The evening world. Newspaper, March 30, 1918, Page 4

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—_———— st 2e.24 rt hy a tl it h a e f i “WAR MOTHERS” I LONDON CHEER UP AMERICAN BOYS a The Real Mothers at Home Need Not Fear Soldier Sons Are Neglected. DIRECTS i AR MOTHERS Helen H. Hoffman (Boscia! Coreenonient of The Evening World) (Oovpridht, 1915, Bren Publishing Oo, (New York Prening Word LONDON, March 15.—Scores of American women in London are act-) ing as “war mothers” to sick ana| wounded American boys who aro| brought to English hospitals. It May be a comfort to American| mothers to know that this croup of | ‘women, under the direction of Mrs. Robert P. Skinner, wife of the Amert- ean Consul General in London, is pergonally in touch with their boys and looking after their smallest in- terests. In this way American boys, who early in the war joined up with the Canadian expeditionary forces, or cast their lot with “Kitchener's Mob” are not left to feel that they are strangers in a strange land. This work of looking after the “Sammies" in the British Army ts being carried on by a committee known as the Care Committee for Soldiers and Sailors, and is now a part of the American Red Cross. The committee is quite remarkable in ite perfection of methods for eearching out these boys in the vast machinery of army organization. Hospital officers have been asked to notify the committee when an Amor- fean arrives, And the big Visitors’|Shock. “Four months ago when I Committee, under Mrs, Skinner,|™et him he was suffering partial or twice a week, is allied with the| better now. 1 ountry will work of locating these boys through| Strengthen his x explained various channels. Mrs, Hyde. At the headquarters of the com- SHE CARRIES A BUNDLE OF |inittec, No. 1st New liond. Street, AMERICAN PAPER’ there are on file hundreds of records Mrs. Frank Hyde, a New York|f these boys who have been be- woman, now making her hi friended by the committ And the is her home in|commitice keeps in touch with them London, holds the record of the com- mitteewomen for “discovering” Amer- joan boys. Mrs, Hyde's thoroughness is iMustrated by a recent visit to one of the big military hospitals where two of “her boys” were convalescing. “Any new Americans?” she asked of the nurse on duty. ‘The nurse hadn't seen any, Passing the office on her way out Mrs. Hyde made casual inquiry of the Sergeant. “Yes, there's one,” he said. “He just came in.” Up the long stone staircase Mrs, Hyde retraced her steps and found him. He was a New York boy. “I've been here a month and not a familiar face. Seems good to see some one from home. I played in a until its usefulness is ended by either on horable discharge and return to the States or he ts sent back to the trenches GOOD AMERICAN NAMES ON COMMITTEE LIST. The work of the committee extends like a great network over England, and where a boy is too far away to be visited the committee gets in touch with him by letter. Mrs. Henry W. Thornton, a former New York wom- an, has proved herself a genius at this work, for responses to her letters number hundreds a month. Well known women on the committee in- clude Miss Choate of New York, Miss Theodora Dodge of Boston, Miss kmily Dawson of Philadelphia, Mrs. Robert Cabell of Chicago, Mrs, Byron De Witt Miller and Mrs, Keith Mer- rill of Minneapolis. Broadway theatre orchestra and I x by hy is in shares of the eho package de ment, Througn, a re- Pe cereinly Be Glad to see some! Cent arranwdnent. made with the New York papers. British customs, parcels not excead- Mrs. Hyde goes armed on every | ing ten pounds may be sent duty free visit with a bundle of Americun news-| to these boys through the Care Com- papers, as the boys represent prac- | mittee poo parcels may be sent teally every State in the Union, by American relatives of the boys British forces +|now serving with the ‘The same arrangement applies to American members of the Medical Officers Corps attached to British hos- “I read everything, even the ads one of the boys said. “It was the first home paper I had seen in two her boy had lost everything in| Ditals ine explosion. Mrs. "ydo made a| If the parcels are sent in care of careful pencil note of the arcacles|the mittee of the Amor needed. A razor, a comb and brush | Red 6 re as, with a ate rank, r and lastly, cigarettes sre} Mental number and, possible, meee ae mrottes were! iaiion of the soldier, tho committee ‘At another hospital was a good look. | Will forward them to the men wher- ing youth from Detroit, Mich., whom | ° er they happen to be when the par- Mre. Hyde had been “mothering” tur | Cels arrive. four months, With the physivian's|SOLDIER POETS SEND VERSES permission Mrs. Hyte had made ar- TO “MOTHERS.” Among the boys who correspond with the committes are severa! poets who now and then send a sample of DID YOU WONDER WHAT that distinctive difference between "SALADA® ‘ TEA and other tea, could be 2? Well, its just the difference between fine, flavoury tea and ordinary tea, rangements to have the boy transfe! red to a fine English estate now owned by a well known American, The boy was suffering from shell In The Sunday World Editorial Section One Year of War! What has the United States accomplished in that time to carry forward the unprecedentedly tremendous undertaking? Members of the Cabinet have personally prepared the answer, setting forth the facts as they know them. It is a contribution at once important and authoritative. Itis an OFFICIAL RECORD of the achievements of all the Departments of Government, a NATIONAL REPORT on the state of the country, a BALANCE SHEET of the country’s activities for the Ameri« can people on the anniversary of the first year of the war. \ Order rom Newsdealers | a Next Sunday “minus IN ae G COMFORTABLE S. BOYS IN LONDON THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, MARCH 30, 1918, : NEW JERSEY MILLS WNED BY ENEMY | Great Woollen Plan Plants, Worth $70,000,000, Are Taken | Over by Custodian. WASHINGTON, March 30.—Six great German owned New Jersey woollen mills, with a total valuation of more than $70,000,000, have been taken over by the Allen Property Custodian, who has named governing boards of directors to assume control of them. The earnings of tho proper- tles during the war will go Into the Federal ‘Treasury for the purchase of Liberty bonds. | The mills taken over were an- nounced by A. Mitchell Palmer, the Allen Property Custodian, as follows: | The Passatc Worsted Spinning Mills, the Botany Worsted Mills, the |New Jersey Worsted Spinning Com- pany, the Forstmann and Huffmann Company and the Gera Mills, all of |Passaic, and the Garfleld Worsted Mills of Garfield, “Selling agents of German woollen firms in the Fatherland,” sald Mr |Palmer's announcement, “years ogo |built with German capital the first Jf this group of mills in order to es Jeape the import duties on woollen goods, ‘They brought over German machinery and German hands to ope- rate the machines. ‘The first mill was successful from the start, and the erection of the others followed rapid order. The same interests fig- ure largely in all the mills. Large blocks of stock are held by influential members of the Woollen Cartel in Germany. “As the business of these Jersey mills thrived and expanded they formed, it appears, an association Nominally for the purpose of securing [experienced German labor, but which soon became a close organization of offensive and defensive alliance of the German woollen interests in this locality. Members of this organiza- tion purchased and conducted a daily newspaper, employed @ representa- tive to look out for its Interests at Washington and to keep close touch upon the attitude of the public senti- ment in all parts of the country.” RED GROSS RUSHES AID TO OUR ALLIES Early in Great Battle Americans Send Vans to Remove Wounded and Care for Refugees. PARIS, March 30,—The great bat- tle In the Somme district has not only given America a chance to show her determination to help the French and British in thelr struggles, but also has enabled the Amencan Red Cross to work in closer co-operation with the French organization. In the first two days of Aghting the American Red Cross sent vans to help take away the wounded, also to care |for refugees and help them get clear of the bat vone and take as much from their homes Homer Folks, Director of the ( fairs Department of the Red was asked recently for French Red Cross. n thousand through - to Secretary of the and we have a cant food: Can you help? The American Red Cross immediate Cross, help by the fugees will pass row,” said 1 French Red Cross, n there but no ly responded with 2,000 tons of con- 00 densed milk, half a ton of coffer pounds of Chocolate, a ton of t and 2,000 tons of preserved meat. ‘This 4s only one instance of how closely the organizations work together, Cant opened by the American Red ( located throughout Northern F their genius. Tho following was the inspiration of a New York gunner: Who'l KAM Kater Bini? it ts. the, treme, Doa't mentoh i} eee him diet “Ven not hig wel, wi Let him stick in the 1 1 make hia shroud! 8 SEZEDBY PALMER /26 CALLED FOR VIOLATION FIGHT. HOUR DAY AND WAGE sonst | IN PACKING HSE Arbitration Also Puts Women and Men on Same Basis | in Award. March $0. hour day CHICAGO, eight The ‘asic in the | nation's packing industry Federal Judge Samuel Alschuler's award in the packing arbitration to-day. Wage Increases ranging from 41-2 ts an hour to employees recetving 30 cents and under an hour at pres- was ordered by ent, and ranging down to 3 1-2 cents per hour to employees ing paid over 40 cents per hour, were also granted, The eight-hour day goes Into effect May 6, 1918, and wage advances are retroactive, effective as of Jan 14, 1918. he award, ,000 the which affects about employees throughout the United States in 90 per of the packing houses of the country, was arded as a sweeping victory for the workers. Payment for overtime work, for which at present the employees re- celve no extra compensation, was in- creased on the following basis: Double time for Sundays and holl- days, time and one fourth for the first two hours over the basic eight hours on week days and time and one-half for all time after ten hours’ work Hetwee 4 and May 5, overtime pay 1 at the rate of time and Ja hat and de i cent rel fix tim ual pay for m nd for fomale mployees doing the same class of work was ordered in the award. ‘The employees’ demand for a weekly guaranteed minimum of forty hours was grante: Upon th induction of the baste ght-hour day, Arbitrator Alschuler ated “the hourly wage rate shall be readjusted so that th mpensa~ tion for a full eight-hour work day shall be equal to the pay for a full ten-hour day heretofore and ple work rates shall be proportionately readjusted in accordance with the ne principle. The present rage annual wage of $83 for employees in packing houses was declared by Alschuler “inadequate for the ordinary needs of the average working man's mily in the cities involved.” Referring to living budgets presented in testimony and which ranged around $1,400, Judge Alschuler declined to prescribe In de- tail the living standard While the award gave the em- ployees only about one-third of their jdemand for a flat increase of $1 per jday, union leaders expressed them- selves as immensely pleased because the eight-hour day was granted, ACTING MAYOR PLAYS BANJO, nora tite trecabm a numer) Mier Gertrude a atten, dayens| $1408 eisueh t's Se" 8) EXCURSION RATES MAY GO,” Bates ter of Mrs. Charles W. Allen of New | £0? from) $168,820, 500,000, 550] BUT HE'S NOT ON THE JOB, — Kochelie, N. ¥., and Kenosha, Wis. | i oireagew at $15,950,000 W| Cancellation Between New York | ,qhitrly, im the morning of Jan. 10, married last evening to Dr. | huildings at $4,099,000. Mo an| and Jersey Resorts Ask ee re meletbors Of tne Reve We 3] George Raymond West halt of the mortgage loans were ad-| Wa cuinGTON, March 20.—C : | Hidahaw bf Bellevilla, TAG. head the gate of this | h. tliat : : ‘ancellae With Hylan and Smith Both Aw Ys lacuna ce aoe yea Heaiecipe| city, at her mother’s residence on | Yanced Ba errtey ty He arly $2 |tion “of excursion rates between New Moran of the Bronx Misses |the hou und Mrs. Hinshaw shot| Premium Point, Now Rochelle. | Doo of old mortguae $ coming du York and Asbury F and Seagirt, an@+ |dead in her bed. Her hushand, weak| | — ling the quarter have been re od, | be n Philadelphia, Atlantle City, Ofporiunity for Power. from loss of hlood which flowed from| Under the auspices of tho st. | the share of the banks and | ance |Ovean ¢ an New Jersey ree tenantlean to-day you were looking |flerce battle with two burglar who| t2Fe® one-act plays will be given in ‘Brooklyn vith 4.176 sal for the Mayor-In-fact of New York to-|had awakened them while they slept.) the ballroom of the Hotel McAlpin on | $4%:930.000 with tulle i 90,000, day Mt ts quite probable you couldn't PRS navn eenanes 1 for mur- ie afternoon and evoning of April €| nuilding projects at, oe March 30,—Frits \ have found him with a seareh warrants | onsational trial of four weeks was ¢ benefit of the tatherless chil-| compares wit hich were sales at rman, was held t 4 Mayor Hylan is at Atlantic Ci.) found guilty of murder in the second| "€" of France. The patronesses in- 5 ee eco mortgages at, $16,990,- pers a mele ae Alfred E. Smith, President of Board degree, ‘The name of another woman clude Mrs. Benjamin Nicoll, Mra, | oh") new buildings at $9,475,000 en ahlanal ehan shite a Sar ot ‘Aiermen, who, under the Charter, [entered into the ease Douglas Tiobinsom, Mrs, Henry Gut | beaks an gaurance companen hav aad a sixnal code for searchlights \ 7 he head 7 J - . e c' | used in guarding a powder pl, acts ax Mayor when the head of the} ette and Miss Lulaita Del, | Laken $1,650,000 in mortgage contract ® b plant near government is out of the city, also Is | beland. and of $5,500,000 advanced on exten- Ry means of the code any Jin Atlantic City, Next In tine as Act. | FINE | of 6 1 mortgages they have re one with @ pocket leotrio pst cote ing Mayor comes the Vie Chalrman of SHOTS IN IN THE TIST. | NX. 18. ONLY. BOROUGH |in any desired direction.” By gefleate the Board of Aldermen, The present BRO SHOWING GAINS. ine the hlights it would Be et incumbent ts Robert L. Moran ew Regiment, L O14, Shows hird with $18,290,000, ;#ible for plotters to work in the Fey Now, Moran is ¢hirty-one. and red Good Markam, py. Bronx comes ti ovat. silssoro0, (An the event plans had been lad’ to headed. He is an expert banjo player, Trophy shooting is engaging the ate| THF were 10) Miley et ee new | destroy the powder works. lives In the Bronx, and the ambition of |tention of the 71st Infantry, and re- Oe ei rerations at $8,696,000. A | aaa 4 his life is to bring the gas company up arkable shooting scores are being! year ago, the figtres stood, 1,360 sa eococes: his way to its knees, So Instead of mate Inthe weekly competitions. Col. | $8014 500; 625 | mortgages, | $4, 9005 | CAN’T FIND DANDRUFF selzing the opportunity of being Mayo Wells has ordered @ match shot each| 18 nev buildings, $2,175,000; | total, || uN 0 OO ok: a ay by holling doen: Mave) week by teams from each of the cane beat a trough, selling ‘and. building | Every bit of dandruff di Hylan's tig leather office chair, Moran line companies. As the great majority | (1s tions, | after one or two applications of thane ik ehh 14k Be ee at of men had never shot @ rifle before!” "Queens scores $9,525,000, with 1,930! derine rubbed well into the scalp with \ company. In fact, he was so busily Joining the regiment, Capt. Short, In-| sales 5,000, mortgages at) the finger tips. Get a small bottle of -y engaged trailing the gas magnates that! Not More Than 10 Per Cent, *becte* of small arms practice, hae been | $1,190,060, 400 now ‘buildings at $1,25.-| }yanderine at any drug store for = few ia) ebuldi'b ie cence Go chenk Seen . a coaching the men, with the result that | 000. Its '$20, 910000 OF the frat quarter cents and save your hair, After from the City Hall of German Americans There | the new 71st ts sustaming the reputation | 10, 1917 Bias nS go, | Several applica $166,570000 IN FIVEILL FOR WEEK REALTY DEALINGS ON SOUND LINER, OF FIRST QUARTER, HAVE SMALLPOX YOU CAN TASTE daylight now. New fish, called daylight or sundial, has appeared in New York market. DOGS IN AUTOMOBILES must be muzzied, saree | lyn court decides, establishing a precedent. COURT ON FARM in Kansas, Judge sitting on cule | | — aa | | tivator, counsel on piles of corn fodder, reporter using barrel for desk and witness lying some distance away Greater City Shows Drop Stewards on Middletown May with smallpox, From $297,577,500 Last | Have Spread Disease to LONG ISLAND WOMAN, in court charged with 4 sal | Many Passengers, being pro-German, proved: She was Red Cross nurse in| Year—Bronx Gains. | y S Belgium; was on Lusitania when sunk; has four brothera | in United States Navy; two uncles with Pershing; two! Greater New York realty d |, ane repartee), 2 ae sons in National Army, and left husband because he was|for the year's first quarter have in. to-day to reach several hundred per- pro-Cerman, Acgoltted in A JiMy. | volved $16,570,000. ‘The total ems Sons Who have made trips in the past ; two wee Hartford Line and warn them t vediately, The wn makes regular trip® be- York and Hartford, with braces saies, mortgage loans and new on the buildings, It compares with $297, 600 for the corresponding period last | year. | Middle Operators believe twee PRISONERS in Pennsylvania penitentiary have Knitted 16,428 pairs of woollen socks for the Red Cross. + | steamer SOME JOB—Tiny, seven-tono rhinoceros in Bronx Zoo, has pneumonia and every half hour has to be rolled ~ the quarter will 1 New into @ fresh layer of hot blankets. mark the low records of the war intermediate landings, and usually slump. The drop below normal was carries be en 130 and 150 passen- RECORD FOR TWINS tn Algona, Ja, where only |iargest during the first month and gers children on main thoroughfare are four sets of new twing and one of triplets, . the volume of operations has been| Five ne increasing slowly but steadily. Ino ) employees of the stews ment of the steamer were many prominent sections transactions yosierday (aken to the Kingston Aves of March were equal to or larger|nuc Hospit 1 Brooklyn suffering PR FY than those of the two preceding) fro 1allpox, ‘They had been sick | Notes in Society months. jfrom three to thirty days, going Much recent activity has been at-| about their duties without suspecting | tributed to the big rise in the city) they had the disease | Miss Ethel Trippett LeMingwell,|tox rate. The added drain upon in- | 10 first suspicion that there was daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank D.!oome has led to liquidation, which! trou th came Thursday | Leftiingwell, will be married to Lieut. | naturally depresses vali but all of | night when Fr Wagner, eighteen, Rolfe Saunders Sample, 49th In-line properties are taken either by | Walked int Volunteer Hospital fantry, U. 8. A., to-day at the home Fand coimp was not feelin \ shrewd operators with strong finan- well, A diag is showed he bi AFTER 20 YEARS of hor parents in Montclair, N. J. clal resources or by conservative in- | smailpox * Fey . vestors who have been waiting for To sore the doctors Wagner The Easter dance of the Friday pki T {de jc usually me ned that several other q Junlors will take place at the Plaza|Tock-bottom bargains. The lquida-| oes the steamer had complainea Indianan, Convicted of Wife’s]o» Monday instead of on April 6 as| ton is regarded as a final clearing up.! of jiinoss and = Health E 5 ald had been expected, and market experts are inclined to} ment officials hurried to the steamer Murder, Giv®h Parole look for steady, even if very slow, en- | and found Clurenco Eastman, Nore | man . Anthony Beeman and n in the same condition. vace ted all the eme East River, ‘The Barnard Club Unit of the Dur- yea War Relief will give a benefit | bridge on the a hancement. They say the improve- ment should continue for enough | ternoon of April 13| years to form a well recognized cycle, | pl at the Plaza, Among the patrone: by Governor. Doctors INDIANAPOLIS, March 30. The nding, as such periods do, with nota- | Where the cks and every tev. William E. Hinshaw, sentencea]®@ Mrs. J. Fred Pierson, Mrs. Ed-|ple activity and boom-like conditions, | 07° ¢!se W Ri ng Paden to pri@n for life for murder more| “274 _¥ Stettinius, Mrs. Herbert Ls | this development to depend, of course, | ‘reieg were nenttin “| Satterlee, Mrs. Charles H. Ditson,/upon the progress of the war and) Hartf y, Middletown, 4 than twenty years ago, has been] Mrs. Edwin W. Morse, Mra Nina|the establishment of satisfactory | 1" Haddam, Bast riven a parole, It was announced at] Duryea, Mra, Charles D. Wadsworth | peace bases for renewed prosperity and. Sey tenaee the office of Gov. Goodrich to-day.|494¢ Mrs. George D. Boynton, ‘Tick- | through all lines of industry. P it appeared wted prisoner, hia case having at-| mor’ gtr gen ‘aylor, No, "AT $125,860,000, Wont We chy fumigated. tracted wide attention. The action ‘ Selling in the gerater city plated . Lnounced to-«c een ©: e. gona \the past three mo has involve¢ of Mrs. Robert Dean McFa lon, will 25 be married to John Kendrick Bangs | * sgh with 13,935 Jr On April 6 in Chicago, ee Th fective parole g during allows the anted Hinehaw is ef- “good It 860,000, This com | Compan arcels and $ o Injured in Accident Near Dover, a behavior.” former minister to go to wed | 836,500 for the corresponding pe DOVRK, N. J. March 9.¢One girt te his ranch in the Southwest should he] The engagement of Miss Florence last year. Borrowers on 3.855 mort-|dead and another is in Dover General desire, Hoe purchased the ranch last} Brevoort, daughter of Mr. and Mrs,| age contracts have obtained | Ho da Peale wing: of being year while at liberty under a tem-|James Renwick Brevoort of No. 390 | 985,000, against $80,000,000 on 6 a Aitomeble OR aaa last night. ders have filed plans | porary parole, Before his return to] North Broadway, Yonkers, to Rudolf | year ago. 1 5,125,000, ad girl was Miss Nellie Kinney, prison at the expiration of his tem-|Elckemeyer jr., member of the Yonk- |for 969 projects to take $12.72 |twenty-five, daughter of Willlam Ay porary parole in 1917, Hinshaw said] ers Board of Education and a noted! their 2,283 operations for yor Mate Kinney, a former Freeholder. The ine he had married and his wife is re-|amateu q {1917 having called for jured girl is Mias Mamie O'Connell, ported to be living on his ranch, heres OR bt apd ts announced. | rg, Nearly. $4,000,000 more has | inachine was driven. by Albert Bate is ranch Friage of the couple will unite |} involved in altcrations of old knecht, a Dover baker, ‘The two girla Hinshaw was charged with having|two of the oldest and most promi. | eet, nve were Walking along the road. and | murdered his wife, but always denied! nent families in Yonkers, at) than balances the | Knecht declare did not see them, al- Manhattan more though his Tights wer on. his guilt. Moe has be n granted tem- | other four boroughs, with its total of | tions you can't find # 19,009, 790 mortgage au is so euitdings at $3,490,000. particle of dandruff or any falling Richmond makes $2,590,000 against|hair, and the scalp will never itch $3,810, of the old organization of having many #001 shots in its membership. | Loyal, Says Leader, pee Me has, Company 4, Capt, Albert Dow: pm st yea c ave been | Adyt. manding, won the Zabriskie ‘Trophy. for| 420" sales ne ¥1.985,000, 190 "morte —— OF MEATLESS DAY ORDER A secretly organised "Council Of/tcams of ten men from each omeann {loans at $875,000, Ti building proje cams of te ‘om each company, | RY hl slivcaa eho i with 250 mortgages at] : cans in Hoboken—will go to Washing. |/ts team Capt. Orsenigo and Privates| §: atte tat new buildings at $881,000 Twenty-six deli sen proprietors}. sn the near future and ask Presi. |Diancht and Ramondi, crack shots, who Fs and restaurateurs were summoned pe-|'°R 'h He Me Pere S'- represented the old 7ist in many State |fore the Food Board to-day charged |dent Wilson to place the city under|matches, Se Licut, Lester Stickter | SIR GEORGE A SMITH COMING neu toll the bell with having violated meatle day last] martial law before the tak ne over of Of Company B carried off tne indivi dual | wan Attend Clerical Conference and ye Youn’ Bull ‘Tuesday, my property on the water front {{4nor, making a score of 49 out of a| ie -_— shecawe te The Board announced that in spite of | CNOMY Property on a aa ( Speak Throughont Country, His leg. the °F completed. deb haace bles 01 bi pli eem st Gaia Uta licen le die ekcae ee en eee eee ATeRi the members of |, Company E won the six men trophy | lpexe me ses ay nar matitiod lnatent relief trom paral Heeman's Slayer Gets Life) (onporarily tnued, it will con-| For se honths the members of | i ape : we ondo: e > 7 Boston Po! . y |! p ria uw WAL Gael Cannell ‘have been invectioation Ia is he aking tis Teeoar namie ore of! Henry A. Atkinwon, Secretary of the, ture and misery with old 3 o pre ersons who haye| Iwating | 374 out of a 5 je 420, Capt, Otsenigo| 4 2 aff ” ais . STON, March 30.—Harry Manster, | {the rule in the past German interests and German-born |und Private Bianchi each making 6s aut | National Committee on the Churches| St. Jacobs Liniment” pony ; 7. Was wont| and the Moral Aims of the War, that | who shot Policeman Joseph Reiser to arenakly, delicatessen, at No, 1/citizens of Hoboken, focusing special of a pussible 70. Company B was sec- ani George at Set Waites at <i —ene c Back Bay apartment Ja ke Street ordered to clo. Pettent abo i on A on, F Geo! Ada head o} i" murder, hore to-day. He was eenelwho heard the cases. Six others wera | % leader of tho Counell, who! nt vaing: beating Company BY by on, | clerical conference on April 4 under| ment right into the sore, i ‘ 1 ed to tiie imprisonment by Judge jordered to close one day, April 9, for| May not as yet be named, said that 5 nt | the Joint auspices ot the (National nerves, and jike mani Sear eae nderson food violat jnot more than 10 per cent, of the Ger- ‘The regiment 14 taking on additional| Committee and the Liberty Loan! appears, “St. Jacons Liniment” con- men, oa hat wie re Committee, He will be the princinal . Y ¢ > =| man-Americans in Hoboken are loyal. Men All men between thi | speaker at two of the meetings. to AUGEE BAL I" is a harmless “neural “On the list of those we knew to be s can be made at the roome 57] beheld that day. relief” which doesn't burn or disco! Pre ie ; ae mes Company St inthe armory, Park “Aves | q,8l®, “eorge IM accompanted by hiv) the skin G jthat wou stonish you. There are Hue 4nd 34th Street, any Tuesday or Fri-| tary during & two months stay iuj . Don't suffer! It's so needless, Get PAPE’S y | ' i Gay night, the United States, After his appear-|@ small trial bottle from any drag 22 GRAIN TRIANGULES OF | put officials, prominent business Pre a epee a ance in New York he wi Il make a) store and j vently rub the “achin en, lawyers, ‘chants, These m your of the country, spea ing be- | nerves” and jus it a } 7 ¥ y : spéering prop: an an acereditec representative oft) | They carry on a whispering propa-| Philip J. Murray, aged seventy-three,| the Departinent of Information of the| fering FOR INDIGESTION Jwand, + ames ea they ie rf Oe et of Chambs of ornmeree | British Foreign Office, ae. » difference whether Feba? pain oF Resistered in U.S. Pat. OMico ’ ; ‘aby a aaSht Thea Gearing cake jAfount Vern died suddenly a neuralgia is in the face, head or any : win é | the water fron » antes of su tin Es om: hia home, 3 2 1 ‘ast Lincoln LAUNCH 2 SHIPS AT ONCE, | part af the body, you set loses re ‘ patie el ey Ay th this old-time, hones uld be of value to the enemy, and k Eckert, a Civil War veteran, Net wi 0 y await opportunities to give the his nome 36 V TAD eet Vennel and Mine Sweeper| destroyer—it enn not injure.—Adve, Ifacts to the enemy." ng Isla | Take Ways at Shooters Inland, The council, tt was said, would phile Yeaye, a brother of Fugen! a double launching took place at Bre tN ER eOe Gre Renee Of arene hei igs ge 1 oe eae the yards of the Standard Shipbulla- would ask the President to establish |#t Nice, Pr jing Corporation on Shooters Island } liwartial law so that defendants may) Rufus Ellis M pare, noted as a collec-| this morning. ‘The vessels launched | lod by cou nartial instead « of Oriental art, 1s dead at his home,| were the steel ship Montclair and a i | Stops Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Heartburn, "i", ral instead of West but strech, eged eeveutys| Wore he, tent AAP, Mor ae 1 | ‘| of the vice- ace . Le pnwr . I Edward Hale, who organized the! pri ¢ atic was| Gases, Sourness and Stomach Distress ra! Comsraiiaies Attten om |, 0%, Havant Male wh onsantand the preaident of, ihe Vcoiporanin, “wa “ aoa 4 3 in 1890, Is dead at his home, Chestnut places 7,500 tons, is $92 feet in length Fat ‘‘Pape's Diapepsin’’ like Candy RIO JANEIRO, March 80.—The Bra- Hill, Mass. aged sixty and 2,500 hori power, An innova a { a an Government to-day officially! Samuel J. Burrell, for many years a tion in uction is that she | - Makes Upset Stomachs feel fine Gxtended its congratulations to the stock broker here, 1s doad at his home, will be mastless, having only a signal | I 6 2, en for their success - No. 0 Pier 5 mle. ne vesse! Large 50 cant cas. Any drug stare. Ralicf'in five minutes! Tima tefl | MiMi goh the Muscees againet the Ger- No. 180 Pierrepont Gtreet, Brooklyn, pile, vets Oo ogo derricks, FOR INDIGESTION

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