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Ce Seer an hea WILSON OPPOSES WHISKEY SEIZURE Minus “Bone Dry” Clause ‘a! of the Senate. -INNEW FOOD LAW) GERMAN PRINCE “President Backs House Bill,| Engagement of Miss Hunting-| i AMERICAN WINS GIRL WOOED BY ton Recalls Blighted Ro- mance of Kaiser’s Son. Women Make | Woman’s Service Club Oper- ates Thirteen Kitchens for Demonstration, i WASHINGTON, July 14.—Preaident | The Hohengollerns have suffered ‘Wilson has made known his views on food legisiation in general in a lettor to Senator Martin, the Democratic floor leader. Before the Senate votes on Food Control Bill, however, ‘Mr, Wilson will indicate clearly to| The Hohengollern who gets the Marguerite Mooers Marshail. members of both Houses what he thinks <i the matter. Tn his letter to Senator Martin the President gave his reasons for favor- tng the Lever bill as it passed the House, with the exception of the Viquor section, and opposed the Goro substitute food measure with its broad, liquor-commandeering Smoot ‘ amendment. With the “bone dry” amendment eliminated, the measure will provide the machinery to contro] food condi- tions that the President believes ts vitally needed, AS passed by the House, it vents heavding and wasting of the food supply, authorizes the President to Moense business, to purchase and sell necessaries, to purchase and- requisition the necessary plants, and to fix the minimum price guarantees, | (The Prosident wrote that he be-— lived unnecessary the intention of | Government control as proposed in tollern would never be permitted to|ment house within the libraries’ ter- Qmendmente attached in Congress Of ary outside the encred circle of| ritory, ro} steel, tron, copper, cotton, wool, leath~ er and other products. | His objections to the Gore propost- tion are much the same as those voiced by supporters of the food control programme in Congress. In accord with them the President tndi- cates that it will exempt from the control of the Food Administrator meat and provision packing houses, commission men, coal sellers and other dealers in domestic kage ties. One of the most vital defects of the | Gore plan, as viewed by the Govern. | | ment, is that the proposed contro] | over exchanges dealing in euch com- | Modities are Mmited to transactions of an interstate nature, and because, while seemingly prohibiting the ac- quiring and storing of food products _ for future sale, it really permits dealers to make a market whenever | ; a, cen. Proposition to place the control food products under a board of t@ considered od, Hi of embarrassing Herbert C, + Who has been selected for } Administrator, Hoover be one @ member Although the “dry” lobby is as well satisfied with the Gore sulmtitute as are the meat and provision packe: the cold storage dealers and wheat farmers, there, uppears to: be very good reason to justify the pre diction that the Gore substitute measure will be “canned” either by the Senate or by tho conference committee and that it will never reach the President. There is little doubt that if the Smoot amendment were before tho through Senators have for the Prohi ists who kept a vigi! ir Benators” until and those of “big busine: obeyed. Diietesetiiet P. §. C. to Fix Own Power, ALBANY, July 14.—The right of the Public Service Commission of the Sec- ond District to authorize twenty-eight iyaciion companies to increase thoir fares from 6 to 6 cents will be decided by the commission next Wednesday, it Was announced to-day at the close of the second hearing on the fare | crease question. The indications are that the commission will decide that it das the power, if the railroads prove the ity for the increase ne Burning ltehing PimplesonFace Started with Blackheads. Caused Loss of Sleep. One Cake Cuticura Soap and One Box Cuticura Oint- meat Healed in Two Weeks. “I discovered a small number of Blackheads scattered on my face. | eed different soaps, but by so doing these blackheads changed to pimples. First the pim- | pee were small and red ut later they grew larger and caused ternble itching and burning and loss of seep. “T sent fora fre: of Cuticura which showed a most wonderful improve- 80 I purchased a cake of Cuticura ey a box of Ointment and at the ‘end of two weeks | was healed. Alhadeff, 21 Rivington Str lew York City, January 24, 1917. Clear the pores of impurities by daily tse of Cuticura Soap and occasional touches of Cuticura Ointment, For Free Sample Each by Return | card: **Cutieura, Sold everywhere. 25c. Ointment 25 and 50c. - ; day was a big strain on the fire and| another reverse in the announcement | , that Miss Olive Huntington, daugh- ter of *"rs, Channing Moore Hunting- | ton, » going to be married to Joseph je istopher Worth of Norwich, Conn. | blow over the heart is Prince Jo ohim, the Kaiser's sixth and youngest son. Miss Huntington and Prince Jo-| achim met in Egypt four years ago. She was a pupil at the Willard School, Berlin, Prolonging the Easter vaca-| tion of 1918, some of the young wom- en of the Willard School and their chaperons went to the Land of the |Pharaohs. Prince Joachim and his ‘suite were there, His imperial pap: | had exiled him temporarily for @ lit- tle note-indorsing affair, Mise Olive Huntington made a great j impression on Prince Joachim. She was then scarcely nineteen yeara old. Sho has brown hair, dark eyes and a creamy complexion. Sho is @ fine musician, a graceful dancer, | tennis player, equally | doors or out. Constantly seeking her goclety, Prince Joachim did not give a rap if his daddy sent him to the centre of Africa—if Mise Huntington were there, But his devotion was hopeless. | In the first place, she did not return | it, Second, she knew that a Hohen-/| tractive in. ity, So Miss Huntington said she was so glad to have met him and! came on home, Mr. Worth and M Huntington | are old friends. +t not a bit) princely. He works for a living makes @ good one in the real estate busin: | The Prince? Oh, yos, he's married— the Princesa Marie Augustine of An- halt, whose family dates back io 1089, But that doesn’t mean that Mr. Worth hasn't handed him one, | RUNS THE FERRY NOW | AS THE COLONEL LIKES Roosevelt Party Delayed, Its Leader fr Fumes, and Line’s Manager Takes His Suggestion, GREENWIOH, Conn., July 14,—Bo- [cause Col, Theodore Roosevelt was | held up one hour last Sunday waiting in Greenwich for the ferry to Oyster | across Long Island Sound has been) changed, so that the steamer Oyster Bay may be always on time in the future. } Col, Roosevelt, Mrs. Roosevelt and | & friend came over on the 11 o'clock | boat from Oyster Bay and on their return arrived at the Greenwich | landing at 3.60, ‘The boat was due to depart at 4, but it was 5 o'clovk be- fore the Oyster Bay finally pulled out. Meantime the Colonel, out of patience, sought the manager to learn the cause of the delay. It was explained that running the boat at top speed for twelve hours a engine room crew, and steam was Ukely to get low in the afternoon, |“Then why don't you cut out a trip and give ‘em a chance to get thelr | breaths?” asked the Colonel, |_ “That's « good idea and we'll do it,” said the manager. } So the 12.01 trip has been omitted, with the boat runs on time, | On the trip that caused the protest the manager finally had the laugh on | the Colonel, After the boat had | reached Oyster Bay the Colonel's auto, in charge of a negro, reused to start, 3: held up a long string of cars tn line. u're causing a delay, Colonel,” the ferry manager, | JAPAN WON'T VIE WITH US | IN NAVAL EXPANSION | No Need of It, Kato Tells Peers, and | It Would Be Impossible for Lack of Money. TOKIO, Japan, July 14.—Being asked |in the House of Peers if Japan tntehds to keep pace with the United stat naval expansion, Minister of Mari Kato answered that there ts no need of doing #0, and besides, 1t would be tm- possible in Japan's financial condition, Sakue Takahash! said he asked th question because he thought Japan's oc cupation of South Sea Islands influenced the future relations between Japan and the United States, y | called i ,BLACKTON QUITS VITAGRAPH. HAVE SPECIAL EXHIBITS. All Attending Give Pledge of Household Economy for Country’s Good, O create a new channel for Her- bert Hoover's food propaganda, conservation clubs for women Popular by Teaching Food | Saving in Public Libraries ‘Hooverizing’ the United States are co-operating In this campaign, ‘The war medal was conceived by the American Fund for) French Wounded, and the profits from its sale are to be used to carry on its relief work abroad among American soldiers and in war-strick- en sections of oad ‘The first three medals struck off in gold have been taken to co by Mise Morgan Prelimi D ————— aries in Several Dis-| tricts Completed; Others End Delay. EXEMPTION BOARDS RUSHING WORK FOR DRAFT NEXT WEEK. THE WORLG SENDS 39 SOLDIER BOYS One, and All Are Volun- tary Soldiers, TO FTN LE First Class Warriors, Every where she hi Field Marshal sented them to re, former Promier Vivian! and President Poineare, An- other gold medal was given this week to Mme. Sarah Bernhardt. al medals are to be presented to the leaders of other allied nations, and meanwhile replicas are being struck off for the pubile, Addition. Theodore Spicer-8lmson is signer of the medal. js under the direction of Mrs. Ethel- bert Nevin, Cyairman of the Ameri- ¢ being opened) can F the de- Ita distributio: i Every registration boarddn the city has turned over, or #8 ready to deliver, the properly sorted registration cards to the local exemption boards, Chair- ! man Boyle of the Board of Control | announced to-day. This means that the preliminary work of the exemption boards can now go forward with few delays, and it 4s belleved they can finish their work and be ready for the drawing in nine men from the various depart- newspaper contingent so far contrib- uted by any dally journal in the couv- try. When the call for mobilization comes to-morrow more than thirty- menta of The New York World will answer it. This represents the biggest There may be better men enrolled in Uncle Sam's fighting ranks, but The | Many of them are giving special ex- | hfbits and demonstrations of con- g00d | serving food and outting the cost of in the public Ji- braries of New York by the Na- tional League for Woman's Gervice. Demonstration “" heen opened in J ‘ some of the . * branch Ubraries. ind for French Wounded, and the Executive Committee, which in- cludes Mrs. Lewis B. Stillwell, Chair- man, Miss Elizabeth Scarborough, Secretary; Miss Morgan, Treasurer Mra. A. M. Dike, Miss Elisabeth Mar- bury, Mrs. Frederick H. Allen and Mrs, Schuyler Van Rensselaer, The headquarters of the fund are day at the latest. the exemption boards, one cal delay, have virtually ccased, that New York City ts started, it 1s expected to make up for lost time. Washington by next Thursday or Fri- Resignations from Now ‘ew York World doesn't think #0, from the “big boss" to the smallest office boy. The men mentioned below were among the very first to the call to arma, and there is no doubt but what they are going to give great accounts of themselve of wer kitcheas also have} in the Old phine. surgical dressin ‘colony Club Buildin; No, 122 Madison Avenue, and it ‘has been shipping to Paris an 400 cases of supplies each week. This represents & monthly average of 500,000 articles, including garments, bedding, and instruments, anti-tetanus serum unite and mor- The fund has been ‘erage of entirely Five boards have finished thelr work up to the point of turning over their duplicate cards to the Mayor for for- warding to the Adjutant General. More than 80 per cent. of the boards, ac- cording to Roscoe Conkling, have or- nized. Approximately 185 out of 189 local boards have obtained head- mobilization, wants to take this op- portunity to 1 “All the tuck in the world, boys, and when you get back there's going to be some big doings!’ to be soldiers or ‘The Evening World, on the, eve of These World men are either in the olive drab of the military arm or the! blue of the naval arm some part of every day, drilling, studying, learning | liors and, from all) |than two weeks ago, and already | all the performances, at Uwing. The campaign was begun less thirteen branches in various parts of the city have established specialized departments of home economics which are designed to bring the food propaganda into every home or apart- The branch ibraries which already have been organized include the Washington Heights Branch, Fort Washington Branch, Bt. Agnes Branch, Woodstock Branch, Melrose Branch, Mott Haven Branch, One Hundred and Twenty-fifth Street self-supporting and all the work is done by volunteers. It is now offi- cially recognized by the French Gov- ernment as an auxiliary agency in caring for the wounded in military hospitals, has become affiliated with the American Ambulance Fieid Ser- vice and will extend its work to caro quarters. The five districts which have made up_thcir serial turned in their cards are those in Districts No, 110, No. 142, No. 175, No. In these districts tered on June § may 182 and No, 185. those who regi number lists and reports, themselves. to go to France, and there's the great- majority of them will get before many months have gone by, before the rendering good account of! Most of all, they want est Itkelihood in the world that the ver there Some of the men were members of for wounded American, soldiers, FUSION LEADERS IENORING CROPSEY Branch, Harlem Branch, Riverside Branch, One Hundfed and Fifteenth | Street Branch and the Morrisania Branch, The Central Library has be- gun the circulating of Mr, Hoover's bulletins and will give special dis- attract the attention of readers, The thirteen libraries which the league has organized have started ome economics clubs for thelr wom- en readers, where they will gather each month for the exchange of in- formation pertaining to the food problem., Members of the clubs will carry thé discussion of the food situ- ation into their apartment houses, for the Hay, the schedule of the new ferry|P/¢deing themselves to interest cach of their nelghbors in the economics which will ald the Government in keeping the wolf from the door. 4 188) FLORENCE OVERTON, | es manager of tho circulating de- partment of the main Ibrary, 1s co- operating helpfully in the work of using the libraries to eave food with Mrs. Irving Brock, Chairman of the want to give them definite and York get information ry OR the benefit of United States aviators two weeks of grand opere will begin next Tuesday night at Columbia University, under the auspices of the Aviation Committee of the National Special Aid Society, No. 269 Fifth Avenue. Mrs, William Allen Bartlett, Chairman of the committee, and her aids are selling tickets for which will the Metropolitan ny, the Boston National oppear stars from Opera Compi um by members of the Junior League and daughters of officers stationed at Govornor's Island, Among them | He Will Pat Out yen Year of J. Stuart Blackton, who helped found the Vitagraph Company of| America and was its Vico Pfemident, | has resigned his office, it was learned yesterday, to become an independent produ It ig understood Mr, Blackton retains his financial inter- eat in Vitagraph, which was re- last summer by B, » & Vice President of an ‘Tobacco Company; Clen: |denin J. Ryan, son of Thomas j Kyan, and H. H, Vreeland, the trac- tion inan With an entire organization of his own, Mr, Blackton will produce four | big photoplays a year which will be dis- ributed “by the Paramount Pi The first will be rele The Paramount ts one of \the strongest distributing organizations in the movie world and handles th films of the Famous Players-Lasky Cor- poration : nee Berry, Army Aviator, A divorce was granted Mrs, Elizabeth Berry of No. 387 Frank- lin Street, Brooklyn, from George M. | Berry, an‘officer in the Army Aviation Corps. A nurse ars emplo the two invalid ehildr is named in the tes dren ure in the cust will be the Misses Marjorie Elias, | Edith Morgan, Helen Huntington orence Stillman, Natalie Will not Gregory, Therese Hohooff an Mrs, McAllister Colman. On the ev nings of July 17 and 19 "La Boheme, Puccini, will be given; July 21 4 6 Faust; July 24 and 30, “Tosca, and July 28 and a1 will be the double bill of “Cavalleria Rusticana” and “Pagiiace!. Commander Peary, Lord North- | cliffe, Admiral Fisk and other well | known men will make brief speeches at the performances in the interests | of aviation, and the net proceeds of | the sale of tickets for the opera will |go to the Aviation Committee of the National Special Aid Society. Tickets | may be procured at Columbla Un \ versity Aero Club of America, IN TICKET PLANS plays to books on home economies to| Adamson Slated for Alder-| manic Head—County Fu- sion Still Undecided. The Fuston managers to-day seemed to go ahead with their plans without considering Jacob Liv- ingston, leader of the Brooklyn Re determined publican organization, This may re- sult in a red hot Republican primary | fight between Mayor {Mtchel, who Is favored by the Fusion leaders, and Sropsey, favored by Mr, Liv- ‘usion Committee's Bub-Com- mittee on Nominations meets again Tuesday and may settle the question of nominating men for county and ju- diciary offices, Platform Committee will meet to con- sider suggestions for the platform, of any one. se YANSCI DOLLY DIVORCE OFF Also She Is Sorry f ‘Tries to Have Record Destroyed. case by askin divorce suit be destroyed. has denied the also ts filed. tnued. The cour! jd in an’ affidavit: e “complaint $ brloases 3 which re ‘unfavorably, on | whatever happens I shall feel proud Orgran the Coleako Opera. don | mi character, and to. permit'the same | of them; butt would like a chance to ch ticket, costing $2.50, bosides | ty” remain on’ file and a public record | say egodby to my boys and foe! the admission to the opera, entitles tho| would seriously impair and endanger | {0¥ KeOdDY to my rvs and holder to refreshments served on the | my standing In the community and my | thrill of the brave boy ey ewing lawn outside the Columbia gymnasi- iness relations.” past on their way to At a later hour the reached, for, though fairly strong in Charges, and Yanscl Dolly Fox, one of the Dolly Sisters, and her husband, Harry Fox, have merely added to the papers in the that the records of her equest, and its decisl “rhe sult’ has been discon: Fox, who also is on the stage, erein contains alle- military organizations state of war with Germany was de a astened to enlist at learn their serial local headquarters. Mr. Conkling said to-day: “Although resignations from ex- emption boards are no longer trou- dling us, we want to make it clear that no resignations are valid until | >! they have been made by mail to the Mayor formally accepted. A member of a board who has resigned should keep on with bis work until relieved by his successor. We appre- ciate the ctice of’ the various boards in reporting to Mr. McCook of the Mayor's Committee the progress they are making.” Few local boards reported direct to the Mayor's Committee yesterday, but the reports made to the Adjutant General in Albany were available. Mr. McCook again asked that tho newspapers request the local boards to communicate to the committee the location of their headquarters as soon |as established, so that the informa- tion could be made public. WHOLE CITY TO PAY TRIBUTE 10 FIGHTERS ON “SENDOFF” DAY (Continued from First Page.) numbers at the And that these might be en- for the Nation, Evening World which sald that men who may be called into active service in the National Guard, Naval Militia, Army or Navy Reser’ who mf&y volunteer for service these organizations, will have the dif- ference World in every case where their Fed- eral pay is less than their World arte: MEN ARE AT THE FRONT. city posted such a notice. of the men who had enlisted or volui pendents during their term of servic from the nine stout hearts, Department is the Colonel which he has vice, both here at Mexican border Jast summer, where he gained his high with his regiment, Arthur J. McKeogh, Jonata Stotme Bocnoni ite Committe While many preliminary moves are|| SHOW THE SOLDIERS bes AER Braker tras on, : sboeget . | vet to be made, it ts almost certain " ¢ and Miss Mary Humphrey, the field | {hat the Mayor, the Comptroller and|| 4S WELL AS THE FLAG, mission. Herb Roth, the artist, and organizer, | Borough President Marks will be re- AND AID RECRUITING || tions ate enilsted in the N eh gy bed “The object of tho organization of | MoMInAted jah aig sour Pad sais care |the Mbraries is to reach the women | {gnated to run against’ Frank Dow. 2 GE Seven men of ‘The Evening World| | who can't be reached through leagues | ling for the Presidency of the Board '¢ are not ashamed to shoto our |) editorial staff have signed ¥P wit ol a ' vor'g of Aldermen, and that the Fusion |] fag. Let ua not be afraid to parade || Uncle Sam. Three are in the Reserve Or, clube) and to get Mr, Hoovers Of Aldermen, and that the Fusion Mtaes open Officers’ Training. Camp at Flatts Problem into every home in New | oq yee tien , agi rv "an || 0UtE—Bozeman Bulger, the ‘baseball York City,” said Mrs. Brock. “If the! ‘This leaves the question of who more recruiting virtue in |) writer, who has been recommended themselves do not come to the | shall be chosen for the Borough Pres- || @ marching reoiment off to the front || for the rank of Major; Joseph A We expect to reach them | idencies in Queens and Richmond || than in all the anceches ever made.— || rady and Gerald C. Smith, The othe their children with pamph-|wide open, and some deep politics} Col. Theodore Roosevelt four are Sergt. Richard P. Freye jlets and with attractive displays. We|may be played before a decision 1s of the Quartermaster's Department, Great Britain found that hustling curate information on the Govern- Queens, the Mayor is known to need |] her troops away by night and se- %| 13, Seventh Regiment and Private H aL AN pC La any ite, show them | real support in Richmond. eretiv did mare to iniure veorutting 11H: Han, also of Company B ot exactly how they can help, and when| While the senomination of Mr. A e eventh, James Mund they start their economies we want | Marka will not meet the approval of || Man anv other single cause—Brik. 1) rivets attached to Second Brigad iem to know exactly what they are|a great many men most active in the |{ Gen. White, in charge of the British || Headquarters in Brooklyn. about, Fusion cause, he has the best chance || Recruiting Mission. 1 feel that if the women of New | otany om : PRESSROOM SENDS MANY MEN GIVE OUR BOYS THE SEND-OFF couraged all the more to “do their a notice was posted on the bulletin board of every department of The World and The ‘any tween their Federal pay and their World salaries, for the duration of the war, made up to them by The DEPENDENTS CARED FOR WHILE Only one other newspaper in this It served to set completely at rest the minds teered as to*the welfare of their de- The list of The World men who are subject to the call of the Government for military or naval service ranges Tag rank of Colonel to the arduous duty of the private and com- prises thirty-nine stiff backs and thir- Reginald L. Foster of the Sunday of the Twelfth Infantry, a regiment with seen many years of ser- home and on the rank, being 4 Major when he went to the border also of the Sunday department, has Corp!. Eugene J. O'Brien of Company A SOLDIER BELONGS FIELD ARTIL- LERY—Red hat cord; leather leg- wings; crossed guns on collar. COAST ARTIL- LERY—Red hat cord; canvas leg- sings; crossed guns and shell tn red diso on collar, crossed guns on collar. CAVALRY— Yellow hat cord; leather leggings; crossed sabres on collar. QUARTER. MASTER CORPS —Oream hat cord; canvas leggings; eagle, wheel, key ‘and sabre on col- lar. CORPS OF mounted, castel- lated towers on MEDICAL CORPS — Maroon and white hat cord; canvas leg- wings; caduceus on collar, SIGNAL CORP: —Orangeand Crossed signal flags and torch on collar, AVIATION SECTION, Signal Corp s—Orange and white hat ‘ord; woolen put- tees; winged hemisphere on collar. “U. 8." on the collar means Regu- lar Army; the initials of a State in- dicate National Guard, and “U. 8. R." indicate Regular Army Reserve. Student officers wear no collar in- signia; they have red, white and blue hat cords; canvas leggings. In some camps they wear an arm band with the letters R. 0. T. C., meaning “Reserve OMcers’ Training Corp: All commissioned officers have « band of braid at the cuff: oMcers from Colonel down have binck and gold hat cords; general officers ha: gold cords; officers wear knee-high leather legeiggs, though woolen put~ tees are permitted. Officers wear ‘lack braid in a scroll on the sleeves of the overcoats, one strand in braid for each grade in rank from a Sec- ond Lieutenant up. department {s in the pressroom con- tingent, which has enlisted sixteen Thomas Madigan is a Second Liew tenant in the Forty-seventh Infantry, Harry Atwood ts a Sergeant in the |same regiment and Edward O'Brien a private. In the Seventy-first Infan- try are Corpl, James A. Farrell, who is In the machine gun company, and E. Pendleton, both of whom saw aer- vice on the border. In the Twoaty- third Infantry, which also gave them service in the “late unpleasantness” r|with Mexico, are Lester Collins, Jo- r|seph Moran, Robert Taylor and Law- rence. Condon. ‘Two men in the press- room staff are in the Naval Ri o— Michael Hayes and Thomas O'Brien, In the Thirteenth Coast Artillery are Frederick Carlson and John Whelan, © | and Charles Denan is in the “Fignt- ing Sixty-ninth,” and Walter Spleth is in the ranks of the Fourth Infantry of New Jersey. William Ball is in the Fourteenth Infantry and saw ser- | mist | Regiment. “STUDENT-OFFIGERS USE in the Thirteenth Cot William H. Moore, a a first class printer at~ Naval Publicity Bu- Books, fireman, In the accounting department (er- @id J, Ednie has become Corporal in the Thirteenth Coast Artillery and J. 8. Callahan is a member of the Sev enty-first Regiment. Paul Burgdort of the cirowlation department is in th Second Field Artillery and A, EF. | Lnephard of the classified advertising department is a Captain in the Com- ry Department of the Twelfth BOMBS AT PLATTSBURG Battalions, on the Hike, Will Fight Sham Battles Next Week, PLATTSBURG, N. Y., July 14. —Field manoeuvres on a large scals, including trench digging, bomb throwing and general battle problems will be begun at the officers’ training camp here next week. Two battalions will leave the camp Monday and march north in the direction of the Canadian line by different routes. ‘They will camp that night about sev- en miles apart and early Tuesday morning will engage in battle, offi- cers of the Regular Army acting an umpires and deciding at the close of the problem which of the contending forces has won. YOUNG ORPHAN GIRL | How She Was Cured. Had Headaches, Dizzy Spells, Awful Pains, Could Not Work. “Tam an orphan gitl, and when only seventeen years old had to sup- port myself, but [ would have such sick spells every month that I would have to stay at home from work, and I could not afford to do it. I also had headaches, dizsy spells and a pain in my side. My sister told me Hhow much Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound had helped her, 60 I began taking it. The result is I am now in good health and never lose a day from my work, and you may publish my letter to show other girls the good Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound will do.”—Miss MARIE SCHMELTZ, 84 Gardner St., Troy Hill, N. 8. Pitts- burgh, Pa. This good old root and herb rem- edy has proved unequalled for period- ical suffering of young womeng it contains what {8 needed to restore healthful conditions, Write the Lydia E, Pinkham Medi- cine Co, (confidential), nn, Mass., for free advice if you need it—Advt. TRY THEM The next time you suffer with headache, Boe anienet bilious- ness or loss of appetite, try— BEECHAMS PILLS ‘The World composing room force Sale of Lepsd Sateen te fin the Werld. advocating “Send-Off Day" for the troops, has been in receipt of hun- dreds of letters praising the move- ment, Fully 50 per cent. of the com- munications are from mothers, al- though many are from tho soldiers themselves. “It isn’t in human nature,” writes t| one woman, “for a soldier on his way possibly to give up hia life for his country to feel happy or spirited over being secretly smuggled away from home under cover of darkness, Ihave three boys in the National Guan, and War Dept.—U Lime from us to protect the summer. That's what Uncle 2 | tonal Bpecial Ald Society and the Metropolitan Opera Ho . in your garbage can, sink, toilet bowl, privy, ¢ 188 ANNE MORGAN ‘s one of etc. Acme kills germs and destroys odors instantly. | the leaders in a new campaign ‘to raise half a million dollars for the At your grocers, 15. ‘R substitutes. wounded soldiers of America and! bed 1 W8e. ‘Refuse, France by the sale of a medal com- memorating the entry of the United DISINFECT NOW! States into the world war i} Women and women's clubs all over tas ordered five hundred thousand containers of Chlorinated You, too, can protect the health of your family by using . S. Government health of our boys in camp this Sam thinks of Chlorinated Lime. pool, slop bewl, accurate t next move of the Mitchel . 3 ws INTO THE ARMY. only as to how they can help AMr.|Fusoniaty wil be. toward gathering THAT'S COMING TO THEM. The greatest number of World men | vice at the border. Hoover but to the actual food situa: | into the fold as many ant\-Tammany in military organiaations from one tion, and if they got waked up and|organisations as possible. ‘This is baad. educated, {t will help us to fight the| partly the purpose of the meeting| ‘Rey are to recglve a fitting “God food speculator and that 1s a fight] on Tuesday. speed” from an appreciative public AENEAN SE NE AE IE which, 8 bound to come sooner or The Evening World, since it began a A Vacation Necessity °: The World 1917 :: Summer Resort Annual 64 Pages of Reliable Places for Rest and Recreation For Sale - - Price 5 Cents Atall World offices and at your nearest Liggett-Riker-Hegeman drug stote in Manhattan, Brenx, Brooklyn, Jersey City and Newark. By mail from World office, 10 cents. Lincosinenisileesiedachlachteleaindridadia facie ivindis do-indnds dodniodedaiurind’ NANA RNAS RRA RIOAI HRA ANNA AR AAA RR AAA ARR ATA AAR