The evening world. Newspaper, May 21, 1917, Page 3

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4 e Sa AR AGE LIT ADVANCED TO 0 FOR VOLUNTEER McGraw and “Kid McCoy” Make Recruiting Speeches— Engineers Begin Camp. HIS DAUGHTER'S When the First Reserve Regiment jt Engineers, recruited from New York, set foot on French soil, they | will be accompanied by a squadron of “Cameaufiuers,” according to present ns. The job of the “Cameaufieurs” {s to paint aero- Planes and other implements of de- @truction in protective coloring. ‘This work {8 highly important for the Engineering Corps, inasmuch as they will bulld barracks and can- , tonments for the American troops to be sent abroad. Barry Faulkner, an artist, of No, 11 McDougal Alley, has volunteered to organize the “Cam- ‘eaufleurs.” Fourteen men enrolled in the En- Bineers left this afternoon for tem- porary quarters at Mort Totten. They will be joined to-morrow by 150 more ‘men, the remainder of the division, which will consist of 1,061 members, will be sent to training headquarters as fast as they are recruited. The regiment now has an enrollment of: 650 men. After a brief preparatory course at the fort the recruits will be en sent to a base camp at Great Neck, ig” a LZ ©) located on the Grace estate, Stanley Barker, a son of George | Barker, President of the Acronautica | Sotiety, has joined the Engineers. If | Question Is Not One of Bev- erages, but of Girls, and Your Choice Is Between the Good, Old-Fashioned Girl and the | the regiment carries an aerial corps young Barker will be its ieader. Plans to form an immense mobiliza- tion camp for the 10,000 men who will man the mosquito and patrol fleets were abandoned this afternoon on re- >| celpt of orders grom Rear Admiral| Modern Butterfly Damsel. Usher. A site on Staten Island had j been selected by Capt. William B. | Franklin and arrangements were way for the immediate organization of the Reserves for active training. The men will be trained in small de- tachments and at various stations. ‘There are 300 undergoing training in 4 the Second Battalion Armory, Brook- lyn; 100 at New Haven and 100 at! Bensonhurst. ww" will you have, gentlemen brisk to-day, although most of the large cities, outside of New York, have shown @ falling off. For the )) week of May 18 New York's figures. » for this arm of the service, are 257 Cleveland enrolled 159 and Phila- delphia 141, The age limit for enlistment in the Army has been raised from seventeen | Nay ua’ ain: Part oe |the girls, and I have doubted some- from Washington received to-day by | ttn the strict impartiality of my Major John H. Hughes, of the United jopinion, But now a man, writing in States Infantry, stationed at ATMY |tne say wumber of the Ladies’ Home Medea aN haeed | Journal, steps in and settles the vhoie Major Hughes is of the belief that |thing with a question, a question men who had planned to enlist |never uttered before in the Lavlies' Roosevelt's “army” will wel-|tome Journal, however familiar tt come the announcement that many of ned to baser them are now eligible for regular ser- |May sound to ears attu AND A MAN ASKS AND ANSWERS THE QUESTION. WHICH side of the controversy you personally have taken depends in large measure on whether you are @ man of a woman. My own sympa- thies, naturally, have leaned toward Headquarters at vice. atmospheres: At the headquarters of the Mid-| “What will you have, gentlemé day Recruiting Committee to-day| ne author, whose name is not yan. hey err meneenn of Whe bode op Igiven, goes to the almost incredible ded for army, navy anc e Spee Ponds enlistments, A room full of-Jongth of admitting that the averaxe young man of to-day does show a dé cided preference for the human cock- ‘tail, When asked what he will have jamong girls, his choice tends almost n cheered him. d through the room were several members of the Giants, excused from morning practice so they could listen to McGraw's appeal. Harry Hempstead, President of the club, occupied @ seat on the platform. Norman young m th \dizened damsel, and young women Arman. celly, heier Known 88 penerally have concluded that in mats Reet etant ih the Beventyctirsi |timony, as in other flelds, the raco js Regiment, also spok indead to the swift. A “Tf stand before you as a soldier, not On GIRL wants to be popular,” sys as ‘Kid MoCoy,’ the fighter,” he sald)“ tig truthful writer. “With whom? "| want to call upon you all to enlist 7 he nd a in the Seventy-first Regiment. ‘The | With girls and women? Yes une |doubtedly she wants to stand we \with her sex—but with her sex alon word conscription does not mean slacker, but it 18 an unfavorable lot at all, She wants to be popular with men, It is in her nature to geek term. Tho word volunteer will be the her mate. Hence the girl sets out to game as that of hero. There is not a man in this audience who, if the ttract. How can she do 60? Natu- rally her every womanly instinct leas Kaiser walked on his feet, wouldn't punch him in the nose.” James H. Herbert, twenty years old, yon of Jusiice Henty W. Herbert of 3 Sessions has been accepte: Specie oruit in the aviation section of (ness, modesty and those attributes of the Naval Militia. On bis father's a woman that she hus been taught advice, young Herbert enlisted as @ |are inherent to good and high woman- DO eee ‘hood, So she starts out—demu: R | modest, retiring, simply dressed, YOUNG TAFT IN ARTILLERY, |motest, retiring: simply aracect A ‘Go to any gathering of young people resident Taft’ Son and Nine| and wateh. other. Tem Bere een |"“swho is the popular girl at the MMW HAY Conn, May 2t-—/dance—the belle of the ball, so to Charles P. Taft 24, eon of former Pres-|{0"'"7 phat demurely dressed. irl, ident Taft, a junior in Yale College, shy, modest, with a sweetness ail her was enlisted for the artillery branch of |S"¥+ modes the regular with ni own? he latter, why is it that our eu! rmy with nine other jown? Ift " Siattiates lesaky a : Fount gons do not dance with her, and why All the enlistments were of students |1s it she ‘sits out’ more dances than who were under use for the Reserve Of- |any other girl, and no young fellows Acers Training Corps of the university. latand waiting to ‘cut in'? Whom, Al pad may be went to Fort Miver, Va. |then, are our sons dancing with? meena = |WHAT CAUSES STAID FATHERS Napoleon Once Said: AND MOTHERS TO MARVEL. |«\VE fathers and mothers sit against “A Footsore Army Is An| Ww the walls and marvel at Army Half Defeated.” sons dancing with ‘that girl.’ our Why a . |'that girl’? Mother, sitting next, says: cH Ip every conmnunity men ere drilling for ‘Really, Jessie's mother shouldn't let National Preparedness. For al! these men the y b igang Tine Hh; frequent use of ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE, the |her dreas that way. Her dress ts cu altogether too low, and the skirt is | certainly too short, What tn the world is she thinking of? But all the same, Jessie is the belle of the ball, Her dances are cut into ¢ antiseptic powder, shaken into the Shoes and sprinkled in the Foot-bath, increases their ef- ficiency and insures needed physical comfort. It takes the Friction from the Shoe and fresh- ens the feet. The troops on the Mexican Border ry minute or use Allen's Foot-Ease, and over 100,000 Pack: |4o, and more young men cluster oes have been used by the British and French > 4.4 ner after one dance than speak WP cope in Europe, Why not oer w denen 2S (0°th9 ict with the careful dreonal friende in training com inthe navy’ We evening. And the carefully dressed will eal FREE’ Semples to any oldier’s ttle girl wonders, And who dress upon » Address, Allen S. Olmsted, | blame her? La Roy, N. Ye-Advt. “It all comes back to us men—what can \ IMMODEST TASTES linvariably to the sportily attired, be-) her to attract by feminine winsome- | What Will You Have, You MAN DISAPPROVES OF His Wire's O8 Nis SweeTheART on | kind will enc man. “An decent and undertake 4 cial pursui “We mus who show oer pation, they tt ought, pursuit of for us men | the rear them to lo | who are happy in matrimony? Then, with {ing ir | unsought, friends f girls our sons like, Kind of dresi our sons tow are those THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, MAY 21, 1917. ng Gentlemen? — RUSHFORPERMITS “‘Feminine Cocktail’’ Is Insidious, but | EXPECTED TO LIST Too “‘Heady’’ a Tipple for Matrimony ALL GERMANS HERE G6) —— or the sane eares A Y) ye 4 ‘Hundreds of ‘Barred Zone’ Ap- ghd deat = f/ | plications Daily Rapidly Reg- By Nixola Greeley-Smith. Lest you suspect the propriety of the invitation, let me ass you that it is offered by the Ladies’ Home Journal and not by me, years a controversy has raged women in the United States on the subject of the dress, » morals and deportment of the modern gir “How can we be expected to marry painted, pow- dered and hedizened clothes horses, who can neither cook, etween young men ‘ou never come near enough to us for us to prove any of our accom- |plishments. You are too busy chasing butterfly girls. anner or habit t Be id certainly, this in America of ours, there are enough earnest-minded men an 1 moulding a mode ts shall be lectual enjoyments often fall short in | forded by following the crowd in the Isn't it to study omestic infelicity as exhibited in too many homes, to get {deals of men the butterfly girl. to point them § ok into th eyes open 1h they to will t¢ xh | their admiration for girts who, though | choosing as im possessing quali nd whi adds the fur-seeing ttitude on the part of as sweet, pure | istering Teuton Population. With the rush for “barred zone” per- mit# continuing without let up, United States Marshal McCarthy said to-day that he expects the order restricting the movements of enemy aliens will result ‘in registration of fully 90 per | the clty by June 1, the date the regula- tion becomes effective. “The remaining 10 per cent.” he tarily before the order has jeffect many days. i been in of bumping into some phase of the pro- hibitory regulations they didn’t know of and so will want exemption papers.” Five hundred men stood in line when the office opened at 9 o'clock this morn ing. Many had been about the Federal Building all night. To take care of the work, twenty-five more assistants were specially appointed by Marshal Me- Carthy, The application blanks upon which aliens must detail their reasons for ‘seeking permits ran out to-day and requisition for 25,000 more was made upon Washington, That the appli- cants rushing to the Federal Bullding might not be forced to come again. Marshal McCarthy ordered that thelr names and addresses bo taken and promised that the application blanks would be mailed to them. In classes of 150 each, the aliens were then in- LZ RINTELEN DEMANDS U.S. TREAT HIM AS WAR PRISONER Plotter Fights Against Brand of Convict * Lamar Gets Habeas Corpus Writ. ties how to fill out the blanks when they get them. Permits issued, said the Marshal, will be only good in this district. Marshal Powers, in charge of the Brooklyn-Queens district, is also keeping busy, His office granted 400 permits Saturday, 425 Sunday and 200 more were Issued before noon to-day. Marshal Powers ruled that Germans residing in Brooklyn and working within “barred zones’ in Manhattan would have to obtain thelr permits For and from the New York Mar- Six or eight hundred more will be —_— sew nor converse intelligently?” the stern moralists shaped bol chen ibe versa is gent to Bensonhurst as soon as accom-| > 7... * among young men have inquired bitterly. “Find us a) ; Lovemaking 1s not recognized as a modations can be ready. The Naval! “ ="? good, old-fashioned girl who can cook and keep house} Cupt. Franz von Rintelen, million. |, 0 necessity” in connection with Reserve has now enrolled 4,179 men. asd make her own clothes, and just watch us.” ra et ein oe thes ahaarouma nt ok thas burned “Highty have been accepted for service . To which soberly attired young women conscious of)'fenry and reputed realtive of the) Oo rao Hard date tains a Site. Kalser, to-day protested against be- : ce Saturday noon. SRG 4] the virtues enumerated have replied acidly: mann of Harlem raised the ques Marine Corps recruiting continued Ing branded as a convict and insisted tion by applying to Marshal Me- Carthy for @ permit allowing nim to enter at his pleasure the restricted victed by a Federal jury yesterday |#T¢a about the Seventh Regiment with David Lamar, “the Wolf of Wall| Armory. Rudolph gave all kinds of Street," and Henry B, Martin, a| €Xcuses, but finally came down to thi Washington lobbyist, of plotting in| truth. He said that his “best girl, the interest of Germany and spend-|Leah Hartrafft, was employed in an ing thousands of dollars here to fo-| Mast Sixty-seventh Street house and ment strikes In munition plants and| that It was “absolutely nocessary that he be t oner of war. The arlstocratle “spy” was con- ted as a military pris- . hey big to oat minded generation of women—a gen- Testrain American trade in war sup-| that he be permitted to seo her, oration in which the majority of Plies. His attorney, Albert Massey,| The “necessity” arose froin the fact, those wh lives are filled with so- 4sserted this afternoon that $280,000 / he said, that bis rival for the hand of of the Rintelen gold fell into Lamar'y, #4! Was possessed of citizenship and tine as true womanhood can be, | hands alone, papers and therefore allowed to enter t not forget thot our sons| Four other defendants in the Von|the “barred zone will, The Mar- the best ability to select| Rintelen conspitacy case—Ex-Con-| hal advised Rudolph to look up a men friends and intel-| gressmen Frank Buchanan and Rob- |W girl in some territory not “ver ert Fowler of Illinois, Herman Schul- | boten.” | the choice of women friends, because! tels and Jacob C. Taylor—will be put| one Wve the subject too ttle} on trial again because of disagrees! TRIES HARD TO DIE; FAILS. seeking the relaxation af-| ment of the jury as to thelr innoze.co| | Schmidt Cuts Throat, W Ankles, and Leaps From Win or guilt, according | ment prosecutors. to the Govern- i | Charles Schinidt of Caristadt Von Rintelen, Lamar and Martin| tried hard to die yesterday afternoon, were convicted under the Sherman| but he did not succeed, Ant-Trust Act, and ordinarily wouid| He told his wife he was tired of liv be subject to penalties provided jy | ins intended to take his life forthwith, civil law. ‘They would be classod iw] AP With & carving Knifo started for ha | pihin'vconviata ‘and iain the attic, iis wife ran for help ibit nd imprisoned --ith| In the attic Schmidt cut his throat, counterfeiters, smugglers, ers and others guilty violations, Moonshin-| slashed both ankles and wrists and then of Federal law] plunged the knife in his stomach, Ta | make doubly sure he then Jumped out ties! Such it is expected will be the fate| of the window and landed on his head which bring attractions to quiet he of Lamar and Martin. the former aj-| 4 Policeman Mrs, Schmidt summoned life, who minimize the risks In war-| ready being in the conviet of found the wounded man and called an ge and help to popularize common class and | smbulance from Hackensack Hospital. | rving time at Atlanta penitentiary | Ithou: eak from | f blood th ae oe for Imperwnating a Conerenenay | inoue ae, om eof ed te |ONLY MAN WITH SUB-NORMAL| but von Rintelen insists that bin tans pn Resins | EGO WINS FIT MATE, as a German naval officer entitica |]T !s all the most ex.ellent sense, I] him to more honorable consideration RUSSIAN BONDS GO UP. doubt, however, if the young men| Ho was sent here from England, he so wisely cautioned will pay any at-|leclares, a9 a British prisoner of war| LONDON: Roassuring Rus tention to it. The fish leaps to the} 204 he dnatete fat ble status, with | sian news b u1 influence on | scarlet fly, bites on the glittering arti mine bebe, Tobe uraudas geont lena Rustlan gaminties wie prec ficla minnow; ‘and when it comes to] viet, it 1s pointed out. would be a dis. |fueslan bonds advancing two ann | matrimony men. are warter than| ∽̱ to be held as @ prisoner of war| Allied. bonds were quiet, but mat would mean chonor rather than dis-| pr an und Mexican issues rea | ; in ten th honor in b Fatherland t 4d firm, Tho leading gold mines Not one man in ten thousand has} It was learned in the Supreme|and industrials received attention and \sense enough to marry the girl who] Court to-day that Lamar ol td | American 6 oule ke him the best mate, Fo from Supreme Court Justice F ‘d r nla ie vie Seda fey Ton Saturday a writ of haveas corpus, | Make Belleve Warabips Itun ax “4 that girl, a girl con & dignity! The writ calls upon Warden Hat | ‘Train, and self-respect with tenderness and} of the Tombs to produce Lamar bo. | CHYCAGO, May 21.—A special na |heauty, will not stoop to the proceed-| fore Justice Bijur in the Sup. \reere was run over th linge ary to ensnare him, She} ,ourt to-my mrow on the ground t evated rallways# of Chicago to-da ere Z U ‘as practically idnapped ‘om e car was odelled after the may make up her mind to do It, See-| the Atlanta penitentiary and forcibly | be mm ewaled: Aster the. bal {ng the snares set by other girls, she| returned to this elty, Lumar a tleship Pennsylvania, while others nay attempt | ut she simply has] contends that the telegrap i arried models of submarines and not got it In r Cheap eajolery,| of the Department of Jus ' submarine chasers, @ fourth car cheap coquetry, moving picture poses| ing him to t Tombs w jut; was used @8 @ Fecrulting offic and ragtime t are not within the! authority of law, | A one-pound gun was fired at inter range of her ac nents, try as The conviction of von | vals and stops were made at every she will, She w we ver hair in} Lamar and Martin ahd the station. ear muffs, She 4 mined to appear! ment over the others came | st | ——- undressed tn the ‘ cose not| ni after the Jury which heard the |Mank Gets $60,011 Verdict Age believe that a b ‘ ve Con-| case had deliberated for rly thir Ly led lke a d Ity, ew N not] hours, are to be sentenced A jur 1 the Queens Cou " say one thing when she thinks 4n-|by Judge Cushman late to-day, the int, Justice Aspinall presid r, She won't tend to be in-| penalty provided by the statute beir 1 a verdict of $60 sted in thir bore her, What) one year's imprisonment and. $5.00 ies’ Bank of chance has she? faethe fing. A fight to convict Buchana Peay ihe ay Just this: That some young man|and the three others, all members. o ae ae with renl Intelligence aid '@ sub-nor- | Labor's National Peace Council, at “ine, grew. mal eso may realize and appreciate! new trial will be immediate Ing, her, Hut for one such paragon there | jaunched 4 ) recover Jare a hundred w icheaner| No evidence was presented at the {tort ty in hut he yarn she, wind trial of von Rintelen, who was bi y claim to the of cocktall wh no pmount of na-| lieved to have alded the Governme: tlonal prohibition will be able to pro- | in ‘the prosecution of th se, His | finer Colent ht - counsel, Mr, Massey, in speaking of Ahroa . funds disburse by von Rintelen ¢ | BOSTON, May WAR HORROF charged that $40,000 of the $280,- | foreign port of the 1 ” The Allies are now chewing {000 given to lamar {9 still “unae-| ian, fears tor whe ” x ere s74955 counted for. he rest was spent f 1 in local shipping gum at th ate Of S74915 % German propaganda, Massey says week, was reported in @ cable message ‘month. Lamar told the German, received by agente hexg to-day ’ cent. of all unnaturalized Germans in | sald, “will probably come around volun- | ‘Thoy will be afraid | structed by MeCarthy and his depu- | US. FLEET OF 24 MINE SWEEPERS 10 HELP BRITISH Daniels Confers With Ship- builders to Speed Up Con- struction of the Boats, WASHINGTON, May 21.—To speed up construction of twenty-four com- bination mine-sweepers and sea-go- ing tugs, Secretary Daniels to-day conferred with a delegation of twelve shipbullders representing all of the principal shipbullding yards in the country. Daniels explained the ne- cessity of quick work on the boats amd called upon the ship builders for ald. He assured the builders that jthe Government would co-operate with them in procuring labor and material, Already the Government has ar- ranged to furnish certain plates and other steel needed by expediting shipment. The new mine sweepers will be of 1,000 tons. They ars to be sturdy, powerful boats, Although officials re- fused to comment, it was said the new boats might be used to co-oper- ,Aate with the British fleet of, mine sweepers. After their conference with Daniels the ship builders met Admiral Griffen, j where they went over in greater de- tall the plans for construction of the | ships. At a later conference with Daniels thod of payment for the new was talked over, The Govern- ment favors payment on @ profit per- centage basis. Daniels said the biggest problem ts procuring skilled labor sufficient to meet the demands of the heavy programme. | Contracts for the construction of twenty-six of (le wooden ships to be built for the United States Shipping Board in its 3,000,000-ton —_pro- gramme, and for twelve steel ships already have been signed, It was an- nounced to-day, Bight of the steed vessels include those of 8,000 tons to be constructed at Los Angeles, Four additional stecl ships of 3,000 tons will be built at Jacksonville, Fla. The wooden ships will be approxi- mately of 3,600 tons each, Some of them, tt was announced, would be built in yards in the victty of New York. MORE PROMOTIONS MADE IN THE NATIONAL GUARD , Division Headquarters Announces New Commissions and Re- assignments of Officers. The following promotions and as- nments in the Natlonal Guard were announced to-day at Division Head- quarters First Lieut. Charles Bunker Crane, Company K, Seventh Regiment, pro moted to Captainey of Company B, same regiment; Second Lieut, Woodford Hayward, Company K, Seventh Regiment, promoted to First Lieutenant, sam regiment; First Lieutenant Edward Cavanaugh, Com- pany A, promoted to Captainey of Company B, Twelfth Regiment; Irvino Alexander Williams commis- sioned Second Lieutenant and as- sicned to Battery A, First Fleld Artillery; similar commission and assignment for Hamilton L, Aber- her Vanderbilt commis. nd Lieutenant and as Virat Cavalry; Albert Ernest Scharfer made a Sec: Lieutenant and assigned to Bat econd Wield Arti ‘onnor commission Lieutenant and assign to Company 1, Seventy-first nent; Capt Arthur L, Howe, Signal Corps, pro. moted to the rank of Major and aw: igned to Divist Headquarters Lennox ©, Hrennan comm { First Lieutenant an gned to Company B, Twenty-third Regi ment: First Lieut. George Edward Bryant, Machine Gun Company Twenty-third Regiment, promoted t Captaincy of Compar ne com mand; Ford Morris. commis ioned Second Lieut in Com pany B, Sevénth Regiment; Jolin Kerr commisstoned First Lieutenant ( th Fegiment Capt rick nsferred from Company I, Regiment, t npany rir n; Sergt. Henry R. Stimson, A Squadron A ommissioned Lieutenant’ in ttery D, Fir 1 Artillery _—_ SWISS FREE COUNCILLOR. 4, May Nationa! Councltlor, waa fre yesterday fter he had nprigon Grabe was with an Wspaper by a mob been i of the uccup! A ten years tr « his con viction for att » jure ne applicat ficate of reasonably doubt, t for a duction of ce Harry | _ BUILDING CAVES IN One Seriously, In Brook- lyn Accident. ‘ | Nearly every man of sixty-five em- , Ployed in assembling the timber forms for the concrete floor of the second story of a factory buliding | In course of construction In Richard j Street, near Delevan Street, in the ' Red Hook district of Brooklyn, was injured when the form lumber caved In to-day and precipitated them to the cellar. However, most of the men were lucky, for only a dozen were hurt seriously enough to require hospital treatment and only one, Benjamin Dougal, @ carpenter of No, 181 Seventh Avenue, Brooklyn, apr cars to de fatally injured. It ts feared by the surgeons that his back is broken, Nearly all the other hospital patients, after treatment In St. Mary's Holy Family, Long Island College and Swedish Hospitals, were able to go to their homes this afternoon. The building is to be six stories high and will be used by the Adriance Ma- chine Company. The John W. Fer- guson Company, No. 253 Broadway, Manhattan, is the contractor, ‘The floor space is to be 200 feet square but only a section of flooring 60x60 feet was in preparation at the time of the ccident. This section was supported by uprights which, in turn rested on uprights in the basement. No con- crete had been poured in the floor | forms on the first or second floors. | An investigation will be required to \determing the cause of thy cave-in. | Apparently the supports in the cellar gave way first and let down the whole section on which the carpen- ters and laborers were efiployed, Capt. Conboy of the Hamilton Ave- nue station with the reserves and £wo hook and ladder compantes of the | Fire Department were soon on the scene assisting the workmen em- ployed on tho, job who had not ft jured in the aceldent, Most of the |men who dropped with the cave-tn ‘wore able to scramble out without assistance, The painfully Injured were ut the bottom of the heap, covered with beams and boards, ae years the bank has made it a rule not | to pay Interest, but in view of the finan- letal situation brought on by the war it ma payments has determined to Ume deposits and on special and r serve accounts, The bank,” said Vice President H withdraw a balance of $1,000,000 because Gor, Edge tow ected to Keer War Strength. TRENTON, J, May Fdge recetved orders from Department to-day New Jersey National now in Federal Service up to full war trength. i) 21.—Gov. the War Signal a d umden, the First Cavalry and the d'Hospital Corps, ‘The order ts that, when the remaining 15 |troops are called out July 15, the bay airy report dismounted, | - 900,000. F f Bayer-Tablets Aspirin Tablets in Pocket Bones of 12—Bottles of 24 and 100 Capenten in Sealed Packages of 12 and 24 ‘The trade-mark "*Aspirin''\ Reg. U. 8. Pat Office) {o's quarantes that the monosceiiencidester of tallcylicncid In these tablets and capsules is of the reliable Bayer manutactus INTEREST PAID TO HELP WAR tte to recruit all the ard units not | + includes the Third Regiment | | | | CONSUL DECLARES A Dozen Are Injured, but Only | Middle Classes in Worst Straits, f Says U. S. Representative at Antwerp. : Henry W. Diedrich of Washington, for eleven years United States Con- sul General at Antwerp, accompanied + by hig wife, arrived to-day at an American port aboard a Spanish steamship. He left Antwerp on April 1 with Ambassador Brand Whitlock. “The poor ‘are by no means the greatest sufferers in Belgium,” Mr. Diedrich said. “The Germans allow them 0 centimes a day apiece, which Permits them to get all the food they need and have a sum left over to take them to the moving picture theatres, which they do attend, The real sufferers are the middle vlasses, which are disinclined to ask charity. They are in bad straits. Ks “There have been no deportations since the middle of February. A num- ber of the deported Belgians who have returned home suffered intensely with the cold, many of them being frostbit ten, As they limped through the streets of Brussels they received! @ tremendous ovation.” John F. Case of the International Corporation, No, 26 Broad Street, ac- companied by his secretary, Nicholas Roosevelt, was another passenger on the vessel, He returned from Mad- rid where, he sald, there was great prosperity and much cordial feeling for this country, “Spain's prosperity was shown tn tite fact that a recent internal loan of $200,000,000 oversubscribed four times,” Mr. Case saié “Spain has lost one-sixth of her shipping by the German submarine campaign and resentment against that coun try ts growin: Among the other American officials aboard the vessel were Commander Stephen V. Graham, U. & N. oral Naval Attache at Vienna, with Mrs Graham; John L. Bonchal, former Vice Consul at Prague, Bohemia James Barclay Young, former Cc sul at Flume, Ausirla, with Mrs Young, and Nicholas R. Snyder, former Consul at Reichenborg, Aua- tria, HARLEM BUSINESS MEN HOLD INDUSTRIAL LUNCHEON Four Hundred Hear Addresses on Commercial Growth of That Part of City. The Harlem Board of Commerce. The Chemie 1 Bank is going| Which recently completed an indus lto pay 2 per est on deposits] trial survey of its business com- after June 1 nearly one hundred munity, assembled this afcernoon in Carlton Terrace for ita monthly luncheon and to listen to addresses upon Harlem's growth and industria: importance, More than 400 members gathered under President ‘fhomas P Fowler and the toastmasior, Arthur K. Twitchell, “has taken this step so as 1G, Freeland. to be In Hine with all those who willl at the quest table were Borougl Poe a riyeinat waving Incerect {President Mathewson, who spoke in was to faithfully kept that some time|Plce of Burough Fre ident Marks o: ayo we requested the Government to | ‘he city’s need for active co-operation of all business; R. Ross Appleton of the Central Mercantile Association; Fire we could not make an exception and | Commissioner Adamson, George H. est on it, But in view of the! Duck of the Motor Truck Club of rituation, which calls for the] America; Brig. Gen, Hamilton, Robert ing of Government deposits on an {Grier Cooke, President of the Fitth | interest basts, also to serve the interest | Avenue Assoctation : of executors and trustees of wills, our| ,,Coneland Townsend, President of board hus taken this step. We, shall | Commissioner Ward, Commissioner of HOE COTS ee stret companion, BU | Ticenses Ball, J, C. Hupte Joseph F. _ Kean, Secretary of the ‘Mercantile 0 JERSEY TROOPS, | A#80cltion: Commissioner of Corres ORDERS T +] tions Lewis, Thomas EB, Green, Pres dent of the Hotel Men's Association, | Superintendent of Buildings Hines |} Charles E. Reid, Secretary of the | Bronx Board of Trade; William Goe | bel, President of the Upper Manhattay Taxpayers’ A tion, and others. Cork a reguiar a Soclety ninth Stre meeting of the Cork yesterday at Fifty and Madison Avenue, the solution Was passed unani approve th rty, th ough the . in rejecting Laoyd George stion Ireland or any part thereof 4 heartily mmend the party in LENINGTON, Ky., MWy 21.—Fire de- | ayre ing to participate in ac " h a ei) of representatives from al stroyed property with an estimated) f1.\is8 the Home Rule question and Ww | $600,000 here early to-day. It| hope it will reach conclusion | ina livery stable, and within| Such a settlement » hatled with | rs had consumed’ the larger| satisfaction by IrishyAmerteans and al | . sporty in the ecantral sec-| liberty loving American. James F ve bu we dbat rt } Ahern, President; James Fox, eretary Beware of Substitutes The sole makers of gen- uine Aspirin brand every tablet and every package with the Bayer Cross, “The Bayer Cross — Your Guarantee of Purity” } ] —_—

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