The evening world. Newspaper, June 7, 1918, Page 13

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SOAPBOX ORATOR “POISON.” Gets S10 ate Sorry Ht tan't You ave poison to the gommunity. 1 with 1 cout you to jail for ‘ e Magistrate ‘Ten Fi ‘et Pollee C when} workhouse for six my of cursing the Presiden the flag The prisoner, Morris Beneshowits, r ain POSLAM MADE TO HEAL YOUR tailor of No. 16 Rivington Street. Ww niiested nt Seward Park June 3, where i he wae making & foap box speech in : Juseian, Jn in of No. 123 Henry ret called 9 policeman, interpreted } ihe tailors address ‘and Was’ eager to | If you attend to Pimples, Rashes and an skin troubles with Poslam, 1d do so promptly, they will not de: Yelop und spread. Unless have actually seen Poslam’s work and know how readily it takes hold, stopping the itching at you you will hardly believe its| short a time. i y Poslam's action appears! e rkable when the is persistently stubborn and Nght else seems (0. bring lasting relief. Poslam is harmless always. Sold everywhere. For free sample write to Emergency Laboratories, 243 West 47th St., New York City.—Advt. am WhoDiscovereaRICORO ? ‘Ricoro? Traffic Manager. le of Nog 23 South Burnett Street * ea . Beet Orange, $15; fifth, A. P. Horn of “Next day, when I called, I found the doctor hiding behind a | parnegat, $10 . ° . Ra dsb 4 No. 23 Prospect regular after-banquet cigar. Pied agri ioe aa ir ily ‘ ie " among the elementary teachers: “*Nh Ha! Physician, cure thyself’-—I laughed. pits Mivaee tian Calahank eae > ““*Nonsense, man!’ he rejoined. ‘I said no heavy cigars. Thisis |‘ my va Fo; ROABTA COR OE 19) A; light and mild, and you can smoke as many as you wish. Take Margaret Marra of No. 817 Pacitic Ave He : A nue, Atlantic City ; A. O'Brien | of ‘01 ental School, Elizabeth , . . . teret; Ida Ale of No, Rutherford y “*Doe,’ said I, after a puff or so, ‘Ricoro is the pleasantest pre- | Xvenue. Trenton, Jessie Chase Was F sade iy of No. 119 Orchard Street, Newark, $10 scription a doctor ever ordered!’ ” | each 1c Sooner or later you’ll discover— Dedede gee | | a | Outdoor Life Urged by Speaker at National Tuberculosis Asso- ciation Meeting ; BOSTON, June 7.—-Methuselah lived to become more than 900 years old be t cause he was the first real fresh alr |crank and lived out of doors day and « night, Dr, Vincent ¥. Bowditch declared to-day at the annual meeting of the Na- | Ricoro is softly mild—you can smoke them all day without aoe een Penetela size, 7c feeling them. ‘Their fine, mellow, tropic fragrance and | “Soldiers disabled by tuberculosis cAan vleasant flavor are thoroughly satisfying. hei ices are should be restored to complete physica Box of 50—$3.50 I ' Bm mye T heir Brees Ore usefulness just as well as one who has as low as Ge to 2-for-25¢ because Ricoro is imported from had his leg phot off,” sald Col, Ha Imported srto Rico duty-free. Spiat Aca etna auirenn Gensnats ane ; i weet : : ; . Oe, | “Higures compiled from the averages from Porto Rico Sold only in United Cigar Stores —"Thank you. |of all belligerents show that for eve 1,000,060 men mobilized 10,090, or 1 Dr, G. A. Prosser, Secretary of ine Fe Washington » » BROKEN-OUT SKIN’ 4 common complaint, IRISH WARNED CONSCRIPTION 1S NOT WITHDRAWN a Lord Mayor of Dublin Coming Here as Soon as It Goes Into Effect. DUBLIN, June 7—A warning to Ireland that Lord French's recruiting proclamation mean the withdrawal of conscription was made In a statement issued last night by does not the Anti-Conseription Conference af- ter a four-hour session at Mansion | House. The Lord Mayor of Dubiin | presided at the meeting and John Dillon, Joseph Devlin and other Na- }tionalist leaders, as well as repre- sentatves of Labor and the Sinn Fein, | were present The Lord Mayor of Dublin, it was | announced, will proceed to the United the attempt to con- script Ireland is renewed. The im- prisonment of the Sinn Feiners with- j out trial is condemned and the Irish | Military Administration denounced The attitude of the conference toward the My nerves were jumping from overwork, ‘phoned the doctor and told him my trouble. too many heavy cigars again. see me tomorrow.’ statement says nothing of the]! That’s what the doctor ordered!’’ he said. THE EVENING wWuRby, STATETO SUPPLY reortiiting campaign. Its reference to the proclamation of Lord French fol- lows: “The conference takes note of the latest proclamation from Field Mar- shal French, In view, how , of ite terms, we warn our countrymen against false confidence that conscrip- tion is at an end. hitherto, Irishmen must trust above all else thelr own unbroken unity against a renewal of the danger of conscription which the proclamation has only provisionally postponed.” In regard to the Lord Mayor's pro- posed visit to America, the statement says that the Lord Mayor “has patri- otically promised to hold himseif in readiness to take up the mission whenever any fresh attack on the right of Irishmen to self-determina- tion as a nation may be attemptod,.” Presssanaa oo PRISONER HAS “THE BENDS.” Subway Worker to Be Held ns Draft Dodger on Recovery. When Peter Magola of No. 539 Gra- ham Avenue, Brooklyn, arrested on a chargo of Intoxication, was brought from his cell in the Bedford Avenue Police Station to-day it was discov. ered that he had the “bends,” resuit- ing from work in compressed air tn the subway excavation under Seventh Street, Brooklyn, It was learned he had not filed his ‘raft questionnaire, the police said He wus placed in a comprensed air chamber in the excavation for treat- ment. When he has recovered he will he arraigned in tne Bridge Plaza urt and then turned over to the acral authorities said the so I ‘You're smoking Cut them out. Come a art vet a WRIDGE DESIGN BY GUSTAY LiNDEWTHAL, Consalting Emyiuew. MOR! NEWSPA MONTHS OF v, STATISTICAL YORK EVENING POST: x 365,114 Agate o18 8 a AA TOF THE NEW The NEW YORK WORLD’S Lead over the TIMES ‘Si AMMALTAN LAND’ T0 MEW JERSEY. —TOTAL LENGTH 1.38 FEET, NEW YORK NEW YORK NEW YORK NEW YORK NEW YORK Lines New York World, 5,894,144 Agate Lines TIMES AMERICAN. HERALD TRIBUNE SUN 51, the TRIBU! Agate Lines.) and unshakable purpose for safety | In the future, as} WAR FOOD, FISH AS BEEF SUBSTITUTE eee Ponds in Old Champlain and Erie Canal Are Now Being Stocked. ALBANY, June 7~<War food fish to supply the growing Weficit of meat are now being stocked in the State's new fish ponds in the beds of the old Brie and Champlain Canals under the direction of the State Con- servation Commission. While meat prices are soaring the Commission's slogan, “every pound of fish caught means a pound of meat saved,” {s assuming more than mere verbal significance at the two points in the old canals which have been selected for fish rearing pur- poses. The necesmry construction work on the sections is completed, enemy aliens have been eliminated and the food fishes to be used for stocking purposes ane being rushed from various points in the State and MWberated in the canals as fast as they arrive. The first consignment consisted of @ large number of yellow perch fry, which were planted in one of the sections of the old Drie Canal near Amsterdam. Accbrding to the Conservation Commission a quantity of perch spawn was collected by State employees in Aridondack lak where these fish are a menace to other fishes In the same wate: Its removal is therefore accomplishing a double benefit. By autumn the young perch showld be grown to finger-long size and thoy will then be distributed to vartous parts of the State for stocking de- sirable waters. The second section of the Erie Canal at Amsterdam will be used for rearing emall- cesout black bass. JERSEY TEACHERS WIN PRIZES FOR WAR ESSAYS | Elmer Johnson First on High School List and Raida Osborn Best of Elementary Writers. TRENTON, June 1.—The best essay from a New Jersey High School teacher on “Why the United States In at War,” a subject put forth by the National Board of Public Service, was written by Elmer W. Johnson of No. 326 Walnut Roselle. An education bulletin ed by the State Department of Pub lie Instruction announced this to-day Mr. Johnson will receive a prize of 875 ‘The other prizes a ond, Max J. Herzberg of the Central High School, Newark, $30; third, Danie! Chancey Knowlton of No, 160 Walnut Street, M $20; fourth, Anita A Street * air, SIX MILLION AGATE LINES ‘| married foray-two yea ¥KIDAY, JUNE 7, STRAUS RESIGNS AS HEAD OF PUBLIC SERVICE BOARD Insists to Whitman He Needs Rest and Will Retire Not Later Than July 1. Insisting on the rest he believes he has long needed, Oscar &. Straus has sont to Gov. Whitman his resignation an Chairman of the Public Serviow Commission of this district, effective not later than July 1 It is under- stood he will do nothing until fall, and will then seek work along some na- tlon.ul or International lin The only suggestion to-day as to Mr. Straus's successor was that Com- missioner Charles Bulkely Hubbell might be promoted to the position., When Mr. Straus, who is sixty-oight | years old, became Chairman, Deo. 20, 1915, to succeed J. Sergeant Cram, he refused to take the place for the full | five-year term. He expected to retire at the expiration of two years, and Protested at the expiration of that time against holding it longer. | The Governor persuaded him to re- main a while lon, but now he ts determined not to serve after this) month. —_— MORGENTHAU FOR P. S. C.| Impression That He Will Be Named to Succeed Oscar 8. Stri An impression prevalis at the hend- quarters of the Public Service Commis: sion that Chairman Oscar S. Straus, whose resignation will soon be forward- ed to Gov, Whitman, will be succeeded by Henry Morgenthau, former Ambas- sador to Turkey. It ts believed that Gov. Whitman, who has the appoint ment ¢ successor, feels that a Democrat should succeed him. Mr. Morgenthau has written an ¢x re of Germany's deliberate planning for world domination yeara before the | ctual outbreak of war. Since his re- turn from Turkey he has been active In relief work. He headed the campaign that netted $5,000,000 for the Jewish War Relief Fund in a week, LETTER TO DRAFTED MAN READ AT USSELLTE TRIAL |Shot for Stand Taken for Lord Quick Method of Entering His Presence, Said Note. “If you are shot because of the stand you take for the Lord, that will be a| quick method of entering His glorious presence.” This tn an extract from a letter signed “J. F, Rutherford to a drafted jan, which the prosection in the Gov- jernment’s case against Rutherford and feven others presented in the Fei District Court, Brooklyn, to-day | defendants are charged with arousing disloyalty in the Nation's armed forces. Hans Hinsberg of Boston, who was drafted, said he received ‘the letter after he had written to the Watch Tower Bible ‘Tract Society, of which he | and the defendants are members. He asked for advice, he teatif nd main- tained that he didn't think it right. to/ fight because he had been consecrated | to the Lord, and his creed opposed war | and the taking of human life etter introduced n't go to war he confined tn prison or shot, | that is the Lord's way. Prob Lord wants some of hia saints in prison for awhile to tell the elemen they meet the Kingdom Js at hand The letter was marked “dictated eee |FAIRBANKS FUNERAL TO-DAY. Thousands View Rody | State Capitol, INDIANAPOLIS, June 7 4 battalion of Indiana militia Jof Charles W. Fairbanks, former Vice | President of the United States, wan taken from the Fairbanks residence here and placed in the State Capito! to-day ‘Thousands passed through the corridors of the building to view the body {The funeral was to be held at Fairbanks residence this aft o'clock. Bishop W. Washington was to deliv address at the servic e made in Crow In Indiana scorted by the bedy the rnoon at % McDowell of the principal Rurial was t Cemetery here. mA to Sagar Plant. Coroner George Engle of Yonkers was notified to-day that a had died suddenly at the plant o! he National Sugar Refining Company there. He was isked to investigate At the entrance to the plant he was man id the dead man was his brother. Jo assistant chief engineer. When he covered his composure he made the vestigation and ‘recorded ac =| ton as the cause of the de. | Engle was forty-nine y indi ho Fonn s old and lived at No. 205 Warburton Avenue, Yonkers. oe Mind of| | . Iworth. On the Frank | Woolworth, five | *, Supreme Court en cent store magn. |Justice Pendleton to-day appointed | | Phoenix Ingraham a commission to in sUigate in al condition of n Mr. Woal- | orth whom ne ix in euch | an 1 condition, for f the application |Georga W. Jarmen and |! tohand, _— | Sallora’ Club Opens To-Night Sailors are to have a big club and playground in the ity for the dura- 1918. MAY INTERN WOMAN AS DANGEROUS ALIEN College Graduate Said to Have} Written Letters Defending German Atrocities. Mrs. Marie Schaefer of Mamaroneck is locked up In Waverly House, No. 38 West 10th Street, charged with boing @ dangerous alien enemy. Sho was ar rested last Saturday by Sheriff Nossi- ter and brought to this city Monday. Mra. Schaefer, who ts @ graduate of the University of Paris and Columbia University, 1s sald to have written let- ters defending Germany and also mado speeches denying German atrocities. | engaged in p Her husband, Emil Schaefer, listed as! }an enemy alien, is employed in a bank of this city Capt. Roger B. Hull of the New York Port Alien Enemy Bureau has | No Matter What Else into the Pienic Basket, Don't Forget to Goes Mrs. Schaefer's case in charge and it "6 |is understood she will be recommagnd- | Take Along a Bottle of ed for internment for the duration of the war.. It is sald she claims to be of French extraction and her maiden name was Theresa de la Perriere, ——$—$ Marines Seek More Men Here, The Marines, some of whom are now hing back the Germans around Rouresches over there, are not forgetting their drive for publicity over ‘ h mid-year calendar, with a . : Christy girl as the main attraction, ts being distributed around the ality. It is designed to keep the Marine Corps in ‘one's mind every day from July, 1918, to July, 1919. The Corps can handle 26,000 moré men cae In a word, Made in Any Why Hi Neil How We Bring Down the Cost of Custom Tailoring All your garments are tailored in our own thoroughly modern daylight factory under the direct supervision of the firm. All woollens are purchased in large quantities direct from the mills, enabling us to secure most substantial price concessions. The large business we do in our stores enables us our organization at the minimum of overhead expense. all middlemen’s profits and we give you all the savings. Three-Piece SUITS to Measure Style You Select not have your clothes made to y YOUR iens, especially when we offer euch You select your favorite fabric assure you of excellent tailoring in every detail. Many Other Fine Suitin; Open Evenings Till 9 P. M. eM ol th Ave, 1 door above 128th St. t 20th Street, Headquarters. BRONX STORE: 408 East 149th St., Near 3d Ave. to operate our factory-to-wearer tailoring system eliminates Tor Men and Young Men Guaranteed ir order—-made to fit YOU and n attractive saving? you tell us your favorite style, and we $22.50, $25.00 and $30.00 Open Saturdays Till.10 P.M. a] ii ee il i Hn i Le ant STORES IN PaOOKL YN: 104 Flatbush Ave. 1370 Broadway, Near Ga’ "Avenue. 700 B'way, 1 block from Flushing Ave. 5106 Fifth Avenue, Near Sist Street. STORES IN NEW JERSEY: Newark, 196 Market St., Near Broad St. |! Union Hill, 267 Bergenline Av., John St. 4 oT a ie from he MMMM Re In house to-night with @ naval dance, Tho | |tion of the war, It will be opened | ground extends from %sth Street to| 1 Street, along the North River, | HAN ontrance at list Stroet. Mra. | arles A, Childs, Mra, George f | uid, Mrs. Charles Alexander, Robert Gerry and fre. Edward SN. Brett orwritten fe in tive xpensen Riv oath. th Absolutely free to the atior| boys. The New York War Camp| mmunity Service will manage it | Many naval officers will pening. a oe |envey From sw! Wilson WASHINGTON, June 7.-Hans Sulzer Minister from Switzerland, called on President Wilson to-lay before leaving | n a brief trip for Swiss authorities een the Unite uss with pending Switzer Addons 424 Broadway 16 Delancey Street 10 Irving Place rag West gad Street coal-stove on a few Irving Place and 1th Street Stuyvesant 5690 or apartment the Electric Iron means summer comfort Working more effectively than old-fashioned ironing, it leaves the room cool and the work is done without material fatigue Onur nearest Show Room will send a trial iron hours notice The New York Edison. Company ‘ At Your Service Stuyvesant s600 Branch Office Show Reems tor the Convenience of the Publi Telephone Canal 3600 Orchard 1960 Address 1st Fast 86th Street 15 Fast racth Street Harlem go20 362 Fast r4gth Street Melrose 9900 All Show Reoms Open Uniil Midnight Telephone Lenox 7780 Bryant 5263 Night and Emergency Call: Farragut 3000 Thrift and War Savings Stamps on sole at all our offices

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