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’ ne We cm yg an REAL HOSPITAL FORN. Y. TROOPS Government Grants $15,000 to Build Wooden Structure for Sick Men. MANY = SOLDIERS Compelled to Sleep on Ground While Officers Enjoy Good Quarters, By Martin Green. | MBpecia! Gta Correspondent of The Evening Werld) M'ALLIN, Tex, July 02 eMivers in co Althougt | pmand of the Hinth 1 professed to be quite Proud of the feild hospital, which ts @ collection of tents where all but the Most seriously fi! rest upon blankets and ponchos on the bare ground, the War Department authorities are of the opinion that better secommodations are needled Col, Terriberry, Chief Medical OMcer of the division, received word to-day that $16,000 had been set aside for the erection of a wooden hospital with | floors and screéned walls and modern appliances for keeping out Mies and . The work of erecting the hos Pital will be started as soon as the Plans reach McAllen The tents comprising the fleld hos pital wore flooded during last night's rainstorm and the forty pationta got a thorough soaking, In marked con- trast to the condition of the patients Was that of officers lodged in dry- floored and screened tents lesn than fifty yards away From thé viewpoint of a civilian, the field hospital of this division was disgracefully inadequate, especially | im view of the fact that the nearest open base hospital is at San Antonto, | about 300 miles away, approximately the distance between New York and Syracuse, On the other hand, the) Jd hospital, from the viewpoint of @ military medical officer, is a model of its kind here Will always exist & wide divergence of opinion between the peaceable and the military mind as to what constitutes decency and common mercy in handling sick or wounded soldiers. SUPPOSED TO BE MERELY A PLACE TO REST. Theorectically the field hospital is merely a resting point for @ patient bound to an adequately fitted hospi- tal for complete treatmnet, It is fitted up according to red tape rule and the equipment should not be Suflicient to fill more than the eight twansport wagons assigued to use of the hospital. In the case of McAllen this camp ie rapi luking on the eCATANCe of @ permanent garrison, A hospital! serving (he necas of 16,000 men in @ tropical climate without screens, cots or wooden filoors for the tents is a grotesque institution and tho War Deparunent authorities seem to | have come to a realization of the| fact. The inevitable investigators are | our midst. Already on the ground are Dr, Thomas Darlington, who 1s | ooking after things for the Civic Fed- | eration; ex-Senator Mayhew of Weast- chester, who is finding out things for Gov, Whitman, and Mrs, Alice McKay | Kelly, empowered by the National Pa- triotic Committee to investigate the | camp, Other investigators are ap- | proaching from all sides, Dr, Dar. | ington is to make a report to the War | Departinent. The last unit of: the Sixth Division reached camp to-day | when trains carrying the Twenty- second Engineers. of New York! reached McAllen, Men and equipment in good shape, Second Lieut. Hans Whalen of the Six. ty-ninth Regiment, who was admitted! to the First Field Hospital ‘uesday night out of his head and with a high temperature, eturned to his command, He was suffering trom! heat prostration, reinforced by over- indulgence in ice cream, pipk soda water und other ice cold refresh- ments, Now that Gen, O'Ryan has put into force a rule prohibiting the use of alcoholic beverages, an effort ie being made throughout the Sixth Division to discourage the absorption of so-called soft drinks and ice cream. The alleced soda water and supposedly innocuous drinks sold down | here are manufactyred in the vicin- | ity, and the military surgeons say they are as dangerous as beer, The enlisted men have also been warned against over-indulgence in the local water, In time the New York mill- tiamen bid fair to become brothers to the camel, LONG HIKES WILL BE KEPT UP TO HARDEN MEN, An extraordinary victim of dangers Of @ peaceful camp is Private Nelson A. Clinch of the First Field Hospital, Who was thrown from a horse yes- terday and sustained a broken right Knee and a sprained wrist. He was} smiling and cheerful when the regular Inspection was made to-day, When told he was to be sent to the base hospital at San Antonio hig first in- quiry was how long it would be before he could come back and go to work, Definite announcement was made to-day that there will be no mi tion of the order requiring the take long hikes in the hot sur ing full equipment, weighing, accord- ditleas | Sie eae they @hei met py eve leben $o°, Stes Pate’ wl ete by (he enlioted men, end tow ot them here become lenge Reid 4 and Congressmen The enlwied he Rew York mille cannot “ee waree with | principle eet forth at division nead querters that (his iso military camp “ burden of equipment oa the! pace, it te nobody ye militiomen pre * cine, te rean thee they have id the te stick te the rsaranuitn 38 Bom Vv. M. C. A. BUILDING TO FUR. NIGH CHEER FOR TROO ‘The activity of the army and navy Y M ©. A. in this military district has had an effect opposed to that whieh actuated the excellent folk who are back of the ¥ M. ©. A. mov The ¥. M CA. bas completed in the MeAllen building of mi sembilng In general out- nm elevator In @ country act & gral line town, where it in designed to make the Now York sol tiers comfortable With the natural perversity of men Who cannot appreciate what t» being accomplished in their behalf be they have not asked for spectal lowes in Texas, the New York militia the ¥. M. ©. A. build~ They think it ap- © atrongly than any- thing they have seen an idea which In ) hamely, that they “puncved” by ‘the United States Goverament into aslaning for three years as soldiers in the regu- jar army. TWO WIVES CLAIM BODY OF DE MARCO IN MORGUE One Who Was First Married and Has Two Children Given Possession, While @ young woman in deep mourning Was signing papers in the city morgue carly to-day, preparatory to taking Possession of the body of Joseph De Marco, who was murdered in a card game at No. 54 James Stroet ‘Thursday afternoon, and who she sald was her husband, another young woman also in mourning entered and claimed De Marco's body as that of her husband. ‘The morgue officials subsequently e the latter claimant possession of the body, because she had two chtl- dren and papers showing sho had married De Marco in 1907, seven years prior to the date of the first claim- ant’s marriage, which was also proved to the morgue officials by papers she produced. aioe ONE KILLED IN DUEL; PASSERBY IS SHOT n Young Man Is Hit by a Stray Bullet | and Another Grazes Head eof Girl, A revolver battle on the sidewall: in front of the confectionery store of Chapagas & Karopoulos, No. 397 Grand ‘.reet, Willlamsburg, early to-day, ended in the death of Matteo Lavinclo of No. 617 Second Ave- rue, Manhattan, and probably will cause the death of Max Herman, twenty-six, of No, 492 Fast One Hundred and Seventieth Street, Bronx, who recolved a stray bullet while saying good night to three young Won « across the street, The young women who witnessed the shooting are Misses Bessie, Sarah and Celia Hyet. According to Mias Sarah, whose head was grazed by one of the flying bullets, they were saying goodby to their guest when two men came from the candy store and began shooting at each other. Two hours after the shooting de- tectives of the Seventh Branch Bureau arrested Anthony Brace, twenty-four years old, of No, 466 Metropolitan Avenue, EACH COLO STORAGE EGG IS TO HAVE A LABEL If Removed From the Original Package, Notice Must Be Borne On Its Shell. Every cold storage egg offered for sale on and after Sept. 1 in other than the original unbroken packages must have “cold storage’ on its shell In plain letters at least an eighth of an inch high, An order to that effect will be tssued oMcially on July 24, 1t 1s announced by Commissioner John J. Dillon of the ate Department of Foods and Mar- kets, Last winter the department had much ing to official announcement, thirty- eight pounds, The order requiring euch regiment to drill three hours and thirty-five minutes each morning will also stand. It has been decided by BELL-ANS Absolutely Removes Indigestion. One package provesit, 25cat all druggists, | trouble with grocers and del \dealers, who, by cunning arra oft cold’ storage signs, fooled cus: jtomers into buying cold storage exm: which they believed were fresh laid. The practice Kot to be so, widespread that elty people were swindled in that | way out of more than $190,000, —— yo Derby Dedicates Kansas Speedway. | KANSAS CITY, Mo. July ~The ‘new Specdway here will be dedicated to-day with @ 100-mile derby, Heth and a 50-mile dash for a 1600. ‘The Speedway has track, ‘Thirtecn cars ure entered in the derby and fourteen in the dash, prize urse of n olled soil ie la at Fe 9 | City’s Dr, Claude Brought by L, Wheeler, By Marguerite Movers Marshall. What will be New York’ ‘That te the question which inevitably occurs to one after reading some) of the startling assertions as to the deadly after eflects of the scourge thet te now sweeping the eity cular of information issued by the Health Department declares; “It need only be stated that infantile paralp- sls bas been shown in previous epidemics to hai mortality renging from 6 to 20 per cent, and that of those who survi ext few years? be ua to expect that \tow 6 ‘k? Have Mitte? reopin, PREDICTS COMPLETE RECOVERY FOR THE SURVIVORS, “The next generation's health and vitality is not going to be imperilied ‘by the ourrent out- break of infantile paralysis,” he said. “There need be no anxiety on that score, It to say that in most of the cases of in- fantile paralysis in which the patient passes through the acute er ata, there will b tically comp! recovery of all the functions of the body, sooner or later, You know," Dr, Wheeler contin. ued, “there in nothing new and start~ | ling about this disease, I have known of it all my Ife, There have been hundred of cases every year, Of course the suddenness with which it seizes a child makes it a terror-in- spiring thi A youngster may go to bed at night apparently pertect- ly well and wake up in the morning unable to stand, “But there ts instance after in- stance in which a child who passes out of the fever with—apparently— one or both arms or legs completely paralyzed, is in perfect health a few months or years after the seizure, As I sald, wo have been having many, many cases in our large communities, Yet how few cripples we observe on tho streets, how few exist, in com- parison with the number of the popu- lation! I see no reason for any great permanent increase in New York's in- valided children because of tho pres- ent epidemic, “In nis address at the Academy of Medicine the other night Dr, Simon was especially hopeful in his refer- Fences to the disablement caused by |the disease, He said: ‘Of those who survive, @ part make complete jrecoveries, in which no crippling | whatever remains, This number ts greater than is usually supposed, be- j cause it includes not only the rela- itively large number of alight or abortive cases, but also a consider- able number of cases in which more or less of paralysis was present at one time, The disappearance of the paralysis may be rapid or gradual— may be complete in a few days or may require several weeks or montha. ‘The remainder suffer some de- gree of permanent crippling, But even in this class the extent to which recovery from the paralysis may oc- cur is very great. In many in- stances the residue of paralysis may be so small as not. seriously to hamper tho life activities of the ‘n- dividual; in others in whom it is great it may be relieved or minimized by suitable orthopedic treatment. But what is imperative to keep ta mind is that the recovery of para- lyzed parts and the restoration of lost muscular power and function is a process which extends over a long period of time, that 1, over months and even year: ‘So ver may go on gaining for weeks, months and a large part of hi tunately, only a very ber of the attacke verely and are left se- 'y crippled. Lamentable as that even one shad be so affected, it is neverth@jess a reassurance to know that so many recover al- together: and so much of what app e permanent paraly- rein tim FREE ADVICE FOR THE PARENTS OF CRIPPLES, home from the hospital unable to walk or use its hands, the parents need not despair of its future?” I M tainly not," Dr, Whe “There should be de- spairing thoughts for several ycars at the least, I suppose there will be @ certain numbey of crutches in tem- porary use, but there will be no neces- sity for building large homes to take cure of an influx of permanently help- less children, or any enterprise of similar nature,” “What treatment is most helpful ta curing the paralysis?" 1 inquired. “M. ia good,” said ‘and elect t disca the four limbs are li fected, But not all the mus are paralyzed, only cer And the child should be encour- ing atrophied, ‘ut the youngster through course of stunts every night befo je to dance, to run, to play ball ay appreciable proportion of the ation of young men and women will be handicapped for life by en- feobled muscles and stunted limbs, the deadly parting tokens of pollomye Flexner of the Rockefeller Institute) effect of Infantile pareiyele on ibe west generation ta A or 16 per cent, or more were left more or less permanentiy erippled.” Is the cruteh to be the hetic toy of bables for the Will thousands of little boys and girls tag, oven it For the sake of the anxious mothers and fathers, | took these questions to Dr, Claude L. Wheeler, editor of 1 his anewer ts an effective antidote to the poison of panic fear which ts through the arteries of this city just now, BULL MOOSE CHIEFS N York Medical Journal. A LOK HORNS OVER HUGHES SUPPORT Threat of Court Action May Not Stop Endorsement— Colby Scores Rivals, SYRACUSE, July 22.— With the anti-Hughes forces making threats of appealing to tho courte If Charles K. Hughes is indorsed for the Preal- dency their last stand against the evidently victorious Perkins faction, all Indications are for a lively session of the Progressive State Committee to-day, There appears to be liitle chance fo: indorsemont of Judge Seabury as a Democratic candidate, although tt is being hinted that a resolution ask- ing him to enter the Progressive pri- mary will be offered. But this plan is being given only tho feeblest sup- port If the Seabury resolution 1s intro- duced it ts expocted it will be voted down, It Is uncertain what will be- come of & similar resolution in regard to Gov, Whitman, In spite of Chairman John J. O'Con- nell’s prediction of court proceedings it 1s expected Hughes will be in- | dorsed, Among the Moose leaders here are State Chairman Walter A. Johnson, Tuckerman of New York and Charles G, Staples, Frederick G, Mitchell of Buffalo and Bainbridge Colby. Short- ly after his arrival Colby issued the following statement: “I find on my arrival this morning a@ number of former appointees of “Then even if @ child is brought | Gov. Hughes working tooth and nail to transfer and convey the Progressive party machinery to the Republicans. They seemed surprised when I re- minded them that we owed some duty sitll to our party and its loyal mem- bers. “It seema to be on the cards to try to force a Hughes endorsement. The plight of that true gentleman and fine Progressive, John Park whom wo have nominated for V: esident, ts recognized as sad, but it is dismissed with a shrug. Nothing not even duty —must be allowed to interfere with the attempt of the ‘indorses’ to get next to the ‘candidate’ and to ‘point with pride’ to what they have don “The same fatuous determination to do the worst possible, which has in- volved the National’ Committee in countrywide repudiation, and exposed Mr. Hughes to the affront of having hin communication to the California Progressives cabled without reading, seems to actuate his friends here, should call them bis supporters and shouters—they can hardly be consid- ered his friends. “There will be a fight is @ little uncertat The effort to }karrote and coerce the Progressive | party will be resisted here, as else~ where, and it will fail, as it has failed wherever tried al POLICEMEN GIVE BAIL. Three Indicted on Bribery ¢ Are Held for Trial, Arthur B, Dallas, Thomas L. Jand Robert BE, Goldman, p |merly on the staff of Inspector Frank Morris, indicted yesterday for bribery in connection with police regulatior of dis- orderly resorts, were arraigned before to-day and held for trial Fy Which each furnished, Policemen William J. Enrignt and Da. vid J. Foley, already under* jury’ Indictments, pear before Judge Mulqueen, Monda: plead to bribery indictments, Tho vote O'Brien men, for- he goes to bed, Give him plenty of good food and keep him clean, And don't be discouraged If improvement comes slowly, I repeat that in most casos the after effects of infantile paralysis wear away, and in @ few years, at most, you wouldn't know that anything had ever been the mat- ter with the child who has suffered from the disease,” William H. Hotchkiss, former Stato | Superintendent of Insurance; Virgil A. Kellogg of Watertown, Lucius Fear of New York Mothers and That Next Generation of Children May Be joist CHEERS AT CHILDREN _ Infant Paralysis Cripples ae Necessarily Be the Pitiful Toys of as Reoull of Present Epidemic, la the Message of Hope | | | | | dered his resignation, giving no deft- Is Unfounded (re 5 — Or CLAUDE L. WHEELER., BANK CONCEALS DENT OF CLERK wo TOK 75000 Coal and Iron National Gives Embezzler Chance to Re- pay Shortage. OMecials of the Coal and Iron Na- tional Bank to-day refused to re- veal tho name of the clerk, who, it was reported last night, embexaied a@ large amount of money. ‘The work of checking up the books of the employes has been completed and President John T. Sproull an- nounced the dofalcation would not exceed ® $75,000, ‘Tho clerk, whose shortage was dis- covered when he attempted to resign last month, te under the constant watch of operatives from a privat detective agency, and unless he can prove to the Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland, which went his bond, that he can make good his defalcations he will be arrested. Suspicion first turned to the default- ing clerk, who was employed tn the receiving teller's department, on June 20, On that date the young man ten- nite reason for ending his services of twelve years. Mr. Sproull and his follow officers in the bank have been inclined to be lenient with the young man, In tho event, however, that tho de- faulter cannot make good his arrest will follow, There is not likely to be an arrest for several days, None of the partics interested In the shortage cared to discuss the mat- ter in detail, The young employee, It was learned, had occupied positions of trust for many years. One of his duties was to receive funds after banking hours nd he had many opportunities to help himself to money and to “doctor” his books,’ He led a quiet life and was in no way considered a spender, al- though it has been found that he was given to playing the market, Alfred A. Cook, a director in the batik and a member of the law firm of Leventritt, Cook and Nathan of No, 111 Broadway, ts handling the legal side of the case, Mr, Cook its absent from the city and members of his firm sald they could say noth- ing until his return on Monday, The defaulting clerk has no oppor- tunity to escape, Two detectives ac- company him wherever he goes, Seneanalienedaae TWO IN $808,000 MAIL ROBBERY GET 5 YEARS Third, Who Became a Government aY, JULY 88, 191 Fathers PARALYSIS MOVIES MANY CITIES BAR MURS Wit ROGKANAY EACH Hundreds See Evening World's Pictures and Are Told How | to Fight Plague. j BOYS’ BAND SPRENADES. Exhibit of Great Value to Com- munity, Says Head of the Sanitation Committee. v away Heeon last might saw the ent infantile paralyste moving ple- tures of The Bvening World, and the people of Arverne, * Ureater New York, not only * of the epidemic, to educ to the da of preventing incase. entrance of the Mack motor truck Pleasure provi of the lke @ triumphal entry of the days of olf, The people bad been notified by postere and by the local papers that The Evening World-Unt- versal Film Company's pletures were to be presented and they gathered at the centres selected by the Rockaway Heach Banitation Committee for the, display. Dr. G. Hamburger, President of the Committee, bat arranged with The ivening Worl, for the presentatio and the people of Hockaway each Arone to the ov n, ‘They showed thelr appreciation of the plotures by thelr presence and indorsed the cam- palgn with their applause and out- spoken expression, The Ambrose ¢ phan Band of 8t. Malachy's Home of Rockaway Park volunteered ite vicom and led a procession, of whi the Mack motur truck was the contra, flanked by automobtles carrying lead- Ing citizens of the various towns and representatives of The Evening World, the Universal Film Company and the Internatioval Motor Truck Company, followed by thousands of residents of Rockaway Leach When at midnight the lights faded from the moving pictures aad the c- bibition w. 4 ended, a crowd gathered around the at of The Even- ing World and Universal Film Com- pony representatives and aked them for the exhibition, while the orphan band, numbering thirty kid- a screnaded them, That was how the people at the beach showed their appreciation of tho work done in their behalf. Little Andrew Kojancio, a member of the band, with an American flag in his hand, sang a song composed of national alra and at the end of each stanza the band played a march of the North or ig of the South, with a final crash of “The Star Spangled Tanner,” while everybody stood un- covered and gave three cheers for The Evening World, A great little band ts that of the orphan boys of St. Malachy’a Home, and som: of the tooters are tots not more than seven years old, Thomas Goodwin ts their leader and «! :tor and Joseph Co ila, who plays the cymbals, ie a seven-year-old Sousa, The Evening World than!.s them for their musical appreciation of its e*+ forts, Rockaway Beach, which boasts more kiddies to the mile than even the lower east side, showed Its un- &pproval of the paper's good work and repaid the lung trip of the little atreet theatre, Rebert 8. Doninn of the Universal Film Company, who staged and di- ted the picturos, went along with ‘ening Viorld's representatives to make certain there would be ..o hitch, and peer W. Hasselkus of the International Motor Company, Waa also of tho party, Everything worked just as smoothly ne it has! the ten daya of the night exhibitions, Dr. Robert Titus, the lecturer, who has done xneh good work and achleved such good results, was at his best and one could have heard a pin drop while he was speaking don't know what we can express our gratitude to The Ev World,” said Dr, Hamburger. exhibition 1s certainly the by pression of what the people ought to know in combating the epidemic, | The pictures tell the story of the breeders of disease and sound suf. | clent warning to parents to put them | on their guard in caring for their children, Besides that, the lecture is most fMuminating and emphasizes | H the instructions of the Department of Heal t this distance from the city’s centre, we are naturally workin j under disadvantages and our grea! j effort has been to the people to what they should do in the fight ane. for the prevention of the d Witness, Is Given a Lighter Sentence, Judge Harland B. Howe to-day sentenced Thomas Henson and his brother-in-law, Louls Windler, to the ederal penitentiary in Atlanta for five years each iward J, Quigley was given a two-year term in the same institution, Benson and Windler were found gullty of, partictpation in the regia- tered mail robbery on the forryboat Wilkesbarre, Fob. 29 last. Quigloy pleaded guilty to attompting to din- pose of the bulk of the loot, which Aggregated $408,000, The Jury recommended clemency for Benaon and Winder on the theory that they were but the tools of Quix ley. Tho lattor waa given the Ileht uso he became a Gov Miss Dorothy Kanatein of No, 9 West Thirty-firat Streot, her | Hayonne, died at 16 to-day of an overdose of noe: The drug hud bewn presoribed Loadaches, t }them just what they should do and reaches their sympathies much more quickly than anything yet devised to stamp out the epidemic,” The pictures will probably be shown at Rockaway HBouch tn the motion pleture houses, as they are to be shown, beginning to-morrow, through. | out Brooklyn and the Bronx, The campaign has concluatvely shown the le are only too willing to learn ow to care for thomaclves, if the fs opened to them, and The Ww well satiafiod with ed and the apirtt with which tts efforts have been wel- comed, —_— LEAPED OFF STEAMBOAT. A man who describes hi erick Goett, fifty, of New York City, at- 4 aulclde to-day by fumping from at Little Silver while coming up the lower bay, Bereams of women and |children attracted the attention of deck Handa and the boat was turne Jund Goete brought wi ond then re- ¥ moved to Bellevue Hospital, th, ! This moving pleture exhibition shows | around | a * q) ‘ r ~ ITALIAN BABES G& FEAROF PLAGUE, SUA Ha pe ae “We Will Kill You Like Some Steamer Lines Refuse to Dog.” Says Letter to” Take Passengers Under Brooklyn Woman, Fifteen Years, ‘Too eeorant to appreciate what wee doing for them, come of Itatte the neighborhood of baby elinte in Public feheot Me, Albany Avenue and Maple Drookiyn, yesterday sent « 4 letter to Mre Anne Hear No. 1119 Nostrand Avenue, the auras in charge of the clinte, threatening: her tf. Pear of the tefentile pe we op. nding (reater has beeome neat ¥ eur hk thet Wt » impossible for parenta to find « ¥ can go with thelr weather © where th during the hot Bverywhere they try amer or train they find looal health oMoiats oF policemen waiting form them thet there te a @ aeoinet New York « on under Af. toon years of age, They are com. Pelled to face about New York lee subject themselves to quarantine conditions, Not only ehildren, but even adults have found themaelves tabooed in cer- tain communitios. Kiven persons owning country homes heve found themselves barred, Fur- niture vane have been held up and) rehed for hidden ehildren, a many summer colonies have been abandoned because of difficulties placed tn the path of colontate. Incoming trains and #teamere brought back hundreds of New York orn to-day who had expected to ea- cape from the elty until Monday or later, The health authorities at Mountain. view, N. J., ejected from their eum- mer homes 126 men, women and chil- dren because they had recently come from New York and Brooklyn, These people, taken by surprise, had to spend the night in the ratiroad eta- tion, Forty families were affected by the order, Not one person of the 125 showed any symptoms of the opidemte, Thirty-five children, accompanted by fifteen adults, were brought back to Pler No, 40, North River, at 6.30 o'clock this morning on board the Cheater W. Chapin of the New Lon- don Line, The parents had tried to of tofantiic persiyete ta aleo reported @ mu | whieh were unegnitary. of blood, read “Dear Misa Henry, Nures: If report any more of our bables te Hoard of Health we will kill you nobody you, Keep off our street and doa't report our homes and we will de you neo harm.” Then followed @ skull, crosshomes and dagger, and scrawled at the Bote tom of the sheet were the words: “We will kill you Ike @ dog.” Mre, Henry reported the letter the Flatbush Police Btation and Dee tectives Owens and Wackerley were put on the case, Mra. Henry, with Dr, Harry B. Bilis of the Memorial Dispensary, bes been treating about 100 babies « day at the clinic, Recently the Italian mothers stopped bringing their babies and when she asked the reason come of the mothers replied: “You'll poison them, If you Gnd they are sick you will send them to the hospital and they will die any how.” In one house which Mrs. Henry re- ported four families and four male boardera were living in n rooms. ‘Two infants were ill in the house, Mra, Henry was packing to move from her home with her children to- take the youngate . out of town yoa-| ay, but @ald she would continue her torday for the week end, but a police- | Work at the clinic ao long as she was man on the dock at New London had | Siven police protection. “The Gaia saaaiey of the New WOMEN 10 REPLACE MEN, SAYS SIR RIDER HAGGARD Haven Steamship Company aro tak- Work Better for Less Pay ing children of c!! ages aboard, but the parents are warned that Bridge- port, Conn, will not allow children under fifteen years old to land there. | Perform Some of the other Sound liners are hot recetving children under fifteen, in England and Soldiers Must Inspectore at railroads and high- Seek Colonies, ways leading into Paterson are eend-| ‘women of England who have been ing back all children from Greater] called to take the places in industrial New York, Children bound for Rhode} life of the men who joined the colors Island who have to change care at| have performed these tasks eo accept- New London are being put in charge} ably, and in many cases so much bet- of Rhode Island health !napectors and} ter and for money, that a large quarantined If allowed to go on to| number of them are certain to be re- their destinations, Norwalk is closed| tained in their present positions when to all New York children, the war ends.” Irvington has been quarantined, At; This was the statement made to- Peekskill an excursion of the Sons of| day by Sir Rider Haggard, the Eng- Veterans to Coney Island was called| tinh writer, just before he ealled on off after thousands of tickets had been| the American liner St. Louis, He sold to children, In Yonkers another] reached the steamship at the last min- death was reported. A new case was| ute, coming from Canada on a ¢rip reported in New Rochelle. which began last February. The jour- Fifteen new casos wero reported|ney was undertaken under the aus- In Now Jerac, nine of them in New- | pices of the Royal Colonial Institute, ark, At New Brunswio:, the Fer:or| its purpose being to ascertain what Avarchiat colony was placed under] the English colonies had to offer in strict quarantine follow: the way of inducements to men who covery of @ case of paralysis in @] wi: find themselves without jobs at child from New York. In the school| tne close of the war. are about forty cpiidres ici aiesiieepiailis oa was reporte in Je two In Rutherford, e Found Dead From Ges, Hoboken continue: William Morris, sixty-two years rigid guarantine, went to/old, an engin was found dead the Xtent of delivery | trom gas in the bathroom of his home wagons And the driveralat No, 274 West Nineteenth Street they would have to get health cer- |, gay by his wife. The police say & tine 1. Dr. Charles E. Banka made publio| %** *ccitent! fa letter sent out by the Jérsey Cen- tral Hatiro.d, outlining the require- foenta of towns along its lines, as fol- ows Long Brangh—Inspectora will be on hand to examine children under sixteen years of age upon arrive: Raritan——Will not permit persons who come from infected districts to remain in the town, loomsbury--An officer at the tion, and children under sixteen will not be «permitted to remain when from & point whero the ¢,idemio is 0 exis to enforce a 30 Minutes to Your Shore Dinner jh @ shore dinner! fod fresh from the water, orables thas 1 yi Bridges—Board of Health ntful It children to pass @ doo- teeters nolse and crow ts bag 9 eparnination om bf val, id the ey, x nes of it; conves ston, Pa—All children arrivin nien’ sot apart, from’ any place where the epidemie || night {o. Brighton; then you! in known to exist will be subjected to a twenty day quarantine, White Hou J. —= Board of Health will permit no children undor sixteen to remain unles they hold health certificate: West Point, N, ¥.—Military an- \§norittes will not permit children un- |der sixteen to land from boats or trains BED'SOR POSITIVELY | LOVENA and GADESKOFF, | y Ramian Dancers, walling COLASANTO alos RIGO wih his Original Gypey Orchestra, MAGDA DAHL, Prima Dena, ALBERT FRANCIS WADE, Vematile Raritons, ptsthsy ‘PRR Day, Hoom ‘with’ bisth! ) €or ‘a tee | BRIGHTON BEACH HOTEL $1.80 Shore Dinner, 12 to 8.30 P. M. $1.00 Table d’Hote, 6+ Beasonadic « le carte, iB HEALS QUICKLY Ett Control of WILLIAM WEBBER, ONE BOX PROVES HT 25° | Mre Henry reported severat f ‘The letter, evidestly writes | know what happened te — 5 i a a