Hair Mattresses | Wilson's re- noved the sceptre from the | hand, pasing it into the} 10 her own peop OF SUPERIOR ‘ Disn Quaury STINCTIVE IN OTYLE | Attractive l’alland Winter models in Coats, Wraps, Coatees, Scarfs and Muffs All the fashionable furs unther’s Sons New York | of an armistice that will make it im- Karl Herold, in the name of the Cen trist Party, read a statement in the Reichstag asking that the reform of the constitution of the Empire be extended #o that war cannot be declared without German people, that they accept the conditions of peace he has laid down and that the German armed forces on land and sea will observe the rules {of civilized warfare are accepted by | conse} the Reichstag. He added | the President only ax changing the |‘ °" as ag ih ite wae Ayia te situation sufficiently to warrant his! nce possible, the Government will nave | Informally submitt..g the questions |19 cai) on the last man for the defense [involved to the nations with which A of Germany the United States ts associated in the] poputy Ebert, Majority Socialist, de- wart, clared the German people would no SUNRENDER ONLY TERMS FOR! longer permit themselves to be without the right to decide their own fate KAISER AND FOLLOWEAD, Friedrich Naumena, Radial, eaid bo In doing this, without mincing | considered peace impossible by milita words, he tells these authorities and| means and that Germany must use her ces to end the war Count Conservative, ¢ Jelared his par not vote for the | constitutional reforms proposed by Chancellor because |t considered through them the Germ: : people that | the only acceptable ruarantee of their words must be submission to terms dip! 7 them Ulitios; for Germany to renew hos- that the Kaiser still holds | ‘snserous. Seer: Bae) the power to control tho empire, and that unt't he and his autocrays are | DRIVE ON CONSTANTINOPLE out, surrender and not peace negotia- | IS THREAT AGAINST TURKEY tions must be demanded. While this ultimatum | is sinkin Deognre | Jersey City ta the frat woman | sretary to the President, | ftouter's me cable says (he question of | Austria 16 the Malians of fortresses | IS FORMALLY PRESENTED *} with the Just Peace, So Honored Dead Are Unbetrayed, Plea of Kipling itincencinsiamnasinaeiacrennttly In New Poem Entitled “Justice,” He Recalts That We Must Answer for Future of the World. A NEW poem by Rudyard Kipling, entitled “Justive, of Doubleday, Page & Co.: BY RUDYARD KIPLIN (Copyright, 1918, by Rudyard Kipling.) Across a world where all men grieve, and grieving, atrive the more, The yreat days range like tides, and Ieave our dead on every shore, if we have parley with the foc, the toad our sons must bear, Before we loose the word that bids new worlds to birth, Needs muat we loosen first the sword of Justice upon earth; OF else all else is vain since life on earth began, And the spent world yinks bavk again hopeless af God and man. has just been rough the courtesy cabled to America and ts printed below Heavy the toad we wndergo, and our own hands prepare, A people and theif king through ancient ain grown strong, Berause they foared no reckoning would st no bound to wrong; But now their hour is past, and We who bore It find fel) Incarnate held at lst to answer to mankind For agony and spoll of nations beat to dust, For polsoned air and tortured sot! and cold, sommanded Just, Anil every secret Woe the shuddering waters saw— Witted and fulfilled by high and low—let them relearn the law of Sede That when {he dooms are read, nof high nor low shall say: “My haughty or my humble head hi javed me in this day What, til che end of time, their remnant shall roeail heir fathers’ old vonfederate, crime, availed them not at al! That helther achodls nor pricsts, nor kings may build agaly A people with the heart of beasts made wise concerning mon Whereby our dead shall sleep in honor, unbetrayed, And we {a faith and honor keep that peace for which they paid | — | Buzancy report that railroad track sheds d warchouses were dest asian It of the American bo: tuck of yesterday pararnne Sees STRATEGIC PEAK TAKEN BY FRENCH AND ITALIANS | Penetrate Far Into + into Enemy Lints on} Sett@Comuni Plateau ant Get 730 Prisoners. ROMB, Ovt. 24.—Freneh and f troops, in a powerful loral attack on t Sette Comun! Hlateau last night, @trated far into the enemy lines, turing the important peak of Mont Sim mol (threé miles east of Asingo), the Ltatian War Oifice announced to-day. ‘Twenty-three officers and 707 men were made prisoners, Britlsn troops stormed trenches south of Aslago, prisoners. Bouth of the Aesa Ridge and north | of Moht di Italian “GAINS; FIGHTING ABOVE VERDUN HARDEST YET pee tear ene (Continued from Mirat Mage.) Yeru atudbornly defended dy the! Germans, This ts the latest point at | which the Americans have driven @ dont Into the German defenses, de- spite thé fact that the enemy resist- ance Is strong @s formerly, The Germans set fire to Brleutles tate | Tuesday and American patrols yes- terday reported that the Germans had withdrawn from the town, SAY PERSHING CAN NEVER CaP. TURE woobs, ‘The Gorwans made a determined attempt to buld Baatheville, and along the Bantheville-Aincreville road every available point bad veea furtined with macbino guas With their backs to a great seri tf woods, the Bois de Bas and thi ois de Bourgogne included, the Ger. MANS are fighting for their lives, Pris. | oners assert that the woods are liter- ally fuil of machine guns and guns of heavier calibre, and these prisoners have expressed the opinion that the Americans can never capture Bour- |gogne and the Woods to the herth. went. Vesterday as almost springlike but for a low-hanging mist and the avia- tors of both sides were out in force, |Thero were aerial combats all along \the front, beginning tu the éaily morning. Lieut, Edward V, Rickeu> bacher was credited wilh une Uvene before breakfast In A most spectacular eombat over Dowicon which lasted half an hour four American fAghters badly worsted allan p- Austrii taking guna, ALL COMFORTS OF HOME LEFT BEHIND BY GERMANS of Luxuries Found by Americans in Abandoned Headquarters. favonets and American “pep” made it moving day for the Germans when | the Allies started their big sweep along | the front, Lieut. Harold C. Finn, of | the 53d Ploneer Infantry (Old 47th of | Brooklyn) has written home to. his | mother, Mrs. Maude C. Finn, No. 658 | Flatbush Avenue, Finn's father Police Lieut. Frank Flan of Co sioner Enright's staff an equal number of Germans, three| Finn, who was the youngest Licuten= Fokkers being downed. Capt. Alfred lant commissioned at the first Platt |Grant Benton of Texas, single handed, pas he Waa in thé attack | fought two Fokkers and shot down A ne wlabehoied tS | in flames over no man's land a Ger- iat cieda tc | | Man two-seater bound for the Ameri- |Mcadauarters, | can lines on observation duty. had bowling alleys, bililard | MANY VICTORIES IN THE AIR|tables, pianos and electric lights,” ARE REPORTED. says in his letter. “By the look of the | Reports of air victories yesterday | Place they thought they would live there a long time L gucsa they hated | to give them up. “During the atteck we clothes off and o slept hours out of twenty-four. ties were lighter than we expected food s wonderful, and while on front We got double rations. ‘We have to hand it to the Knights | of Columbus. They are na near the | front as they can ge | possi lll MAX ILL WITH INFLUENZA. en Hears German Chan- demic Victim, continued to reach the oMcials until after dark, and it ts known that at least twelve German machines have been brought down, Lieut. feed Chambers of Memphis brought down two enemy planes, A late report say: that all four fokkers which engaged nuta, Wooley, Manning, James 4 Ison over Doulcon were sent crash- ing. Eieut, sidney Grant of Orange, N. J., observer, and Lieut. F, B. Foster of Boston, Mass., pilot, claimed two ever took our! about two Our casual: | Tha | the work, turning to their own lines twenty-three bullet holes in | their wings as evidence of the fight. | While Grant and Foster were on 2| COP ct. 4—Prince Max!+ | flight Tue they were attacked! milian, German Chancellor, ts ill with and downed one Boche, Observers influenz late from here to-di returning the region of he Germany the allied Govern. | beer act ‘ m will be preparing for the next| Unconditional Surrender Is De. move, which lies with them, acting! = mand of Allies, With Army Greclal for in harmony with the United States. ., ! pec' “ Bed yg: SB ee Pat there ie 13 be termined. as | nce Aiacrenaigt Mouanene ucreRann cure ube iour crete 3 | the President asks, whether the Ailies| WASHINGTON, 00 lanes An ce) wine Hae eit Ou of Feovermint, Hemember 25¢ are willing to effect peace on the; mum surrender unconditic POUND BOX conditions enunciated by him and ao- Ailied drivé on Conetent Turki#h agents in Switz | roueh Allied pted by Germany If ov do. thea on of af armia- eh With representatives, avs tee be bubmitted to the military | ¢o*aing ts an duis priative soures he to-day smpleve surrender os being advisers of all the co-belligerents, rinara Ot ee belltgerents. | demanded of Tewnk's Government, U 4 bidurtd 7 . SOnSHOns 1e levs this demand is complied w mT y the Germaan military machine | Alka Pabaan OE India 8 for rb 1 have been formu- \t e ora ill be orwa eo 4d Allied tr Progr. a will be forwarded | | 4 Allied troo i | aero! Dedegat beat riansels that those in the conf. | They being oath in readiness an to-day is that the erasldont ‘and the|be a mater of des United States Government now are diplomatic quarters it situation Is before the co-belligetent fp Governments and the future an- emai Was vtated in whk Pasha is holding out for through with separate dealings with |guaraptoes tnat Turkey be permitted ine the Gernan authorities. The whole dependent existence In Asia Minor. The Ingiet that Consiantinople and lestine be severed from the Turkish Lape. ASSORTED FRUIT AND NOT BUTTERCUPS— facies fe Dainty Ute sau ro acieteity rink silky flashed acl co GREA pews | Brooklyn Lieutenant Tells Mother | cording to advices received | KING OF BELGIANS LONGS TO RAISE HIS FLAG AT BRUSSELS ies Wi il Push neces That | the the All ir Successes to a Com. Victory. PARIS, Wednesday, Oct. 23,—Atlec be to a com ing Albert of Heigium mdent of a Maris | newspaper | "We must not that the tegs of « move as quickly as our heart tainly, never for an hour do to think of the day when I shal labie to enter Brussels and holst the Relgian flag there. but we jate still forty or fifty miles away, and there is the Scheldt River to vr crossed. “The victories of our soldiers prove ht wo were nut to de- spalr. King Afvert apoke (Man gun which bombarded |from Leygenboom and whica was ptured Intact. The King has tn tts possession splinters of ¢ | fired at Sil TY ce ‘WHY HYLAN IN LEFT T ‘THE FARM, Farmer if He Mad Stuck, Reigelmann Tells ttt Willlam fl Alien, Director of the Insutute for Public Service, made # strong plea in behalf of public schoo! teachers at the budget hearing to-day Many gf then, he said, ere worth! more to the city than they Nére being Good Only en twas @ boy," repited Mayor | » EL worked for a furiner. One| t occurred to me I was wo > more than the fa $ paying nie, 401 went to him and asked hin for a ‘The fa told me if 1 4 dn't tke my pay 1 could look for ano o», whioh 1 a! If you'a stuck,” observed Borvugy | pres dent Riegelmann of Brooklyn "rm sure you'd made a migt ates by Unis act ancl pniaetin | Ranmanta’ cis Binck Sea Poruw LONDON, Oct The Britien Ad tolraity reports jerman wirele nity good 2 that | Guapatches picked up at Moscow the effect that the Roumanian ment has declared al! Roumania Black Sea and on the 10m havea | a ernment the tempor: here to-day. —_— choices—sure to regret it thi afternoon."’ Ever feel that way? Lunch on Borden's Malted Milk. Noheavines: o regrets, Apure, nourishing, food-drink. ors—all fountains. on Rorden's=the roved Mattel Mus acting for New Ideas? ‘The best place to find them is where they grow the thickest, and that’s at the Business Show. Scores of booths full of them —ideas that point the way to lowered costs, quicker and more efficient work and less of the hard-to-get kind of office help. Come today, ih ingluate Oct, 2tat to 1 P.M. to tl BONDS BOUGHT Books, LIBERTY nait WMEDIATELY. SACKS cherkd jOpen daily uil"o BOM. ¢ Bundays till" WINTER OVERCOATS cu i va rROM AC i} Rt Lost, 7 tock” Myrtle 5 be wenarted, Bature w Pi be 5 AND REWARDS. | jae é GOTHAM HOSIERY { d| | } all seed ieee: Our Specialties Silk stockings that wear. Silk stockings that garter clasps cannot ful. Silk stockings dved to sample in afew hours without charge Silk stockings invi ibly repaired, “run new toes or feer inserted GOTHAM HOSIERY SHOPS Stivoth—Mellow— Delicious COF Sate in ae Lots From Wholesaler Direct to You BEAN or GROUND Sure Latur for t salt, Rud fuer t héewe, Mie ease aint swuter for sour. vere inn eee Le TH S30 F ff mate g Gillies Coffee Co. Beutn 1915, suddenty. of oda at. TIM. 1 of Bridact f Juha, de in ataty Cambs FUNERAL cHunon, AVAL Manone services A conducted Wednesdus, FUNERAL Cuur On Oct, a1 on OL: ot Thomas Couns and the Be Inte Arnea Yrantes ( of George Thomas, Ct and Gortrutie, M ' tren dis Keauteon 1Stot, Cor ry. May bis Arrauy 2, ta hor fty-third wear, Oct Funeral from ber lacy ce ous West Thirtv-seventh Stree 2. Oct 25, 10 A, Mi thence to wr tt Church, where masa wil ' the repose of her soul, |MARTORELL.-MAGIA GERESA MAR. jh Serv at UASIPBELL FUNERAL CHURCH, Broadway, 66t ot, Fr #30 MARLEI.—On Wednesday. Ger, 5 MARY AITKEN YOUNG MARLEY, b MWKINLEY, OU 2 tone loved dof Bella Mowiniey (a D , f Rosana alot wad the late Ja McKinley Funeral from Wis late residence. 265i ib av., on Saturday at 8.45 A.M, Mbane at St, Charles Borromeo Chureh at 8.1 A.M. tuterment Calvecy Cemetery RAZ.—MANL PIEDRAZ, Lying fn atate at THE VUNERAL CHURCH, Drowiway end 6Oto oe SBELOS.—NANETTE SHELOS, Lying In state CAMPBELL FUNERAL Weoadway, 66th st. EVA LEVY SHELLEY lying AL CHURCH —TETSUZO, in state CAMPBELL FUNERAL CHURCH, Broadway, 66th at w—Dr, FRANK J, Frank Joseph Stoll Funeral v 2756 Creston av STOREY. 22, 1918. Hines, 18 A. ron of ¥ t Storey eral from his late residenc East 117th st., Friday, 2 o'clock. | WALCOT.—-BEATRICE RAMSAY WAL. cor * Services FUNERAL CHURCH, 66d ot, Friday, 1 P.M in state CAMPBELL Broadway, 68th at, beloved son of M., Oct. 24, ae Oct after @ ehort ¥ STOREY, Delovedt at CAMPBELL Broadway, UNDERTAKERS, IF your Undertaker cannot with the CASKET as Te “The Campbell service never falters. NY “The Campbell Bronze Caskets Endare’’ J We still have on hand a complete assortment of Caskets, Boxes, Vaults. Etc.. notwithstanding the fact that the Epidemic has greatly depleted Maou- facturers’ stocks FRANK CAMPBELL NV ‘THE FUNERAL CHURCH” \ NON-SEOTARIAN \G eRe B’way 66th-67th wt. S >No Deserving Poor Re/ueseet Phone Columbus 6200"