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GUARDS WHO SHOT PRISONER TRIED IN ora nn tantry; Private. William 106th Field Artitie M. Roy and Embre ©. 1 Artillery. ¢ and Don- In Public School Still TN ARMY CHIEFS IN Needed to Protect Lives eniisted men ha storred to the aviation Corps, and ordered to Ca faniary Detachment 16h Infantry: | Evening World’s Successful Plan to Feed Hungry Kiddies _—_ hari Jacke __ Camp Wadsworth Victim Was '°\'" Machine Gun Battallon. Without Pauperizing Them Is More a Necessity This \\.<¢ of Them Involve Old aus = - A ver of new buildin to! H , ‘tat Trying to Escape—Xe- |» Se ie Linea] «=| (LORE That Ever Before—Great and Lasting Good (yrjcers whose Activities 7 a . Nae ee Ge Be | Stier eee Was Accomplished Last Year, a Fact Testified To by Aré Lessenied quittal Expected. unica and laborers are being used Both Principals and Teachers. | fat ates 7 " after on elvilian will be em ogo peaked teria han, beat vae- sieaba aipeal . woul oe ee Rear RIE Winn rat Oe re ony any A * WASHINGTON, Jan, 26,—Sinee the BURG, J 26.—Private Farl 1 ne coun How to Send Money Contributions nate Committes on Miltary Af. | Laird, C I, 108th Infantey the negroos, bave A fairs, of which Senator Chamberlain wee of . owns. Sust ene no adoner of ty Chateman, began investignting Beal ot the nentrise. who, 34 of Commindoner To Evening World School Lunch Fund | «o'r. terns tnventmuns A of who Ww whiskey ts baling wold astm gen have taken place trying to es 0 ee livre in, Southorn training camps your contributions to t oo] Children's Lunch Fund,” q:nong higher oflcials of the War guardhe Wed y wae halle whines te onuceied te wait oof The Byening World Department, by order of Secretary pleced on trial before a military Court) dierq ocoastonally, but the amount i) Hvery contribution recetved, » atter how e#mall, will make {t | Baker. Chief among them are the yesterday. All the evidence was put very small, Not a single man tn unt or % " con a8 " te , following: in, but the verdict will not be an-| form ham been arrested for dranken-| he ice beaday ics slid och dren to receive wholesome, ' tlie ia iene esawe potencies: nounced for somo days. It te gen-| C88 aince Camp Wadeworth w nutritious lune! eG @rally believed Luird will be acquit- | *Ablished Nevitle, C K ey aghast aatintey ault- | Private John Neville, Company I, : ted, as he was simply acting in the/s34 Ploneer Infantry (the old 47th Everything ts furntshed at cost Mecharge of his duty when he fired |Infantry), died in the Hase Hompital | No child ts pauperized. at the man trying to escape, Le a ee tana Ave: | Every case investigated by school authorities ; ? Private Charles P. MoCarthy, the! iis, Brookly other sentry concerned, will be tried) Col. James R. Howlett, command. | have been |ing the 24 Ploneer Infantry (the old | By Sophie Irene Loeb. Sharpe, Quartermaster General; Gen. Crozier, Chief of Ordnance; Gen. Weaver, Chief of Coast Artillery. Included in the shelving order but still active—Gen, Crowder, Provost Mirshal General. | Detached for foretgn service—Gen. Bliss, Chief of Staff. No money ts made in any way. Kingsland Ave | evously contributed to this fund. to-day. The two me th 1 officers were oer rales vets i nt , | Tt is now exhausted, 20, towether with some elviltan under arrest sinco the shooting, /4t) wave @ theatre party tawt TIE) ood First for the Kchook Children: Wy antes AiG Aiea: 1a Ohtle M fomethier with Sums eae awaiting a formal investigation by| his regiment in recognition of tt No Hunory Ohild (na Pudlto Kchook.| 40) Oe ee ae ao I within the War Department. the authorities. |hart work they have been doing HIM was the slogan that The that the able to keep up with nt ane ae 2 so The affair is greatly regretted by preparing camp for the men coming | ening World used in ite 'y al jer was that ile a 7 As ; to recruit everybody in camp, of course, but DO| mrength, EXverything {@ now in| blame {ts attached to the two @uards.| readiness for the new men, who are ‘Tue prisoners who tried to encape, |expected next week. There 1s an yet Privates Dickey, Scoville and Beard, |no information as to where they are ” 100 were confined for minor breaches of COMMS from. There were about 3 at the theatre party. Ciscipling and would not have re- Lies 0 ar | council oMeers were relieved of Ow tal 6 duty in ther regular depart- ments, the regiment their classes, an appeal is now made to the publio to supply auf- ficient funds to carry this impor- |" scention to this appears to be tant service through thie year, | Gen, Crowder, who is still running one of the hardest years for chil- | the draftAlso, Gen, Bliss, who, past dren in the history of the city, SUP asap ti esttae paar eel rd campaign two years ago which brought about the penny lunches in | the publio schools Through the ef- forts of this news- s, ‘ »| ‘The work 1s conducted by the New! america in the Allied War Council in 5 gdh grote pl il ai Paper, the health) vc School Lunch Committee. ‘The| fri a highly honorable post. ville and Beard face long terma, Of MOU ote a eee aclous, echoain in thelr places the Secretary of Much as the accident is regretted, children has boen : be ie cont dsnees ef the works bees w Jesiened the following officers ake persona » 80] 5 nerve ae”: *§ may come of it. “There are some M\ oo OE QONOY | mikiinerts n. Goethals, Acting Quartermas- people.” o-day, “even | -~ " b, unches, * or General, Bec ase tk the Aaa vio 4o | Government Figures Show Re- wa Previcus to The| Every penny ts apent to ald those tr COneh ste cuter of Ord- fn! i whe ‘ 2 | unfortunate little ones in gettt ance. v Rot seem: to Understand the, county. tall Prices Ate Ex. | Pvening World campaign only elght| emt no that they Ge a | Ae arate Acting Chief of ie at war, and that we must have the cessive. |achool lunches were in operation, and : . , Coast Artillery. Gen. Biddle, Acting Chief of Staff. Tatest of all changes ts the ap- pointment yesterday of Edward R. Stettinius as Surveyor General, to hav consolidated control over sup- pltes and purchase for all branches of undernourished and underfed. During the preceding year The Evening World Fund was used to serve 10,496 quarts of milk, 6,549 half pint portions of hot cocoa and 1,500 pounds of crackers, most rigid discipline if we are to have an effective army, Discipline was lax in the old days of the Na- tional Guard, but the country was at pence then, and we cannot have such now there are over @ hundred. Besides thin, there is one building, No. 98 ® central kitchen, at Delancey and Tompkins Streets, which serves food to 26,000 children, | WASHINGTON, Jan, 26. — Gaaoline| Production costs, showing that retail prices are from 7 to 10 cents above tho | refining cont, were made pubilo to-day | |by the Federal Trade Comminsion after affair causes & more goneral APPFE 1 Wie found to be lowest in Callornia.. | 8 Price of the meal, deen this vear, also crackers and vo, Staff and from Quartermaster, Ord- ciation of the gravity of the situation, 1253 cents, The retail price in San| But aside from these activities, hun-| (54. and the ereat good done by thia Nnec and other branches of the ser- geod may come from it after all." Francisco wan given as 20.5 cents. dreds of children were coming, and) wholesome food every morning at * th rae Private Dickey lived at Buffalo.| ‘The highest production coat was in|are now coming, to school without) sciool cannot be estimated and iy ,Annher Ree eas Lapel Private Lawrence P. Scoville, who|N@r Jersey and astern territory, constantly pratsed by the many let- t al ¢ breakfasts, Many of thes childrea fire of severe criticism and Congres- amounting to 17.642 cents, while in New stonal Investigation, has just made an was wounded, lives at Rochester, and are crippled and tubercular. tere ek come: eck: Prikelpals and " teachers. i Pavate Henty Ke Heard, the third | York the retall price was 26 conta : important change." J.D. A. Morrow, prisoner who tried to escape, is a| Tho commission said it used the nar-| Thus it waa found necessary to in-) In tho words of John ©. Gebhart.| sooretary of the National Coal Ass Buffalo man. ket price of crude oll In computing the | Susurate a morning meal of milk and | | School | ation, was appointed assistant ad- Lunch Committee: “The food situation is Ikely to be- come more acute this year than last, hese officers have heen sent to|refining cont, but added that, as mont Fort sill, Okla, for a ten woeks' |!mportant refineries aleo are Intorested setae ok inatruction aa aerial op. {12 ol wella and pipe lines, it follows crackers and occasionally eggs and mintstrator to Dr, Garfield with special cocoa in order to properly nourish charge of distributic Mr. Morrow !s the first practical cou! rial that refining costs contain an element of | such children. especlally with tho almost prohib- 4 t : nervers: First Lieuta, Roger P. Clark, |pront on the production and transoor- |" whe ivening World's renders gen-|itive cost of milk, It bas been Man of Hy deleony ete ta] reid haeffe Fred tation r U stated by the Health Commissioner j4traiion, and his entrance ts negarded that 400 bables have died during the 1 RECENT WEEKS THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JANUARY 26, 1918, emcee ty Mr. and Mrs, Olney B. Dowd of No, 600 Riverside Drive announce the | j@ngagement of their daughter, Miss Florence Dowd, tu Lieut, Thomas t Y Kenneth Jolnston Mr. and Mrs. Prod ‘Taylor Gates of Montclair announce the en- |gagemont of their dat |Grace Tatcilo to Li Randolph Mitch ft the Ma jehine Gun Tattallon at Camp Lee |Va, gon of President Samuel | Mitchell of Delaware Stata Col Mr. and Mes. V fam A. Minott of No. 244 Fast 61st Street announces the engagement of their daughter, Miss Margaret Minott, to Lieut. John |Kerr of the 107th Infantry at Spar tanburg, son hn i Kerr of No. 40 West 11th Sire Miss Mally G , daughter of Prof. Herbert iner Lord of Columbia University, and James Tay~- lor Kemp will be married thie eve- ning at the Lord home, No. 623 West 113th Street. ‘The marriage of Mias Emilie How- ard Rich, daughter of Mr. and Mra. Charles Alonzo Rich, to Andrew M. Underhill, U. & %. R, of South Orange, N. J., take place this afternoon in St. Agnes's Chapel. Miss Anna Nicholls Wildman, daughter of Dr, and Mrs. Henry Val- entine Wildman, and Lieut. Elliott B. Nixon, U. S. N., will be married this afternoon in the Second Presby- terlan Church. ‘The marriage of Miss Pleanor FP. Wild, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Pranic Griswold Wild, and Lieut. Edward Clark, U. 8. R, of Flushing, will tako place this afternoon at the Wid home, No. 291 Clinton Avenue, Brooklyn. Mias Gertrude Hinrichs, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Loula Hinric will be married to Samuel Gray King, U. 8. N. Pi, this evening in Christ | Episcopal Church, Glen Ridge, N. J. ‘The marriage of Miss Amalle C |Mahr, daughter of the late Emil Mahr, to Tyler C. Richards, Aviation Section, Slenal Corps, U. & A, of Norwich, Conn., will take place to- day at the home of Miss Mahr in Ar- lington Heights, near Boston. J. Stevens Ulman will give a din- ner at his home, No. 24 Past slat Street, on Jan. 31 for Milenko R. Ves- nitch, the Serbian Minister to France and Belgium and chief of the Serbian War Mission to the United States Merrell | the scalp. j and {ts control in Mississippt. men, A couple of days ago aeveral eafl- ors from Dutch ships appeared at the artment offices and asked for some- K to do. were told that they many wanted work have ported yester- nxlous to get an bour, Amster: 'TO SPEND $150,000 IN TRAINING CAMPS thin und ihe Rockefeller. Foundation An- Xvonue and ay we hounces Appropriations To- talling $193,500. The Rockefeller Foundation has announced the following additional appropriations: | To camp welfare for work under supervision of the War Department's Commission on Training Camp Activ- ittes, $150,000; to the National Com. mittee for Mental Hygiene for inv tigation of the public care of mental diseases and study in the psychopa~ thology of crime, $27,000; to the State Charities’ Aid Association for public clintes in New York Stats in the af- ter care of Infantile paralysis The Soap to Cleanse and Purify the Ointment to Soothe and Heal The Foundation’s International ‘These fragrant, supers Health Board has provided further to creamy em ents soothe ing with the French Government an rashes, stop itch the American ed Cross, to praver the skin of pimples, tuberctilosis in France; further to in- {scalp of dandruif and the vestixate the hookworm disease, par- tands of chaps and sores, tleularily tn Rio de Janeiro, and to ‘or cuts, wounds, bruis- continue the investigation of malaria es, bites and stings of insects, sunburn or windburn they are —--—.>—_-- | WHITE WINGS OFF SEA, |_| most effective. | Kecaots Rash Pree! Mail. Ad post. ford: "Cou Boston.’ Forty sailors from interned Dutch steamships in the harbor presented « novel epectacle to the upper west side yesterday, when they appeared as snow sweepers. Because of the scarcity of labor tt has been extremely dlMeult. for Street Cleaning Department to enough HAIR COMING OUT? Dandruff causes @ teverish irrita- tion of the scalp, the hair roots shrink, loosen and then the hair comes out fust. To stop failing hair at once and rid the scalp of every particle of dan- IL Save Decayed Teeth, Tighter Loose Teeth, and ag Jreat Diseased Gums. druff, get a sinall bottle of Danderine SETS OF TENTH, Gold and at any drug store for a few cents, pour Porcelain Crowns, Bridgework, a little Im your hand and rub it into Fillings and Inlays of Gold, Silver and Porcelain carefully made at Reasonable Prices. BADLY DECAYED TEETH and Roots carefully extracted. Teeth thoroughly cleaned. Broken plates repaired while you walt, or !f sent by malt pRr-BLOO 1) <TWwO OFFICES: PE OORT SIRS HOURS 9A.M.1O 6 PM DAILY INOAVS 9AM. TO SBM After several applications the hair stops coming out and you can't find any dandruff—Advt, BAD SPRAINS OR WUSCLE STRAIN Rub pain, ache, soreness and swelling right out with “St. Jacobs Liniment” Rub {t in on a sprained ankle, wrist, shoulder, back or a sprain or strain anywhere, that’s when you realize the magic in old, honest Jacobs Lini- ment” because the moment it is ap plied, out comes the pain, ache, sore- ness and swelling. It penetrates right into the Injured muscles, nerves, liga- ments, tendons and bynes, and relief comes instantly, It not merely kills NEW WAR SIZE Woko-Zol The Perfect Digestive Tablet Now Sold at All Drug Stores 25c The New York City Telephone Directory Goes to Press Wednesday,J anuary 30, 1918 Aut changes or additions in present listings must be arranged for on or before that date in order to appear in this new issue. Any of our business offices listed below will be glad to give you full information. Just telephone, write or call— MANHATTAN-BRONX 15 Dey St. Cortlandt 104 Broad St. 415 Grand St. 430 Brondway at Howard St. 93 F. 26th St 1456 B'way at 42d St. 19 ¥.. 420 St. 9 F, 49th St 8087 B'way at 724 St. 109 W. 195th St. ¥., 140th St. 453 ¥. Tremont Ave. 1106 Hoe Ave, BROOKLYN Al Willoughby St. 839 Ninth St. 460 Nostrand Ave, 6110 Fifth Ave, 097 Flatbush Ave, 023 Havemeyer St. 1030 Gates Ava, 1660 Pitkin Ave. JAMAICA ¢ Hardenbrook Avs. SHING 70 Main St. RICHMOND HILL 434 Napler Ave. Richmond Hill LONG ISLAND CITY Bridge Plasa North Astoria FAR ROCKAWAY Birdaall & Cent'l Avs. Par Rockaway TOMPKINSVILLE 445 St. Marka Pl PORT [ICHMOND 70 Richmond Ara Flatbush Williainsburg Bushwick East New York 19016 gol 19016 woe Orchard Canal Mad. Bq. Bryant Murray AM Plosa Riverside Morningside Melrose Tremont Intervale Jemalan 19000 1a 19090 12000 13090 19090 12090 12090 Flushing 19018 sole wore 1s016 Main South Bedford Sunset 19000 19014 19014 nels Tompkineville 19088 West Brighton 190 NEW YORK TELEPHONE CO. past year because of the high cost of mille, | “It ts fair to assume that older) children have suffered proportion- ately from this increase. The F ning World service has done mu to relieve actual suffering and to promote the physical and mental well-being of school children,” BUY LIBERTY BONDS? NO! HE GIVES MONEY TO U. S, Foulke Contributes $4,000, Saying | | | Nation Should Pay as | It Goes. | Beca’ he believes the United | States should finance the war on & pay-as-you-go principle, Theodore B. Foulke refused to buy Liberty bonds und gave the United States $3,000 in} cash. Mr, Foulke is a nursery:nan) of Flushing, L. I. He admitted yes- terday he also had given the Nation $1,000 last summer, and added that he had just sent his check for $3,000 to France, “America should pay as it goes,” | Mr, Foulke explained. “If the Gov- ernment needs @ billion dollars, the people should give the money outright. ‘A man who gives his boy to the coun- try, gives him, and gets nothing in jreturn, The rich man gives his money and gets back @ promise of full re | payment. with interest for tts Because | want to live up to my ideas I gave the money as I did.” | Mr, Foulke Is known In Flushing aa} an ard Prohibitionist, His wife| and son are Quakers, peleeciaina eS OBITUARY NOTES. Parson w a@ teacher of mu ng bis pupils} many celebrated atage pe: ts dead at! his home, No, 401 t ts Avenuy, Richmond Hill, Queens. | James Murray, vivors to Japan N ninety-ona, one of ¢ ts dead n Aven’ ks fs to have! use on will he ‘exclusive army circle as ending the past pollcy of barring pain, but soothes and heals the injury experts from participation In Govern- 50 a quick recovery is effected. ihent control. a az |_ Miss Syivia Penbody, daughter of | Get a small trial hottle of “St Likewise, the appointment of f. > Jacobs Linimen right now at a Stettinius marks letting down of the| MF and Mrs, Francis Peabody of | site) ‘i i drug store and stop suffering. Notti- ing else sets things straight 80 quickly —so thoroughly, It is the only appli- cation to rub on a bad sprain, strain, bruise or swelling. —Advt Boston, will be married to Capt, Clar- ence Van Schatck Mitchell, U. 8. It. | to-day in the chantry of Grace | Church. bars against men of freat business ability in management of the War Di partment. He Is the first represent tive of Big Business to break Into the HAIR A tol!.t preparation of marit, Pring eeraatoate dan ira ‘or Beauty toGray or Faded Hoo and $1.00 at rugeita. If Today’s Packing Industries Were Swept Away! MAGINE—the entire present system of marketing livestock wiped completely out of existence! Can you picture it? Production—preparation—market- in ow all kept moving onward by an army of workers—would become blocked in their channels, The outlets would be choked, Producers would have no market! Consumers would have rio food! be an almost exact duplication of today’s method for TIME HAS PROVED IT ECONOMICALL SOUND—on the whole, fair to both Producer and Consumer. Unequalized Food Supply O THE west of the Mississippi there would be a glut of meat; to the east there waquld be famine! If you will consider all these thipgs, you will uhdets stand the efficiency with which Armour’s obligation to both grower and consumer is and always has been met, You will realize that Armour’s bigness is, in itself, both the result and the cause of an indispens« able service which only volume makes most effective, The hundreds of little plants which would spring up would prove inadequate. They would ‘necessarily have to charge more for meats, for the economic handling of beef is essentially a by-product busi- ness requiring huge plants and heavy investment. Nor without cars specially built for refrigeration and ° se owned by themselves so there could be no car-short- Holding Down Living Costs age, could they possibly keep up an even, continuous flow of goods to the ends of the country. 1 IS only through a tremendous organization, fully equipped and skillfully managed, that Ar- mour can keep the channels of distribution con- stantly open to livestock growers, and at the same time pass the finished products on to consumers at a minimum labor-charge. eequpeenemmmmecumas With this in.mifnd, it logically follows that you are directly holding down your living costs when you buy Armour meats and food products. And even did they ship, they would have no local refrigeration stations, no selling-force continually keeping the market open. Undoubtedly, in time, all this would be straightened out. But remember, it has taken nearly half a cen- tury to perfect the present system. And no matter what the first start might be, the final result would ARMOUR 4x» COMPANY CHICAGO