The evening world. Newspaper, July 11, 1917, Page 3

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fj K 4 ——— People Want a Chance to Bid Them a Fitting, Rous- ing Farewell. WILL STIR PATRIOTISM Evening World’s ‘National Guard Day” Soon to Be Announced. The Evening World is able to an- nounce to-day that it will bo in a position, possibly to-morrow, althotigh mo definite date can be set at the Present time, to announce the Gov- ernment’s exact plans in regard to) this newspaper’ rive’ for a “Na- tional Guard Da: Major Gen. John F. O'Ryan is in| Adbany discussing with Adjutant |© General Stotesbury and Gov. Whit- man the full details of the plan to. GIVE OUR BOYS THE SEND-OFF THAT'S COMING TO THEM. Before leaving, Gen. O'Ryan sald to an Evening World reporter: “I am convinced that The Evening World's splendid idea is going to 69 through. Of course, ultimate orders) will have to come from Washington, | but I am sure, from sources that I am not at liberty to give out, that the War Department méans to co- operate in the fullest measure in giv- ing the boys of the National Guard a big send-off. “Gov. Whitman, Gen. Stotesbury and myself will take up the practical | details of the ‘send-off’ to-morrow It is then highly probable that I shail go to Washington to confer with the authorifies there. In any eve! don't think that New Yorkers need fear that they will not have a chanc to give our fighters a fitting voyage.’ Col. Daniel C. Appleton, commander of the famous New York Seventh Regiment, is janother ardent supporter of The Evening World's} campaign, “By all ‘means let us give our boys| the proper sort of farewell,” he said | to an Evening World | reporier “There is nothing to be gained either for the men or for the country f which they are going to fight smuggling them of darkness. “The Evening World's suggestion for a big parade down Broadway and in other parts of tha chy is & splendid one. It will not only bring In recruits, but will also tend to de- velop the fact, which many persons do not appear to realize, that war Is at our doors, We are not playing now, we ure fighting, and I can think of no better way to hammer home the fact than by parading our away under co or troops.” Much the same opinion was ex- pressed by Col. Reginald L. Foster of the Twelfth Regiment “The best way to get men to fight ig to show them fighting men,” sald Col. Foster. * emulation in any other line of w men bravely about to do their excites an instinct to do likewise the hearts of ev one who them. This has been proved land, and in fact in all the countries.” GHARGES HOSTILITY T0 COLLEGE MEN k, the sight of brave duty in I Washington Influences Against Uni-|* versity Students as Officers, Says a Harvard Review. CAMBRIDGE, Mass., July 11 “While it is clear the War Depart- ment has grave difficulties in find- ing a sufficient number of instructors | for our colleges, there is ground for suspecting hostile influences,” says an editorial on "Officering the New Army” in the Military Historian and Economist, a quarterly military pub- cation edited by Harvard men. “There are organizations ¢ viduals of influs trained body of officers The low brow ideal ik Nothing 1 Wart do will be more useful wo the county than to get the utmost benefit gible from the colleges, ‘They shoul ne tiled 1 utilized td be adv than has hitherto been ease, Why cannot the Secretary of War or Council of National Lefens appoint a ¢ Iuing board of collexe Preside nah It would -provide them with useful Information.” Pandhaabdisd slay = Slackers to Jolly More Jail sentences Newark yesterd e ne Peied, nposed y woon four sla: , Who had failed to register, wero at trials of four others were begun in the Federal Court before Judge Height. The Federal Grand Jury mot d heard evidence against oth mn accused of baving failed to register Joseph Martovalli sixty day of Paterson Kot Phillp Krakower ten days and Stanley Rycys thirty days, all in the Passale hn Smich. kofski got one Essex Jail All denied int to disobey the law Soldier Kille Bridge. Private Vin . tirene , ty-thres, of Company O, Fi ment, N. G. N Was erossing the Jersey Central Radroad bridge over the Passaic River near Newark at 8.05 last night ¢ bound passenger train struck 4 killed him. His head was crushed. tivad apner ~ {TS BRAVE SOLDIER ARIP-ROARING SEND-OFF WHISKEY SHURE. Substitute Wann Will Prob- 1| stitute for the Food Control Bill, un- | derstood to meet the wishes of the thon | President, formerly | jm by! BONY Se BOYS INVENTOR SAYS: War Has Shown a Thousand New Uses ‘for Tractors and | Motors. It Has Made Flying, an Every- y Affair for Thousands. It Has Put Wireless to Work in Many New Diréctions. Europe Will Use Aeroplanes in Everyday Affaixs, as in Car- rying Mail, After the War, The Commercial Triplane for Long-Distance Pa nger Traffic Is Practicable. The ~Submarine Will Not Be PROUD OF THE FLAG AND OF OUR SOLDIERS; LET’S SEE’EM PARADE “We're proud of our flag; let's be proud of our boys.” “We don’t hide Old Glory under a@ bushel; then why ship the “Sam- mies’ a under a cloak of dark- ness and@@ecrecy?” In every war of history—and in this war too—the most powerful stimulus to hot-blooded patriot- tem has been the sight of marching troops, with thelr bands and their banners. Military officers, civic officials, big business men and labor leaders all indorse The Bvening World's de- mand: the Wa: By Nixola Greeley-Smith. “ HE war has stimulated science Marconi, Senator of Italy and mem- United States. “I cannot that war is gcool in any rense, FROM FOOD ol See LO ew ideas, the obliteration of difficulties in many | flelds of science, | the wireless to work in many new | directions, on submarines, / control which it ably Pass the Senate on July 21. tte atmosphere through Passes to a degree which | would have been thought impossible | 4 few years ago. War has developed | flying to an enormous extent and will | extend {ts uses more and more.” Soo MARCONI'S blue eyes, his gestureless calm, the lonyr pauses between his faultless English sentences, made it very hard to ren lize that he is an Italian, And it was only when I remembered that his mother was an Irish woman and that he lived for years in England and has an E reconciled to his impassive manner, I had gone up to*the Ritz-Carlton fotel to ask Senator Marcon! what the war has done, or will do, for sci- ence. “Sclence,” T sald, “has made this the most agonizing, the cruelest war in hist WASHINGTON, July 11—A sub- Probably will be reported | to the Senate to-day. by It was only consenting td take some of the} drastic features out of the bill the Democratic Senators suc- Jed in getting an agreement for that ce a vote a week from next Saturday, Although !t was realized there was a nation-wide for definite action on the bill, the outlook ap- peared to be almost hopeless yester- demand day, but threats of invoking cloture to-day brought the oppoeing sides to a compromise, and i. was agreed to} close the debate at 2.30 on July 21, science of destruction to enable men ‘One of the features the Democratic | to kill each other, What has the war Senators agreed to take out was that | tone for science? relating to Prohibition, In fact, a| Senator Marconi replied, with the substitute for the bill was promptly | brief references I have quoted, to the med and {s said to be simtlar to | extension by the war of the fh the iginal Administration bill, with | Aviation and of wireless. | the excepton of the ellmination of the |Shown a thousand new use i “een WORLD. War Has Forced Progress in Science | Which Will Benefit Whole World In Peace Times, Declares Marconi\ Used for Ocean Travel After | wonderfully,” said Guglielmo! ber of the Ifalian| commission to the | say | The war has put! for in-| Stance, and we have learned how to| 4 elish home, that I became really | Every science has become a| | BOOS OOS O0009504-0-6- NLY.HOTEL MEN ADOPT WAR BREAD FOR BRO} BROADWAY Whether the the Hotel Patrons, An'excellent French-Italian chef at the Hotel Woodward is the author of the above recipe for Broadway War Bread, which has been adopted by the Food Conservation Commiitee of the Hotel Men's Association of York. Tne restaurateurs, Capt Churchill, Monsieur Mouquin, Patrick Kyne and all the others, are amons. the food conservers, and from now your favorite hotel and restaurant will appear in war economy garb as clause giving power to control other tors and for tractors," he far as foodstuffs are concerned. War things besides food, has made ying an every-day affair broad has been tested at the Wood Tho new bill would prohibit the |for thousands of men who’ would! ward py the help and “Charlie” Gehr manufacture of distilled Hquors with. | never t ed an aeroplane oth-|ing and pronounced 0. K.~ Whit out provisions for Government pur. | Wise. I believe ropean Gov-! Churchiti's cuatomers will aay of it ur chase of existing ste and also | raments will use aeroplanes in every | srququin's do to it is a stor@for an would give to the Preridant the au. | day affairs after the war Is over, that] Sener day, thority and the responsibility of in- | the malls may be carried by them.” }°'R1) there iw no denying that Messrs cluding beer and wine within the} “Do you b in the practicability | nowman of the Biltm acl Gre prohibltory clause of transatlantic passenger travel by ag eke cue sre Other changes ‘a Gore substitute |triplane and in the commercial aub. )t®¢ Woodward have prepared a Wai nubea ave desieaed. to simplify tha Hanne, eorvicn war?” ]| footing programme for all hotels aud measure to conform to the orikinal |! A the slender, clean-cut inventor | restaurants alike, It Includes twelve | is by eliminating from It the pro- faldarept think, tc Including such articles aus | 4 passenger stesl, fron, wool, lumber, | cable thing, do not lead and other basis products, | iis. seb maetne sya ue| bade: mer | H ie ve ie of peace, jalong with fodder and fuel, over the water when you which the Governnent is given con- | ci its surface?” added the | trol, | ‘d of wireless, It appears reasonably certain that ee cn ae the Smoot amendment, prohibying re the use of grains and foodstuffs in| the inventor retorted, “that the m ufacture of whiskey and d. rect the Pr lent to take over Ie not quite the name thing. ind pay for existing stocks at an|A flying me AB aoe a RAAT, arbitrary profit of 10 per cent, will be | Obstacles, distances: LOPSOOA ERRs cut out of the bill, The new liquor | elling, One can fy from New Yorie to t ft . TH ! Chicago, for instance, in. a strath provision will probably prohibit by| {ics theouct t while on the sur- statute the manufacture of whiskey | face you tv ke many twists and leave to the President the decis- and turns and so pmuch time, 1 | thin the submarin: 1 ion whether war neczssition justify | do not think tne susmarlo wit the commandeerina of it. [pe eeeve you ever been in ® subrc If the “bone dry" forces in thd Z “a to compel the 9 - * Senator Ma an- 1 irom con= ae us Re sumption, pt this proposal, Were’. | t ea iieen HRMeIEn thero appears to be Nttle doubt that since thr That, however, the President's wis 1198, “one of t ics In the matter ae Prohibition project will not be mitted to di- which brought vide the people of the country dur- wacked by. submarines the prosecution of the war. them seve now that th aly know tha at objects in The chief bones o: e features au ention will origing the Gov- to fix prices for food prod- commercial , -| That se items, some of which are as follows That one day each week shall be designated on which beef shall not be seryed. ‘This day not to be Friday That there should be an individua |servige of bread and butter of | fori et Rolls to weigh from i to 14 ounces: | That at least 10 per cent. of some ther kind of flour-naenc ry | potato, &e.—should be pt in wheat rolls and bread, That all stale bread and trimmin | from toast bread be made | bread," to be served to 4 employees Substitution of rough place of wheat breads to reduce u ‘of butter. Into “wai ts and breads In vice of fre 4 sho possth ice of young nb suckling pls hh pork to guest and empl id be discouraged as tauch | That such as discouri much as ‘That remove free luneh counter the committee, What roun young lainb and ers of two org th cw far bread trom the ay'’s and Chureh 5 ep > , Jeshow, Pat Kyne hasn't ¢ ts and giving the President other * lave that the su ymaringy aus cae hig cine te oat ee wat cad powers of supervision to be problem is the m erloue prema |tread over, and Capt. Churchill ts delegated to subordinates, ed by the war an sn Ty ope | hesitating. He saya his custom in letting me As bp | er ar. Mine Host Mu For the time betng the Hquor feat. | {iaittie lon," Senator | SE Vers wae Rg xt i N be subordinated to the con-| Marcon! co {donot want | "ny, on marietta n of the general aspect of Atle be tag of | that? it at 2 Wa the food contro! proposition, A - | the war, b Bue know Pads Pend) bread? = Well, I ¢ en of Senato: 2 to| Victoriously for the m | see, I am not a member of the Mou ber of eoeiore. ae Baye. bitherte He entrance of the United | Conservation Committ Howeve been regarded aa favoring the Goy- | $¢ FR entran aining.” 8 M to the struggle net- | he Programme sounds entertaining nment plan seem to have under- | Btater into fa Messrs. Bowman and Green of the one a change of sentiment tled that absolutely. America waited, : ‘ pe , ghed, judged and tovk up the bate Senator Gore's itute, whicn| Weighed, judged and : NOE etenrinte nits Ta fondamne I believe that her| will be whipped into final shape at. ie Germany | meeting of the ricultural C » of histo: America as we would Uund@stood in like if have it y) "It was Ita 8 declaration rittee to-day will provide for a Food ar ble to overs | trality that ¢ # five mombere to be moral and economic value | draw one miilion i America’s pa y in the | lan frontier, and it was thi n while much elapse | men that enabi to figh \ ‘ be you ean se n largo! win the Hatt! Ita f pumb: financt a morally | never intend s 4 , t Jiatel, de-! ? gerres " he j Rreaident cag i neae y, your support was immediately de-|war of aggression nigh seek ee f have kept France 1 uinimum price proposed for contribution of Italy to the; million suldiors tr tu wheat will be $1.00 a bushel, cauge of democracy is aut so widely | were uot uevded.” 5 oeeeneoe GF-LHSIHHOSPHOLSOCOHT GEE SES OOLTOSOS » ins aca nESEES SUISSE EDEENEEEEDSREEEEn BROADWAY WAR BREAD IF 1T COMES TO WORST On the b of a butter tub of stale bread, crusts, &c., and ten thas of wuter and ten ounces of Soak thoroughly and atrain eine a flour sieve. .For this quantity use about one-half pound of weast and cnough flour to make a very stiff dough. oe committee are expected back from Washington to-day, where they have Will Eat It Is Another [had a jong interview with pr, Hoo- | | ver. are going to do the ex Matter. plaining. One hotel man satd saat | hight: "I never thought of it. A beeftess day excepting Friday would ‘neau two meatless days f r devout Cath- to up and tell that ture that 1s cort very hotel will s on its menu es the use of less ucts, butter and ail nd to substitute ond freely sea food, fresh vegetables Economy in the non-re- use und fruits, stricted foods tx not neces: sirable at the pr OUT GOES FREE LUNCH TO AID CONSERVATION And After Sunday the Tall Beer for a Nickel Will Be Only Memory. “How dry I be turned & mourner’s wail next Monday when two of New, York's most cher- shed Institutions will cease am!" will to exist The free lunch and the tall glass of beer for a nickel will pass into ob- vion after Sunday, At a closed meeting of the Retail Liquor Dealers’ Assoclition of New York County yesterday afternoon in t wee Garden this stern measure was adopted. Members said after- ward there was “considerable debate” the question, One member, delegated to speak for McClanahan, President of the association@said the assootation abolished the free » help the Government | m lunch in order food con ervation, It was pointed out that 2e free lunch costs the m $4 to $20 a day, About 4 rbers of the associath was os was $7, un lunch, It average h would make the t t and. that aye © "pint bar inany easolln process of na s will t nnrnetion ‘ Shoe Specialis| Sixth Avenue, Men’s Oxfords tan Women’s Shoes—high | timate or vicious, hi 3 | the consumer.” Andrew Alexander Sale of Summer Shoes for Men and Women Every distinctively Summer style included. Now $4.75 to $7.45 Now $3.75 to $6.75 Good range of sizes in most lots a BILL DELAY HONEYMOON YACHT, “AIDING GAMBLERS, | STEAM UP, AWAITS DECLARES ARES HOOVER GREEN AND BRIDE Writes, President Masses Are, Couple Expected F From Chi- Now Ill Fed Because of cago To-Day, and Will Sail xorbitant Prices, for Panama at Once. WASHINGTON, July 11.—President } Col. Edward H. R. Green, only son Wilton has made public @ letter |of the late Hetty Green and one of | written by Horbert, Hoover. Food |the richest men in the world, will to- Administrator, pointthg ou€ the werl- day bring to New York the bride he | ous and far-reaching consequences tO took with ali the simplicity of a $6. [the farmers and consumers of the jweek clerk in Highland Park, a sub- country which may follow the delays wry of Chicago, yesterday In passing the pending food legista-| pin steam yacht United States, ton, inted war gray and with a quick- After reciting the major factors IM i¢iring gun on her foc'sle, awatte the situation with regard to wheat, /the honeymoon couple off West For- Mr. Hoover says in part: tieth Street, and they will sail at ‘Many plans have been tentatively | once for the West Indies and Panama |put forward and abandoned and | cana) j others have been developed, but 10) A tror presenting to his bride $500,000 any case none has or can be settled|in cash and $125,000 in Liberty bende, until legislation has been completeds| Gntoago despatches say Col. Green Three facts stand out plainly enough remarked: from ov investigations: "I do not know who Is going to be “First, that in this situation theltne boss, All I can way ia that fm farmer will need protection as to the| going to try to be.” price of wheat; second, ‘that largel” rhe bridegroom received his 9,001at masses of people in the consuming) i ropcval while opening congratulatory centres are being actually Under | ioecrams, It was from a girl in al nourished to-day, due to exorbitant | taror¢ section of the country. cost of living, and that these condi-| After the ceremony at No. 102 Sher- tions, unless some remedy be found.|iaan Road, to which Col. Green had are likely to repeat themselves 'M) journeyed on a 68-cent ticket in the even more viclous.torms at this time] ingy smoker of a commuter train, he next year; third, the speculator, legi- | nerged with his bride, who was Miss tiken @ 1arg®) stanel e, Harlow, and sald: | Part of the money now being paid by! we came out on the porch here to wet our pictures taken, I want to show the world what a fine little wife get your machine guns Mr. Hoover calis attention to the fact that the 1917 wheat crop prom- ises Lo yleld 678,000,000 bushels, and that the normal consumption and seed requbrement amounts to about 600,000,000 ‘bifshels, leaving a theo- tical export balance of 78,000,000 While the camera men were gettin set the bride sald: “He ta the fines! man, and | am so happy"-— when he Interrupted “Look up Into my eyes, darling, as the photographer there says.” And she did ols. The conservation measures are al- rfdy having a marked effect,” says Mr. Hoover, “and it ts not too much to hope that the national saving may be $0,000,000 to 100,000,000 bushels, and t © the export balance in creased to, say, 158,000,000 oF 180,- 900,000 Bush: “The experience this year in the rampant speculation, extortionate profits and the prospect of even nar rower supplies than tho 1916 harvest and carry-over, must cause deepost anxiety. No bettor proof of the hard- ships worked upon our people during the last year need be adduced than yet wheat has been as high as $8.25 at Chicago and the price of flour has been from time to time based upon this speculative price of wheat, s0 that through one evil cause or an- other the consumer has suffered from 50 to 100 per cent, and vhe producer | has gained nothing. “In order to do Justice to the pro- ducers, who have shown great pa- trictism in @ a effort to increase $6°% line as well as materi production in and further to stimulate the efforts of 1918, it Is ab- volutely vital that we shail protect er from a slump in price thia| to a glut as above or from! Uncontrolled decisions of one Refined Organdies Fluffy Dimities Hoover gayd that this year's wheat crop is “surrounded with eir- | cumstances new to history and that | the old distributing safeguards are torn away by isolation from the re clprocal markets abroad and the ex tinction of a free export market and frocks freo export transportation, This be higher priced dresses. ing the case, now that the new hur vest has begun to move, and from these very causes the price of wheat | has begun to drop, if the sell his furmer is to wheat either the speculator urn to the market and neces since | be greater, or the Gov- | Jale eriment must buy the surplus wheat Sale at at some ri 1 mum price, | Four trade to) proceed with proper safequards against epeculatio “We practically helpless to! eyuard either the farmer or the |consumer until the pending legisla FIRE RAZES SHIP PLANT. | ©Aygo.463 Fulton St.|14-16- Lightship PAST ipbuilding plant of Rice destroyed by tire to-day, + half-compl ral beam GAIN! The same story awlers a zen yachts and launches owned by suinmer residents he loss was estimated at . The lightehip was belng built under | overnment contract, and was to have i100 Work had Just starte trawlers. 4 on ts for 60 Years cor. 19th Street more than And the York, ate environs. and black—were $6 to $9 site" and low cut- were $5 to $10 f Ed F | aaam<n Thursday Sale mmm Soft and Dainty Summer Dresses the recitation of the fact that the pro: Refreshing in Fabric Fer bushel for the 1916 wheat harvest, and Design Soft as a Summer breeze, in l—those transparent, cool frocks upon which the Summer Girl dotes —a most unusual assortment. Novel Cross-Bar Effects \% Dresses which may be worn interchangeably with the highest-priced suits and -madeinexquisite taste and quite the equals of much Tremendous Assortment in Both White and Colors—Alterations Without Charge Pst al Nineteen West 34th Street Downtown: GAIN! month after month, year after year. For the week ending July 7 THE WORLD printed 78214 columns of advertising (218,100 agate lines), as compared with 67414 columns in the corresponding week of 1916, a gain of 108 columns (30,240 agate lines). THE WORLD printed 390 columns more than The Herald. THE WORLD printed 264 columns THE WORLD printed 31,730 separate ments in the one week ending July 7: THE WORLD is the HOME newspaper of New Its circulation is in the City and its immedi It is not scattered. Merchants and manufacturets who seck New York trade for mer- chandise or service realize that New York circula- tion is essential, hence THE WORLD'S leadership. nu, IMT oo TMT mga IMT ALIEN ENEMIES WARNED OUT OF FORBIDDEN ZONES Notices Posted Throughout City To-Day--Barred From Water Front. Agents of the Department of Jus- tlee, aided by the police, to-day con- tinued combing the water front for enemy sailors and longshoremen, United States Marshal Thomas D. McCarthy has posted notices along the New York water front warning enemy aliens off the docks, wharves and piers, and calling on citizens to notify hie office of.any violation of the order. A aimilar notice will b¢ posted ip Brooklyn to-day by Mat- shal James M. Power. Stull another bulletin to be posted to-day at armories, forts, camps, mu- nition piants and other restricted pla will remind allen enamles that they are forbiden to approach within half a mile, Brig. Gen. N. M. Wright, who haa assumed command of the United Staten Army plers, has made it evident he was not golng to take chances of any further leakage of news to the enemy. Following the discharge of every em- ployee whose loyalty to this country might In any way be questjoned, he has taken steps to strengthen the cordon of secrecy around the piers. So strict are the new orders that Not even a police detective wearing a shield is permited to aproach the piers day or night, and policemen on the far aide of the street are forbidden to cross over and accost a sentry. It became known to-day that a vig- orous search is being made for two mon said to have been seen on a roof near the pliers at the time of the sall- ing of the Pershing expedition. Infor- mation has been given to the autbor!- tles by a citizen who said he Knew, the men, and it ia thought likely they will be In eustody within twenty-four hours. Fashion Shops | Newark: Broad & Park Sta, Mth week after week, The American advertise- Reason? oe aE

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