The evening world. Newspaper, January 4, 1917, Page 3

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} en a x FOR MAKING N IS HALED en Mayor Mitchel Loses Time in Giving It His Warm Approval. No PRAISE FROM WILLCOX. East Side’s Poor, the Million of the Melting Pot, Manifest Grateful Interest. The announcement of the plans for ‘The Evening World American Forun to be established for interesting im- Migrents and the children of immi- Grants on the east side in real Amerl- canism has received an instant re- Bponse from men of patriotism and civic activity. The response was just as cordial from the people of the crowded tenement strects of the Melting Pot—the district below Four- teenth Street, in which there are a million people, representing every na- tion of the globe, groping mentally for the Ideals of their new land, Word that persons who have taken out citizenship papers or who desire to do so will have the activo help of the Forum organization, not only in facilitating the court processes, but in . training for the privileges conferred came asa glad boon to thousands. The volume of the inquiries received Is the pest possible indication of the need which the Forum plans to meet. Mayor Mitchel, President Willcox of the Board of Education and Frank Trumbull, Chairman of the American- ization Committee, in which Mrs, Vin- cent Astor, Miss Frances Kellor and other patriotic men and women have an active Interest, were the first to hail The Evening World's plan with warm words of approval, Within a day or two a meeting of those who have promised their active aid to the American Forum will be held in which the plans which have already been framed will be discussed 4 detailed arrangements for organ- izing We work of the Forum on a basis of practical efficiency will be made, MAYOR APPROVES THE FORUM AND PROMISES AID. This is the statement sent to The Bening World by Mayor John Purroy Mitchel as soon as he had read the announcement in The Evening World yesterday of the broad scope of the Amoricanization movement of the Forum: “Iam giad to know that The Fve- ning World has inaugurated an Amer- jean Forum movement, having for its purpose the Americanizing of the !m- migrants, Constructive work of this kind answers one of the fundamental neede of the country. “It ig a work which involves a sym- pathetic interpretation of the aims, the traditions and the ideals of Amer- ican Institutions to the Immigrant of the first generation. It also means teaching the sons and deughters of {the immigrant to appreciate the tra- ‘ditions, the culture and the ideals of their parents. The old must be taught to face forward and to adapt thom selves to the conditions which t meet in the new country. The young must be taught that to be a good American does not mean irreverance and an trresponsible individualism. ‘They must be urged to contribute the fruits of their fathers’ traditions to the new land, They must have a vision of the future America as @ blend of the finest in the old world with the best In the new. “We need more than anything else in America a national spirit, a welded ul which is prepared to defend our juntry—with arms if need be—but always with disinterested and con- structive public service. “I congratulate The Evening World DRINK HOT WATER BEFORE BREAKFAST Says you really feel clean, sweet and fresh inside, and are seldom ill, f ed to wake up with @ coated tongue, foul breath or a dull, dizzy headache; or, if your meals sour and turn into gas and acids, you have « real surprise await- ing you. Rcmorrow morning, immediitely upon arising, drink a glass of hot water with « teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it. ‘Chis is intended to |the Police tn a letter to find his sister, containing bran or brown matzc first neutralize and then wash out of |M Gertrude Silberman, whose last ad- Under this regime the stronger men your stomach, liver, bicneye and | dress wes on Seigel Street, Brooklyn. went Under and the weak soon fe Van thirty feet of intestines all the indi-| He writes that having ieft his eiti- 80 that, the Belgians say, deaths oc- toxins, thus cleansing, sweetening and | forced to enlist In the German army and. fice week torment of hunger purifying the entire alimentary canal, | *4s captured M4 the British than drove them to such extremes that they Those subject to sick headaches, |% Jear Ase. All replies should be i crept into the kitchen and collected backache, bilious attacks, constipation | No, 2, Vamp No, 1; Allen Camp, Knock- | P64ngs of potatoes, turnips and car- or any form of stomach trouble, are | aloe, lle Mah." | rots. urged to get a quarter pound of lime A‘ietective has failed to find trace of! One workman who attempted to os stone phosphate from the a store | elt Mrs. Silberman or the citizenship) cape is reported to have been ana Decin | ng this morning in| with which Gessin says he can! brought down with a shot and fin- gin « s me IN| fee nim a h the bayo: " who t hecome enth arby was ’ oF eae an egme roth PELL FROM FUNERAL TRAIN, tured meigian sold Phe soldiers | siastic and heey it up daily. Wis a were better f van the civilians and pplentfel ten tth ane » for itis mors n oof W Special ¢ in conta b then on being Rermereant to heen tikes aid him an Death in Port € permitted to attend funerals of civic ye inside on mi pee les ag (dens, Pitying their countryme: the skin pores do not absorb impuri twenty-six, of No. 4298) took to them secretly bread ties into the blood, causing disease, this city, 18 near death in| served articles ¢ while the bowel pores di The returned ay that the The principle of Wething inside is civiituns at Boltau receive no fon not new, as millions of people practi and are advised to use sand insteud it, Just as bot water ae m1 up choanse is @ brakeman, The fune Notwithstanding — their suffer ng: rif {freshen the skit hot turning to this city from Stock. moat of them refuse to Work, although purify and freshen the skin, se he ‘Tuesday night at the rate of promised good food and considerable water and # Ceaspoonfal of limestone an hour, Gray Was adjust: Pay 1 sphate act ih} stomaeh, \ naon the rear ont When According to the sceounts there evs and bowel imestone p he the raila near Port Chester, ara 41,000 Belgians at Soltau whol idneys a Dimestane pl ar | His absence from the train was not Sfe 3100) Beleiana at Holtay wh phate ia an inexpensive white powder ed until the special arrived at New "refuse to work and still hope their and almost tasteless. Advt rele may be brought about THEEVENNE WORLD FORUM EW AMERICANS BY ALL CLASSES bs | upon this undertaking and wish the movement every success.” SCHOOL HEAD CONGRATULATES | EVENING WORLD. Many of the meetings of the Forum Will be held in the assembly rooms of the public schools, The attitude of the Hoard of Education toward the | movement is shown by the following xteeting of President William G. Willcox of the board: | “Lam very glad indeed to learn! that The Evening World is proposing to organize a series of Civic Forums! in public school buildings on the east! side, | “The importance of spreading among our foreign-born population correct understanding and high ideals of American citizenship cannot be ¢- : —— overestimated, Patriotism and loy- S=——* / alty of the common people are the very foundation of our democracy, without which it is like @ house built upon the sand. Such patriotism a.d | loyalty, however, must be based, upon intelligent understanding of the rights é and privileges enjoyed by American Zone. citizens, To promote such knowl- edge, to extend the band of human|, OM the steamship Espagne, which brotherhood to those who bave come has reached here from Bordeaux, to us from foreign lands, to Lea was Countess Regis de Oliveira, an them that this ts thelr country a8 Well ‘author and daughter of the late Bra- | sountry to be proud of, to tithe el ke : zillan Ambassador to Spain, who 19 | Countess REGIS de OLIVEIRA Will Write on What Americans Are Doing in the Battle live for and if necessary to die for, is to perform a real service not only 80 devoted to the cause of the Allies | to them but to the entire community. | that she has come here to write ar- | Loyal and intelligent citizenship 'ticieg on wha: Americana are doing 8 me object for which the pub- Ha vachools are, ‘organized and main- |! the war and to devote her earn- One of her tained, and the Department of Edu-|ings to the Red Cross. velcomes the assistance o2 pe Sievening World in this great Plays was acted by Mme. Rejane at work. I congratulate The Evening the Coliseum in Paris, World upon its enterprise and pub-| With her was Mrs. Cecile Sartorta, No spirit in planning this undertaking whose husband, a grandson of Gen. | | | HAS PROOF OF PAY “TO BRECKINROGE, DECLARES SWANN $1,000 Collection Only One} | of Several Instances, Says | District Attorney. |HE WANTS TO BE FAIR. | Announces He Will Let Former Aide Choose Own Forum for a Hearing. District Attorney Swann dictated # statement to-day in answer to ques- tions as to whether he meant to put his charges against former Special Assist- ant District Attorney Lucian 8. Breck- inridge before the Grand Jury for ac- tion. It wa: “Tam busy fn the examination of witnesses to the receipt by Mr. Breck- inridge of money paid to him by the | Employers’ Association while he was a Special Assistant District Attorney un- der mo. “In order to be entirely fair to Mr. Breckinridge, I am going to ask him to choose his own forum where the cane can be presented. If it 1s pre- sented to the Grand Jury, I shall re- quest them to give Mr. Breckinridge a hearing before they decide on the disposition of the case, It was explained that Mr. Swann meant to give Mr. Breckinridge an opportunity of a hearing before a City Magistrate if it was desired. After a conference with the Judges | and wish it every success.” Grant, is fighting with the Loyal Le- | AMERICANIZATION COMMITTEE (gion, and Mrs. 8. A. Puget, widow of | WILL JOIN IN GOOD WORK. | Andre Puget, son of a former Presi- | From Frank Trumbull, @ leader | gent of the French Tribunal, and a f the among the kreat railroad mem Stoard | Well known poet and dramatic writer of Chesapeake and Ohio, Chairman of/in France who was killed at the| the Committee of Railway Managers | front, | on Legislation, comes the following promise of the ald and encouragement of the body with similar purposes which he 1s chairman, the American- ization Committee: ‘ ! ; “The Evening World's American |!0 tho Forum idea Js simply splendid, ‘The| A French soldier who was hit by ‘Americanization Committee will co-op- | twenty-four shrapnel bullets came erate in every Way looking to the SUC- nore on the Expagne, he sald, | cess of this meritorious undertaking. loons Leng pian is marry In the homes in which our immigrants |@ young woman in Montclair, N, J., int titure citizens get thelr first con-. who nursed him following his injuries, fusing glimpses of our national life j16 refused to tell her name, He is re re ds wh there are pundreds Oar help without | Alfred de Lenfernat de la Mothe, ving that they want it. knavi should ft them for becoming | _—_—o_- citizens, It is to our interest in | every way that having cast in their | lot with us they shall know more j ebout our institutions and what 4 | | | French writers who have been killed \ | beneficial thing it is to be a citizen. by the way, js @ thing which we Ives too lightly regard, and it is significant that in more than one place in the United States the cere- mony of naturalization is now per- formed with impressive dignity and | made a special celebration.” | iach das thas \ | SUFFRAGISTS SCORN LOBBY | AT ALBANY THIS WINTER |Seventy From Prussian Camp Three Days and Three Nights on Six-Hour Trip, Hope Now to Win at Polls With- out Opposition, Says State Chairman. | i THE HAGUE, Netherlands, Jan. 4 | ALBANY, Jan, 4—The Suffragists|via London.—Tho first rt re Jare not going to bother legislators |celved direct from Belgians deported | | this winter, No more importuning|to Germany, who have been in-| Senators and Assemblymen by | vaiided from the camp at Soltau,| jons of women, or special Prussia, has beet % arrying “Butte to the capt. | ETUSa, has beon given to the Asso clated Picss. Theso persons W..0 re- trains tal charged to New York women, Mrs Norman De ft. Whitehouse, |tU?ned from Germany because they Chairman of the New York State | Were in almost a dying condi..va, A} Woman Suffrage Party, made such|PUMber of them who were inter- | a promise to-day, when, in @ formal) Viewed while separated froin each | other agreed in thelr stories of con- dittons jrevatling In the Soltau camp venty of the Belgians were sent home in a crowded cattle truck at- tached to .. freight train. It took three days and tl:e nights for the Journey, which usually t» made by express trains in six hours, They ar- rived home In an emaciated condi- tion, ning, (he greater number of them bearing evidence of having con- tracted tuberculosis According to the "statements made y these Belgians, while in the civil] mp at Soltau they received at 6) statement, she said: “All demonstrations of any sort will be avolded, because last year some of the Senators who are op- posing us complained of the presence of women. “Undoubtedly the agitation which Was necessary to get our votes for the Women's Aw dment was excel- lent for the cause, It aroused enor- mous public interest, as the numer- ous editorials in its behalf showed, | and turned many who were indifter- | ent Into active champions, But in spite of the value which there may be in opposition, we rejoice that we by shall meet none this year, I hope! o'clock in the morning a bowl of some | it will be an omen that we will carry | decoction made from acorns, At mid- | our ame nt at the polls next No; day they received half a liter of soup] vember w oF no opposition. containing much water nd a w turnips, carrots and shrimps, served | MRS. SILBERMAN WANTED, = without bread or potatoes. At 3 ere ° in the afternoon there was Her Brother, a War Prisoner, Must to them grams (slightly Find Her to Win Freedom, more than half a pound) of black read, bad and often mildewod. » evening, as at midday, rived half a liter of soup, # In Samuel Gessin, who says he 1s a pris- oner in @ British detention camp, aske CATTLE TRUCKS "SANTA BRINGS BABIES, of General Sessions and half an hour, with the Grand Jury Mr, Swann! summoned Detective Lieutenant Clin- | “THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, JANUARY 4, 1917. COUNTESS DE OLIVEIRA COMES TO TELL OF WA MISS KATHERINE CULVER HAS BIG THEATRE PARTY | . Granddaughter, Miss party to be given by her aunt, Mre. Lewis Rutherfurd Morris, to-night (Thursday), one to a danco at the Metropolitan Club. SOCIETY FUNCTION PRECEDES TRIAL OF NIRS, SANGER Effort to Delay Court Pro- ton Wood and Detective Abraham Snydecker to his office, These are the men igned by Commissioner Woods | to ald former Judge Delehanty to at- | the twenty-eight Inbor — lenders charged with inciting east aide dis-|* orders. “I have incontestible proof,” he} sald, when the detective had gone,| “that not only did Breckinridge re- ceive the $1,000 of which I told yeater- day, while he was a special assistant under me, but that that was morely one of numerous instances. The mem- | bers of the committee which furnished | the money has been to my office and| I have been told all about the bus!- ness, I have given my information to the Judges as well as to the Grand Jury because I am an interested party and I want them to act in my pla of No statement was forthcoming from Mr. Breckinridge in addition to his declaration yesterday that he would sue Mr. Swann for criminal libel for the assertion that B ridge accepted $1,000 from a tween collector” of graft represent- ing a committee of employers. Though he said he was not ready to announce his counsel, he passed the morning tn the office of former Dis- trict Attorney Perkins, BUT IS A FEW DAYS LATE With Priest’s Aid Childless Couple Present Each Other With Youngsters. Santa Claus was a little late in call- ing on Mr, and Mra. Thomas Con- nell of Lakeview Avenue, Rockville Centre, L. 1, this Christmas. And here is how it happened: Mr. Connell knew that nothing In the world would please Mrs. Connell balf so much as to get & real live baby. And Mrs, Conneil (she and her husband have no children) knew that Mr, Connell would be made happier than he has been for a long ime tt} he could have a baby for Christ.naa, ther Mr. nor Mrs, Connell told the other of their plans for Christmas, but they did tell the Rev. Peter Quealy of St. Agnes's Church because they Wanted him to act as @ sort of deputy Santa Claus. Father Quealy listened, smiled, and told Mr, Connell nothing of Mrs. Connell’s plans and Mrs. Connell nothing of Mr. Connell's But he couldn't fill the order until a few days after Christmas. Then both Mr. and Mrs, Connell were pleased and surprised. Mrs, Connell got a fifteen-months-old baby girl and old brother. Both are children of friends of the Connells who have be- come poor. hor husband got the baby's four-year. | ceedings in Birth Control Case Fails. The trial of Mrs. Margaret Sanger, Mrs, Puget ts here to lecture at the! tack the good faith of Mr. Swann's, charged with conducting a birth con- f Theatre Francais on the lives of the! motion to dismiss the indictments of, trol clinic in Brownsville, was made as much of a socta! function to-day was an elaborate Hotel Vanderhilt, hundred members of the Birth Con- trol League, and then the whole party motored over to Brooklyn and filled the Special Sessions court room with pretty gowns and politely ex- cited chatter until the caso was called, During the luncheon one of those present asked Mra. Sanger: “Will you really go on a hunger strike, dear, if you are sontenced to breakfast at the attended by Mrs, Sanger replied with much emphasts. “You'll be @ martyr to the cause,” was the enthusfastic rejoindef When the case up Lawyer Jonah J, Goldstein, counsel for Mra, Sanger, asked for an adjournment, Ho sald he desired timo to prepare briefs Aspinall, who dismissed a writ of habeas corpus by which Mra, Banger tried to get out of Raymond Street Jail, Mr. Goldstein said he wanted an op- portunity to prove that the birth con- trol section of the penal code was un- constitutional, He was opposed by Assistant District Attorney Cooper, who said that delays and appeals to public sentiment had mado the case notorious, and he wished to have it dis- posed of at once, The Court refused to postpone the hearing. Among the women who attended the luncheon and were spectators at the trial were Mrs, Lewis Delafteld, Mrs. William Colt, Mra. Rose Pastor your fight the life and relationships of women, As the Jally bursts Into a beautiful bloom, so j will zo the beauty of the knowledge to rea rs. Newton Fassett joined throng and introduced ‘herself Mrs, Sanger as the secreta Birth Control League of Spokane SERVANTS SET LABOR SCALE Dalnth Union Fixes Wanes, and Treatment of Member, DULUTH, Jan. 4.—The first Domes tle Servants’ Union reported organized east of the Missour! River hag been ‘ormed here with 100 members, They will present their demands to the house- | wives of Duluth Jan. 15, as follows: Families of two, $20 to $25 @ month, Familles of three or more, from $26 to ) a month. ine-hour working day, If for overtime. il day each week for recreation. V food in reasonable quan al , properly ventilated and 18 a creation of the Indus- of the World _> jours with time and The trial Workers Woman Accused of Driving Auto When Drank Is Held, Mrs, Joseph St, John of } Road, Flatbush, who on Dei rested charged Ancoln 90 was ar- with driving her auto mobile when in did when her case was called yest before Magistrate Steers in She was held for 0, which was furn She said she had come all the way | from the Kockies to attend the tri > | Pwo Governors of | Menangen to Leginiature, | PHOENIX, Adie, Jan, 4, — jstruggsle between Gov, Hunt and Gov.- jelect Cainpbell over the Jof Arizona will 4o before the State [Supreme Court this afternoon, The {Campbell forces ask an order compel! ing AND THEN A CLUB DANCE Former Senator William A, Clark's Katherine C, Culver, daughter of Mrs, Charles P. Kling of No, 7 East Fifty-first Street, will be the central figure at a theatre Later the guests will be 8 her friends could contrive. There | sq, appealing from the decision of Justice you this day this bouquet of flowers by our speaker to encourage you in to mould the law to suit bud unfolds its petals and fin- he minds of all the people grow 1 by the truth and birth con- | the to | y of the | rizona to Send The Governorship Hunt to vacate the office m fayor IN BRITISH ARMY DUET SANDAL | Mrs, William Cornwallis-West Bitterly Scored for Action Toward Irish Soldier, | | | | NAME VISCOUNT FR i Many Notables Involved and High Officers Are Censured or Removed. LONDON, Jan. 4.—A sensation has | been caused by the report of the) Special Court of Inquiry, exposing the exercise of Influence over high army officera by a prominent society woman. Mra William Cornwallis- ‘West, wife of the Lord Lieutenant of Denbighshire, one of the greatest landed proprietors in England, is of- ficlally censured, as are several high officers in the army. Mrs. Cornwallis-West for many ears has been a power in English so- clety. One of her daughters Is the Duchess of Westminster the other the Princess of Pless. Hor only fon, Capt. George Cornwallis-West, is now the husband of Mrs. Patrick Campbell, the actress. He wns dl- vorced by the former Lady Randolph Churchill, mother of Col, Winston Churehitl, formerly First Lord of the dd fi 4 INT PLM SORe criticised in the report, but being jady retired is not otherwise ‘pun- ished; Gen. Thomas is completely vindicate Regarding Mrs, Cornwallia-West, who of course is not subject to army discipline, the court's report says: HER CONDUCT ‘DISCREDITABLE,’ SAYS OFFICIAL REPORT. “We have no doubt that her inju- dicious boasting of the power she wielded at the War Office—which was confirmed to an appreciable extent by the wording of some of Sir John and Admiralty. Cowans’s letters—w. caleu! id to ‘Among the officers mentioned by| Pring him and the administration at name in the report are Field Marshal | ‘he War Office into disrepute. unt French, Gen, Sir John| “We feel obliged to record our opin. conduct, as re- has been highly discreditable both in her behavior to- ward Second Lieut. Barrett before letter of the 14th of February, in her vindictive attempts to injure him terward and in the untruthful donce she gave before us. “It appeared in the evidence that this lady holds positions of some im- portance in ahe County of Denbigh rious associations of a public cter for assisting In war work ) our opinion it Is to be regretted that she should hold such position: v Cowans, Quartermaster Geno: Forces and member of the Army Counoil; Gen. W. H. Mackinson, Brig. Gen. Owen Thomas, Col. Wynne Ed- wards and Lieut. Col. Delme-Rad- oliffe. A further upheaval is expected, ‘The hero of the story as unfolded in the official report. 1s Lieut. Patrick Barrett of the Royal Welsh Fusiliers. Cornwallis-West 1s Honorary | Colonel of the Fourth Battalion of this regiment. “TOOK MORE THAN ORDINARY INTEREST” IN NON-COM, One of the last official acts of the late Sir Arthur Basil Markham, M. P, for the Mansfield division of Not- thie amshire, who died last August, was to demand an inquiry for the vin- ication of tho character of Licut. | Barrett. He was supported in this| by soveral Irish members, as Lieut. Barrett {9 Irish. It appears trom the record of the court of inquiry that Lieut. Barrett, then a Sergeant of the Koyal Welsh Fusiliers, was recommended for a commission by Col. Delme-Radcliffo, his commanding officer, in 1915, and this recommendation was strongly « le DON NEWSPAPER, “Mrs. West's conduct to the unfor- tunate young officer, whom she ap- pears to have honored first with her affection and then with her hatred,” says the Daily News, “was so extreme- ly base as to deprive her of all claim to pity or sympathy, But even If she should have used her alleged influence much more worthily than for motives of private vengeance, it would «till have been in the public interest that she should be punished. “The conduct of the officers blamed ‘by the committee was weak, foollsh and in one case grossly unjust. It Is Impossible to suggest that It was corrupt In any ordinary sense of the term. Given impunity and secrecy, however, there are no limits to the possi! develop it of such impu- supported by Col. and Mra, Corn-|dent meddling as that which Mrs. West attempted.’ wallls-West among othors. “Probably before this time, and cer- tainly later,” says the record, “Mrs. Cornwallis-West began to take more than an ordinary tnterest In Mr. Bar- | Mrs. Cornwallis-West ts the grand. daughter of the late Marquis of Headfort. Col. Cornwallis-West has been Lord Lieutenant of Denbigh- shire alnce 1872, the year of his mar- riage, as well as Justice of the Peace rett, to which he consistently failed to|}ijx ‘real estate holdings are estl- respond. Eventually be wrote her, In| mated at 10,000 acres. He was a February last, @ letter of remon.| member of Parliament from 1885 to strance, which she plnced in the} !*"” hands of his commanding officers.” | are. Sawe BARRETT CENSURED AND THEN TRANSFERRED. Barrett, it appears from the record, was severely censured by his comman- TROY, N.Y. Jan. 4.—The Roard of Trustees of the Emma Willard School announced to-day that, continuing her of great. benevol toward thi. der, without having any opportunity to | pelrool and the new. ft Suge College Justify himself, and shortly afterward, ractical Arts, Mra, Russell Sa Kiven $ of the the only money so given should be u way ae the original gift of a ik d through the influence excrted by Mrs. Cornwallis-West, he was transferred to another battalion. Gen, Sir John Cowans, It is stated, was instrumental at tha the sam: amou t a r ago to establish the college. Stokes, Mra, John H, Williame, Mra, | in arranging this for Mrs, Cornwallis: |. Ths, makes $500,000 given by” Mra Morlan Cochran, Mrs. Ida Raun East- | Wort, Gen, Mackinnon also taking part | S*#° [°F aaieaca man, Miss Jessie Ashley, Mrs. Au- | in the affair, Funeral Services for McC sh. susta P. Pope, Mra, Nora Blatoh| Going on to investigate other re-| jruneral si rvic John McCullagh, De Forest and Miss Helen Todd, ports of undue influence wielded by |former Chief of I will he held to Hefore the hearing was begun a|that lady in army affairs, the court|morrow evening 8 o'clock in th ansfer of |Kighteenth Street Methoc Cpls woman presented to Mrs, Sanger a found that, although the transfer of igutaene a Le thodt . Eplaco| al sien? a6: teat Attached was a] Gen. Owen Thomas from command |j:ghth’ Avenue, The Bervices” will by card reading: “From the Current | 0f & Welsh brigado to a less desirable | tod Buterion’ Gh une Events Society, Brocklyn, Wo send | Post was not, as had been reported, |to Puritans, assisted by Key. Dr. B. ‘ due to her activities, this matter con- |. Warren. of the Etghteenth Stroet Chureh to this elty to-d and talcen to the Merritt Burtal © stituted “an unfortunate sequence of events,” In which “the ambtmu wording of certain official letter: played @ part, The report shows, however, that Col, Edwards wrote ao letter to Mra. Cornwallia-West reflecting upon Gen, Thomas “with the apparent object of exalting his own qualifications for | the post of the same,” that Mrs West sent this letter to Gon, Cowans with @ postscript, which he forward- ed to Lteut, Gon. Sir Pitcairn Camp- bell at the War Office, with a letter | | of his own praising Fdwards, | NAME OF FIELD MARSHAL) FRENCH IS MENTIONED, “Regret ta expressed,” the report! | also saya, “that a letter sont by Lord | »| French to the War Office was so am- | »| biguoualy worded as to be capable of | | mtsconstruction. In any case, a por-| dy was brought Axbury Park 5 ‘or Campbell pending « determination | ion of thé letter was in the nature of T H W jot the recount of ballots which will be-|an adverse report on Gen, Thomas |gln- Jan Gov, Hunt to-day re- | Mined in possession of the fxecutive |@nd should have been communica > ripe Chambers. Both Hunt Campbell | to that officer at the time. It it - ing cup 6 jue propane va to the Lasts | regarded ax unfortunate that Lord de late Rev Semue! Boult. ty-nine years have confirmed that officer's suspicion Superintendent of the New York Port | of sinister influence.” Society, and pastor of tts Martners Ae @ result of the Church, will bo held at No. 166) vieut. Col, Delme-Radcliffe has been Eleventh Avenue this those who will take part are the Rev Hi. G, Mendenhall, phy of the Rockefeller Foundation, Phe Rev. Charles A Stoddard, George & Webster and the Rey. A. R. Many field and Stafford Wright ning, Among , Moderator of the New York Presbytery; Starr J. Mur- | French should have concurred in the termy of the War Office letter of July 29 to Gen. Thomas, which letter must removed from his command for his part in the Barrett affair; Gen. | Cowans has been officially censured, but not otherwise disciplined because of his long and otherwise excellent record; Gen, Mackinnon is severely i MRS. WEST 1S SCORED BY LON- ~ | Advt. o tants Try It 12 POLICE ROOKIES. TOLWEON 25 CENTS ADAY DET TES Life Extension Institute ta Demonstrate How Cheaply Man Can Exist. | | Police Commissioner Woods is going [to detail a dozen of his rookies to ¢o- operate with the Li F tension Insti- | tute of No. 26 West Forty-fifth Street ja cos in a dietetic course of three weeks at Not to exceed twenty-five cents to each rookie for three meals a day. The Commissioner says that the course will demonstrate the sort of a diet that will maintain any normal person jn good health. The mon selected will be bachelors and will be divided into diet squads of sixeach. One squad will get meat once a day and the other twice. The men are in the best of health and physical condition, spending two hours and a half a day in the gymnastum as part of thetr schooling for the force. A model kitchen and dining room is be= ing prepared in Lafayette Street near Police Headquarters. The first meal will be served at etght o'clock on Mon- day morning. Those in charge of the squads will he Prof. Henry C. Sherman of food chemistry at Colum Prof, Irving Fisher of Yale and Dr. Eugene Ly- man Fisk, medical director of the Life Extension Institute, Prof. Mary §. Rose will supervise the preparation of the meals at the bands of dletitia selected by her, | “By means of this exporiment,” | said Commissioner Woods, “we hope to | sive to the housewives of the city the | message of to-day—economle and | healthful food values. We hope that this will prove one of the practical | ways of cutting the high cost of liv In the course of the experiment All be shown that cheaper foods be prepared in a palatable 1 ble way, and how waste ear Tho dietartes and menus | employed will be of a character sueh fit wi us the average family can follow |'Thev will in no way represent a rigid minimum emergency diet, but an everyday diet that every individual rich or poor, could follow with benefit | “We believe that if we can success- | fully demonstrate that twelve husky men can live on such meals | as these scientists have planned gn: | be satisfied in every way, a working | basis will have been established whieb will enable housewives generally te adopt a more economic mode of living end a more healthful one.” CURED HIMSELF OF THE LIQUOR HABIT A Missouri Man After Drinkin Thirty-Five Years Banished His Craving for Liquor With a Simple Home Recipe. * Mr. Thos. J. D. O'Bannon, a wel | known resident of Missouri, living « R.F. D. No. 8, Frederickstown, Mo. | banished his craving for liquor witi | @ simple recipe which he mixed a home. | Mr. O'Bannon recently made th | following statement: “I am 51 year |old and had drunk for thirty-fiv: | years, My cravi.: was so great 1 | could not quit liquor, More than ; | year ago I had the following simph | recipe filled and began taking it anc |it entirely banished my craving fo liquor: To 8 oz. of water add 2% rains of muriate of ammoni mal jbox of Varlex Compound ‘and 1: grains of pepsin. Take a teaspoonfu three times a day. Any druggist cen mix it for you or supply the ingre dients at very little cost.” This recipe \can be taken of your own accord o given to any one secretly in coffee | tea, milk or in food, as it has no taste, color or smell and is perfectly harm: i less. I believe any drunkard can cure himself with this simple recipe."— | JUST SAY TO YOUR THE TONIC LAXATIVE Sor CONSTIPATION . You've tried the rest - now try THE BEST Austin.Nichols € Co's. UNBEA COFFEE ORLD'S BEST hit! of the aroma from whole being thr it a steaime ils with it, it licious. and your und cor tizing and ¢ ll Like It, ou’! GUARANTEED by the larg wholesale gro cery cone the world,

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