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Tee ia yey SORES PER OF Fe 10 esae 4S Sere Four Men Cut and Burned and One Dying—Lost Children Add to Panic. 100 LIVES IN PERIL. Stream of Water Knocks Fire Captain Down and Saves Two Lives, f fighting @ force fire in the five- Story tenement buikting at No. 102 Delancey Street this morning, Capt. Rankin, aide to Chief Kenlon, was knocked to his knees in front of a @mall room on the top floor by a mis- @irected stream of water. While on the floor he heard moans coming from under the door of the room, and on breaking it in discovered Benjamin Ortnstein and Reuben Cohen uncon- scious. Their room had no windows and they had not been awakened with the other’ tenants. When the Intense heat aroused them all escape was blocked by the flames in the hall. Four men were injured, one fatally, and many women and children were trampled in the stampede to get down the stairs, The seriously injur- ed: ORINSTEIN, BENJAMIN, 22; burns and suffocation, will die. COHEN, REUBEN, 3; burns. DAVIS, ISAAC, 30; cut by fall- ing glass. ROTHMAN, PHILIP, 36, No. 106 Ludiow Street; cut by falling glass. The blaze, of suspicious origin, started in the third floor hallway and went up through the roof #0 quickly the passing citizen who first saw it had no chance to warn any one after sending in an alarm. Escape by the stairs was cut off for ali living above the third floor, The |wores living below packed and { ammed the stairs in a few minutes. Meany carried household goods and ef Idren, and the women's screaine \ild be heard for blocks. When Policemen Reich and Mullane ofithe Clinton Street Station arrived dl + found men fighting desperately to get out ahead of the women and children. The panic was so great they had to use their nightstick® to i straighten out the tangle and clear J the stairs, The fire did little damage below the | third floor. The total loss is estimated | at $5,000. > FRANK LYNCHING REPORT SCARE,’ SAY OFFICIALS Georgia Governor Takes No Chances and Has Troops Ready to Resist Any Attack on Jail ATLANTA, Ga., July 14.—“Only an- other scare,” was the local authori- ties’ comment to-day on the report that an attempt was planned for lest might to take Leo M. Frank from the Milledgeville Prison Farm and lynch tim. Although it wae sald he did wot take the story seriously, Gov. Harrie ran no risks. He held the three companies of militia at Macon, through which the sepposed lynching party was scheduled to pass, in read- faees over night and warned the civil qathorities to be on the alert until farther notice. ‘The privon farm officials were quot- a4 as saying the strong prison build- ings, garrisoned by a well armed farce of guards, could withstand a siege even Without outside assistance. _—— ee Brooklyn Restaurant Closes, ‘The last of the Dennett restaurants im Brooklyn closed its doors this ening. It was at Nos. 368 and 355 Iton Street, on Borough Hall ‘Baquare, and when the sixty-eight em- ees arrived this morning they Mereine doors locked. Later they were admitted and were paid off, Mie rapid increase in the number of theap lunch rooms in the vicinity ought the profits of the place to Pjeagre margin in the past few yea: \ | 4 The Delicious Laxative Chocolate Ex-Lax relieves constipation, regulates the stomach and bowels, stimulates the liver and promotes dige: Good for Id. 10c, 5c, and 50c, at articles 9 reported ain The World 0 f Agencles. ly to ‘The Worl kman, New York, or e, 4100 Blain, telephoned 4 JCal! 4000 Bi | Brookiyn orf! ‘ a! eet Sh Rep O ey x ——a |To-Day's Illustrated Les- son Shows How to Break the Slavery of an Ex- cessive ‘“‘Fondness for Food” and Gives New Trunk - Twisting and Squatting Exercises. Because of her perfect physical proportions, Pauline Furlong hae deen named the “American Venus.” She t# the author of “Beauty Oulture at Home,” and ts an authority on all questions of woman's physical well-being. She twill give a course of lessons to the soomen readers of The Hve- ning World this summer on “How to Make Yourset? Well and Strong and Preserve Your Figure.” LESSON XIV, By Pauline Furlong. Probably the factor in the prob- Jem of reducing which gives most trouble to the stout women is her diet. If she fs not entirely permeated with the poison of sloth, that so often accompanies the disease of obesity, she fs bound to find a cer- tain real pleasure in the exercises and athletic sports best suited to her complaint. Their immediate physical results—a ewifter circulation of the blood and the taking of great draughts of fresh, sweet afr into the lungs—will react fn mental exhilara- tion and foie-de-vivre, FONDNESS FOR THINGS TO EAT A SOURCE OF STOUTNESS., The stout woman will treasure these sensations and will desire to have them repeated, even if her soft, unused, almost atrophied muscles are temporarily sore and Jame. But there is nothing particularly exhilarating about a diet. Almost every stout ‘woman is fond of things to eat—that's one of the reasons why ahe is stout— and she doesn’t find it amusing or ex- citing to cut down the quantity of her meals and to omit from them some of the articles of food which she likes best. Then, unless one Is a bachelor maid or man, taking most of one’s meals alone, there is a galling publicity about a diet. It is euch an obvious thing. As a fat woman said to me the other day: “It makes me feel such a fool! “There I att,” she continued, “munching away at my dry toast and moodily consuming my one soft- botled egg, while the rest of the fam- ily feasts on pork chops, fried pota- toes and hot biscuit, They believe in the hearty, old-fashioned Amert- can breakfast at home, “I'm downtown at lunch, end, following your advice, I’m not taking any juet now. As a oon- sequence, at dinner I'm simply ravenous. The situation le even more unpleasant than It wae at breakfast. | ohew voraciously my little strip of lean meat and my t side, And thou; the visions he evokes will be rather unpleasant, they may gerve to check the hankering], after the flesh-pots, to convinee you that obesity is not @ joke, not an of- fense against aesthetics, but a dis- gusting disease and menacing anger, Henry Ford, the great philanthro- pist and automobile manufacturer, hag just established a department of dietetics at Ford Hospital in Detroit. “Wat only when hungry, and then eat less than you feel you need,” he warns. “Try this for a week and I'll guarantee you'll feel better and much healthier. Thomas Edison eats lese and does more work than any othe man_I know. The beet authorities I can find tell me that we eat too much. I myself have tried out the theory that less eating 18 beneficial, and T am thoroughly convinced that it ts reliable.” If you are trying to reduce you can eat: Lean meats, poultry, fish, thin soups, salads without it breads. n drink: Orange juice, buttermilk, lemonade with- out sugar. You cannot eat: Cream, butter, oll, starchy vegetables, fresh white bread, pastries, hot cakes and syrup, aweets, por! and fat meats, You cannot drink: Milk, cocoa, chocolate, alcoholic liquors. MORE STRENUOUS TRUNK TWISTING AND SQUATTING, To-day we will take up another form of trunk twisting, in which the twist goes all the way aan If y you have not practised care! simpler forms of the same that I have given you, this one. But it is more you are able to do it. Assume the correct standing post- | tion, and without moving the feet, move the body toward the left, keep- ing the head well back and the spine | hollowed. While the body is still bent, continue the twisting movement (as shown in the illustration) until the trunk has described a back semi- circle. As you do this you are in-| haling, and you exhale when you give | the body a “forward lean” over the right leg. Then repeat the movement from the opposite side. Your arms are outstretched during this movement, at right angles to the body. Do not try it more than five times at first, and increase the num- ber only as you feel strong enough, | It 19 a waist reducer, a corrective of | stiff, awkward carriage and has an excellent effect on the kidneys. ‘The stationary run we did the other day with a wand for eup- port. Try to dispense with that k ir balance by resting raise can, Begin by taking thie exercise ten times apiece for each vinegared tomatoes and lettuce, with an orange for desert. The family looks on with an exaspe- rating emile that le compounded half of mirth, half of pity. “Meanwhile, | have to watch my elstere and my mother and my brother flitting happily from course to course, eating entrees vegetables en permit myself a piece acrgeou come from New what It ‘ial It certainly must be mfost uneom- fortable. Modern food is prepared and served in 80 many 4 lous and appealing—even if indigestible and flesh-producing—ways, t to many persons glutton; rather than a vice, Also, it is phy- ically and figuratively true that the sight of delectable viands which one may not touch makes the mouth water. Finally, the virtues of hospitality and qoclapllity” are intricately bound up with the pleasures of a generously loaded table. That seems especially | the case In New York, T is an old saying that whenever a New Yorker wants to do anything for a friend he takes him out and buys him la dinner. Decidedly, dieting would re- quire infinitely less self-control and will. power on a desert jeland than on the Island of Manhattan. FAT OUTSIDE MEANS CROWDED ORGANS INSIDE. Neverthelesg, if you hw reached the point where you are inclined to think that the game isn’t worth the candle, that the slenderness ysn't worth the sacrifice—well, think again, Or do something else. Go to your family physician or any reputable |doctor and get him to tell you what the body's inside map looks like when the outer surface Is pence and pil- lowed and paiies with fat, He will tell you how all the or- gans that form the difforent parts of the marvellous machine of life in the torso are crowded and jammed oul of place by the un- wieldy fat He will show work of the heart iver and digestive organi constantly is being interferro with, until you wonder they don’ | go on strike, Whereupon he will promptly tell you that often th ry thi a jragio, tha n short, he wil show you that the unwieldy and tnartistic condition of of your body isn’t a cir- te what to taking place in- eon outald seems a fine art,| Teg. When you oan keep it up for ton minutes you will have run two miles. It reduces the abdomen. The equatting exercise you have also formed, with the aid of dumbbells and @ wand. Try it alone. ‘Take position with heels ther and hands on hips, Inhaling, lift the heels as far from the floor as pos- sible; exhaling, bend the knees as Jow am you can; rise to the tiptoe po- mtion, taking another long breath; exhale as you bring your heels to- gether on the floor, Squatting re- duces the abdomen, thighs and back. Readers of Mise Furlong's ar tholes who are keeping measure ment oharts or otherwise follow ing her lessone are invited to write to her, in care of The Evening World, asking any questions per- tinent to the leasons or requesting information that will aid them in following her rules for dict and everotse. | Letters From Evening World Readers Following Miss Furlong’s Lessons. A. W. asks: How can I redugelarge ankles? Always wear high laced shoes and don’t stand too much, Mrs, F. W. writes:: Tell me how to obtain the back numbers of your val- uable articles Bend stam and they will to cover cost of same be matied to you, Mrs. G. H. asks: If I am following your diet for obesity can I eat meat? Yes, all kinds except pork, but not much of any. L. M. 8. asks: When did you pub- lish the measurement chart? June % Mrs. 8. H. T. writes: Will you please publish some articles for re- ducing double chin and neck? ? ‘A full series of these will be pub- lished a little later. Y. C F, D. writes: 1 am 6 feet 8 inches tall and weigh 176, Is it pos- sible for me to reduce? the | capacity of first chief, issue an am- exercise |Hesty law in an endeavor to ‘have do not attempt | those in error return to the true path and to helpful when Fepubli Qarowany RUUNIMOUHOUY gueRORT hag eas AMR ee CARRANZA WILL CALL FOES TO “TRUE PATH” First Chief Says He Will Try to Have “Those in Error” Aid in Restoring Peace to Mexico. WASHINGTON, July 14,—Gen, Carranza has sent the following dis- patoh from Vera Cruz to his repre- eentatives here: “With reference to the occupation of Mexico City, Gen. Pablo Gonzales will afford all kinds of guarantees to native and foreigners, He has in-| structions from me to severely punish all crimes against property. “Within a few days I will, in my restore peace and order in the o."" BATTLESHIP PLANNED PROOF AGAINST ATTACK Gathmann Says His New Type of Vessel Will Defy Sub- marines and Mines. WASHINGTON, July 14.—That he has perfected plans for battleships that will defy submarines, torpedoes, mines and high explosive shells, was asserted to-day by Louis Gathmann, the naval engineer. ff “I submitted such a plan to our Navy Department in 1908, but they would not consider It,” he eaid, “so I submitted tt in 1905 to Germany, and all her newest dreadnoughts are con- structed on my triple hull system. ‘The German dreadnoughts’ weakness ts that at close range (inside of three miles) their armor belt may be pierced with semi-armor-piercing high explosive shella, exploding in- aide the #hip. “My newer method defies armor- piercing shells at any range; there- fore the construction of large battle- ships need not be abandoned because #0 many have been sunk in the pres- ent war, Such @ battleship ay I ad- vooate could gven force the Darda- nelles.” Gathmann expecta to present his idea to the House and Senate Naval Committees when Congress convenes. —_—_——s_— PICNIC OF THE FRIARS. ‘famous Theatrical Club to Make Merey at Glenwood To-Morrow. Laying aside all thought of a bad the- atrical season, the Friars will hie them- selves to Glenwood-on-the-Sound to- morrow and there make right merry in thetr peculter care-free fashion. The 00d ship Merchant, which the club has chartere and go direct to the picnic groun There the married men and the men Hugh M: ri won fifty consecutive times before it be- comes She Pareaneey property of the winners. | wa a9 Caries 8 sear won It year, so he has only forty-nine years to go petore the prize ts his” ‘There will be field events of all sorts, swimming ches and an umpakat contest, what, ever that 1s, And, oh, yes—there will bé a dinner, Aspe TRENCH DIGGING IN JERSEY. Non-Comminstone: Officers Have a Hard Day's Work. CAMP FIELDER, SEA GIRT, N. J., July 14.—-Work which is as near to the grim realities of actual warfare as can commissioned officers in attendance at the school of instruction to-day. Maj Winfeld S. Price early ordered the to march into the country for work. With all thelr flela equipn Certainly; anything ts possible if you have the will-power, You can take a few exercises during your buckled on the entire school with the instruction officers, the kitchens and everything necessary for a long slay walked out of the reservation and headed for the farm of Forman Allen, east of Brielle, which had been selectes for the work to-day, The farm ja not 4 in cultivation and {ts 120 acres provide @ good area for drilling. Trench ali be formulated is the lot of the non- |f, 4 | Bath. HE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, JULY 14, 1918.7 WHAT EVERY WOMAN SHOULD KNOW! ‘How to Keep Well, Keep Strong and Keep a Perfect Figure, Told in a Series of Illustrated Lessons SPY" THREATENS DEATH TO BAY STATE GOVERNOR Writes to Boston Newspaper Saying Public Buildings Will Also Be Destroyed, ROSTON, Mara, July 14.—Gov, Walsh was threatened with death and the State House and the Custom House tower with destruction in @ note received in to-day’s mail by a boston newspaper. Inclosed with the note was a newspaper clipping containing a portion of a story #ent from Berlin regarding Germany plac- ing interned German steamships at the disposal of the United States for the transportation of neutrals. The note was printed on brown wrapping paper and an attempt at disguise was evident. The text was as follows “2 bombs are placed in State House and one in the Ci tum House Tower. German spy and # terned ships will leave when the bombs go off. The Governor is to be killed. The bombs will go off about Friday. We have fooled the poll Gov. Walsh ts now in the West but | is due to return home Friday. Police Headquarters were notified and the note turned over to the de- partment. L, A. Rogers of the United States District Attorney's office, after being notified of the receipt of the note, sald: “While it may be the work of a crank and may not amount to noth- ing, one can never tell. Nearly every- body thought the warning regarding the Lusitania was a joke. Several German Minera have tnterned in Boston harbor since the outbreak of the European war. pc anal. Ral DELANY STILL ALIVE. Hope Given Up by Doctors—Family Bedatde, Justice John J. Delany of the Supreme been confined to his Court, who hi home in the Cl and One Hundred and Third Street, since he was taken ill in court May 14, was still alive to-day, but physicians have abandoned hope for his recovery. He is suffering from uraemic poisoning. Until Sunday it was belleved he would recover. He has since been in a tose state. The of the Church were adiminist and hia family, a wife and six children, are at his bedside, Justice Delany was born in New York in 1861 and has been on the Supreme Court bench since 1910, He was Assistant Distriot Attorney in 1901, and in 1904 was made Corporation Counsel. oe Coal Price LONDON, July 14.-~The text of the Price of Coal Limitations Bill, which was tesued to-day, specifies that coal may not be sold at the pit mouth at a price exceeding four shillings ,$1) a ton more than the price at which the wan kind of coal was sold during the twelve-month ending June $0, 1914 Violators of the act are Hable to a fine not exceeding $500, POSLAM HEALS SUMMER RASHES STOPS ITCHING he Poslam_ to The ing power which enables dicate virulent Eczema, remedy for Scalds, Sores, Boil tions, wounds and all howsehold m haps resulting in abrasions of the skin Poslam is antiseptic, penetrating, puri- Eplandid for benteresh, "oevtine out ching, feet. Removes ‘ Blemishes, Hives Clears inflamed complexions overnight If ordinary toilet, soaps irritate, try | Poslam Soap, medicated with Poslam and superior for daily use, Toilet and For samples, send 4¢, stamps to Emer- ies, 32 West 25th St, the principal part of the \ il King |N, Sold by all Druggists. ry Ye errata chances of ‘ever irving the 15,000 MORE JOIN. 'SLADE CONSPIRACY (diate settlement of the differences CARMENT WORKERS TRAL POSTPONED == =~ = ng INGREAT STAKE Meanwhile, Mayor's Council of Conciliation and Arbitration Committees Hope to End It. —_—— Promptly at 10 o'clock to-day 15,000 vest makers and knee pants workers affiliated with the Amalgamated Clothing Workers’ Union of America walked out of 460 shops and joined 10,000 pantemakere who quit Monday. In the 460 shops the manufacturers made no éffort to fill the strikers’ Places. The only hope for an imme- Hes in the action of a committee of seven manufacturers appointed last night by the American Clothing Manufacturere’ Aasociation to meet a committees fro mthe striking panta- makers. News of the walkout of the veet- makers and knee-pantamakers reached Mayor Mitchel’e Counoll of ConciMa- tion just as the etx members, headed by Dr. Fellx Adler, were ready to be- gin the first session in the Aldermanto Chambers in the City Hall. Late yesterday afternoon Charlies lL. Rern- heimer, President of the Chamber of Commerce and a member of the Con- eiliation Council, and Dr. Judah L. Magnes of the Jewish Community UNTIL FAL TERM Judge Russell Too Ill to Re- sume It—‘Oliver’ Osborne Still Missing. Oliver Osborne may never be found, after all the time and labor that have been devoted to searching for him. Judge Hunt, in the United States District, Court to-day, declared a mistrial in cases of David and Maxwell Glade and their detective, Albert J. MoCullough, indicted for conspiracy to obstruct justices. United States District Attorney H. Snowdon Marshall eubmitted the report of phy- sicians that Judge Gordon Rusgell, who has been trying the cases, is too 1M to proceed. A letter from Judge Russell was also read, atating that he could not go on with the trial and advising that It be put over. Judge Hunt die- charged the jurors, who had sat daily in court for a week before the itiness of the Judge stopped the trial on July 2. The cases will go over to the fall term of court. ‘The Sladen were counsel for iitttie Rae Tanser, who acoused Lawyer James W. Onborne of having taken her to the Hotel Kensingston, at prose we st . 1 mest be remem! and we had at all.” THE GOLD ‘GART Tt Pe '. 4% DIFFERENT sHaveEs, — YOUR DEALER'S Plainflela, N. J., on Oct. 18. She swore that he had proposed marrtage to her after @ casual meeting in the street the evening before; then took visited the manufacturers and urged them to adopt arbitration in the hope of averting a spread of the strike, ‘This visit did not, however, keep the a7 Wi aorH ed AM HOSIERY 8 EST “TH HOP, vest and knee-pantemakers from | her to Jersey and wronged her. Re ‘a — striking. Mr. Osborne proved by untm- Peached witneswas that on that day ‘AUERBACHS Whether 15,000 coatmakers amit- ated with various branches of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers’ Union will walk out to-day or to- morrow will be determined to-day at he was working on a case in the Bar Association in New York. Franklin D. Safford, the hotel olerk, who po tively identified Mr. Osborne an the Chocolate Roasted b/ Peanut Bar six mass meetings held on the east) man who accompanied Rae Tanzer o. 4 ke gige end se the Brownsville section of and registered as,"0, Osborne and ‘ AUERBACH & SONS ‘ Mra. O. Osborne,”' waa convicted of perjury. It was for the aileged in- citing of this perjury that the two lagyere and their detective were on trial. Martin W. Littleton, attorney for the trio accused of conspiracy, amiled when asked his opinion about the h_ Merch: RORDENTOW Yo While waiting at the wharf of the steamer Springfield this morning ith his daughter to go to Burling % 4 Park with a Bunday sohool cursion from Rordentown, At Your There has just been {ssued by the Historical Publishing Com- pany of Washington, D. C., a magnificent illustrated history of the construction and builders of the Panama Canal. The editor of this great history is Mr. Ira E. Bennett, with associate editors, John Hays Hammond, celebrated mining engineer; Capt. Philip Andrews, U. S, N.; Rupert Blue, Surg. Gen. U. S. Public Health Service; J. Hampton Moore, Pres. Atlantic Deeper Waterways Ase’n; Patrick J. Lennox, B. A., and William J. Showalter. One of the most interesting portions of the book is that:deal- ing with the feeding of the immense army of laborers. A few paragraphs concerning one of the foods chosen and supplied the Commissary Department, are ‘quoted (beginning page 428 as follows: “Visttors to the canal who were privi- leged to get a glimpse of the routine. inner life will recall a familiar picture of “This food fe eo Datked Workerien ping: to Sits. pineee OF Jeter that it keepe almost to re cigiapiagradiy Sn os te emer ee “Often, as they went, they munched a ‘4 food poured from the tin into the hand. “os fats Gone ee Coanecntar te The eo pad South America, able pert in “pullding’ the canal, was the | Ajsel ne Jepen, the well- article of diet, ‘GRAPE- | China coset, Manila, Australia, NUTS’ ica, on and “The mention of Grape-Mute {n this 4 sonnection fe. pecilarie partment, Not | mum of nourishment are requisite in merely because Grape-Nuts is a food— | f00d which hee to be transported for of course proper food was an integral SARC HE OFA ORIOT. ED of the big enterprise—but because it is a cereal food which Grape-Nuts FOOD —scientifically made of prime wheat and malted barley, contains the entire goodness of the grain, including those priceless mineral elements so essential for active bodies and keen brains, but which are lacking in white flour products and tho usual dietary. There's a reason why Grapo-Nuts food was chosen by the Canal Commissariat. There’s a reason why Grape-Nuts is a favorite food of hustling people everywhere! Sold by Grocers