The evening world. Newspaper, November 19, 1914, Page 1

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i PRIOE ONE CENT. ‘cmt 926,t0 e 37,716 SCHOOL CHILD IN NEW YORK SUFFER DALY FROM HALF-FAMISHED STATE Evening World’s Plan to Feed _ Necessitous School Children Every necessitous child, ‘after investigation, who has not the nec- penny to procure the lunch, to be given a ticket by the teacher the meal. The necessitous child without funds will therefore be ‘unknown to the other children. r ADMINISTRATION. ‘The present moving machinery of the School Lunch Committee under the auspices of the Association for the Improvement of the Con- dition Gf the Poor shall extend the lunches to all schools, by the funds obtaineé through The Evening World. COMMITTEE OF CO-OPERATION. ‘ MIGD MABEL HYDE KITTREDGE, whe Fit peann.Wwndnge In the Ae, WiLLtAM GRANT BROWN ‘of the Federation of Women'a n and Rescue Homes. Noeant CARTWRIGHT, Chairman of Public Pron a Sree fe berg re y Chet Rear’ me ike aa ancon "ae cena Hy Playgreund Move- This Committee. will work under the auspices of The Evening World ana the Association for the Improvement of the Condition of the Poor, represgnted by Bailey B. Burritt, General Director, and Edward F. | Brown, r of Iunches, and Miss Mabel Hyde Kittredge, all, of course, who are now in co-operation with the Board of Education. The Evening World will publish the conditions and facts as inves- ns proceed and will receive and account for funds. Each school "will be: gradually opened to this measure through the work of The Evening World. All present relief organizations of the city will report to the above @ommittee their cases of actual necessitous children which they will recommend for meals. mo money is made in any way—everything is given at cost. " Evening World’s Campaign for *——__— Feeding Without Pauperiz- FOUR KILLED IN AUTO ing Progresses, SMASHED BY TRAIN Mayor of Convoy, O., His Wife and Her Parents Victims in Collision at Railroad Crossing. FORT WAYNE, [nd Nov. 19.— Four persons were instantly killed at Convoy, O., thirty miles east of this city, when the Pennsylvania flyer struck an automubile in which they were riding, at @ crossing, early to- day. Tho victims were Durbin Leslie, Mayor of Convoy; his wife and Dr. and Mrs. De Hayes, parents of Mra. Lesiio. | By Sophie Irene Loeb. ‘The following conditions exist in Mew York City: Thirty-seven thousand seven hundred and seventy-six children euffering from malnutrition on, socount ef lack of food and im- proper food. Hundreds of scheol children unable to get pi food on count of unemployment in the family. Principale et echools plead for enough milk and eggs to at least mourish 7 per cent. of their chil- —_———~—_ SIX-DAY RACE SCORE OF EIGHTY-EIGHTH HOUR. yarious cases go down into their @wn pockets to give lunches to the children that they eee in thie con- Miles. Lape. + 1742 REN _|KARLSRUME NWA FOR BRITISH NERS ER oR on Ship She Cap- \ {THRILLS IN THEIR TALE. | \English Prisoners Secretly | atiantio, is under orders to make a Ti to southern’ waters. | to-day by 114 passengers on board the | were on the Lamport & Holt, liner | the Karlsruhe off Babia, Brasil, Oct. |26, and wore taken to that port by a FINAL Che | “Cironlation Books Open to All,’ iB J 5 NEW “YORK, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER | 19, ‘York Weetd). IN NORTH ATLANTI tured Are Here and Tell Her Plans, Planned Attack on Their German Captors. ‘The German cruiser Karlsruhe, ter- ror of British shipping in the South: dash north and etrike Gireokty at, the North Atigatie ahi laned ' taving done as much damage as possibi British ships of South America and , having drawn the major portion of the British North Atlantic squadron This ts the news brought into port! Brazilian steamer San Paolo, who! Van Dyck when it was captured by German tender of the Karlsruhe. | While German officers were aboard the Van Dyck they freely told the; passengers thelr work in the South Atlantic was about finished, and that | within a short time their cruiser would make its dash to the North At- lantic. Lieut. Count von Issen, one of the Karlsruhe'a boarding officers, aboard the Van Dyck, said the Karlsruhe would run the gauntlet of the British crulsers despatched to southern waters and would lie off the ship lane between New York and Liver- pool to pounce upon one of the big Cunarders or White Star leviathans. Ho spoke confidently of the success of this venture, saying the Karlsruhe had enough coal and sufficient speed to make the break throygh the British cordon, TALE OF CAPTURE OF VAN DYCK LIKE ROMANCE, In case of being hard pressed, the Count said, the Karleruhe’s orders were to find refuge in a port of the United States, But if she were forced to fight against overwhelming odds she was to be destroyed by her com- mander, ‘Mines were laid along the interior of the cruiser, to be touched off by electricity as # last resort. It was the opinion of many of the refugees from the Van Dyck that the Karlsruhe was already speeding north, and that her presence in the North Atlantic steamship lane would | soon be made known by @ daring coup against one of the British float- BROADWAY CROWD SES FIRE PANG NEXT TO THEATRE | Goullet and Grenda. 9 . eed Guteoh the onan we a dition. ing palaces, Flames darted out of the open win- a w Hund ede of families, having Moran and McNama 1748 bd The story told t- the waifs from the we and danced and filekered above! children, appes! to charity that | Fogler and Hill 1742 9 ¥ gp Piso gone Root and Clark 1742 gi sunken steamer Van Dyck is alt Se chiiiel® voaninimheatea nest \ | romance such as rarely comes to this vhich Elsie Fe ly way to relieve this | E99 and Verr 1742 9 i ; dor which Elsie Ferguson was una annenk: peuperizing the Cameron and Kaiser, 1742 g| Work-a-day port of New York. Sure) staying a inatines in “The Outcast,” ehildren le te provide one equare 1742 @ 9| Prise, plots, attempted mutiny—these| pore was no panic in the theatre, meal a day Aytod public schools. 1748 9| are some of its elements, Alexus Lin-| pu: there was a tremendous uproar Bohoo! luneh committee dein se 1742 9) Gren, @ representative of the Inter-| in the house of the fire, The building jenootiont work, but lack funde. ° +. 1742 | national Harvester Corhpany of Mo-| iy twoive tories high and of fireproof After investigation as to the re- janiey. 1742 7| line, Ill, and Sidney Goldschmidt, rep- | construction, but itf’blazing mid-sec parts of starving children in the pud- | Bedell and Bedell. 1742 G| resenting tho International Paper/tion sent all the tenants scurrying, te dehools, I find that the allegations | Mitten and Anderson... 1742 6) Company and realding in Brooklyn.) Rxpecially the men and xirle who ave true, and that thousands of chil-| Qupuy and Piercey 1743 1| were two who tuld the story to AA) were in the film room when it burat ..@ven are auftering from mainutrition, | Kepsky-and Hansen. 741 Evening World reporter. |into roaring blazes, They ran shout- ‘ 8! leading; former record 1742 which has been existing, but which is ‘© eartainly accentuated by the present eatricken families. It 1» estimated by Edward F. Brown, Buperintendent of the Bureau ‘ of Welfare for School Children, t “ ever 87,776 children are th ff ing. From ail reports of the various ‘vollef organizations hundreds of . Mle are rithews manne, te previde| St, Perchicot in 1913, SS aay W , black thibet, brown: Car yt stripes ag and mostly Engliah, forty | Bahia, Passengers and ¢ Ww alike $12 Se eee semua ee very nervous over the possjbility of tors, whlch f the Karlsruhe. But on Oct, British cruiser Bytetot was (Continued on Second Page.) we oh Waar, ‘The Van Dyck, with sixty first clans | ing down the stairs to he street Other people in the houne necond class and 180 in the steerage picture \ealers, film exchange man- jwas sailing from Santos, Braail, to agers, musical publishers and then- German Crown Prince in the Field Sitting With Members of Staff = the stairs or down the fire escape at the rear of the bullding, An artist ran out of his studio on the fourth floor carrying a painting upon which he has been at work for three weeks, Suddenly he remem- bered that he had left his coat be- hind, and, leaving the painting Propped against a stair tread, is ran With his coat on his arm he eprint- ed down tho stairs two at a step~and BRESNAHAN NOW MANAGER OF CHICAGO RATIONALS Former Giant sot Abpea To-Day to Succeed O'Day as Cubs’ Leader. CINCINNATI, Nov. 19.—-Roger Bresnahan was to-day appointed manager of the Chicago National League Baseball Club following meeting between President Thomas of the club, Charles P. Taft, owner of | the majority of the atock of the club, and Bresnahan, Ho succveds Henry O'Day. Breanahan #liqned a contract | fo document were not announced, Bres nohan was formefly catcher for the New York Nationals, former manager | trical agents-flew to the three elewa- ck & Frank Distasio ond James McCormick kept running to full eupacity 1 the bullding wan so full of smoke that they could neither gee nor breathe ‘above the sixth floor, After that some of the tensots atill dashed dows of Uhe St. Louis Nationals and last veagson was catcher for the team he wigned to manage to-day, pe 19, 1914. RUSSIAN AND TURKISH WAR FLEETS: IN BIG BATTLE IN THE BLACK SEF BATTLESHIP DA DAMAGED, FRANCE STRIKES OFF. ALL GERMAN NAMES ON LEGION OF HONOR plunged his right foot, alas! deep into) Poincare Says Teutons Are AlxelasChappelle, Charleroi and Maubeuge to St. . if his prectous painting, h that the G ha Ciwarette Sets Off F' and no! L won't tell you his name,"| Violating All International It Is reported that the Germans have evacuated Lille en Nai she to The Evening World re-! that the town is now occupied bysthe British. Douai is Empties Building—Damage | porter. “11m budly enquah off as it} Rules for War. reported occupied by the allies. ts without be rs “, He ix of mild nd middie War O} TOO) Is $60,000, hoight, rather. slim and. has brown | According to the War Office report the French t pohavd jhair and Van Dyke beard. A BORDEAUX, via Parts, Nov, 19 {defeated a German attack at Tracy-le-Val, inflicting heavy loss. Be ae erin Se Hernponsible te | (Associated? Press).—President Poln- LONDON, Nov. 19.—The Daily Mail's Dunkirk correspondent ‘wiress ‘aif a dozen men and girls were VK IS mm ip the long and|care Iasued a dec to-day striking |The Germ noticed a week ago that the fire from the English warabiper working at a quarter pact 2 o'clock | many- ya. The flames! from the roll of the Legion of Honor | off the Belgian coast spared the houses on the sea front at Middelkorka, - | this afternoon In the fim r of thet j the names of all Germans thereon. whereupon they took up quarters in them, This fact became known to-the: Amertean and European Film Com. | th ei y died away and| “When the French Government be- | y3ritish, who suddenly bombarded the houses from five ships at once, The ath oh ipl Kini (Aube OF 90 145 | He, fireme 0 Srp ge eeenteraptl pee 4 the decoration of he 2eaeien of German casualties were enormous, the dead being estimated at 1,700," West Forty-fifth et. The films oving pietu films on the sixth! ——— ticor te 4 ‘ not do so merely in 2. 2 are made—WERE made of cellulold,| gyreaa tlw ognition of individual ment, but (Germans Report Battle in Air; A man came in with a cighrette, The} men to th Iso and above all these distinctions ° 2 ‘ge found of the explosion could be beard | Was ne panic re acvordod as a mark of homage One of Their Machines Lost blocks away. | to the nation to which the foretaners | nuRtIN, Nov. 19 (via Wireless Telegraphy to London).—A German thus decorated belong.” Presi Germans, in conducti systematically violatin, of international law by jai and barbariam without precedent history of humanity, which | in the have excited against Germany the universal conacienc NO CONSCRIPTION IN IRELAND, SAYS PREMIER ASQUITH. | ! LONDON, Nov. 19.—The@Government has no intention of attempting conscrip- tlon in Ireland. In the House of Commona Premier Asquith denied there was to enforce auch « measure. 2 statement was mede in reply to a three years, but the figures in thi) queution from John Redmond, —_> STEAMSHIPS DUE TO-DAY. be Advis Cigroea riatic, Liverpoe Gamerenia, ent Poincare asserts that the 20 PAGES PRIOE ONE © “ORNT, Constantinople Says Five of Czar’s Ships Were in Action—Petrograd Admits Fight and Declares Crue 7 sier Goeben Was Disabled. FRENCH CLAIM VICTORY to an official report reaching Berlin from j to-day. | PETROGRAD, Russia, Nov. 19 [Associated Presa} ~ There has been a naval encounter in the Black Sea bey | Russian and Turkish warships. No definite news of the outcome has been received here beyond the fact that the Turkish cruiser Goeben sustained serious injury. | BERLIN (via The Hague), Nov. 19.—Qains have bese | | made by the Germans west of St. Quentin and Roye, it oe |declared here to-day in an official statement. Floods continue to hamper operations on the front, but positions are being strengthened from. Ypres o" Arras. New big guns have arrived at the front. . if PARIS, Nov. 19 (United Press).—With constant ing by artillery and frequent infantry attacks, the making a determined attack in an effort to cut the line of communication to the north. of Arras. The brunt of this fighting is being borne by oes troops about Arras. They are endeavoring to swing the allied line eastward and force the Germans back, piercing their main line which leads from the base at Cologne, official coramunication given out In Berlin to-day says: “A German aviation squadron encountered some of the enemy's aviators while making a reconnoltering filght and caused them to descend, one « them falling. One of our flying machines is missing, “& flerce French attack In the region of Servon, on the western dedi lof tho Argonne Forest, was repulsed with heavy loss to the enemy, Om) {losses were small.” i 'German Fleet Bombards Libau, — Lose a Destroyer, Sunk by Mine LIBAU, Russia, Nov. 19—A squadron of cruisers trom the German Bolife Bea fleet, accompanied by several destroyers, bombarded the barker here Tuesday for more than four hours, Several factories were damaged, the petroleum reservoir destroyed, the railway station set om fire on houses in the poorer part of the town damaged, > The Germans also sank some of their small cargo steamers in the entrance to the harbor, { Five persons were killed by the bombardment, including two womes, ‘and thirty or forty were wounded. * set it 5 ad KS war, are the rules ‘acts of cru- be to-day, a It te said that a German destroyer struck a mine and sank os \ BAM Am ' vombardment,

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