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« eo we, eee <8, SOTVANTH GETS [Have You Got a Schizophrenia? A University President Has One and 12 SLEEP POWDERS, RE NEI With No Greasers Around, th Militiamen Try Them on Themselves TASTE HORRORS OF WAK This Is Shoe-Trying Day, Pre- paratory to Entraining for the Border, Geel ee 5.0% gore ee CAMP WIIITMAN, HERKMAN, The preparedness of y-ninth Megiment was com Pleted to-day with the errival Mp of & myrterivus boa which w 4 to the tent of Father Duty, militant chaplain of the trish con. it. Great secrecy wae mm regarding the contents of the end the wildest « of rumor to pass fron) man to man, One Strongest circulation, was to th that the bos contained powde thet would put the Mexicans to sleep Of the Buropean battlefields, The Cet Who started this rumor was not far afield, for Father Duffy nent word through the company streets that the box was to be opened, and the entire Fegiment formed a half circle before hie tent. aplain lifted the lid brought to Hight twelve bouncing boxing gloves, and the firhting Irishmen gave forth « Gheer that started a stampede in the mule corral a mile away, The twelve sleeping powders are a witt to tho regiment from Father Pbil McGrath, the fighting Manhat- fan priest. Father McGrath has been a visitor to the camp of the Bizty-ninth and he was almoat moved to tears to discover that no boxing Bloves had been brought into the field. No time waa lost by the dough- ty followers of Col. Conley in donning thé gloves and at the present rate of progress at least half of the regiment should be properly decorated with black eyes by entraining time to- morrow. There ts nothing that these ants of the Sixty-ninth like better than to whan, ‘h other, and {a this big concentration camp there f@ room enough to whang. ‘This is shoo-trying day in the Six- ty-ninth, and the rack, the thumb. acrews and the grid are but passing Joys compared to the agony of squeez- Ing feet into shoes that don't fit. The on re tuted shoes among them- @elves until they find the pair that suits them beat, ‘i i The Sixty-ninth has {ts hands full subduing two score or more of recruits intended for the Fourteenth and Sev- enty-first Infantry and the First Cav- alry. Fourteon recruits for the Four- teenth were put up with Company I and began to act as honored guests, Firat Sergt. Joe Healy is teaching the “rookies” a lot of things they didn’t know when they left Brooklyn. Slackers are getting rought treat- nt at the hands of the men of the ird Infantry, Finding that a Private in their regiment, who had Applied for discharge because he had @ family dependent upon him was not even married, tha men of the regiment gave him the barre! stave treatment, and it was necess: to call the ambulance corps. The man, whose name is withheld, is now threatened with dishonorable dis- rge. The first blood of the campnign was drawn early yesterday morning when Private James H. Carr of Company ¥, the Twenty-second fngineors, kitted Maud. Carr was on guard. ai the post office, and rumor had said there would be an attempt to rob it, Carr hoard something move in the darkness, and after the ‘nree peremp- iz’, Pus, as it go with the Springfield, At once Carr discovered he had taken a life His victim. was Maud, one of the most inoffensive mules in the camp Major Storrs, former Borough Presi- dent of Brooklyn, who is survey off. cer of the camp, sat on the carcuass of the mule to-day and pronounced Maud well dead, No, 8, Team Work Can those avoidable accidents crossings on Long Island. forever. Last year, despite the The railroad’s part is t securely as may be. Yours is to——— The these rumors, and the one that 7 | unanswered challenges, he! LIFE-SAVING BULLETIN automobiles, working together with the manage- ment of this railroad, can stop all such accidents eleven people were injured and twenty automobiles smashed up as a result of reckless driving. Stop Before You Cross en bs Wr EAN INR Hite he THE SVENING Se eee WORLD, MONDAY, JULY 10, i9i6, NEW YORKERS WILL RELIEVE REGULARS | It’s the Only Good Thing of the War \ Boonen CiARNS | Dr. G. Stanley Hall Describes It ae @ Split Soul | Caused by Conflicting Emotions Due to Trying to Be Precleely Neutral’ Mexico for the Mes- icans Says the Noted Educator, and | President Wileon Ie Victim of @ Cabal of Silence, By Nixola Greeley-Smith, | Have you @ot eehlsephrente! Mf you have, it in more than likely the world war @ be, @ Blanley Mall, President of that be bas it, A tums to me I dee feel your pulee, t Aplain that sells utrality t chizophren| used by made in Germany, ACRE nan neholarship, there |to reeonelie these conficting tende: |echizophrenta, or split soul.” GOOD AND THE BIG WAR. Dr. Hall and 1 sat under the plate form of Madison Square Gard whence he had deliversd an address on “The Present War and Edueat to the afternoon session of the tlonal Educational Association, His speech had dweit alternately on (he good and evil effects of the war spirit in man, and I had t unable to d termine from it whether or not Dr Hall thinks the benefits of war out- weigh Its crucity=-to be brief, whether war is worth while, ou have urged personal purity, self-control and unselfishness as the best form of national preparedness,” f anid, “Do you really believe that if we should all set ourselves to the cultivation and attainment of these virtues war would cease?” “] should like to think #0," Dr. Hall replied, “but I fear the cessation of war is a beautiful dream, I have tried to think what good may come to the world from the present war, and I find most comfort in the sublime spectacle of the youth of all nations in America following the story of the war to- gether without letting inveterate Old World rancors draw them into con- fict. “1 believe because of the genuinely neutral thougtié of Americans the true} verdict of history on the European war and its causes will be the result merican opinion. oe ance the benciicent effects of war {s that {t brings men of one national- ity together, ‘They huddle together as) antmais do in time of danger. | An- other good result is that it reduces | egotism, The individual sinks him-| self in the 1 He realizes that t bechive goes on forever even tho! the worker dies In three months. ts not only in mankind that war re-) duces egotism and promotes deeds of heroism and unselfishness, The war- rior ants rn to die for their fel- lows. Europe and America too sadly needed a lesson in unselfishness. WAR DISSIPATES CLOUDS OF EGOTISM. tndividualism has run mad in the conta oeeulture., Everywhere. the enlightened selfishness of the super fram was preach@l, Selze what you want, Ket what you can and Jet the Tovil take the hindmost, was the phi- losophy of the intellectual | world. lAnd these ideals had influenced {thought, had touched American life, We too © giving ourselves to this leult of self, Yet before the supreme | Catastrophe of war the clouds of exo- tism melted from men's mind: The | German soldier who went to war with ‘a volume of Nietsche in his pocket \has thrown it away, Shall I tell you the book of which most copies have been sold in the German army this last year? It is the eae | of St. hn. Jelrrance, hovering on the vergo of paganism at the outbreak of the con. | flict, has become deeply religious, | Mme. Juliette Adam, the foremost lit- ‘erary woman of France, published a year ago "The Confessions of a Pa- | NS | LH, End Them— to automobilists at grade You who ride in or drive Yy VM warnings of the railroad, © guard their crossings as rate, before you send for the fa chologivle to de which the Jekyll-lyde personality is ou type At the same time, J deplore the militartat spirit EVIL EFFECTS OFS ——-~— | Bu fect of taking vast tracts of land right eit to you Che nd after he he oymp ided that I have Mefore you your own temperature, or at any ily phy jet phrenia meane a eplit soul or mim likely to get it tu preserving yward the warring nations Dr, Hal) told me, “te o term it too, a, » tribe « divided mind, of Iwi , and everything I am 1 owe to Get for I spent some of my student days it te in tryin jes Im mywelf that 1 have developed wan’ Recently #he wrote a new book retracting this confersion of paganiam and telling how the war has made her a Christian thing has happened to wane me hteloetuala in the war Fing countries. As Dr, Hall talked, I gazed won deringly at hiv fine gray head, the Jong ascetic f hot unlike that of the Whittier, and It seemed to Mochin resolute determination to find War with all its brutalittes a r how good, In the rlumph of the ideatiatte spirit Mis eminent scholar and Paychologivt has wet about squaring the European confict with the bellot that every day the world grows a lit. tlo better and he had sucesaded by reducing this clash of millions to a war betwee two tiny p une—the pronouns which tell the story of all love, all hate, all life--those powerful irreconcilable words YOU and I, “Thore Ix a possibility still that we will have war in this country,” T aaid “Do you believe that we need the lesson of war tn Amertea. Shall wo have to fight Mexico to reduce our egotisms?” “I shan’t tell you what I think about Mexico. You wouldn't print it," the venerable college President answered In short volleying monosyllables. Like most persons who think he thinks faster than he can talk, and #o his words have the effect of tumbling over one another, sometimes, “Go ahead,” I sald, “I dare do any- thing that may become a woman,” CAPITALISTIC CABAL KEEPS TRUTH FROM WILSON, “But you won't!" Dr, Hall reiter- ated. "You won't dare! I believe in Mexico for the Mexicans, and that's all Carranza believes in, That's all he is trying to enfor Mexico 1s} in the same situation to. jay that we were after the Revolution, and, like! us, she wants to settle her own af-| Diaz sold the country out as! King Leopold of Belgium sold out the Congo. 1 Know of one American who Bot an $80,000,000 concession from him. “Capitalists are in control of the American press and won't let the public have the facts. There ta a cabal of capital which prevents the truth from reaching President Wil- son. I was told yesterday that C ranza had a special agent In America for weeks and be cannot even sce the President!” Well, at any rate, the cabal of si- lence Is broken now, I have broken it. And whon President Wilson reads Tho Evening World maybe he'll tell Tumuity to let the mysterious Mexi- can gentleman MANY PROMOTIONS. IN PEEKSKILL CAMP Col. Chapin Is Made Brigadier Gen- eral and Other Guard Officers Are Advanced in Rank. (Special to The E PFREKSKILL, 10,.--A ‘onsiderable shakeup was made in the Forty-seventh Regiment when Gen, Louis W. Stotesbury visited the camp, coming direct from Gov. Whit- man, Gen, Stotesbury brought with him the promotion of Col, William H. Chapin, Inspector General of tl National Guard of New York, to Brigadior General Post Com- mander of the Forty-seventh Rexi- ment, Major Walter E. Corwin of the Third Battalion was promoted to In- spector Instructor on the Division Staff. Capt. Harry McCutchen was appointed Assistant Inspector Gen- eval, He was formerly Adjutant for twenty-five years. Capt, George A Wilson of Company K will succeed Major Corwin, Chaplain Ei d with Dr Thomas J ot the Brooklyn rea of Charities regarding re- Heving the distress of the wives and children of the soldiers in camp here. While returning to camp in his auto last night Ideut, Simon nar- rowly escaped death when, in turn- ing out to avold another car, his m chine skidded and overturned fayr miles from Peekskill. Both the Lien tenant and an orderly in the car were uninjured, See PERU AND VENEZUELA JOIN. Make Feuador, WASHINGTON, July 10.-Oficial de spatches received to-day fu Latin-{ American diplomatic quarters say a secret agreement has been made tween Peru and Venezucia with the ob- —_, — “DRG STANLEY HAL | SECOND WARNING BY CARRANZA OF RAIDS ON BORDER 2 | Washington Told That Villa Bandits Are Still Heading for Texas Line. WASHINGTON, July 10.—A_ sec- ond warning that Villa bandits are headed for the Big Bend District of Texas was given to the State De- partment to-day by Eliseo Arredondo, the Mexican Ambassador Designate, He told Acting Secretary Polk his Government had given him definite information that the bandits were moving northward toward Bouwquillas, Tex, and promised co-operation of Carranza forces. Signs of definite progress toward real co-operative settlement of the Moxican problem were in evidence to- day. A long conference was attended | by Acting Secretary of State Polk, | Mexican Ambassador Arredondo and American Ambassador F tt was the first time the latter two havo met. The conference, while informal, was admittedly the frat of a serios which were suggésted by Carranza n alternative of mediation in Car- t note to the United States, AN ANTONIO, Tex,, July 10.--The ent bandit raids in the Big Bend country and the report that a large band of Villistas is headed that way, has caused Gen. Funston to plan the disposition of most of the National Guardsmen in that region The Fifth Massachusetts Infantry ordered from Camp Pershing in the sections, EL PASO, Texas, July 10.—Cutting off (he top of one , Villistas are branding Mexicans who refuse to join them against the de Gov- ernment, Gen, Gonzales of Juarez in- formed the State Department nts to-day. Several hundred in southern Chihuahua have Jready n mutilated in this manner, Gon- gules stated, $22,000,000 MORE NEEDED TO FINISH NEW SUBWAYS Service Board Told Construction and Interest Will Require Huge Increase, The Public Service Commission is advised jn a report made by Com- missioner Travis H. Whitney and Chief of Rapid Transit Lekoy T Harkness that there will be needed to complete the municipal Ines called for by the dual contracts nearly $22,- 090,000 in addition to appropriations ade in March, 1918 16 report points out that the net increase in the cost of construction work itself is only $7,000,000 on the original estimate of over $202,000,000. Apparently estimates by engineers; of the construction work did not ap ply to items of interest and real es- tate, for the total increase In interest fy over $10,000,000 and the total in- crease in real {9 little more than $4,500,000 estate M. J. Shan M. J. Shaughnessy, for many years an rtising man in this city, and later President of Scandinavian- ican Bank of » te ad at . in that ity. | business as ad ie Bloomingdales | } later organtaed the Wan advertising department. He) jgiven wherever Mexican Homes O'Ryan and Staff Begin Tour of inspection ARMY KIFLES POUND Indications Are That Militia. men Will Spend a Long Time on the Frontier, By Martin Green. (Bpecial Bia Correspondent of The Evening World) MeAIAMIN, Tor, July Ate Precautionary measure attending « tour of the outposts along the Mle © made by Major Gen, O'Kyan, Cornelius Vanderbilt, M VON, Ward, Major Ole aud yt MLN, Falls, UA command of # batt ty-elghth eg terday, extra taken to prevent the road from teking « chance at the party, whieh travelled in automobiles, unattended by an oe ort Detachments of the Hecond Te: and regular infantry regiments # toned at the points along the river which the wy soldiers are wots ae guards of this part of the frontier, searched all Major in lion of the Twen nt of Infantry, you ho coupled by Mexicans who are wun f being in any way in or active sympathy or Villlata t on the other side of the border # search of the Mexica three and a half Kueh town of Ma pilew wouth of Mission, brought to light two modern “thirty-thirty” Springfield high power military rifles and several long, dans Kerous daggers, fashioned trom files, This episode was attended by con- siderable excitement Madero t# a typical Mexican hamlet, a few rode away from the big pumping station of the Shary Irrigation Company, which has been under guard for two years, As in customary, Mexican laborers from the vicinity journeyed to town on Sunday to fraternize and talk over the situation, Tho laws of Texas pro- Hibit the sale of liquors on Sunday, but the Mexicans find a way of natia- fying their thirts in the cantinas of their native quarters, and the crowd in Madero was quite lively when a detachment of Texas troops, in com- mand of Lieut. J. M. Keudricks, sud- denly entered the town from thelr camp @ short distance away They proceeded with thelr businoss tn hand with surprising neatness and thor. oughness. SURROUND THE TOWN AND SEARCH FOR WEAPONS, In a few minutes the town was complotely surrounded and soldiers ordered to go into the houses and look for weapons. There were about seventy men in the detachment, The | search was made by parties of three, nter each house, and one to stand guard at the rear, At the door of one little shack, two Mexicans made a show to oppose the soldier: They were pushed aside, and the reasons for thelr show of resistance was found Inside the house in the shape of a Springfeld rife. In an- other house an old woman was caught hiding something under a pillow In @ corner, Tho other rifle was taken from her, No ammunition was found and except that their homes were invaded the Mexicans were not bothered, ‘ While the search was in progress Gen, O'Ryan and his party, bound for Mission from Hidalgo and other ex- posed points along the river, passed through the town, Gen, O'Ryan made a tour of the stations which the border 1s guarded, ‘This was about the biggest event of the day in camp, It presnges inove- mente of detachments of New York- ers from McAllen and Mission to the outposts at which Mexican bandits may attempt to cross on raiding ex- peditiong into Texas, The apparent determination of the Goverment to make another attempt to sottle the ditfloulty with Mexico by mediation has caused no abatement of military activities along the border, All appearances indicate that the New York troops are hore for two to @ long stay, especially is ttled that they the of the ave ving at pointe for y weary mont! or, 6 outpost detachments will be ntly shit Major Gen. ‘anticipating a lengthy ake the camps and Pharr as attractive possible, ATHLETIC FIELD PREPARED TO HARDEN UP SOFT MUSCLES, To that end a tg athletic fleld has been laid out adjoining the Mission camp. Athletic competition will be encouraged, boxing matches will be arranged under the direction of Pri vate Kid McCoy of the enty-first, and moving picture shows will be possible, Baseball wil! also figure as a camp relaxation as soon as the men feel able to tn. ed the M. J. Shaughnessy Adver ful. possession of which they dispute with Colombla and Ecund irave fears for the peace of the na-| tions involved were exp'osn ‘ne boundary disputes involving the . four countries have i lang standing and at one time or nother oO! Long Island. Railroad fad at one “ume or another tome of had been reported that Colombia and Peru had eppronched an underatanding of their difficulties and that an arbitra tion was in contemplation. An award SM in the dispute berwaer ot ¥ Colontbia was made by Spain in 1891, tising Company, of which he was prest Gent at the tine of his death, He was preaident of the Puget Sound. Mortgage Company, membor of the ttle Cham. b and of the Mt. Ranier the Catholic Club, the ul Soctety, the Metro t 1d the Sphtr Was fitty-th will be broug e on the Grand Cor course and the funeral will take pla at St. Angola's Chureh, Morria Ave ind One Hundred and Sixty-third Street, Burial will be tn the arn plot in Thompsonville, Conn, dulge in the national game tn a tem- perature of from 95 to 100 deg anticipation of official placing New York Ds on Rud along the frontier i busied himself to-day with selecting what will amount toa troop of ca f officers A ne ol ers of the First Will pass a woek al familiarizing themaely with the fords and other points re quiring the superviston of troops. Two members of the Seventy-frat Searched as * quae fot eye nine | eter may send wut « drinchmwt to howh for the missing we Major ne of the remuian eer medion of the die ot, wtetiened at ‘ made 4 tow of inepection of the camps at © and Minn t Pharr to-day | wolf satinfied th sites, and he wae the sanitary arrany de tor a went into ently Third Hegiment was ted at Where yesterday, but had arrived al @ late hour lant © Roventy fe oly down bere can fod out w ne tie 20 SOLDIERS 60 FISHING, GET LOST, 2 OVERBOARD Pears That) Party Had Been Drowned Allayed When Boat Reaches Newport PINHEIUH INLAND, N.Y, July 10 —dirent anxiety was caused at Fort HOG Wee jay by the finding on the be two seit conscious embers of @ party of twenty st artillerymen who had leave to wo fishing ye day. been the subject of Inquiry since roll oall last night Fear was #et at rest by a report fron Newport, Kh, L, of the arrival there of the boat, The soldiers had lost their course at the mouth of Long Inland Sound. An investigation has n ordered to leann how the two FOIL WEDDING TO WOMAN 75 [eit Btreet | Thomas Benson Confesses De- Unions and tails of Plot and Deseribes | Elaborate Plans Henson, alleged mall rob © Prieoner in the Tombe walling trial to-morrow, confessed to day bie whe the plot te aeoape | from the prison, which was frustrated Baturdsy by Warden Maniey | Henson, who le « lived at No Forty to #teul a ack of regis tered mall, eontatnin OTe from 4 wagon on & Penney! Yanla ferryboat, I be enth Ger of the prison, Hoth of thene keve were perfect duplicates of nd by the keepers Fri oth were made out of tough, * wood, and when inserted in the lock of fee. * colt by Warden Manley they the door as NY an at ov 1 keys, » his ed all other by the Warden, any outside help Warden niey found aia keys, similar to the two surrendered by Henson to-day, when he searched Henson's cell Friday, and also that of Windler, Nenson had also woven & rope over thirty feet long out of sheets, Hoth Henson and Windigr had kept atlont about their plans un- U1 this morning, when Benson turned over the keys to the Warden, “Thoae keys represent a whole lot of work,” sald Henson, “I have been busy with this plan to get out of here since I first came, last April.” “What did you make the keys out ofa olgar box?" asked the Warden, “No,” answered Boneon, laughing. “I ¢ound @ ploce of broom handle in the corridor one day when exerciaing, and knowing I wi handy with a knife I started to work, Baseball has confession, exon. pereons suspected He denied he had 85, HIS CHILOREN But Both Declare They Will Fight to Give Him “Place to Lay His Head.” HUNTINGTON, N.Y, July 10.— Rilando Bammin, eighty-five years old, who walks with two can and Tan- thia Conklin, who ts seventy-five and strong wnd vigorous for her age, came here from Northport to-day and asked ‘Town Clerk Trainor to issue a mar- riage license, Clerk Trainor knew they were coming, and informed them that owing to objections which had ‘been made by « son and a son-in-law of Sammis he could not Issue the li- conse, Mr, Sammis sald that he would hire @ lawyer and compel issuance of the license, Tho bride-to-be was equally post- tive, She said that Mr, Sammis want- ed some place to hang his hat and lay his head In peace, and that she proposed to give him both, Mr. Sammis is reputed wealthy. Ho lived most of his life tn this village and his brother was the late Charles H, Bammis, tax collector, SD Ae ba ASQUITH PROPOSES HOME RULE PLAN IN COMMONS Declares It Has Approval of Both Sir Edward Carson and John Redmond, LONDON, July 10—Premier Aa- quith this afternoon formally pro- posed In Commons the plan for an Irish Home Kule Parliament framed by David Lioyd George, Ho stated it had met with the ap- proval of both sir Edward Carson and John Redmona, leaders of opposing Irish factions ASKS $1 <> 0,000 FOR HIS LOVE. Brig. Gen, William F, Morris, retired, formerly commander of the Second wrt- gade of the New York National Guard, has beon made codefendant with his wife in a sult for $10,000 damages by Mra, Mollie KB. Morris, their daughtor- in-law, who charges them with altenat- ing the affections of her husband, Will- tam F. Morris Jr The sult came to light to-day in an application for a bill of particulars made by the younger Mrs, Morris be- fore Justice Kelly tn the Brooklyn Su- preme Court, Mrs, Morrta ts eulng for a separation on the ground that her hus- band abandoned her and their three children, > Tim Sallivan Execators Win. Lawrence Mulligan and Patrick H Sullivan, executors of the estate of the late ‘Timothy D, Sullivan, to-day ob tained from the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court a favorable decision upon their appeal from a judgment of the Supreme Court, which granted Dr. Robert Foster $3,162.93 for medical services re Sullivan. ->- Body Recovered Fi ¢ Surf. The body of a man, Villiam Powell of No. 107 West One Hundred and Ninth Street, was recov surf at Long h by hief Edward F. Croker \| Was missed a week leved to he .| made discovertes which he has report- jor two, sweetened with sugar, removed @ lot of the skill from my fingers, They don't work as smoothly as they did” Ho held out hie hands, the fingers of which are knotted and gnarled, with each knuckle enlarged to two or three times its ordinary siae, Benson declared all the work on the keys had been done during the night, when the Tombs is in darkness except for the ridor }'~hts, fven my cell mate knew nothing about it,” boasted Benson, “Every chance I got I would closely observe the key to my cell and the key to the corridor door when the keeper showed thom. lt was easy enough to get the keys cut down to the proper thickness and grooved. Then, by my observation, £ would notch thom, and, when chance offered, try them in the locks, A little pressure on them would mark where the key# did not fit and I would cut them down and try tt again. My own celt key fitted the first time, “It wasn't as easy as it now looks, though. I juess, altogether, I mado as many as eighteen keys out of that broom handle, only to have most of them break when they were Just Ou got the eh the rope?” Benson anke “Oh, that was ea: he answered, “When I was out for exercise I would walk into an open cell and tear @ couple of strips off.” Ho refused to discuss where tho steel gaw had come from that was used by Windler in cutting @ bar on his cell door, “It wasn't visitors we got it from,” ho satd, “but ight here in the Tomb." “Tho Evening World, Saturday, had the straight dor on how we were golng to got out of our cells,” he con- tinued, “except there was no automo- bile to wait for us. We intended to #0 to the yard and there pile up the oll barrels, lasso one of the projections jon the wall and pull ourselves up, then drop tho rope uver the other aide and slide down.” Benson's statement that the saws came from some one tn the Tombs tn believed by the Warden and he has ed to Commissioner of C Burdette G. Low READ THIS CAREFULLY You Will Profit By So Doing The following are the directions for taking Johann Hofft's Malt Ex- tract, the world-famous tonic food aud restorative, Dyspepsia Takeo @ wineglassful with every meal. Discontinue the use of fee water, tea and coffee while taking. Coughs and Colds—A wineg) ‘rections ‘aken | hot before retiring at night, will af- ford rellef and assist in breaking up the most obstinate cold Convalescence from Grip and other wasting diseases—U: liberally at meals. Sleeplessness—-Take one or two wineglassfuls every night before re- tiring. Johann Hoff's Malt Extract ts a body builder, a blood and muscle maker and equally beneficial to men and women, Changes pale, sickly children into hungry, red-cheeked pictures of health, Keeps the body keyed up toa pitch of resistance that makes tt difficult for disease to take hold, ko by hie brother John after they had mn bathing off Castles by the Sea, Endors by medical authorities throughout the civilised world.—Ady, | tan, dub ti ¢ Get Together To-Morrow and Talk Peace Meyer Mitehel end el) euteiders Prectioally elimineted to-éay from « eonterence between the garment makery walon an situation © orning, with the exception that the nference eammittee of the unten de will be made up of fourteen m « enough for the All offers tion ¢ sociation. arbitration or arbitra. mittoos were declined by the Which insisted on @ straight heart-to-heart talk with the union, along ines sugested by The Fivening World ‘The preliminary come ference will be preceded by @ commite too meeting of bother dides at an Up. town hotel, This action oame about after both aides had accepted the tm. vitation of The Evening World t “get tomether” on the base of the union recognising and accepting the right of the employers to hire and die- char#e, and the association's recog. nition of the right of the workers te strike if one of their number te dias charged unjustly, Henjamin Schlesinger, President ef the unton, sald to-day that there was one point in the bire and discharge issue which he intended to lasist upom, namely @ board of review similar im Practice ‘to the one called for in the agreement between the Typographical Union No. 6 and the Publishers’ Ag- noctation of New York City, He con- siders thia one of the real protective features of the acheme suggested by The Evening Wosld, “I intend to bring this up early in the conference,” he said to-day, (For further details of es rment etrike Pie aot) sl BATHER WANDERS AWAY. ty-two years old, of Minetto, this coun- ty, appeared at his home early to-day clad only in an overcoat, Gardner wont for a swim in the river | Saturday evening and when he did not return and his clothes were found on the river bank yosterday it had been drowred and begun, Gardner says he suffered a lose of memery and does not recall what hap- pened. 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