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_ gases form in the stomach pce ene CURZON DECLARES BRITAIN IS FACING FOEATHERGATES “Military Menace Gre Greater Than at Any Time,” He Says in Harmony Plea. LONDON, May 11--Speaking at the ahnual meeting of the Primrose Earl leader » the House of Lords and a member of the British War Council, defended the British War Cabinet, “The present is not a moment for prophy It 1s a moment for grap- pilng with hard facts, because the military menace is greater than et any time during the past four yoars, 't may truthfully be said that the enemy is at our gates and the hour of destiny is with us at this very mo- ment. League, Curzon, Government “I was thoroughly astonished when’ I read in the newspapers proposals A HELEN FEDER | 1S ENGAGED TO MARRY if _ Ue, B. J, FRENKEL teveners Parry SrISSSTCRVSRCCCSOCS $100, 600, 000 for Red Cross, Its Second War Fund Drive : Largely a Woman Campaign : There Will Be a Parade of 25,000 of Them on May 18, a Spectacular House-to-House Canvass, a Chain of Booths All Over City, and Teas, Dances and Bazaars, All of Which Will Raise Money for Fund—Auzxiliaries Thoroughly Organized With Well Known Women of Brains and Energy at Head of Important Committees. i} | By Hazel V. Carter. REPARATIONS for launching the Big Drive for the Second Red Cross War Fund for $100,000,000 ts the newest work tn which auxiliaries in reater New York and throughout the country are now Interested, While the actual business of the workrooms—making surgical dress- ings, hospital garments, &e—will not be interfered with, many of | drive, 4 As in the Liberty Loan campaign, the women's work is a huge part of the general plan. Following are the women members of the “Committee of One Hun- dred” who will represent various boroughs: Mrs. William G, Wilcox, Rich- | mond; Mrs. & A. Quinn, Brooklyn; Mra, James A. Burden jr. and Miss made by responsible persons that the Sos POPPED Goo Heo Eo OD) Ruth Twombly, Manhattan; Mra, L. Lawrence, Bronx, and Miss Odessa right thing to do in this emergency and Admirals in- Tho strange thing s to place Genera! tde the Cabinet. sbout this suggestion ade by rman militansm, “Let the Generals and Admirals! attend Cabinet meetings, as they do every day, and advise Cabinet Mints- ere, but the moment a soldier is plaged in control of policy and ad- ministration the soldier ts spotled and does not improve administration. “Mistakes may bave been made, but since the present ven in office the empire has given forth a war effort which has never been equalled in history, The position | tf E 4 to-day is that she is at sl nent the pillar and bul which 48 Upholding the liberties of the world ‘I do not claim that th present Government is indispensable. Th are other patriotic, disinterested tea who might take office and discharge their duties well, but the British Em- Dire would sooner have Lioyd George a® Premier than any otber statesman. “It Lioyd George had fallen yester- gay, the rejoicings would have been Berlin, and not in London, Paris, Calcutta of Montreal. soldiers may have to give Pncouragement is to be found, how- ever, in the unity of command, in America’s effort and in the resolute, indomit spirit of the British peo- ple.” Lord Curzon closed with a wish that Ireland had joined in the milita: effort, a hope that it is not yet too late, and the warning: “There is only one thing we cannot afford to lo d that is the war,” MUTART GIVES UP GIRL. Henry A. Mutart of No. 26 Mountain View Avenue, West New Brighton, 8. 1, who was arrested last Wednesday, when he was scheduled to appear as a witness a the prosecution of Charles and Jen- vie Birang for burning the hands of ¢ sevidence. The warrant for hin arrest nad Deon, issued at Fort Edward, N. Y¥., CaN arse, concerning bis daughter th positign of the signified her de- to live with her grandmother, who her from, infancy, 1 have ‘given y consent. I have ‘al payhre agrosing that her grandmother may er BELL-ANS Absolutely Removes Indigestion. Druggists aaet money if it Pe eo PILLS Keep the stomach well, the liver active, the bowels regular, and the breath | will be sweet and healthy. But let poisons accumu late in the digestive organs, the system becomes clogged, and affect the breath, is that it te} those who shrieked about! Government bas) dren, has returned to his| i art was discharged for want of ; Harvard Man and Soldier Wins Girl Active in Red Cross as Bride. Mr. and Mra. Joel Feder announce the engagement of their daughter, Sara Helen Feder, to Mr, Benedict Frenkel, Lieutenant, Infantry Reserve | Corps, United States Army. ROCHESTER STREET CARS Motormen and Conductors Walk Out in Demand for Forty Cents an Hour. ROCHPHSTIOR, N.Y, May 11-—-al) motormen and conductors employed by the New York State Railways, Toches |ter TAnes, quit work at 4 o'clock this |morning, Not @ car wheel turned, and thousands of people were forced to walk to work. Many factories were handicapped dur- ing the morning hours, some of thom making war material for the Govern- ment Decision to strike was taken at a ‘meeting held this morning at 2 to 4 o'clock. J. J. Sullivan, business agent of the Rochester Division of the Car- men's Union, announced that no cars would run until the men were given forty cents an hour. As soon as the » of the strike spread this morning a few automobile owners appeared in the outlying dia- triets with thetr cars and did a thriv- ing Sitney business, but could accom- modate only a small fraction of the workers anxious to get to their Joba, Demands of the men for higher wages Were recently refused by the treetion company on the ground that unless the elty consented to a #ix-cent fare the financial condition of the New York State Railways would not warrant an- increase in pay, ‘MUST NOT DISCHARGE | UNION TELEGRAPHERS War Labor Board Asks Wire Com- panies to Abide by President's Proclamation. WASHINGTON, May 11.--The Na- tional War Labor Board headed by ex-President Taft and Frank P. | Walsh, has ruled that under the na- |tlonal labor agreement entered into ‘on March 29 and approved by Presi- dent Wilson on April 8, the Western Union and Postal Telegraph Compan- tes must not, the decision made, discharge em- ployees because they have organized. ‘This pronouncement was contained | ‘in an official statement and came as | the first test case involving the prin- ciples laid down by the national board with the object of preventing atrikes and lockouts during the war. The conferees, five of whom repre- |wented capital and five the labor in- jterests, declared for the principle of open shop, but held that employee should not be discriminated againat for expanding their organizations if they did not resort to force, THINK SIOLA WAS SLAIN AS A MURDER INFORMER Case Believed to Be Sequel to Other Slayings—Suspect Held Without Bail, | Detectives of the Queens Bureau said | yextorduy they believe the murder of Baldasare Siola, twenty-four, of No. 160 | Meserole Street, Brooklyn, whose body Correct | these conditions with Beecham’s Pills They promptly regulate the bodi- ly functions and are a quick | remedy for sour stomach and Bad Breath "ange te a ay Median te the Wt Sold everywhere In Bonen, 18s. tie. 4 wes found Wednesday afternoon in| woods in Hast Elmhurst, was a sequel to the murders of Patrolman Edward | the {Costigan and Court Attendant John Hunt in Akron, ., @ month ‘They said Biola came to ereeeire a week after the Akron murd Anthony Maredi and James Palmers, nd went to work in the Shults Bak- gry at No. 1] Harrison Avenue, His |eompanions were arr taken Mom with the back to Akron in conni murders. Slola, it t» believed, was co: imi ‘in thelr arrests, for his tongue ut Off b; ayers, "Girolamo Cassrole, «laborer of No, 1h Montrone Avenue, Brooklyn, was held |without bail by Maglstrate Tovie, yeas |fis'es Jn the Long Island City Co Court, ied as the man who Hols is hone ‘Rucsday night. He | dent Knew anything about the murder. ALL TIED UP BY STRIKE: if they are to abide by| Morris, Twenty-five thousand women will! ~ | march in the parade, May 18, Every | vork overtime as we all do here, Rut [auxiliary ts forming @ unit and the Hie ote pac, axerciee hes put }women are signing up “in advance ie with tremendous enthusiasm. Mrs.| A birthday party was celebrated re- (15, A. Quinn ts Vice Chairman of tho] cently by the Lafayette Auxillary of Parade Committee, the Red Cross in Brooklyn. Birthdays Under the leaderstip of Mra, Aug-/ pay, At least this one did—$1,040 wa Mr. Frenkel was graduated from] ust Belmont, Vice Chairinan of Pub-| Cleared a having Weihane par - " d | , joaides h jes the Harvard tn 1915. Ho received his} lic Meetings and Speakers, women] ratavetty Auxiliary has the following | commission at Fort Benjamin Harrt-|from even the most remote auxil-| figures to show for April: 18,710 surgi. | son and ts now stationed at ( mp | lartes will co-operate in getting cal dressings, > hospital garment Sherman, Chillicothe, 0, Miss ¥ the messago of the drive to their pag Biinene? untied ce i arments (includin tev jis an active Red Cross worker. communities. Mra. C. Waterman of bf ments from the I natural colored yarn, having no dye will volunteer to make a thorough house-to-house canvass tn certain districts allotted them, Mrs. Jos. R. to the Red Cross {on shipment. Red Cross members of the Brooklyn | Cross in their workroom at the Acad-| emy of Music, An entertainment for! the benefit of the Red Cross will be given by the Theosophical Society un der the d fon of Mrs. H.C. Stowe, Chairman, May 20th, with a delight- Vice Chairmen in the house-to-house campaign. | Mrs. Willard ®. Straight has been | appointed Vice Chairman of Profit- Sharing Days Committee Entertainments and benefits will be | solos, the women - largely undertaken by ; dances, bazaars and almost! Here's a: reat memorial tdca—a Teas x | knitting machine, very sort of entertainments are be» | 0 Ne Ing planned in the various auxillaries | 4° to furnish money for the campaign tm are The idea origin- bh Mrs, EL R olf of the Mls Chapter at Staten Island Mrs, Randolf's son Franklin died r Vice Chairmen of this com, cently at Camp Mead and she Mrs, Seymour Cromwell, Manhattan, |to make some momorialt, hum, that} ‘and Mrs, William C, Beecher, Brooks | would be o: his comrades lyn whiting machin Ab tho Great Rite r chine to reat Miss Louise Dixon, a Jun! ipraeidial Chapter, and in consequence ion | girl who established a record for hf “dreds of boys will wear woollen socks Bit in the last Liberty Loan drive knitted by this mother and. other 5 instructor in the classes for bond ; Membera of her chapter. rm c salesmanship, will be Chairman of | Booths. Practically all of the booths will be in charge of women worl ry, Mrs, Reginald Fincke will act as Vice } Chairman. Crary's Mills, a “maple sugar” town way up in St. Lawrence County, achieved a remarkable feat, Ity | Red Cross, with a membership of 102, hay in one fortnight made 2,297 pillows \clipped from rage. Two teams were organized with sey. enty-five on each side. Livery man, woman and child took part and clipped for hours at a stretch. When the two weeks’ contest wits ended the teams stood 1,151 to 1,146, ‘The Red Cross Cottage, recently opened by the Richmohd County Chapter to care for women and girls who come to visit sick relatives at the new base hospital at Vox Hille, 8. 1, had its first guest last week. She was | 4 mother who came all the way from The Motor Corps girls fre busy n is “Why, this Ia almost as nice as have| 10k” Corps nt ork Dave al ing my boy at home,” she sata, ae we, |Union Hill, N. J.; etnias ane |Iooked around the cheery ving FOOM) Camden, N. Ju; Jersey City” We oe | of the cottage, “and I am so close that) Binghamton, N. ¥.; Staten PP N I can be with him often.” 123 Westenester County Chapter and That to just what the Richmond | tion gh York City ens vide women planned when they established | york County Chapter ts Nerves ty tt [the cottage for the boys who come| National League for Women's Service, back to “Blighty.” Because first-class hotéls on Staten Island where women can be properly taken care of aro) lucaree, the rectory of St. Jobn’a Church at Clifton was lent by the Twenty-five hundred compresses for front line packets were completed during April by the Theresa Chureh Chapter in Brooklyn. The Ladies vestry of the church for the purpese Aid of the church will give a bazaar o aeesdations aro timple but | ext Tuesday evening to buy eup- The accom: piles for Chapter, Miss Lillian attractive, afd the big rooms aro ar Harrison and Miss Gertrude Fittin ranged as dormitories and good, will be in charge of the Red Cross wholesome food {s served at a figuro| booth. jwhich merely covers running @x-| want to Know what tho Pollus |penses, A competent ma 9 11 xe? A Red Cross Canteen worker charge. a, i edie; fo: he Cy ph. The Bayside branch is still piling dies for the nographs are very searce in France, she writes, and up figures, Look at these for the writes, ang month of April: Surgical dresmngs,|%° have to use each necdlo several “| time: Z Yoilus lke picture pug- 6,167; hospital garments and supplies |e The Pollus like picture pus pajamas, 34; bed socks, 11 paira; | #08 the small ones that do not take fs pe clothe, 38; fracture pillows, 3,|t0° 10s to finish. And above every- | di weater ufflors, [tins they love cigarettes, The men Knitted goods—ewcaters, 27; mufflers, | love the pictures in the New York 12; helmet, 1; wristlets, 13 pairs; #om,/ Sunday papers and they ask us to| | 63 pairs, May totals promise to axceed| translate them into I h. “The | ‘according to Mrs. Clare F,| very tall buildings!” they exclaim, Winkelman, Secretary. _ The Nowatk Chapter points with It has been found that only one ont|pride to its report for 1917; They of every 1,000 of the American Red|made 653 surgical dressings, 18,119! Cross nurses in France succumb from | hospita v4 garments and 43,633 knitted disease or overetrain, according to {arti department for making nursing officials, Miss Florence Mor. | Pus ments has been opened rf thousands are being turned out, riam Johnson, new director of the De- partment of Nursing, says AN the lnyettes being mado for “The American nurses serving at| French babies by the American Red base Dawelals BACK ct , Airing iine Cross are in pale pink or light blue govern their service at home, Thay , Materials, Just the dainty colors a | have time off daily and are given the Mother would naturally choose for half boliday and a Sunday off, if pos- her child. It has been suggested that sible. Of course, If ® convoy comes in either gray or tan be substituted, but er @ big battle ip progrosm, they Mie Misabetb &. Hoy, eoslstqgat Wo | the women are planning volunteering to give extra time to the claims of the | tween towels before being turned over| ful programme of Greek dances ana ; Lieut. Dr, HAROLD S.MORGAN Herdic Surgeon Who Gave His 4 Life on Mission of Mercy at the Front. Lieut. Harold Sidney Morgan, re ported killed in action in Gen, Per- shing’s casualty list, was a member of the staff of Bellevue Hospital when he received his commission tn the |Army Medical Reserve Corps. He (Was @ graduate of Johns Hopkins; Hospital, |State of Washington. ——— (STORM UPSETS RVES OF JUSTICE SHEARN'S CHEF | Brooklyn is one of the directors in frciety) The average attenda = od this division, Mrs, Charles B, Alex-|the Lafayette Auxiliary is 130. © | ike. Bas ei rn ander will serve aa Vico Chairman on] yy i ay — | Verdier Becomes Hysterical and Is the Committes for Selected List of |v 0re [alk abe ue socks and pleas) Taken to Bellevue Psycho» or more socks, This was the = 4 ree ject of a talk given by Miss Ellen] pathic Ward. The woman's publicity end sof the) Louise Adee, Director of the Woman's! SJean Verdier. f. drive will be under the direction of] Bureau at the recent conference at|of Supreme Court Ji Mru. Victor Morawetz of Manbattan.|the Waldorf Hotel last: Wednesday | Shearn, 308 y-elghth A special Committee on Women’s | gocks will always be needed,” Miss] Street, 1s under treatment to-day in the Tcoams has been appointed with the] Adee said. “Machine socks are wel-| Psychopathic ward in Bellevue for al following members: Mrs. Walter|come, While the knitted socks last|}ysterical condition caused by last Maynard, Chairman; Mra. Jas, A./four days, the machine gocky last | his lectrical storm, and too :aany , and Miss Ruth Twombly. | {tee days, and require less time and | cigarettes Burden Jt, and aie mont extensive | Woot, 10 foake The unbleached of| tte was prepeting dlaner for guests of ne Justice last night when the, storm parts which the women will play in}in it, is demanded, for in case of!) ke. ‘The lightnin pie y the drive will be tho house-to-house |ubrasions the dye is apt to produce| , dP doles whe hea hie hla, ke eolneataae 1 and finaly made him campaign. In each ete At] The socks should be washed in|®ysterical, Etforts to- qulet him failed are being signed up by worl tepid, soapy water and. presses bes/and an ambulance was mumoned, ia the pgpitat he admitted bh as fifty cigarettes a day, Another man who had an unusual ex- aes E erlence | en an Swann ie adoniies ian te Rae Theosophical Society are co-operating| reonte one ay Wor ae wee a ey uinn, Queens, and Mrs. Wi wit o Bi de Rb Natatic wd. whe ts Ate Quin, Gace ond, will eerve as{ Wt the Brooklyn Academy Red! Newark, N, J who was at a window of | hin home with his feet on the sill. Light- ning struck the butlding and tore a shoe from one of Lunk's feet, He was tuned, but revived in time to block ar- 8 to move him to a hospital. ™m was particularly violent in but also way to Albany and as far | wires all ¢ as Washington, ie + New Yorkers the greatest Interest the storm, which reached M ‘bout 6.20 B. M., was the sp a re ting in a burni ets of rain, with of lightning. > Truck Driver Interrupts t versation and Gets Five in Workhouse. Miss Viola Me of No, 244 fF non, was talking in nan with an el derly man at Sith Street and ‘Third Ave nue last night, when Matthew Burns, a congratulating each other 0 jes of the Kaiser, that he did not undors Miss Morris eaid that she talke- ing on trivial matters when struck by the truck driver. Her clothing “was muddied, but the was o} un- injured, Burns clalmed had been manhandled “by a crowd mans” before a patrolman arr | clas to be @ veteran of the fean War and was so talka the Magistrate restrained him wi Infungtion: “You are not in a bar room Me was sentenced to five days in the orkhouse. * a A HURRY. (Prom the Washivgton Star.) “Is your boy Josh am “Yes, replied Fa “He's plannin’ to be cessful that already look on me as a sort o' poor re tlous. er Corntossel Tich an" suce 8 beginnin’ to tton,” babies.” Another hand to th | ‘The Bryant High School of Long Island City, since war was declared, has raised $1,783.88 among Ite 1,290 pupils. It has already presented the Red Cross with an ambulance and a kitehen trailer, besides contributing I finished garments to the Red Cross at an approximate cost of $459.85. Now | they intend the top” with | Thrift St Is there a sock in ev knitting Don't leave it there, Fintsb it, start another. Our boys have to h into Berlin on those socks. | printed | \] wi Satur i | ‘The Shermon law indictment charges | ‘to live up to them ' charged. and his home was in the oked as many | \ did damage to| old inter- | truck dri of No, 216 & 6 e |knocked her do He was ar In @ very talc @ mood was in Men's Night Court before Mavietrate | Groehl. He deciared ho believed the young woman and her companion were the Red the General Manager of Cross, who has been tn ce to standardize layetys, says J Bright colors are to be com-| mende s “The French | women elves won't wear gay | clothes, but the refugee women take ompecial pride in these dainty colors | for their children, Let's have the prettiest pinks and blues for the _THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, MAY II, 1918, BELLEVUE PHYSICIAN KILLED WHILE HELPING WOUNDED IN FRANCE (ALLEGED CONCRETE TRUST ° INDICTED ON TWO CHARGES j Chi icago Plants Charged With Cons Spiracy to Force Monopoly and Swindling by Use of Mails, Two indictments were found yester- day by the Federal Grand Jury, chars- Ing violation of the Sherman Anti-Truat Law and the Mail Swindling statute, against tho Ironite Company, Master Build Company and the United Products Company, all of Chicago, #4- ward I. Bucklin, Syivester W. Fleshelm. Sidney L. Flesheim, Richard E. Bishop, Harold E. Smith, William O. Belt, Sold- mon M. Hexter and Louis F. Body are, Individual defendants. & conspiracy to create a monopoly in the manufacture and sale of pulverized fron an@ similar material used tn cone | crete construction work? It Is charged that the defendants fixed prices and terms of credit and required all jobbers, The companies also maintained s| “blacklist of persons who refused to agreements with them, it ts The Government says the Ironlte Company and the Master Build- | ers’ Company entered a collusive decree , forming @ holaing corporation, and used erma to threaten dealei to sign {uniform license agreements. Ri second indictment charges the 6 obtained money by repre- ssnting they had patents Sovering roe cesses for waterproofing cement Hocke and hardening concrete structure that any manufacturer not licer 0a them was Infringing their patents. CLOSING STOCK QUOTATIONS. | With not chanste tram, oreviows clase Net Low. Last, Cha'ze, | i caimen wy + in er ay Hy > 8] Gas 4B Ge BP ti im, Intern : lingsed crs: & t's =3 $3.8 ,— % aoe | ra | Rees : Fe fag i} 1% i tne | Kentiew [Tack ' | Mew I aid | Nat x 1s ‘ fe ; x he 8 | ewan : i “ | “ 3] 3 Is Open, High, 4.40, | WALL STREET GOSSIP. | Utah Copper Co. report for first quar- ter of 1918 shows net profits of §5,810,- 5,65 as compared e qu arter of 1917, equal to $2.35 a ehare, ugainst 446 a’ year ago | Chino Copper Co—Net profits of $1,- a decrease of $1,867,818 compared with first quarter of 1917, Net profits equal to $1.29 a share, compared with Mu your ago Alles Powder Cc so--Npecial Red Cross | dividend cent. on common of 1 per stock, payable May 18 to stock of rec- ord May “10. Pierce-Arrow Molor Car Co.—Report quarter ended March 3; Net proft, S107, after preferred dividends bal- | ance of profit was equal to $4.12 |or at annual rate of $1648 a a Curtiss Aeroplane Motor Corporation earned $1.42 a 6! on common stock | in year ended December $1 last | TNesino | dos wonders for | poorcomplexio | tween you and popularity--geod time success? Resinol Ointmentand R nol Soap do not work miracles, but | they do make red, rough, pimply skins clearer, fresher and more attractive, ‘Use them regularly for a few days and see how your complexion improves, 4 dealory (n totlet | eloe i ala evade 34th and 35th Streets GIRL WHO JILTED Queens youth must give him back the engagement! Ting, jury has decided. OTHER KIND becoming so scarce men may s00n have to wear pearl buttons on their clothing, dealers say. MAN WHO FOUND house flies In bottle of sett drink has been awarded $175 dumages by a Meridian, Misa, jury. LIEUT. BADR, new American “ace” in Lafayette Pacadrilie, was “the most timid of our four children,” his father said in Mobile, Ala. GROCERS LAID IN much large stores of matches following fake story of a famine, the State of North Carolina has declared them a fire menace. > THAT SCRPECHING, rasping, Wailing sound when the “L” slows down will become a mere sob after June 1, Public Service Commission ordered new device on brake shoes. LIGHTNING TORE off shoe of a had feet in window during last night’ not burt him, ewark man who storm, but did FLATBUSH MAN supposed to have been buried three months age ‘has come back and will take a look at his grave to-day. B. Altman & Co. 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