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New-York tribune. [volume] (New York [N.Y.]) 1866-1924, May 04, 1919, Image 16

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$2,842,021,000
Victory Bonds
Yet To Be Sold
Nearly Half of Buying
Must Come in Final Week
of Campaign if Govern?
ment Gets Money It Needs
Workers Are Optimistic
Feel Sure That Momentum
Gained in Fight Thus Far
Is Sure to Bring Success
Latest statistics of subscriptions re?
ceived last night at the close of the
first two of the throe weeks drive for
$4,500,000,000 to pay the unpaid bills
of victory showed that the bulk of the
people's job of lending funds to the
government will have to be done in
the closing days of tho campaign.
The Treasury Department announced
that $1,657,979,000 of the new gold
Victory notes had been sold in the
first eleven business days of the coun?
trywide "push." This figure reveals
that the people in the twelve Federal
Reserve districts have fallen $1,092,
021,000 behind their schedule. To
touch the goal fixed by Secretary
Glass, $2,842,021,000 will have been
subscribed in the days that remain.
The campaign workers are confi?
dent that the cumulative effect of the
campaigning in the opening weeks
will be registered in the notes sold
next week.
If Each Does His Share
If only each citizen realizes that his
subscription is necessary for success
the amount will be tilled easily, say
loan officials, who insist thare is
plenty of money in circulation.
Ranking tenth among the Reserve
districts, New York and the rest of
the Second Federal Reserve District
have raised $376,906,250, or 27.9 per
cent of its quota. To raise the $1,350,
000,000 which was allotted to this
district, the people will have to buy
notes at the rate of $189,013,400 in the
remaining days. The gain for the dis?
trict on the eleventh day was $43,999,
700, and for the country as a whole
S157.979.000.
Three of the twelve Reserve dis?
tricts have exceeded the half-way
mark?St. Louis, Minneapolis and
Chicago.
Standing of Districts
The standing of the twelve follows:
PI Louis.$126,246,000 64.74
Minneapolis . 83,268,000 62.86
Chicago . 332,122,000 60.90
llo.?ion . 170,724,000 45.52
Kansas City. 77,078,000 39.62
Richmond . 80,566,000 38.36
. lev? land . 151,734,000 33.71
Atlantu . 48,363,000 33.67
I'hiladetphla . 112.653,000 30.04
New V.irli. 376,900,000 27.91
Pan Francisco. 78,071,000 25.90
Dallas . 20,260,000 21,13
Of the subdistricts of the New York
district, Syracuse and Utica lead with
44.9 per c:*nt of its quota tilled, and
Queens stands first among the five bor?
oughs of the city with 39.9 per cent
of its allotment cared for, having just
displaced Brooklyn from the leading
position.
Analysis of Figures
An analysis of the statistics for the
Second Federal Reserve District
follows :
NEW YORK CIT?
BubecrlpUona Per .vnt
Oil Total f..r of
ci' renth <1hv. elevon days. quota.
Manhattan .ti;i.O'iN.;r.O $230.262,650 25.8
ltro.-kl.vn . H0?;.:?.-,0 1:2,632,000 37.TJ
Uuoeii?. 1,103,100 2,823,450 30.9
liront . 61,650 547,050 11.0
lUchmond . 39,800 888,550 23.8
New York City..$23.449,750 $265,654,600 26.5
r.ufralo . $T.C6?.S0O $23.402.ino 35.7
Horhfj.tr . 1.415.100 10.:?2S.700 32.fi
Syracuse and UUca. 1,220,100 12,:?7.tiu0 28.2
llliiRhainum ami El
lnlra . 1.003.700 fi.:174.?00 44.0
Albany . 4,253.87.') 18.059.3U0 35.8
Long bland (outside
New York City).. 402,27.0 2,01f.,7nO 35.8
northern New Jersey 2.8tt8,:'.o>) 29,214,450 27.0
ralrfl.'l.t fount y.
Conn. : Westcbester
ami ltorklaiid coun?
ties . 1,710.850 8,038,200 30.3
Total outside city.$20.549.97.0 $111,251,650 31.S
Total for district..$43,909,700 $376.906,250 27.0
Sixteen additional towns in the Sec
end Federal Reserve District yesterday
passed 100 per cent, of their quotas,
making a total of 159 community honor
flags thus far in the campaign. The j
newest additions were Comstoek, Skan- I
eateles Falls, Bouckville, Irvington, !
Fast Irvington, Flushing, Crestwood,
Xiverville, Schenectady, Limerich, Apa- I
chalin and Maltaville all in New York, j
??nd Clifford, North Branch, Cranbury
and Stockholm, X. J.
Memory of War Dead
Recalled to Spur Loan
Meeting on Victory Way at 3
o'Clock To Be Attended by
Those Who Mourn Their Loss
Ceremonies at Victory Way, on Park
Avenue from Forty-fifth to Fiftieth
Street, to-day will be in honor of
America's fighting men who fell in
France. Officially designated as "Gold
Star Day," the exercises will be at?
tended by parents and friends of men
who gave their lives for victory.
Father Duffy, of the 69th Regiment,
and the Rev. Herbert Shipman, senior
chaplain of the First Army, American
Expeditionary Force, suggested the day
to the Victory Liberty Loan Commit?
tee,
The meeting, scheduled for 3
?'clock, will be nonsectarian. Father
Duffy, Chaplain DavldowitZ and Chap?
lain Shipman will make/addresses, A
rilen4, prayer will be given, and the
exercisoH will be closed with the sound?
ing of tap*.
The Woman'? Liberty Loan Commit?
tee will hold "Gratitadfl Services" at
"the Altar of Liberty, In Madison
Square, at 10 o'clock. Mr?. Antoinette
Funk, Dr. O. H. L. Mason and Dr. Ches?
ter C. Marshall will speak, and Mme.
(?rare Humlin, of the Boston Opera
Company, will sine.
??. ? . i
IHivharged Men May File
rjctinis for More Mileage
WASHINGTON, May 3.--Thousands
of wen d?sch&rgfld from service bfl
tw??n November 11 and February 28
trnxy file claims with the auditors of
the War Department for 1V4 cents a
roil?! for travel expenses from the
place of discharge to their homes. This
v/hu decided ? to-day by Controller of
tb* Treasury Warwick. Men dis?
charged between those dates had been
allowed only '?% cents a mile under a
former act.
READY FOR GERMAN POISON
s>iw^w-M-?-vMy,'?.v.m?v.-ft-^vAAVKv.?.-.y.^ :.:?:?:?:?:?-.?:?:::<-.-:?::.:?:???..;??/'?;?;:?? : :
Horse and rider equipped witn ^u? masKS, as they appeared in the Vic?
tory Loan pageant.
Policemen to Stop All
Who Have No Loan Buttons
Complete Canvass of City Is Begun by Men o
Department, Aided by Firemen; Thousand?
of Cards Signed; Big Business at Booth
The police of the city yesterday be- | p<
pan a search for men and women who j u<
appear in the streets without Victory I
Loan buttons. All persons found in the ;
dragnet will be politely asked to put j ?
their names on the nation's financial L,
honor roll. ?
Besides 7,000 to 8,000 policemen who '
will actively participate in the cam- '. (
paign all next week, many firemen will
aid in the work. The men will work
under the auspices of the 'Metropolitan
Canvass Committee, and will seek sub- j i
scriptions from people in the street to
overcome the deficit here.
From Washington Square to 110th j
Street on Fifth Avenue, where the I
Panorama of Victory proceeded yester
day, policemen and lire fighters did |
their first day's duty and got many j
thousands to sign pledge cards or pur- ?
chase coupon books.
More than ?I.OOO.OUO of notes were
sold in the booths yesterday, which
were patronized by 15,000 individual
buyers. Mrs. Charles S. Whitman.
chairman of the booth at the Altar of
Liberty, in Madison Square, reported
sales of $90,250, and the boot!; at the
Grand Central Station, in charge of
Mrs. Grantland Rice, raised $63,950.
The "Argonne Forest" selling unit at
Times Square brought in $55,750.
The following new subscriptions for
largo amounts, many of which are not
yet included in the official total, were !
filed here yesterday:
Brown Bros. & Co., $4,000.000.
$1,000,000 Subscriptions
Union Carbide & Carbon Company, :
Julien Stevens Ulman, Morton H. Mein
hard, William Rockefeller, J. P. Mor?
gan (personal), F. Blumenthal Com?
pany, Delaware; East River Savings
Institution.
$511.500 to $900,000
Forstmann & Iluffmann (additional),
$900,000; Franklin Simon & Co. and
employes, $700.000; E. I. du Pont de
Nemours & Co. (additional), $675,000;
Utah Copper Company (additional),
$600,000; Metcalf Bros. & Co., $544,500.
$500,000 Subscriptions.
Butte and Superior Mining Company,
Nevada Consolidated Copper Company.'
Chino Copper Company, Ray Consoli?
dated Copper Company, National Lead
Company, Eugene Meyer, jr.
$101,600 to $295,000
C.artleld Worsted Mills (additional),
i $295.000; National Aniline and Chem?
ical Company, $250.000; The Barrett
Company, $250,000; Creen Street Real?
ty Company, $300,000; Raritan Woolen
Mills, $114,650; Charles Pfizer & Co.,
Inc., $110,000; Edmund Wright-Gins?
berg Company, $103,700; W. II. Duval
| & Co., $101.600.
$100,000 Subscription?
Mrs. Gerrish Milliken, Dickerson,
Van Dusen & Co., Herbert !.. Pratt,
American Zinc, Wing & Evans, Detmer
! Woolen Company, Auburn Woolen
Company, Sun Insurance Company,
l'assaic Cotton Mills.
$55,000 to $75,000
Semet Solvay Company (additional),
$75.000; Southern Cotton Oil Company,
! $75,000; H. E. "Yerran Company, $75,
? 000; West Disinfecting Company, $67,
000; Harry Rosenwasser, $60,000;
Stern, Heineman & Herff, $55,000.
$50,000 Subscriptions
Dix, Henry A., & Sons. Fleitman &
: Co., Inc., Ichabod T. Williams & Sons,
George D. Emery Company, By-Prod
uctfl Coke Corporation, Lanman &
Kemp, Peters, White & Co., Franklin
i Black, Standard Varnish Works, John
Anderson, Emile Pfizer, Binney &
Smith, Harry E. Verran, Knickerbocker
Insurance Company, .1. K. Lar kin (ad?
ditional).
$23,150 to $10,000
American Steel Foundries, $40,000; J.
C. Turner Lumber Company, $40,000;
Swift & Co., $40,000; Elizabeth M. An?
derson, $40,000; Louis Leavitt & Co.,
$35,000; Cross, Austin <& Ireland Lum?
ber Company, Brooklyn, $30,000; Dr.
Benjamin T. Whitmore, ?27.H00; Dr.
James D. Vortices, $35,150.
$25,000 Subscriptions
Mrs. J. Watson Webb, George Loask
& Co., H. K. S. Williams, Hayden
Chemical Works, Koller Color and
Chemical Company, Inc., Paterson,
Boardman & Knapp, McKoason & Rob?
bies, Inc., Omega Chemical Company,
Herman Hheur & Sons, Samstag & Hil
dcr Brother?, A. Stelnhardt & Brother,
Fercav?! U. IiilU Ne?U?'n Food Com
iny. Inc., Victor Morawetz, Ajax Ru
?r Companv, Inc.
Parsons & Whittemorc, $22,200.
$20,000 Subscriptions
William C. Lane, Rosman Tannii
struct Company, I. M. Stcttenhei:
auis Mortimer, National Enamelii
This is Gold Star Day
In Victory Way Events
THE following events will take
place to-day in the Victory Lib?
erty Loan campaign;
GOLD STAR DAY
Victory Way
3 P. M.?Invocation by Rabbi Harry j
S. Davidowitz, address by Father i
Duffy and prayer by Chaplain
Shipman.
Victory Way
8 TO 10 P. M.?Polish Night: Exer- '
cises.
Hippodrome
8 P. M.?Concert. Addresses by
Rear Admiral Sims and Lieutenant
Colonel Frank S. Evans.
Academy of%Music, Brooklyn
2 P. M.?Concert and Norwegian rally.
Hotel Plaza
8 P. M.?Concert and French dem?
onstration in behalf of loan.
and Stamping Company, Fried Mendel
son & Co., Daas & Toen, Aetna Life In?
surance Company (additional).
Dr. Silas F. Halleck, $15,500.
$15,000 Subscriptions
Lumber Mutual Casualty Company,
Inc., F. U. Steams & Co., Philip Florin,
Heinrich, Herman & Weiss, Himmel
& Isaacs, James B. Homer, Inc., De
voe & Reynolds Company, Inc., F. O.
Palmer, Mrs. Antoinette Eno Wood,
Mrs. Charlotte G. Norton.
Louis Rosenheim & Co., $14,000; J.
& C. Fischer, $13,000; Clifford Sea
songood, $12,000; Mrs. A. Louise Er?
langer, $11,000.
$10,000 Subscriptions
Globe Wernicke Company, S. Wieder, j
Carl Maier & Co., Simpson, Spencer
& Young, Walter Hinchman, Mrs.
Emma D. Kemeys, W. S. Matthews &
Sons, Edwin Gould, Charles S. & Will?
iam I. Spiegelberg, John B. Phillips,
John Lumsden, Autosales Corporation,
The North American Companv, Mrs.
Katharine Pratt Twitchell, Barber,
Watson & Gibboney, Abraham & Co.,
A. J. or F. L. Sperry, Rube A.
Fogel, Leon Gilbert, sr., Richard L.
Morirs, Charles S. Jones & Co., Allen
Wardwell, General Hide and Skin
Corporation, William H. McAllister, A.
Pricken, David Schoenfeld (additional),
Mrs. Emily Mayo Schell, Madeira Em?
broidery Company, A. P. Villa & Broth?
ers, Celia Sibley Wilson, A. W. Her?
zog, Mackie Paschall Davis, Walter
Fedorman, C. T. Carnahan, Fred M. Hil?
ton, Murray Guggenheim.
Germany to Pay $35,000,000
To Brazil for Coffee Seized.,
RIO JANEIRO, May 2.?Dr. Epitacio
Pessoa, President-elect of Brazil and
head of the Brazilian delegation at the
peace conference, has sent word here
by cable that the conference has de?
cided that Germany shall pay the cost
of the coffee stocks confiscated at
Hamburg and Antwerp at the beginning
of the war, together with interest on
the sum involved. The value of the
coffee is ?7,000,000 ($35,000,000).
Your Liberty
AND
YOUR LOAN
m
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Don't Be Afraid, Good Friends of Russia; Don't
Rejoice, Our Enemies ! Russia-Will Emerge Free,
Strong and United ! "
Says Catherine Breshkovsky in
UGGLING
A New Weekly Magazine Devoted to Russian Problems
Rassia Will Emerge Free, Strong and United! The Russian People Against Bolshevism
Leonid Andreiev, the famous Russian writer, in
his "Appeal to Humanity" says :
<t"VTOT for the Russian people do I pray for help. To save the
?^ Russian people is too great a problem, and God alone ia
the master of its life and death.
In these sorrowful days when the scorn and laughter of
fools is the lot of great and trampled-in-the-dust Russia, I bear
with pride my Russian name, and firmly believe in the future
and glory of Russia. Such giants like Russia cannot perish!
Whether the Allied Governments come to Russia's aid or she is
left alone to free herself from the putrid swamps, it> matters not.
In the destined hour Russia will rise from her grave, will come
out into the path of light and will take her place amon;' tho great
nations of the earth."
("Struggling Russia," April 26. 1919.)
Catherine Breshkovsky, "The Grandmother of
the Russian Revolution," says:
* * RUSSIA will emerge free, strong, and united! Natureiteelf
1 has constructed her to remain in her entirety.
It is the Ukraine that fed all of Northern Russia, giving
her excellent wheat and seven;! kinds of grain so much needed
all over the country. It was she who furnished all Russia with
her garden fruits, the delight of our children. After the
Ukraine, it was the Donetzky Basseyn which enabled the Moscow
region to develop its industry, supplying it with millions of tons
of the best coal, giving heat and light to millions of people.
What would Russia be without the Ural, with its stores of
every kind of mineral, metal and precious stones, its beautiful
mountains covered with mighty forests, with rich meadows giv?
ing the best of grass to feed millions of cattle?
Linen and hemp are supplied by Little Russia, and cotton
by the Province of Tashkent. Oil, naphtha and kerosene are ob?
tained from Baku, which yields these treasures in sufficient
quantity to satisfy all the demands of Russia's interior shipping
and other industries. Certainly, oil is not the only material from
the Caucasus that enriches Russia. There is another immense
Province that presents Russia with no lesser gifts?Siberia. For
a long time this vast Province has been considered by the Rus?
sian people its treasury of gold, silver, precious furs and lum?
ber, in quantity sufficient for many centuries.
And in their turn all these Provinces ar3 in need of the
region which has Moscow as its center, for all Russia's industry
was concentrated here owing to the fact that the dense popula?
tion of 'Great Russia,' gathered here through political need and
historical developments, could not depend upon the natural prod?
ucts of its own scanty soil and was forced to apply its energies
to industrial work.
Textiles, wares and other goods were manufactured around
Moscow in great quantities and there was not a nook in Russia
that did not use goods manufactured in Moscow. Thus, every
Province was always certain that all its needs would be satisfied
by the indu3trk 1 center and always looked upon that center as a
part of itself.
Once Russ.a is free, she will unite around her all those who
seek freedom and peace, who desire to live together in friendship.
She will exist as a strong Federal Republic, protecting every
nationality within her boundaries."
("Struggling Russia," April 19, 1919.)
Russia s Sacrifices in the World War
"Kussia will rise from her grave," says Leonid Andreiev.
The civilized world should understand that Russia's tem?
porary ruin is the consequence of her participation in the
War; that Russia is lying in seas of blood and tears be?
cause she has sacrificed everything for the Allied cause.
The diagram below is prepared on the basis of figures
published by Gen. March, Chief of the General Staff'of the
United States Army, in his statement regarding the
casualties in the Allied Armies during the War.
THE DEATH TOLL JN THB
ALLIED ARMIES
The diagram speaks for itself. As far as Russia is con?
cerned, the statement of Gen. March is based probably on in?
formation transferred to this country from Copenhagen. The
Copenhagen dispatches underestimated the Russian casualties
in this War. A pamphlet issued by the Committee on Public
Information under the title "A Tribute to the Allies" esti?
mated the total Russian casualties ii this War, including war
prisoners, as l'?.000,000, of whom 3,000,000 were killed or died
of wounds.
The estimate of the Committee on Public Information cor?
responds with the data of the Russian General Staff. Rus?
sia's sacrifices in this War are not less than 3,000,000 dead, and
about 1,000,000 disabled for life. Russia is lying in seas of
blood and tears because she has sacrificed everything for the
Allied c*iuse.
("Struggling Russia," April 5, 1919.)
The plague of Bolshevism has struck Russia be?
cause the terrible sacrifices of the"first three years
of War have exhausted the nation, undermined
her industries, commerce, transportation and
finance. But the Russian people have fought, are
fighting, and will fight Bolshevism to the. very end.
If you want to understand why the people of
Russia, not only the Russian middle-class but also,
and especially, the Russian peasantry and working
men are waging open war against the Bolshevik; ;
if vou want to know why not only the Russian
liberals, the Constitutional-Democratic Party, but
also the People's Socialists, the Social-Democrats
Mensheviki and the Party of Socialists-Revolution?
ists are engaged in a death struggle with Bolshev?
ism?read the following telegram of the British
High Commissioner, R. H. B. Lockhart, to the Sec?
retary of Foreign Affairs of Great Britain, Mr. Bal
four. The telegram is dated November 10, 1918,
and here is its full text :
WTHE following points may interest Mr. Balfour:?
A 1. The Bolsheviks have established a rule of fore? and
oppression unequalled in the history of any autocracy.
2. Themselves the fiercest upholders of the right of freo
speech, they have suppressed, since coming into power, every
newspaper which does not approve their policy. In this re?
spect the Socialist press has suffered most of all. Even thfl
papers of the Internationalist Mensheviks, like Martov's, have
been suppressed and closed down, and the unfortunate editors
thrown into prison or forced to flee for their lives.
8. The right of holding public meetings has been abol?
ished. The vote has been taken away from every one except
the workmen in the factories and the poorer servants, and
even amongst the workmen those who dare to vote against tho
Bolsheviks ave. marked down by the Bolshevik secret police as
counter-revolutionaries and are fortunate if their worst fa to is
to be thrown into prison, of v/hich in Russia to-day it may truly
be said, 'Many go in but few come out.'
4. The worst crimes of the Bolsheviks have been against
their Socialist opponents. Of the countless executions which the
Bolsheviks have carried out a large percentage has fallen on the
heads of Socialists who had waged a life-long strupele against
tha old r?gime, but who are now denounced as counter-revolu?
tionaries merely because they disapprove of the manner in which
the Bolsheviks have discredited Socialism.
5. The Bolsheviks have abolished even the most primitivo
forms of justice. Thousands of men and women have been shos
without even the mockery of a trial, and thousands more art?
left to rot in the prisons under conditions to find a parallel to
which one must turn to the darkest annals of Indian or Chinese
hiatory.
6. The Bolsheviks have restored the barbarous methods o?
torture. The examination of prisoners frequently takes placo
with a revolver at the unfortunate prisoner's head.
7. The Bolsheviks have established the odious practice of
taking hostages. Still worse, they have struck at their political
opponents through their women folk. When recently a long list
of hostages was published in Petrograd, the Bolsheviks seized
the wives of those men whom they could not find and threw them
into prison until their husbands should give themselves up.
8. The Bolsheviks who destroyed the Russian army, and
who have always been the avowed opponents of militarism, have
forcibly mobilized officers who do not share their political views,
but whose technical knowledge is indispensable, and by tho
threat of immediate execution have forced them to fight against
their fellow-countrymen in a civil war of unparalleled horror.
9. The avowed ambition of L?nine is to create civil warfare
throughout Europe. Every speech of Lenine's is a denunciation
of constitutional methods and a glorification of the doctrine of
physical force. With that object in view he is destroying syste?
matically both by executions and by deliberate starvation every
form of opposition to Bolshevism. This system of 'terror' is
aimed chiefly at the Liberals and non-Bolshevik Socialists, whom
L?nine regards as his most dangerous opponents.
10. In order to maintain their popularity with the work
h.gmen and with their hired mercenaries, the Bolsheviks are pay?
ing their supporters enormous wages by means of an unchecked
paper issue, until to-day money in Russia has naturally lost all
value. Even according to their own figures the Bolsheviks' ex?
penditure exceeds the revenue by thousands of millions of rou?
bles per annum.
These are facts for which the Bolsheviks may seek to find
an excuse, but which they cannot deny."
("Struggling Russia," May $, 1919.)
The Issue of April 26th contains:
"S. O. S." (An Appeal to Humanity) Leonid Andreiev.
How to Help Russia Catherine Breshkovsky.
The Victorious March of the Anti-Bolshevist Armies
Mir, Zemstvo and Soviet M. K. Eroshkin.
The Recent Past o? Russia's industry S. J. Gavr?lov.
Cable News:
From the Russian Telegraphic Agency in Omsk
Russian Documents :
1. The City of the Dead (Petrograd under Bol?
shevist Rule) ; 2. Have the Socialists-Revolution?
ists United with the Bolsheviki? 3. The Decla?
ration of the Russian Political Conference in
Paris with regard to the Problem of Nationali?
ties in Russia.
The latest issue, May 3rd, contains:
Russia and the World Catherine BaFiHEovsrr.
The First Step in Russia's Regeneration Paul Muiukov
Military End Political Leadership in Russ"s a. J Sack
My Experiences in Bolshevist Russia Evixup Aboksbkko
Military Officers in the Russian Revolutionary Movement
C. M. Obeboccheff
Cables from the Russian Telegraphic Agency in Omsk
Russian Documents:
1. The British High Commissioner, R. H. B. Lock h art,
versus Colonel Raymond Robins; 2. Additional
Documents on Red Terror in Bolshevist Russia;
3. The Execution of General Ruzsky; 4. The Volun?
tary Army in Southern Russia (An Address by Gen
eral A. I. Denikine).
Do not fail to read "STRUGGLING RUSSIA." The
Russian problem is the central World Problem of today.
Single Copy 5c, At All News-Stands
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
$1.50 A YEAR; 75c?SIX MONTHS
Trial Subscription: You may send 25c (coin or
money-order) and receive "Struggling Russia"
for eight weeks.
.fill out this coupon immediately
\ Russian Information Bureau in the United State?
l Piibluheni ???truerlinr R?mala"
? Woolworth Building. New York City
C Gentlemen:
; I enclose herewith $.for which please send me your weekly
; magazine, "Struggling Russia," for.##_
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