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CLASH IN FACING Dictatorship of Proletariat De manded by Radicals—Keren- sky's ‘Blood and tron” Policy MOSCOW, Avg MT —This was the Gay when represent * drow here for aiionai WH peek oul freely and vole their ae Pirations in the consideretion of the military and pw that oo of the upe tin gathered ence, were ave be Chem the emphatic declaration of Premier Kereneky. He insisted, in perch bere, that the new « through @ period anger” and warned @memies within that the Government Benceforth “would be implaca in Pursuing “in crushing with blood and from all attempts with arn forces @gainst the pegple’ power Gpon the Kerensky Government ar Vastly mixed, There are banke: Fich landowners, conser sprinkling of yatiy tionaries — even insue is tehtly » and open dem- @cracy versus constricted reaction- @rism. Yesterday was devoted to confer- @nces of the different groups of dele- pally with the government's state ments, the reply to be made and the attitude to be taken at the general meeting. The Maximalists reached the con- clusion that the conference did not represent the will of the nation and ‘was of an anti-revolutionary charac ter. They decided to demand from the assembly a dictatorship of the proletariat, by the handing over of all Power to the Council of Workmen's &nd Soldiers’ Delegates, and voted to feave the hall if the majority should be unwilling to share their viewpoint. The Internationalists insisted on abolition of the death penalty and renunciation by the government of its Purpose to put down by force the separatists movements in Finland and Ukraine. The Popular Soctalists urged maintenance of the death pen- alty. At the meeting of Constitu- tional Democrats, Professor Paul Teached except in line with the na- Aional programme and that if Pre- imler Kerensky did not put into exe- the ruin of the country would be in- evitable. Premier Kerensky reviewed troops at the Hippodrome yesterday, and in addressing them said he was con- ‘vinoed by the valor they were show- ing that they would be able to drive back the enemy at the front and crush any attempt at a counter- revolution, Gen. Korniloff, the Commander-in- Chief, arrived from Petrograd and was greeted by great crowds. In an address he sald it was a source of satisfaction to be able to teil the army that Moscow was the watchword tor ‘the welfare of the country and war to a victorious end. alae EES U, S. WILL AID RUSSIA, President Sends Reassuring Message to the Delegates Now Gathered at Moscow, WASHINGTON, Aug. 27,—Presid Wilson sent to the members of the Na tlonal Council assembly at Moscow to: day assurances that this moral assistance” to the Gc of Russia, ‘The message addressed to the Pre’ dent of the National Conference As eembly, Moscow, reads: members of the Great Couinci! now meeting in Moscow the cordial greet ainst all enemies within ar without they can extend to the Gov iably united,’ FOR INDIGESTION YTHMODI MUSIC ROLLS. “Where Do We Go From Here?” The New Patriotte Song Roll. Try st om your Player. Muabe SWarerooms S Aves WIVALIDIBMT AS Be OCOuAAGeED The forces which will Iiterally pass) | Sufferers From Hypochondria, of Both Sexes, Have but to, Keep Their Minds and Hands’ Busy to Recover “Health” | and Become Patriots Useful | to the Country and Them-| selves—Dr. J. Gardner Smith of Exemption Board 1. Has a Sure-Shot Remedy. ates. The discussions dealt princi- | By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. IGHTING 1‘ the treatment prescribed for American men with imag inary diseases by medical members of exemption boards. Working is the free prescription offered to women hypochondriacs by Dr. J. Gardner Smith of Exemption Board No. 170 when I talked with him in his office at No. 21 West One Hun dred and Twenty-second Street. Remembering that his New York practice extended over a@ period of nearly thirty years, I had taken to him the wartime problem of a type especially numerous in large cities—the woman malingerer, she who “enjoy: Gracious, how she does enjoy it! At this time of year she {s sitting on hotel piazzas, discussing the occasions she has been under ether. If her hus- Fees hand's income doesn’t rise as high as the operating table, she compares notes on various bottled cure-alls. Her life's occupa: tion 1s and has been coddling herself and certain fashionable and hypo- thetical ailments. RS. CARRIE CHAPMAN CATT has aid that Just now there !s no more room for women slackers men," I observed to Dr. Smith. “What are we going to do with the ‘delicate’ woman, whose delicacy is as tmag' e heart trouble and poor ckers are claiming be- can't be taken, Milukoff said no solution could be cution the measures foreshadowed, eyesight the s fore your board? willy-nilly, into the army: “Nevertheless, war will cure an as- tonishingly large number of her,” Dr. Smith predicted confidently. “The best medicine in the world for the woman who believes she is ill when she i Many a woman thinks her health is poor because she has nothing 0 to think about. She lives with her husband in an apartment, and has a maid to do even the small amount of housework such a menage en- Such a woman steadying responsibility, no work in her home or out of it. the vacuum in her life she cre- ates the fiction of ill health.” with twinkling eyes, told the story of the young woman who went to a doctor and eld that she must have an operation, xumined her carefully She is child- not even Suffr: WILSON TELLS CONFERENCE women, jovernment 14 willing to extend “every material and ernment she was in perfect healt she persisted. Woimy friends have had one, and L am quite out of it unless I follow their example!” “Phat must have endicitis was the thing in |capitals, the sc “I take the Mberty to send to the less will be quieter, Women will get |more sleep {night afte: yst fashionable complaint now | neurasthenta, is it not?” ings of their friends, the people of the United States, to express the conti+ dence in the ultimate triumph of ideals of democracy and self government| smith. “Just the other day a young voman apeared with her husband be- board and pre- sented a doctor's certificate to the effect that she was neurasthania and therefore Gependent her husband for support earned $18 a week before a year ago and nut as neurasthent ¢ exclaimed with scornful emph “Work was exactly what that young woman needed,” he continued. “ which will take many a oft herself and her troubles, When the man who has been taking care of her goes to the front let her enlist for her battle on the , in the railroad yards or at the herself growing under the pressuve of a and to give thelr renewed assurance of every material and moral assistance ment of Russia in the promotion of the common ein which the two nations are a sufferer from Dont it Indigestion Spoil Your Pleasure Teasure| @ Six Bell-ans ar and get rid “Get rid of the a and distress, Get a 26 package. '@ harmless and it’s guaranteed | BEL LANS stronger daily HE present crisis should have psychological » idle woman who suf- grandmother this pseudo-Invalid ‘husband is enduring cold, dirt and all the other routine discom- if she knows that he may be havfng his arm am- moment when she indulges in an unnecessary fit of | bysterics, for very shame she will be knows that her whom 19 we: fis of wounds, THE EVENING WORLD; MONDAY, AUGUST 27, i917. n — less ready to coddle her own head- ache: and nerves. It is as if war laid a great, firm hand upon the souls and bodies of unoccupied women all over America. The bodies will be strengthened and disciplined by healthful, necesaery tasks in ins dustry, business, Government of- fies, on the farms and with the public utilit ith the groups organizing to do Red Cross work and send simple comforts to the boys in the trenches. The souls and minds will be keyed up to the great principles of se!f-sacrifice, loyalty, courage, endurance.” I thought, not for the first time, that the war is the most democratic thing that ever happened to Amert- can women, No other great issue, . has come home to | 50 many women in so many ranks of | soctety, Then I observed: “The war pro- gramme of food conservation ts go- ing to Improve the health of many Going light on sugars and fats will save them from illnesses | that, if not strictly imaginary, are at least unnecessary.” | ee" THAT ts true,” he agreed women, particularly tho: | do not do regular work or take regu- liar exereie, eat too much, Food economy will henefit them, as well as the country at laree, So will other changes in the national Hfe, while the war lasts, As in the European al Ii nd of belng out late “With so many of our doctors and nurses on the other side of the ocean, it is the special duty of every woman—and every man —who stays at home to avoid all ailments that can be avoided, There will be enough for the doc- tors to do, in any event, and in- validism as a fad should be dis- couraged. The bicycle first overrode the theory that it was reflnaed and lady- like not to be healthy, Then women discovered athletics, and many of the younger ores decided that tennis and wolf were preferable to heart palpt- tations and nerves, After the war the business of being a fashionable nvalid ought bankrupt.” / sso csinatal ala ‘Two Women Assaulted and Their ‘Throats Cut OMAHA, Neb, Aug. 27.-—Mra. C, L. Nethaway, aged fo living on a farm a few miles from this city, was Assaulted and murdered near her home yesterday afternoon, Her throat was cut, Twenty-four hours previously Mra, Christina Anderson, @ widow, aged forty-four, was Killed in her home In Omaha, her’ ti also being cut A negro has been arrested as @ sus- pect _ Canadian Ca Lint OTTAWA, Results of the heavy ne Canadian front are re casulty Hasta tot eek en, The mbers 327 wr0 UPSET ON HILL, WOMAN'S NECK BROKEN DEATH OF MISSING GIRL IN HOSPITAL REVEALS A CRIME: Swann Begins is devon! After Body Is Disinterre on Court's Order, District Attor to-day a searching investigation of the Backing to Caught under an overturning au- Singac, N, J. Mrs, Beulah widow of Montolair, 1s dead with @ broken neck. Duncan was motoring with Wyley, the brakes refused to work as he was going up the Schumann- iM, where on one side there When the car is a drop of 100 feet. began to slide Wyley backed It for safety in to the embankment, but it! Missing Persons, It was not unt! After Wyley had told his story he At the hospital it. was said tha was taken to the Mountainside Hos- Montclair, where he js under had “plent police watch, Mrs, Duncan forme: ‘TO ADOPT STAMP SYSTEM viok 6 8 in Value to Be Issued on the Lines Fol- Certificates as Low Details of the war savings certifies somewhat after the announced shortl stamp here doubt- MAY RUN AGAINST KNOTT IN RAGE FOR SHERIFF , Former Car r Coroner, Likely to other contestant in the med Mkely to-day friends want him e place allotted to David four favor of Al Sm This again A movement has been for him throug’ Razor When Arrent Charged with abduction and vioi ¢ Mann law on complaint of Mis 7 Oliver ation amunily 362 Twelfth St eetor ‘Dy ra staf? t he detective with action and 33 to Philadolyy death of Miss J phine Korn No, 245 Weat Dr. Otto Schultze, medical for the District Attorney's offic Miss Korner died on June 16 from an illegal operation but it was not until Friday last that, suspicion having been interment of the body was ordered by Supreme Court Justice aroused, the 4 Erlanger. On questioning other members 0! the girl’s family, Assistant Distric Attorney Joyce learned that she hac disappeared in May and that a report had been made to the Bureau o} turned over, throwing both occupants | Aug. 16 that the family learned shi imprisoning Mrs. Wyley limped to the Little Falls Po- Nee Station and got help. had died in the Beth Israel Hospital Peritonitis was given as the cause Mr. Swann says he has learned tha Deputy she was taken to the hospital by Mrs. the Tends Wax; No. 44 Avenue A, who Are Very Good Looking have double finger tips. Duncan and directed aid she had acted on the request o' that it be taken to the Kuntz Morgue, “a well known east side physician,’ Whose name the District Attorney 4 not yet ready to make public the girl came there in a motor ear eal 11.50 of nd refuse to give the names of f rela "NY tives me apparen lin the State of Jersey as an en aed ere he has been interned st He announced thi ¢ he would resume | would take ou the earllest ¢ rueckner, at t was head of th Home, an Institut seventy or elgnty Germar of whom were su to-day fron to deliver a serm .P. CAMPBELL’S y Swann undertook: | / . & West Forty-seventh Street. It. |!)\\|} became known through a report by, | ° | | nent, Th Good’ Friday 1 as he DR. "ARSENIC: -WAFERS # —— - — —— ACTIONS Fighting for the Men, Work for the Women, F\RSTCAVARY “t= °8 Se Fine Prescription to Cure Imaginary Ils AND SQUADRON A = ScseSoss oe ne ment of tbe 5 wer meee « ene Ree Ameren War ant the Phiene ' 10 MACHINE GUNS je eee ge eo ed ne at the « Departe oe coding Majer Troopers wa EB ype pon gry soggaalaalingae id Trained With Twenty- |" Vous seventh Division, Under the Preach recranatention | ena wet tee «ted at Mpartanbure | = HC. every member of the Piret Caw. | *° airy in the erent “send-off” paraae |. Neat Thursday will eventually beeeme y third and Beventy Aret Me a machine gue tor Ow Vey announcement | made that Hquadron A, which te @ mounted bed) having no military connection with the Miret Cavalry. | war . unted and t ned for ma . . * There are several hundred t sin Mquadron A. To-| day comes the unofficial announce: | ment that {1 will also be necessary | pital to take over the entire 1,600 mombers | 4 of the First Cay soon am the! ASSISTANT TO BARUCH. southern cantonment te reached ana| work of ree cing unite the rr is begun. | An officer at Division Meadquarters | WASHINGTON jot the National Guard explained that | !aee, general jac ree al Harvester | neh trenehe wanization of the Twenty. | "** 4 seventh Division will mean the organ. | SPpeinted Fell Suit and Cent Styles, ton, ‘ the work « « raw materials pp ened ony for the Up and the alll machine mun experts, When the New| Wnder Legge there will be a director | York tate troops pr 4 from Bouth | o¢ p Will be at Lew or of 04 will, have cha ransporte th PURCHASES MADE AUGUST 29TH, 30TH AND 31ST WILL | | APPEAR ON BILL RENDERED OCTOBER 1ST i} Fifth Avenue at Thirty-tifth Street New Autumn Fashions , WOMEN'S AUTUMN FASHIONS Women's Gloves , f t ; Women now speepering their Autumn wardrobes are Reduced for Fall already visiting Best's aovance showing of coats, suits and Anticipate gowns fcr street, afternocn and evening wear, Needless} Your Veeds/ to say, they find here only fashions that represent the , damier cri (a distinction and exclusiveness. First—Gloves at ,65 that were s -85 and 1,00, a In fine quality black hit The New Fall Blouses sii, 36 button length.” They [lll G tl Here is one of Georgette, prettily beaded and lined with » ||| chiffon, coliar and cuffs of white Georgette. This blouse | Second—].50 Gloves that ccmes in the new Fall shades, Main Floor | were 1.85. White glace kid gloves, two-clasp style, with oversewn seams and back stitchings in self or two colors. Miss was twenty sthree | Chinese Braided Effects ; years old and. wa described ag un- ||) | Acd a Fascinating Touch Bini fo 2.25; 1 c torne oyer j P| ore. ‘ will have shure ot the invetigation. | Ili To This Serge Frock for Misses White washable doeskin, with ||| OF WAR SAVING: IN U, S.| Picture it—long, narrow, loose serge panels over a skirt P.X. M. sant sigs. through), ji! | MORE NEGRO TROOPS | of satin, eac® panel edged in exquisite braid embroider: fell uw male Ny Bagel a ( | bright colors, The waist is surplice with a long rolling auntlet effect, and contrasting |}!!! TO GO TO HOUSTON, TEX, | || white satin collar, High cuffs nave Chinese effects Ihe ks; (2) The strap wrist style {f})\ ’ |) You'll love the dress. 3d Floor with spear backs embroidered in ||! The 8th Ilinois From Chicago, All Will Colored, on Their Way—Bell |] 49.50 Fourth—Kid Gloves at 2,25» || Expects No Trouble, | GRR CONES Gere, usually 2,50, | STON 1g. 21, — More} Iliflil i . You may have them In Fall an tae are te ba a Hontien’ [| & Cheviot Suit for Misses shades—champagne tan, brown, before ldespite rioting of negro regulars here To Wear on Brisk Autumn Days Perrin’s make, at, saspe_ with i MAS Seca MANGE Gian —Bell Lah a suit you'll slip on tor an invigorating walk when the Sears Qa eN 8 brag cae the Blenth. linole Infantry” all ne | first tang of Autu'nn comes. The coat is a with a wide Main Floor Hala Gant hare, Hell aiaead | belt, and great spac vee packals that hang loose, You'll control them and will | like the soft inlaid velvet collar against your neck. You , a) : Mice wit eee uttNey lil may have it in any cf Autumn's ricn dark colors. 3d Fi, Women's Stockings rouble aa ; At Marked-Down | WASHINGTON, Aug 7.—Pres 39 50 ‘ I Jdent Wilson was appealed to to-day | . Prices | y the Texas Congres al dele | | all egro tro out 4 Y, R ki y 5. il | the ent! For the Girl and Fillet, 10 to 16 weight cotton, fast black. ‘Thev're | tion, Has Oriental Embroi ery strong-—double garter tops make INTERNED “PREACH ER FREE. —in fact, there's a delightful square Chinese effect to the | i at | | whole dress, It has a pleated skirt pnd quaint stitched | For 1,.35—Other times 1.75. | deer citer cmeeier Damar | designs in broad bands around the waist. A girl can't White thread silk stockings, with | | camrahy Habebints Sik Arsk Man 0) f | help looking distinctive in this frock, 3d Floor black clocks, hand made. Cot | tops and soles make them sere 25.00 i ee Main Floor Fashionable Fall Footwear For Women and Misses Featuring the new Mililary Models, with low walking heel. Moderately priced. 3d Floor. In Tan Russian Calf, straight tips, Illustrated on the left. 8.00 In Tan Russian Calf, with fawn cloth tops or all Tan Russian Calf, Illustrated on the right. 8.50 MN a rnin Minitlu’* You Never Pay More at Best’s’’| cide lil bli sal