The evening world. Newspaper, June 14, 1917, Page 12

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CO \ \ set & | meetin “‘Riaploes of © G4 Women packed the auditorium of | of 7 food. He characterized as a criminal any person who hoarded foodstuffs and thereby helped increase prices. The Rev, Dr. Joseph Meshilansky | ® noted Jewish orator, made a stir | ring address of appeal to the women not to buy food in large quantities He depicted the sufferings of the peo- ple across the wea due to the scarcity of food, and predicted the same con- dition bere if we did not awaken to the ser ness of the aituation Nissim Behar spoke of The Evening World American Forum and declared that the paper could be relied upon to successfully cope with the fe problem. “It is the imperative duty f every woman on the east side to become a member of this aasocta- "bo said. “How many of you will join?” More than 2,000 women raised their hands. 00 EAST SE AOUSEWIVES ENLIST “FOR CHEAP FOOD EB ening World's and Parents’ Associations Hold Rous- ing Meeting. Mr. Beha ite out your applica tion of membership," and they did More than 3,000 enthusiastic men| A food exhibit under the direction Mrs. € the demonstration. President of the F Idreich was « feature of H. Wiodaver, the rents’ Association, presided, and Miss Ruth Clug, - companied by Mr. Isador Turkischer, furnished music. Mr. Goldreich announced that clone to 8,000 women had made application tor membership. Public School No. 62, Hester and Es-| #Ox Streets, lant night, to listen to ad-| Greases on the food situation. The which was held under the The Evening World Protective Association | Hougewives’ @nd the Patents’ Association of the) fins ia rar ion RESIDENT'S SON-IN-LAW TO TEAGH AT HARVARD. Women to join the Housewives’ Asso- | Francis Bowes Sayre Appointed a clation. “We all know what The Evening Fellow in the Law School— Other Changes, ‘World has done in connection with the penny tunches,” he said. “Public CAMBRIDGE, Maas., June 14.— The Harvard Corporati nounced to-day Behoo! No. 62 was the first selected by ‘that newspaper to Introduce a penny funch kitchen. We certainly camnot express our thanks in mere words. Now they are engaged in a movement designed to bring about legislation Pegulating the prices of foodstuffs ‘They are secking the co-operation of the women of New York. that Francis Bowes Sayre, son-in-law of President Wilson, will take up gradu- ate work at Harvard and has been ap- ‘ellow in the Law 4 teaching members| Ge, SUMLAR Semetaat in’ the’ picadents reat east side respond with member. | dike, clinical assistant in ihe Graduate Kohool of Medicine, and. John, M @hip that will reflect credit upon the| frewer, inetructor in education, have istrict.” been acces ‘Appointments included’ P. F. Baum, Following his address, Jacob Hol-! pg, Man, secretary of the Parents’ Asso-| P. chat! tead his yearly report. He de. | Whitmore elared ‘that the Parents’ Association |. ’ 1 Rat Gould be of assistance to the House-| [iernturs Ged phiicoehe, cad wits Wives’ Association by teaching the! & Brown, instructor in’ public health ‘women in the district how to conserve administration Pier, Arthur . Charles B. instructors In English; Roy Instructor in education, Save the Babies NFANT MORTALITY is something frightfal. We can hardly realize that ef all the children born in civilized countries, twenty-two cent., or nearly one-quarter, die before reach one year; thirty-seven eon r ‘i than one-third, before ere five, and one-half before are fifteen We do not hesitate to say that a timely use of Castoria would serve Srey ot ioae ious lives. Neither do we hesitate to say that many an aths oceasioned by the use of narcotic yeretene. tinctures soothing syrups sold for children’s ‘complain contain or less opium or morphine. They in quanti! are, poisons. In any quantity, they stupefy, retard circulation wf ons, akuees, Neate There can ba fio danger in the use of Cas- toria if it bears the signature of Chas. H. Fi: ar letcher it contains no opiates or narcotics of any kind, CE Genuine Castoria always bears the signature of y “At Your Service’? 1882-1917 unlimited and continuous service. many factors, human and material. Between 2000 and 2500 tons of coal ent mines 4 pany insure what is of paramount im servative practicable use of coal. where the generation of power is inefficient units. In other words, one t The Coal Supply Our first responsibility to the public is the maintenance of In this we depend upon vide the required steam for the generators of the Waterside Stations of this Company. Large reserves are kept at all times in the bunkers of these power plants and a still baeger reserve is retained at Shadyside, New Jersey, where coal is i material factors is an adequate supply of coal | delivered by rail and water from no less than twelve differ- The great aggregations of power in the plants of this Com.“ produced from each pound of coal consumed under these conditions are from two to five times greater than is possible | of from two to five tons consumed under the conditions usually prevailing in small power plants. Thus the Edison lt Service conserves one of our great national resources | H i The New York Edison Company | Ast Your Service i) - Inving Place and 15th Street—Stuyverant 5600 H Branch Office Show Rooms for tha Convenience of the Publie t) 424 Broadway Canal 8600 151 East 6th Street i 126 Delancey Street. Orchard 1960 15 East rasth Street Harlem 4020 H 10 Irving Place Stuyvesant 5600 362 East rggth Street Melrose 9900 | 124 West 42d Street Bryant sa6a All Show Rooms Opes Until Midnight Hi Night and Emergency Call: Farragut 3000 ij BiG RALLY FOR CHEAPER FOOD T0 BE HELD T0-NIGHT Commissioners Dillon and Hartigan Among Speakers at Public | School No. 401, There will be a big cheaper food rally to-night in the auditorium of Public School No, 101, One Hunderd and Eleventh Street and Lexington Avenue, under the aumipces of the League of Foreign Born Citizens and The Evening World Housewives’ Protective Association, Nathaniel Phillips, President of the league, will preside, and the list of speakers includes Commissioner il- lon of Food and Markets, Commis- sioner Joseph Hartigan of Weights and Measures, William Hinder, Pres- ident of the Fulton Market’ Men's Association’ Willlam ¥, Bigelow, Richard A. Claybrooke, President c the Now York Produce Exchanige Justices Jacob Marks, John ¥F, C an and Leopold Price SOCIALIST OFFIGIAL IN THE DRAFT NET Secretary Germer Accused of Circulating Anti-Conscrip- tion Literature, GRAND RAPIDS, Mich, June 14.~ Adolph Germer, Secretary of the Na tional Socialist Party, with headquar- ters in Chicago, surrendered himself to United States authorities here to- day on @ warrant charging him with conspiracy to defeat the operation of the Conscription Law. He ts one of thirteen indicted here Inst week and is the last of the ac- cused to be taken into custody, Germer stood mute when arraigned before Judge G. W. Seswions and a plea of not guilty was entered for him. He was released on $1,000 bonds. Germer was indicted because of the circulation in Grand Rapids of liter- ature opposing the draft law de- lclared to have been sent out from | National Socialists’ headquarters in Chicago, ——_— ition Chi Against American a Dropp BHANGHAIL, China, June 14.—The charge of sedition against Dr, Gilbert Reid, an American, editor of the Pek- ing Post, which printed pro-German arucles, was withdrawn in the United States Court to-day. Ho was arrested on April 26 charged with having slandered President Wilson, He ex- Pressed regret, —- Penn, Rond Promotes Massey. PHILADELPHIA, June 14.—R. V, Superintendent of the New York division, was appointed General Superintendent of the Eastern Pennsyl- | vania division of the Pennsylvania Rail- id at a meeting of the Board of Director to. . He succeeds the late Geori ton. Among the chief of the are needed daily to pro- portance—the most con- 4 The effective results ¥ ‘Making Farmerettes Now | Is the Plan Agricultural Committee | ——— charge of the National League for = They'll Not Be Next Year Farmers, but Gather This Year’s Crops. WILL LIVE IN A CAMP Women’s Camp at Farming- dale Will Be Dedi- cated To-Day. Marguerite Movers Marshall. |” DEFINITE and practical move ment to place New York City girls on Now York State farms this summer, and thus to assist tangibly fn | the care and con- servation of this year’s food crop, has just been started by the Mayor's Commit-! 7 WEN street. Many organizations are training girls for agriculture, but one can't | learn to be a farmer in @ minute and this year’s crop of farmerettes will not add appreciably to this year crop of potatoes and apples. There are certain farm processes, however, which may be turned over to willing untrained workers, and indeed it ts! the number of such workers which will largely determine the size of the harvest of 1917. What the Mayor's Committee of Women wishes to do is to supply farmers with .women “hands” who | will help gather the fruit and other products that have often gone to waste because of a shortage of labor, |Co-operating with the committee, | Mins Louise Odencrantz, thead of the | Employment Bureau of the Btate In-/ | dustrial Commission at No. 819 Jay Street, Brooklyn, 4s conducting a “back to the land” campaign among the girl workers in seasonal trades. Many of these girls have practi- cally no work during the summer in thelr regular occupations. Their rather human impulse is to live on their small savings and wait for the fal) opening, instead of hustling for another job, But it is these girls who might be of great assistance to the up-State farmer, and whom Miss Odencrantz and the Mayor's Com- mittee of Women are trying to farm work of the lighter sort. for the military census, ie of Mayor’s to be $10,000 in such cases. TWO THOUSAND SAILOR Woman's Service. ds, al- | though peaceable, are so large that a guard is needed to keep order and regulate the registrations. | Unlike many others in the city, the | thirty-three election districts under) the control of Miga Mary Garrett Hay, | Chairman of the New York City! Woman Suffrage Party, have been fully supplied with registration blanks ‘This was due © the forethought and energy of Mrs. Mabel Russell, a suffrage worker | venteenth District, who collect the supplies nee: them by auto to the prope: ELLEVUE HOSPITAL has called | upon the National League for man’s Service for twe mor volunteer workers for the social ser. vice department. Trained nurses ure enlisting for work at the front and the hospitals must meet the deficit, The league already has supplied cighteen clinical workers in the out- patient department of Bellevue, who Volunteer their services under the leadership of Mrs. Herman Viele. Mrs. Beulah Benson is in change of a simi- for $100,000 In Liberty bonds. bcd sone coreg 4 because fleets on their race. ONLY PERSON State census threw slammed the door, soup in census ton projectile in mouth of the trench Gotha. Her lo: SELL GOWNS OF PRINCESS. |anq family qua MUNICH, June 14.—The public aue-|stantly in the lin tion of the wardrobe of Princess Louise of Belgium, daughter of the tate King! netted 82,000 marks. The was staged in a theatre and exten late King Leopold and the di-|to Sept. 1, 1917 of IMPORTEDand DOMESTIC tobaccos —Blended FIV TEEN pirl makers of straw hate h just promised to go to Milton, N. Y., and pick berries on |the Palmer farm, The girls told |Miss Odencrantz and Miss Mary Foster, Committee Secretary of the Standing Committee on Agriculture created by the Mayor's Committee of Women, that they would go to the| farm if an advance scout approved| of it. So a housekeeper registered | with Miss Odencrantz took a trip to| Milton and brought word of a de- lightfut plan, The girls will lve in tents on the |farm and have a community meas in cha of the housekeeper. ‘Thus| they will combine camping out with holding down their job. They will! |be paid at the rate of 1% cents a pint and their earnings will range from $1.50 to $56 @ day, They start at an early date. HE Mayor's Committee of Women on National Defense is sending| to farmers throughout the State the following patriotic appeal: “Do your bit, has aroused the! women. of .this country, President Wilson’s appeal to ‘Farmers! House- | wives! Children!’ to raise and con- serve food products has led many | women and girls to select work on the | land as thelr bit | “There are three classes. of women and girls who are registering, the! educated ones from the office and schoolroom, the general all-round worker, physically strong and willing, | and the girls whose trade ends in the spring and begins again in the au- tumn, We ask your co-operation in helping to formulate plans that will aid both the farmer who has many acres and the one who has few tu utilize the services of these women. | “Would it not be profitable for a farmer to have such women do the kinds of farm work often performed by his wife or daughter, also other varieties not generally done by wom- en in this country, but successfully carried on by women abroad? such help would enable the experienced hands to do more each day along ex+ pert lines “We want your help and advice. Agriculture in all its forms is attract- ing women who want to serve their country, Can you suggest ways in which women's farm labor might be | used to your advantage’? It can surely be of «reat service at this ime when winning the war depends upon our food supply | “Could you employ one or more | women on your farm? “If @o, in what capacity? i confined to small and i ‘on of coal does the work | "Do you know @ farmer who would In co-operation with the Bureau of ployment of the New York State In- | dustrial Commission, we are conduct- jing an employment bureau for women n agriculture Ferry women farmers of the N ew Vat A new combination— mild, yet they “‘Satisfy’’! Yes, this new cigarette is more than just good-tasting, it delivers a new and important thing to smokers— Chesterfields “reach home,” they let you know you are emoking—they *‘Satisfy’’! Yet, they’re mild! Don’t be surprised—the new blend of Imported and Domestic tobaccos does it. And the blend can't be copied. Let Chesterfields give you new |tlon of Leagu dedicate | their farm ca day at Farming- |dale, L. 1, Bight carloads of guests jare ‘going r the celebration Jand the op of the new perma: barr ened by Miss Fay 6 to place of tents, | Miss Virginia Gildersleeve, Dean of | Barnard College and Chairman of th Standing Committ nm Aroultu of the Mayor's t f Women in National Miss Elizabeth E. Poe, National Chairman | the Women's Section of the Navy eague, and William 1B. Baldwin, director of the New York State School lof agriculture, t ated MESS EbITH BROWNELL, cepsua supervisor of the Twenty-third 1 to the Home for ten mea to do evenings at registration her district, which 19 in where the farm camp District, has apy Defense. Leag ard dut the in cigarette enjoyment. me Ly gatte Myer Tobarce Os widow $18,000 for death of twusband on railroad, NEW YORK WOMEN all look five than the ages they give in registration, supervisor saya, “they Know the art of keeping young.” ee ee Grace to Income Ta Internal Revenue Collector Kdwards instretted to give New of grace beyond June 15 LIFE worth more now, Iilinois judges sald in giving It used yers. Yorkers | jar detachment from the Social and | Over several days. A bewildering array to pay up tee of Women on) iV) fare Department of the eague at |of gowns, lingerie, parasols and mill- incurring eee eeeenat | St, Luke's Hospital, and at the Babies’ | were bold. ne OF Stent two i ndfeiduals. and, corporatio is SKI Etys ulate Creoran ts reise * Louise ts the eldest dauah-| by Americans abroad has been extend rty-minth are v aor led by their band, marched to business section of Newport and subscribed MOTHER GOOSE may be barred from Milwaukee libraries because’ of a verse Jewish women think re thus far refusing to register In man’s face and AFTER STUDYING aviator's photograph of German tunnel, French artilleryman at ten miles planted a half- | vorced wife of Philip of Saxo Coburg and | affairs, extravagances els have kept her con- t nd ed hesterfield CIGARETTES MUNCIP, Ind. June a motorist is sought for an attempt to kidnap the two-year-old daughter of Karl A. Oesterl, wealthy banker, A nurse, sleeping in the room with the child, was awakened and pursued the abductor through the house. Unable to open an outside door, the men Topped the child and escaped through a window, Neighbors stated that they heard an automobile in an alley at the rear of the home. The police believe the atte kidnaping was i tion of Lioyd Ki IT MEANS BETTER HEALTH | FOR ANY WEAKNESS—TRY HOSTETTER’S Stomach Bitters

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