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100 SCHOOLS WILL HAVE PENNY LUNCHES, ee To Be Fully Equipped and Ser- vice Begun Before Next Term Opens, 2,000 FED LAST WINTER. 41,176,534 Lunches Already Served in Manhattan, 319,- 195 in Brooklyn. By Sophie Irene Loeb. We hungry Child in a Public School! Food First for the School Onildren! Following are the results of The Evening World's campaign for whole- @ome penny lunches in the public @chools at the end of one year: It took eight years to establish @eventeen school lunch services prior to The Evening World cam- paign. One hundred achools will have penny lunch service before school opens next term. By Sept. 1 an entire building, mow being remodelled, will serve as a central kitchen to serve Wunches for 25,000 children, the first in the United States. Beven schools are entirely equipped by Evening World con- tributions at a cost of $2,450, where a thousand children are fed dally. One million one hundred and sev- enty-six thousand five bundred and thirty-four portions of food were served to children in Man- hattan alone as a result of the extension of the system. (This was made possible through the $25,000 fevenue bonds secured by The Evening World). Twelve thousand children were @ed daily during the winter in Manhattan: Three hundred and nineteen @ousand one hundred and ninety- three lunches of 3 cents each were furnished school children in Brooklyn from Sept. 14, 1914, to June 80, 1916, All winter The Evening World's penny lunch contributions have Deen furnishing mid-morning milk and cracker service for anaemic, underfed and tubercular children. During January, February and March this service included 5,896 quarts of milk, #44 pounds of crackers and 158 dozen of eggs. Ten thousand eight hundred end thirteen lunches have been eerved in School No. 44, which bas crippled and biind children who cannot go home for lunch, (Equipped by The Evening World). The average service dally in Manbattan now numbers 2000 Portions of food served to 7,500. Thirty thousand quarts of milk was used in Brooklyn from Sept. 16 to June 15. Twenty-three new lunch service echools will be opened in Brooklyn by Sept. 1. Nourishing breakfasts are ‘eerved at “New York Evening World School No. 43," Brooklyn, daily. PINE RESULTS OBTAINED IN A YEAR. The above figures speak for them- elves as of one year’s operation of @ penny luich system advocated and installed through the efforts of The Evening World, Also, it is generally estimated by those in charge that the money wl from The Evening World eontributions has Greatly reduced the percentage of malnutrition whieh had grown alarming, ac- cording to the Ith D front when th gent requirements. important of t! tablishing of Central Kitch n OBE, The kitchen will be the largest ef ite kind in the United States used exclusively for school lunch purposes. It will serve lunches Upright and flaky !—that’s how biscuits bake from dough of Presto Self-Raising Flour. ooo IN THE PROT PAUL JONES ¢. CO. DISTILL UISVILLE, KY. IN NEW YORK to all ech Fifty-ninth Stre es -4 Department of Education has ide for the use of the School Tune Committee the whole building of what was formerly Public School 98E, Manhattan, situated at Tomp-| kins and Delancey Streets, under the Williamsburg Bridge. This building - now being remodelled and adapted for @ large central kitchen, rhe building consists of one kitchen with fourteen forty-gaifon soup caul- drons having a capacity for prepar- ng Soups, cocoa, &c., for a maximum 4Of 26,000 children; a complete bakery, @ central food storage, a central uten- eil storage and an assembly room where the food is to be prepared, pre- Paratory to being sent to the asso- clate echools, A CENTRAL KITCHEN OPEN THE YEAR ‘ROUND. There has always been some objec- tion raised against the preparation of food in a school building where children congregate owing to the that when improperly guarded preparation may present a tire h ard 80, that schvol buildings are, frequently permeated with cooking odors and that much needed room is eftectively performed outside a school | building. Heretofore it has been the custom to equip mali central kitchens in| various school plants, The opening of, possible the closing of five central kitchens below Fifty-ninth Street, When this kitchen is opened there will be merely three central kitchens furnishing food to approximately sixty schools In Manhattan and the been eqiipped with various labor-saving devices, partly from funds derived from The ing World, the municipal special rev. | enue bond issue and the School Lunch Committee, It {s planned to operate the kitchen for three shifts of eight hours each. The committee has never had ac- cess to school buildings during the eummer when schools close which has kept idlo the school lunch equipment for three months of the year. Under the new plan t large central kitchen will operate twelve months a year. During nine months it will prepare food for the children and during the summer months the workers will bi retained to put up fruits and jam: So far 18 possible, the School Lunch Committee will prepare its own foods. This would never have been possible in a building used for school purposes. There will be essential features of sanitation such as a_ refrigerating plant, a plant for the sterilization of all utensils, the screening of all doors and windows and provision for trans. Porting supplies from the central kitchen to the outalde schools, Auto- mobile trucks will likely be used. Speaking of this central kitchen, Edward F. Brown, executive secre. tary of the New York School Lunch Committee, solely re extension and thls work of social preparedness.” HIGH TRIBUTE TO THE EVENING WORLD. The following facts are furnished by the School Lunch Committee: “Through The Evening World the mid-morning milk and cracker service for anemic and unenrted children has been eaiiengs ie responsible f Public Schools 69, wv ana 4, tl Bronx. For the three months. of renuery, February and March, 1916, the School Lunch Commit: tee, from The Evening World con- tributions. served 5! juarts of milk, 544 pounds of crackers and 183 dozen egge. “The Evening World in addi- tion contributed money to pur- the sav ment which made t vice of hot food cost to 6.826 children, registered in Public School: kl 40, 44, 69 and 160, Out of this nu ig ately 960 children are fed daily. he service in Public School No, 69, where 1,878 children are regis- tered, of whom 86 are crippled, half of these again being tubercular or predisposed to tuberculosis, is of es- pecial importance because of the dis. tance the ildren come to school They are unable, therefore, home at noon for a hot lunch, “In this way they now obtain the food at lunch counters. Since the inauguration of the lunch service in this school Jan. 27, 1915, to May 6, 1916, 83,599 lunches were served. It [is of great importance to state that there {is nothing degrading about |this to the children, because they pald $1,679.93 for this food. Al. jthough it did not cover all the cost of operation, it did cover the cost of food and its preparation, “On Jan, 9 the beginning of the year, the School Lunch Committee, in co-operation with The Evening World, opened a lunch service in Public School No. 44, This school has a number of classes of crippled and blind enildren who, if it were not for the lunch service maintained there, would be badly off for want of hot and properly balanced foods. The school has a register of 848 children, Since the opening, 10,813 lunches were sold to the children, for which they paid $432.62, In addition to these specific contributions, The Evening World led the fight for the appropriation of CTIVE BOTTLE AMERICAS ARISTOCRATIC WHISKEY §f ERS NEW YORK OFFICE | 1480 BROADWAY ff Utilized for @ work which can be more | to ral School Children Enjoying Their Penny Lunches, | | this large centrai kitchen will make) = $25,000 to extend the lunch service to {all parts of the Greater City.” |. As a result of this successful effort, attan and the Bronx alon ix schools |this year, having a total registration 61 children, During the current school year through this extension ap- proximately 1,776,534 portions of food Were sold, for which the children paid | $23,687. During, the winter an average of 12,000 children were fed daily. The average for the whole year is daily about 7,600 children, who purcha: nearly 20,000 portions of food. THE SUCCESSFUL WORK DONE IN BROOKLYN. The following public schools in Brooklyn were equipped with funds collected by the New York Evening World: P. 8. No. 43, Boerum Street and Manhattan Avenue, and P. 8. No. 86, Old Flushing Road and Grand | Streets, Maspeth, loaving a sinall bal- ance over cost, which was applied to other schools requiring kitchen uran- sils; 319,193 3-cent lunches were served from Sept. 14, 1914, to June 30, 1915. Schools serving lunches during this perlod numbered twelve. ‘The schools equipped for lunch ser- vico by special revenue bonds secured through the efforts of The Evening 8, Sat firey) Aven corre Fits oe ay ‘Teeaty- Be is a1, ree, ‘and Leonard Streets PS: 148; Lighteenth Survet and Sixth “Arenue, 6 ‘Wyona and a * Hea, Wy pont Avenue and Backman Hs. 106, Lote and Hopkinson To this number were added equips ment furnished by the Board of Edu- cation for eruon’ Avenues, “According to Mrs, Harry Sox President of the Brooklyn Scho Lunch Ascciation, “the lunch ser- vice in Brooklyn is growing stead- ‘and is now on a sel are amply d. Malnutrition or hunger been greatly reduced accord- wuy? “As long,” asks a Montclair man, “as the Erie screams, rag- time flaunts itself and the auto horn bellows, why should any- body kick at three peacocks?” 'WOMAN GOES TO HOTEL AND ENDS HER LIFE Mrs. Lilienthal Vislts Sister, Then Takes Room and Shoots Herself —Despondent Over Son’s Death. Mrs, Allce Lilienthal of No, 409 West One Hundred and Forty-fiftth et, registered at the Hote] Bruns. wick, Eighty-ninth Street and Madi- son Avenue, at 9.30 o'clock to-day as “Mrs, Franklin" and was assigned to a room, She was found dead an hour later with a bullet wound in her head by a chambermaid who had heard a shot, Mrs, Lilienthal’s right hand clasped a 2 calibre revolver. On the dresser was @ note in which sho said that she was tired of life and that particulars might be obtained of her sisters, Mra. EB. 9. Meyers of No. 1839 Madison Avenue, and Mrs, Samuel Seckendort of No, 1670 Acadeiny Street. Mrs, Meyers said Mrs, Liltenthal had called on her at 8 o'clock this morning and remained about an hour, Mrs. Lilienthal, Mrs. Meyers said, had been depressed since the death of a seventeen-year-old son a year azo and was lonesome because her husband, @ travelling salesman, was away from home most of the time. Mra. Lilienthal was thirty-eight years old. —— EE $2,000,000 RR. Job at Orange. Nearly $2,000,000 will be epent by the Lackawanna Railroad Te work “ot elim rousing ons if miles ot | rack een the East rae city Une and the village line of South Orange, ‘The work, pogun cs two months ago, will be comple! bout @ vean = From Photographs Taken by The Evening World | | PENNY LUNCH ar ps. TEACHER IS KILLED, TWO OTHERS HURT eevee ee Buggy Ride Ends in Death of Miss Jean Tatlock of Miss Spence’s School. Miss Jean W. Tatlock, head of the classical department of Miss Spence's school, Nes dead to-day at her home, No, 670 Lexington Avenue, and the Misses Mary L. and Annie M. Brinck- erhoff, New York public school teach- ers, are seriously injured the re- A) sult of an accident that terminated a buggy ride near Danbury, Conn. The three womeh went to Connecti- cut Friday evening to spend the week- end as guests of Arthur F. Brincker- hoff, a New York architect who is a brother of the Misses Brinkerhoff. He has a summer home at Redding. Miss Tatlock and the Misses Brinckerhoff went buggy riding| Saturday afternoon. While they were! going up a@ hill in Redding Centre the traces broke. The horse became buggy was overturned. lock’s skull was fractured, She died in the Danbury hospital without re- | gaining consciousness. Miss Mary Brinckerhoff was injured |internally and Miss Annie M, euf- | fered a broken ankle. Miss Tatlock was one of the lead- ing women educators of New York. Her father was the late Dr. Willian Tatlock, @ prominent Pplacopalian clergyman, who was the rector of St. John's Church in Stamford. She was graduated from Barnard College in the class of 1895, and @oon afterward entered Miss Spence's achool, where she had been ever since, She was one of the directors of the Barnard Alumnae Association. Bsides her mother she leaves a ais- ter, Miss Jessie Tatlock, who is on the faculty of Miss Masters’s school, and a brother, John Strong Perry Tatlock, head of the English Phi- lology Department of Leland Stan- ford University Funeral services will be held to- morrow morning at 11.30 o'clock in Calvary Episcopal Church, the Rev Theodore Sedgewick officiating, —_———_— [PLAN TO UNITE A. 0. H. OVER IRISH REBEL DEAD The Kennedy Faction Invites the Healy Faction to Be Present With It at Memorial Mass, Iu an effort to bring together the two rival factions of the Anctent Order of Hiberntans and revere the memory of the sixteen Irishmen put to death for the recent rebellion, tn- vitations to a memorial mass were sent out to-day by Rodorto J. Ken- New York County President of fhe Ancient Order of Hiberntans, It was Mr, Kennedy's faction, styled “regulars, who lost in an at- tempt to hold the last St, Patrick's nedy, faction headed by Coroner Timothy Healy, The feeling between the rival sets was very intense the day before parade, ‘he mass will be held at All Saints’ Chureh, One Hundred and Twenty- ninth Strect and Madison Avenue, at 10 o'clock to-morrow morning. ‘The celebrant will be the Rev, Father James W. Powers, and the sermon [will be by the Rev, Father William u Avingston, CUPID CONQUERS BRICKLEY. Harvard's Former Star Athte! Wed Mies Agnes Coakley, BOSTON, May 29.—Charles Brickley, |former Harvard captain, who kicked and {batted and shot-putted Yale's athletic a) BY HORSE'S PLUNGE frightened, swerved suddenly, and tho} Miss Tat. | Day parade, that honor going to the} GERMANY LOSES BG FOOD SUPPLY HELDIN RESERVE 8,000,000 Pigs Slaughtered in| April Improperly Cured and Are Not Fit for Use. After nosing her way through thir- teen days of practically continuous fog, the steamer Kristiantafjord of the Norwegian-American Line, arrived here this morning from Bergen, bring- ing with her forty Russian technical experts, William Warfield, special representative of our State Depart- ment in Russia and the Orient; Rich- ard Buhlig, the planist; Dr. Theodore B. von Buest of Loutaville and others recently residing in the warring coun- tries. Mr. Bublig, whose home ts in Chi- cago, but who has been fn Berlin since before the war, says that the German people are reduced now to |® quarter of a pound of butter a week ‘per capita, “Rich and poor sh allowance,” he said, “Just as they do | with bread. Meat ts scarce, too, especially since April 1, but it is |hoped there that after the mating season is over there will bo more animals slaughtered. Unfortunately the eight million young pigs which were Killed all at the same time vy royal decree, and salted down for Just such an emergency as now oxints have practically all spoiled. The curing process was bungled somehow “Most of the milk is used for sick soldiers and for babies. I never saw &@ bread riot and so far as I know nobody is eating ‘wooden bread.” Mr. Warfleld's work of observation carried him through Russia, Siberia, Manchuria and Japan, and he has an extensive report to make to the State Department, some of which may be published later. “T think most of the Russian losses | may be put down to the stupidity of | the rank and filo in the army,” he sald. “In the retreat through Poland the Russians lost thousands of rifiles every day, aimply because the soldiers tossed them away for the Germans to pick up. The Russians also concen- trated too much of thelr ammunition on their first line of defense and when they retreated the Germans got that, too.” The forty Russian engineers who came on the Kristianiaford will work under Gen, Sapojnikoff here, super- vising purcha: made for their government, Dr. von Buest, who has been a dentist in Dresden for twent says that the German peo the stimulus of a victory at Verdun to lift the prevailing depression, even though they are optimistic as to the final result of the war, stoic iaidlaie TWO FALL FROM TROLLEYS, Girl and Man Are Hurt tn Street Oar Accidents. Alighting from a trolley car at Flush ing and Throop Avenues, Williamsburg, this morning, Jennie Bleckman, twenty- five years old, of No, 6 Whipple Street, Williamsburg, tripped and fell. She was taken to her home after treatment by Dr. Fink of the Willtamsburg Hos- pital, suffering from internal injuries and what may prove to be « fracture of the skull, At about the same time, at South Fighth Street and Wythe Street, Ben- Jamin Brodie of No. 23 Rut Btreet, ¢ alike on that of = car, He suffered contustons and) internal injuries and was taken home. ao Manhattan, fell from the running board | ! Ovte im Cricket Ga At Olymplo Field, Fifth Avenue and One Hundred and Thirty-sixth Street, | to-morrow, the first big cricket game 9f, the season will be played. The con: esting teams will be the New York! Ortents and the Boston W I. Wanderers. orm t Capt. ambitions to the winds for four years, a pavte sealer, Marshall’ Dean an| hes met his match, Dan Cupid con-| Nichole, while tie stare of the latter |quered Firtckley and his engagement to| team overs, Bransford and Miss Agnes Coakley of Buston wile be u @nnounced this we: _THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, MAY * 1916. WOMAN APRISONER WOMEN FAGTIONS (CARRANZA'S ANT IN HER OWN HOTEL ' TODAYS, SHE SAYS Manager Spent Money, Then Locked Her Up, Mrs. Cooper Tells Paterson Police. ‘CHILD SMUGGLES NOTE. ; Little Giil Leads Detective to Widow in Barred Room Under Eaves, A protty little girl walked into Po- | ice Headquartors at Paterson, N. J, | to-day and said to the desk Heuten- ant: “Tam Marie Cooper and I am alx yeara old, My mamma owns the Lin- coln Hotel, Mamma told mo to tell | you #he was in great trout She gave me a note for the poilee. She put it In my stocking, and if you watt Just a minute I'll get tt for you." Then she produced from her stocking a slip of paper on which the follow- Ing was scrawled: “Please send help at once, Mra Louts Cooper is being held a prisoner in the attic of the Lincoln Hotel." A detective hurried to the hotel, in Lincoln Street, with little Marie. At the clerk's desk he met John F. Turnciiffe, manager of the place. ‘Tak- ing the manager with him and pllot- ed by Marie, the detective went to a room under the eaves of the building and there found Mrs, Cooper, locked in. The woman was weak and hysterl- cal, but she had strength enough to accuse Turncliffe of having kept her @ prisoner in the room ati 20. March This is the story she told “My husband died seventeen months Not knowing how to run the} , I advertised for a manager. man Turncliffe was the first to respond. “1 employed him and the tirst thing he did was to make alterations cost- ing $4,000. ‘Then he began running up bills. After a few months he seomed to be exerting some strange Influence over me. Once, at the point of a gun, he made me sign checks for his own bills. “On the nineteenth of last March he induced me to indorse his note for. $1,600, I was ready to expose him then and he must have known it, for on the following day he locked me up here. He nailed up all the back windows. “{ was allowed to see my little daughter only when this man waa near. But this morning [ managed to catch Marie alone and gave her the note which she took to Pollce Hoadquarters.”” urncliffe was locked up on com- plaint of Mrs. Cooper, He said he was thirty-two years old and that his ome was No, 174 Van Houten Street, Paterson, Asked regarding the woman's remarkable charges, he sald: “That will proper time all come out at the SILK HAT DOWNFALL OF WOULD-BE BIGAMIST used Weidenbaum to “Topper” Desert Seven Children and Try to Wed Again, Wife Says. A silk hat 1s held responsible for the downfall of Adolph Weld thirty-two ye One was nbs m, ra old, of No. 0 Kast Hundred nd Ninth Street, who arrested yesterday afternoon in eck Church tn Seventh notwithstanding he b seven ehildren—| nly three days old—h bout to marry Miss Am wich, twenty-five years ol Kast One Hundred and Ninete Stree Adopt held on @ short aff davit in x Market Court ths morning charged with attempted bigamy, The fact that Adolph was conduct ing a second romance not far trom where ho lived with his wife and children, and th further fact that y planned t¢ 5 the $18 ves as a& subway # that he has plenty of courage. “TL knew he'd get mixed with some one the minute he bx shiny hat,” hia wife said, sadly, day. “He was always putting It on and admiring himself.” —— PETITION DELEGATES TO VOTE FOR ROOSEVELT Is the Committee's Latest Scheme to Secure the Colonel's Nomination, In an effort to corral Republican Convention di Rates for Col. Roose. velt a new scheme has been launched by the Roosevelt Republican Com- mittee, of which Georga von L. Meyer ig chairman been sent Dozens of workers have out to get signatures of Voters on petitions addressed to the delegate from the particular district, urging him to vote for the Colonel It was ead at Committee Head- quarters to-day thu onal district tn ng CANVassed The Inst petition n New York City was started on Saturday night in the Republtcan ‘lub of the Twenty-seventh Manhat tan Assembly District and alxty signatures were obtained, Alderman Cardant headed the list. Thia dis trict fa the stronghold of the Guard. George W Hamlin Childs, financial backers the Roosevelt campaign, start Chicago to-morrow night Perkinag and William of | tor aft Old | PLAY POLITICS FOR CLUB PRESIDENCY Mrs. Cowles’s Followers Re- | sent Her Exclusion From Mrs. Hammond's Luncheon. MRS. BEERS WITHDRAWS. Mrs. Sneath, Like Mrs, Cowles, for Peace, but Latter With Preparedness. Although reports and addresses are occupying most of the visible time of | the thousands of delegates who are! |ansembled every day in the Seventh | Regimont Armory for the Thirteenth | Biennial Convention of the General Fedoration of Women's Clubs, the slightest pesk be neath the surface will disclose the almost overwhelming {nterest that centres in the election | of a president to succeed Mrs. Percy V. Pennypacker. | Mra. George Beers of Chicago wan withdrawn as a candidate to-day, She | was to have been the “dark horse” to }run against Mrs. Josiah Evans Cowles of California, and = Mrs. | Samuel B. Sneath of Ohio. Mra, EB. G, Denison, campaign manager for Mrs, Cowles, mado this atatement: “California didn't want to use po- litical methods, but preferred to keep politics out of the Federation, But if wo must fight, then Californe’s hat is in the ring. We come with @ can- |didate whose eligibility 1s unques- tioned; a woman of high Christian princtples, with undisputed social and financial position.” ‘This last sentence Mra. Denison ex- |plained as being called for by the | failure of Mrs, John Hayes Hammond to invite Mrs, Cowles to the luncheon jshe gave to directora at the Astor |last Wednesday. Then Mrs. Denison |went on: “There have been rumors that Mr: Sneath's supporters had put in cir- culation the idea that Mrs, Cowlce’s social and financial position was not such as to bring proper dignity to the high office of president. This is utterly wrong.” ‘There was a business eession of the convention this morning at which Miss Lutle E. Stearns of Milwaukee sought to have the organization call {taelf the General Federation of Clubs, eliminating the word “women's.” The matter was laid on the table. The Resolutions Committee proposed that the mountain laurel be recom- mended as the national flower, but this was laid over to the next meeting. Addresses were made to-day by Thomas Adams, ‘Town Planning Ad- visor to the Canadian Commission of Conservation, on “Planning for Civic Hetterment,’ by the Hon. John Finley, tion, on Judge Wadhams, of the eral Sessions, on “Peace. Mrs. Sneath and Mrs. Cowles also spoke on “Peace,” the former urging peace through gentleness, the latter peace with preparedness, When Mrs, Sneath arose to speak the Ohio delegation was on its feet in an instant with a cheer, "Sneath, Sneath, Sneath—-O-h-l-o!" The Cali- fornta delegation cheered Mrs. Cowles. Among the speakers this afternoon were Mrs. George Zimmerman on ‘Civic's Part in the Baby Week Cam- paign”; Cranston Brenton on “The Motion Picture Problem,” and Clinton Gogers Woodruff on “The City EfMfi- lent." — LYMAN A BANKRUPT. Creditors of Accused Broker Will Get About $100,000, John Grant . the Wall Street Lyma broker about to be tried on @ charge of using the mails to defraud, day to of wa: amenable to the la leclared bankruptey by Stanley W. Dexter of 71. Broadway, the referee who heard the ceatimony, Lyman, through his counsel, contended that he was not amenable to bankruptey under the alx- months’ law. The recelvers in the case will apply within @ few days for a Judicial ae- quiescence in the findings and this will xive them about $100,000 for the cred- Important SCHEDULE CHANGE Effective Sunday, May 28 | THE BLACK DIAMOND Leaves New York Wort Te “verey Termtaal Jackson Avenue Newark Bilgadete & Mesker owen Mu. veo Bu@alo 7:55 F. i. REACHES CAPITAL, = BUT HAS NO NOTE: xeeetfonstnite Washington Had Expected One Calling Again for With- drawal of U. S. Troops. WASHINGTON, May 29.—Manuel Mendez, an attache of Gen. Car- ranza’a Foreign Office, arrived here™ to-day and conferred with Eliseo Arredondo, the Mexican Ambassador, but dented that he brought @ note, as had been expected, or that he brought any instructions from Bie chief. He declared he was merely tp the United States on a vacation. Mr. Arredondo and other Mexican officials professed to be puzzled. It has been reported from Mexico City and the border that a special messen- gor was bringing a new communica- thon from Gen. Carranza. No -indi- cation of its contenta has been given, but ft generally has been assumed by American officials that the expected note probably renewed the demand for the withdrawal of American forces or made a protest against the second punitive expedition, led by Col, Sibley and Major Langhorne, which has, however, returned to Am- erican territory. At the Mexican Embassy ft was said that if a note was coming it probably would be brought by #ome other messenger. Kepresentations are about to be made to the State Department for the releases of a quantity of copper and machinery consigned to the Car. ranza Government but now detained in New York. Mr. Arredondo de-, clared to-day that, lacking other in- structions, this was the only question “* he had to take up with the State De partment at this time. —— ELEVEN MORE BANDITS KILLED IN SKIRMISH WITH CARRANZISTAS CHIHUAHUA CITY, May 2— Skirmishes between a small band of bandits and Constitutionalist troops under Col, Jose Cavazos, in the Tam- pico district, during which eleven bandits were killed, were reported b; Gen, Nafarrate from Tampico to-day. He said Col, Cavazos encountered the * marauders at Los Angeles, and after @ skirmish in which the bandits lost four killed, they fled with the evident, intention of derailing and looting a passonger train, This, however, was frustrated by Col, Cavazos, who made a surprise tack, killed seven of the bandits and taking ten prisoners, while only one Constitutionaltst was wounded. Wagone and a quantity of supplies CoG OY LC ane wei Nzed, A Re TREAT POR OO™ TREAT FOR YOU Aichols & C.1 CTNBEM Tantalizing Appotising “OLIVE ZEST” Pride tied unlike anything you ‘@ ever tasted. Made exclu- bt in th jun beam’ ens of luscious olives, sweet pimento peppers and piquant sauces, its pleasing tast puts an edge on yout appet as nothing else can, As a relish and for filling sand- wiches—it'’s great. It is better than meat-—more healthful— and more economical, Give yournelf, your family and your gu new taste—get bottle of “OLIVE ZES from your grocer to-day and try ft. 15c and 25¢ sizes, D Austin, Nichols & Co. Inc, Sole Mirs., New York. T". QorQ9O Every Night For Constipation RANDRETH Pick. Safe and Sure FINE PIANOS FOR SUMMER HOMES FOR RENT AT MINIMUM RATES AREROO OOMSs $ Sth Ave. at 39th \