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am Af eae _THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER “PLOT TO FIX JURY CHARGED |SO7ED vavaee nevéx IW $10,000,000 FRAUD CASE” Mere rowe m1s AFTER LONG ) Nov. 9.—Oliver W. Rourke — ret and Burt D. Wing were trial to-day before Judge | defraud t arka., W @ of those ern A waid eer F itegerald, wh its Rave MEAT CAUSE OF sea LAME BACK AND jijuen, noveo AMERICAN KIDNEY TROUBLE, Jockey, DIES IN LONDON Had Greatest R Take a glass of Salts to flush Ene Kidneys if your back is aching. Acid from meat irritates jbis Feurement from the turf three the Blad ler | |} Danny Maher had the greatent wexord of jock 1 the English ms urie acid which exeites| 3 ithe system. Meg Ator performer on Engiiah race sof meat must flush the kid a fort years prior to his Hy, You must relieve a df nel salbch wll t y in the } pains in the ba € , emint, Helse coated, and whe t the Doncaster St H you have rheumatic | 1908 Hocksand, ond t © is cloudy, full of | etawt nnels often get bert | gag {up two or in 1909 with Ha torte # the result of his turf vie- irritating acids olf the t fet shout four 0 nen dad Sata SIGNALS FOR HUNTERS, 1 of water before | gy t for a few gyn and your kid- Heys will then act fine and bladder dis orders dissppear. ‘This famous salts is} ytanorerre. from the acid of grapes and nals for deer combined with Lithia, and ey be tn trow for Help. t Da Biee ind wchee Hunters whio Rave been prepared u to * "And he hag a vast contempt tr? nee, In this matter of Industrial Bea's z phynieal labor, for any except the | tinal’ nationt mot an, agricultural | rritation. Jud Salts i ld Klove Jo » ens ‘orm,| SUNTeL natiol j s cae Ati My mn 1 Jl ene help may be rendered aa soon an 12 Klove jobs. Ot © fren “ems nation as we ured to be." finery fo harmboss and makes 0 ie’ lposihie. Here are the signals: Help— these pitiful ittle boys that walk fais Do you think the children would hight Veferve Uthia-water dein [Four rhote in quick succession an office utterly untrained for any po. [be willing to learn trades?” T asked whieh « vs of men and women take | jured sition and want something at least “There seems to be a distinct preju- now and then, thus avoiding serious i s ¢ ast dice against manual labor among the Kidney and bladder disenses.—Advt 4 good as the vice presidency, I've: younger peneration.” fignnis ever before the hunters. Retailers 30° Quality FResHiy ROASTED a ae | | ma BONES IN ASPHALT. wer lent late, the ar of many varielt pa boen taken. from which the sof prehistorte Hii OIESMIER Delivered Free New York TRENTON ser ma Saletde, John Kahra, a ae. Now York lawyer himself tn} GILLIES COiF E CO. MB | oust tone vets Waqin [nie fat jini tive yar and Tat Ven nye 1 and unmarried He had been tn poor health 1 125th Street, West When considering Boys’ Clothing you need seek no further than the Koch Famous 2-Trousers Suits $550 Repeat orders are the telltale, One visit and a permanent purchaser results — Parents please themselves, and the boys show delight at the choice, Superior make, style and service are embodied in each suit, at low cost, kk wiodels, pate p pinchbuck; tr throughout; all seams se and reinforced; booked f faced at bottom, and al 5 sand pockets, Cheviots, twe e and corduroys, Sites 7 to 18 Navy Blue Serge Suits; 7 | Mackinaw Sport Coats; 3 Ho to 18, $9.75 to 18 $5.95 All-Wool ChirchillaOver- | Boys’ Corduroy Suits; 3 to coats; 3 to 8 yrs. $5.95 ayre $2.39 miort and sp Koch “Foot-Freedom” Shoes for Boys guage $2.25 | They give ful | too-freedom, cc ji. C.F. KOCH & CO., Inc,, 125th St., Wee at seat did service, Sizes 1 to 534 ILLNESS uble They Can minds of the nes one of his m animals Jobs for Boys and Girls And Ability to Hold Them Is a School Responsibility PARADE Oy Industrial Training for Otani 4 Children Should Begin at 8 Years, Says Fred- erick W. Keough, and at 14 Each Child Should Be Master of a Trade. Marguerite Mooers Marshall. A job for everu bow and girl and the ability to hold it! ! kW one-plank plat Keough, editor Net f the Na al Association Manufacturers. ed on Mr Jugh in his of No. 30 Street, Chureh se of 0 re arkable s - ent ow he io before the| dew * gee ‘Mulltzer School of ee | See pouenaliem. t.. ¥ sald: “For the ‘ 4 of n. | phrase.” 1 peten itu 1 Surely cihsslon Who are under rertraint the present that children pe ool syste should be held vin, largely reaponaible.” reely reapor | seiuat “But what ts the matter with our a living. vol system?" Lf asked Mr, Keough of his It has been called the best in, 4 by tts world, It hos been praised for Ite oscars demoed r its comprehensivencss, is only a very of Now York's ehool children th of things, Do you percen’ thousands of bi ie really) receive from the publi ! ive a a boys} any industrial | replied. i le not| and carry bundles or run eleva- for hi but ‘ | tors, The qirls go into the shops : ao but w t and earn four_or five or six dol t r Keour lars a week. Thoy form the class “The average child who leaves | for wham certain reformers de: ; mand the minimum wage, Bui a New York school at the age of these gitis don't earn the wage fourteen to go to work doesn’t they are now receiving. The mer- know anything of any value to | chante would qindly pay them $12 penal lial A | @ week instead of @ minimum o im. He is incapable of making | $350 or $9 if the girls could a real living in any field. He has | arn it, | learned practically nothing that leven IN PRISONS SKILLED will help him to perform any wu | LABOR IS SCARCE, | ful and worth-while work, He | “I paid a visit to Sing Sing re 5 . and f found that an a jas merely an incomplete know! proportion of the inmates had ever edge of the three R's which he teen taught any trade, The lof the prison paper told me how is likely soon to forget. THE PITIFUL SITUATION oF | illch trouble he had In finding print- |ors. THE UNTRAINED LAD. « » are behind Germany, venind | done what I could to steer some of them Into the work they ought to do “There was one little fellow 1 re [Member especially, He was a mes at is because of the wrong In- fluences that have surrounded them," | Mr, Keough repiled. "The average child of elght or nino t# delighted to) things with his hands. He has a senger boy, and, when I first saw jon for making things, And where him, the dirtiost chap that ever ap- C&M” that passion be satisfied except lim, the dirtiest chap ver AD- | St choolt | vl for a Job, T remembe T had itty years ago boys hal to do} jtwo of the girls tike him out and) chores on the farm, girs had to help rorub him. ‘Then one day he came) thelr mothers tn the kitchen. | There A as WIWEETS es WRG EKG was plenty of manual training at to me whimpering because some Of nome ‘Therefore, and — senstoly poye had t n him up. | enough, the school concentrated on v. Jdmmio, the next time book learning, But now the of 3 beh the apartment or ten: oan't learn joton Wr "ty | you see one of those boys you take tener t le | Dike, mene en ed |e cpair or whatever's handy and qo|t? Use hia handa at home. Therefore | cently | . the school must take over this part TH akototon te nineteen and one-/for him! A few days later Jimmie | oe his training, The country and the| FROM th inchen tall twiee the height sidled up to me with a grin, ‘You child will profit.” BU? he ofided, mentioning relstent tormentors | ‘Well, me an’ him has bad it out!" | | “And what happened to Jimmie | finally?” L asked with interest know LM jers of The Sunday World are Jace thelr in ADVANCE 8, This the ‘only | or, Mmited to AC and 1 guess y than tam." “1 said, “of Now he'a a contra he's making more st reminds | ‘CURTISS | FLYERS TO MIGRATE |tlte'a story of ¢ ther who w | t i Rca es erste Minini, Fin. Che r Winter Site asked what he Inter rh 4 or Training School, |" hon re ees 1. Curtios sald last night on Ive went Haro! r r school and Rolph through a medical sh a ying collego. Arthur plans to enter dlp Ny Havena and ney. 1 KucHs EN make ® common | genued there laborer out of Tom—I want some] vempare with tant theatre’ ie 9f wenchion in ity vicinity money in the family, | Train! ‘| AT FOURTEEN BOYS AND GIRLS | Nin ‘The Curtiss Ml be moved from Iwo sald t at Victor Carlatrom, SHOULD HAVE TRADES, =| w from Clicno hore, making | “The National Association of | {*? will make several fights from Governor's Teland Ina vhort time Manufacturers and the American kup for an alleday Federation of Labor, much ns they may differ on other points, are agr ag to the necessity of trade training for our boys and girls,” said Mr, Keough earnestly. “L think that at the age of four- teen every boy and every girl should have learned some trado so well that if necessary he or she could make a good living at it. The public schools should be the industrial training of children when they are seven or eight years old ods the 1 be given Neht make an- woen New York p ‘ vr, with his wife, ora on the steamship FAMILY DOCTOR'S GOOD ADVICE » To Go On Tahing ““Fruit-a-tives”’ gin of every wn education that will mak sink aMigieny wud reasonably. bh isa Because They Did Her Good able properly to maintain himself and | to m the various obligationa of | Rochon, Ja lath, 1915 Ufovand cllzenship, Almost Well Hy guffered for many years with ter ae Me nea Nar fe fe OTE L ible Indigestion and Constipation, 1 uly of rigut Hving and accometian, | Mat frequent disay spell and b iaeat tai? Of ail & fron kreatly tun down, A neighbor advised in the United States have been de- | me to try “Fruiteactives.” 1 did so and to the surprise of my prived of such ation petor, wit nal tral of books bar ovt everyt will get well” CORINE GAUDREAU Die a lox, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 23 At all sealers or sent postpaid by Frui actives Limited, Ogdensburg, N.Y Advt. to period when th pared for life. "There is ld in We certain grandiose | “He showed a certain aptitude for 7 eeniene, | enjoyment of the Victrola, We have the largest stock diding’” sald Mr. Keough, "So Ijee The Sunday ‘Worl tn BOLD OUP | s and Records in the city, We always have a full se- BAR e! ee FARLY, Owing to ® shortage of news: | lection of the latest Records on hand. |round a chance for him in that trade. | pet paper the in turance record, | 1 began | "1 do not mean," he added quickly, | to improve, and he advised ine to go on | NOTE Get Dolly's “that every Kitl should become a cook | with Fruit-nstives.”” | from your family wine or every boy & boller-maker, 1 40) Leonsider that Lowe my life to Fruit | atore, licented druggist or not look forward to the miakins of . grocer, Mf he cannot : , Hiei (UE actives” and T want to my to those who | Te sulle Garite i ier 4 it | suffer from Indigestion, Constipation or will tell you where to get | | produ y one | Headaches--"try Fruit-a-tives and you} it, Medical booklet tree OUSTING BELGIAN WORKERS, | CHARGE AGAINST GERMANS | All Able-Bodied Men Being Sent to Unknown Destinations, Says Baron Beyens. France, Nov. 9.—Charges that the German Governmen: ie) rounding up and sending to un wo destinations practically all the able | bodied men in occupied Reigium are made to-day by Baron Heyens, Hel- Ican 4 Foreien Minister. Baron Rey- sai ce rica enjoy myse! ‘again since HAVRE sae ag = Rechol oap these depor ¥ en 4 it % i d yee pears ts eared my skin make, in accordan " The Hayruae Convention, th to establish public life, “They affirm that ¢ must not fail a charge upon p charities and that work thay are employed has nothin with the war ‘Is it there would Belgium if the ulations i puolie and pimply, | was so ashamed that I never had any fun 6 unempl with a little Resinol Ointment just at first—has given me back , | healthy skin. T wisd you'd try itt Ointment are sold by fists. For samples alldrag. {nol, Baltimore, Ma, Ds make a clean all leather belting. h ia that Germa f Belgians int number corallings erate an equal workmen to fill the gaps m a “Storm Hero’’ | “Eabei” Umbrella rier to Bring It. SMITH CENTRE, Kan, N Frank Nichols lives on 1 out of this cl “or years Nic stubborniy re to have thouxu a t w Frame if the Wind d Breaks It. $1.50 coward Better Quality, Than Ever Before Hi Macy. Greenhut te 5, hols has hia om ster ase right by his door. Each Saturday he makes the 11 mite Arive from home and gets his mail out Ay Vnfourhour the count Miller Bro. & Co, Mfrs. NY “MATHUSHEK } Known to the Public for Ocer 60 Years injuriou ont The Smallest Grand Piano $450—$25 Down, $10°a Month You have always wanted a grand piano, with its ar- tistic lines and distinctive air, But you have hesitated for two reasons—the greater price and the larger floor space required. We have met both these objections in the Opera Grand, only 4 feet 8 inches long, price $450, on easy ter $25 down and #10 a month. 8, This fine instrument requires little space, easily fitting into the living room of a small apartment, Paper pattern sent free showing exact floor space it covers, You can’t appreciate it until you see it and hear it. Any Victrola 30 Days Free Select any Victrola from our large stock A we will send it to your home~PREE. ‘The first payment need not be made until 80 days after date of delivery, After that you may pay as little as require you to buy a few records that you will need MATHUSHEK, Broadway and 47th St, Telephone 5547-5548 Bryant. or BY CITY, N. 4,, 150 Ne Ta 4 rh Ave eels heat ab, NEW BULSBWILK, Nid BHoU KL v1 8 Chara at ist AALNY x a The success of a product cannot be attributed to advertising alone. It must possess merit to warrant the good-will and confidence of the buying public. | Dutfiy’s | Pure Malt Whiskey has enjoyed a wide-spread sale during the last half century and more of its the users, Duffy's is unlike any does not even taste the because of its merit’ and confiden | other whiskey — Chemical analysis proves it to be different, vastly better and ordinary beverage whiskies for the delicate stom- ach, A. tablespoonful in water before meals and assists digestion and promotes better health ame, more reliable than on retiring, Every family medicine chest should | contain a bottle of Duffy's for use in emergencies and slight indispositions which frequently occur Vhe Duffy Malt Whiskey ¢ N.Y ester When my complexion was red, rough 1 imagined that people avoided me—perhaps they did? But the regular use of Resinol Soap— my clear, Retinal Soap and Resino! eh, free, write to Dept ON, Res Saks & Company Broadway at 34th Street ATHENA | UNDERWEAR FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN The principal ence between ATHENA Underwear and other kinds is that ATHENA Underwear is tailored to fit, while other un- derwear has to he stretched to the shape of the figure. ATILEN A Under- wear is different from ordinary underwear as a. pertectly tailored coat differs from a shape- less cloak, Mea liffer- he Usual Form of Knit Garment as Cutt Re iat The Patented Beat he | The correct tailoring | | of ATHENA Under- | wear 3s it comfort- dainty and in ex- | nformity with the It affords freedom of the arms and + body. There is no stretching — | | of the fabric at one point and no looseness or wrinkling anywhere. | ATHENA Under- wear, which is. superior in every respect to any | other kind, is made in | ell sizes and of all | weights and qualities — | | at the prices you have 4 | been accustomed to | Low Neck—Sleevelens pay When you put on your | first suit of ATHENA Underwear you will realize that it is the only kind which is made in accordance with correct principles. | Athena is sold only at Saks in New York Marshall Field & Company, Makers PRICES: For Women— Vests and Tights. .60c to $2.00 For Women—Union Suits. . $1.15 to $4.25 | For Boys and Girls—in cotton or merino —Separate Garments. ... . .50c to $1.10 | —Union Suits.......... .85cto $2.00 Chicago, Grand Street | Smith Street Cor. Driggs Ave. ROOKLYN Cor, Wyckoff St. You can buy Crockery, Dinner or Tea Sets, / $125 Worth cf Furniture No Deposit $1 Weekly Buy Your Clothing Here for 50c Weekly \ Morris Chairs and Rockers — Weekty, ont You can buy style dresser We have all styles INSIDE THE GERMAN EMPIRE \ A SERIES OF REMARKABLE ARTICLES bY HERBERT BAYARD SWOPE Just Back from Germany Now Appearing Every Day in The CAorid THE REAL SITUATION GRAPHICALLY TOLD BUY THE WORLD EVERY MORNING Nearly 400,000 Others Do \S »@