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Se a ee ee re et ~ es “een es Te ie neha will be produced. were hard, red and large. They were| | maze at Grand Central. | Oe een a ceroreeie, pee oced OSS Chae ugar, 40 per cent. corm S; neat wae re tae and pain- ‘When they started that tale about | ; sl to a he by ranoe, at ede: nd #0 per cent, refined grape x ho Lg sleep. My face! | the iabyrinth of Crete where tho King] pipridparrs karlthe td acgs x ——a Party for Minnesota. 18, — The Minnesota Federation of Labor tn am @eesion yesterday passed a resolu- ordering the calling of a caucus f & Paul on Aug. % next for the os Tabor VIRGINIA, Minn., July 7d, Red and Large. Painful and Lost Sleep. Cuticura He “Pimples appeared on my face that yn, N. ¥., Dec. 26, 1917. Prevent these distressing troubles becoming serious by making cura Soap, and no other, GRAND CENTRAL'S JUST BENDER Three bwiy Le Levels, One, Surface and One “L,” Too, Prove Confusing. There's fust one thing in town mory confusing than the mubway ramble at Times Square—that's the subway als, used to feed the trull, they were feed- ing us no bul about the subways that were to come. There are a dozen subterranean entrances to this multi- | fold system, and after entering them | you find that you've muffed it. You appeal to a guard, and the best jhe can give you Is a sweet amile of sympathy. “Don't ask me, Billy okin + your Me | Qewers with @ wan emia ” THE EVENING WORLD, “THURSDAY, JULY 18, 1918, IN THE NEW GRAND CENTRAL SUBWAY LABYRINTH GRAND CENTRAL | Ligh: ENTRANCE gig ee cee Ay UN ComPLE TED ur GeTween Ow} ann Ni SUBWAYS “1 finished 8.0.8 New COMMODORE > Queens 800 Suwa ENTRANCE TO LEXINGTON AVE SUBWAY “TRAINS levery-day toilet soap, assisted by Little touches of Ci iM sased customer supply’’—It helped us murse comes fer me at night. That! man wid de blue print may help you,” ta the best he can do. | “How do you get to Bo-B0T™ you ap- | sumeasted peal to the man who le tracing his! “CQ Dp finger about the blue print. Save-Our ALLER sason, to overcome the handi- Soula Send-Out-Su: “Maybe they ase another code” I) ———— COD. Where I mnde my mistake was tn not uowinding a “Tm trying to find out myweif,” he! string petund me.” he aver profits — Was the to hold our volume, and to increase it. Now—those still further ‘*Small reduced in this Great War-Time Sale of Kuppenheimer and Brill Suits At N tie aba 1095 Broadway, at 23rd St. 438 Fulton St., Brooklyn, fh you aro clever aud ever expect to be In y held by the ene y , ) § | Central, spend @ nickel now and get ha ne) PERE Cen esyeuss ts $25.00 Suits, Sut | 8386.00 Suits, your bearings,” This Is the busiest| Te Company, the New York offe® | +1. company was 100 per cent. Amer corner on earth—an elevated train, | of which 48 at No, 90 West Street, did |jcan owned. three lines of surface cars, two Man: |. ¢5 090,000 business last year, accord-| “Adotph J. Re claimed that ext Season’s Wholesale Prices. Profit-Prices”’ are $175 $2350 | $9750 With an Exceptional Assortment of Suits at Each Price. Straw Hats for Men “Are all these people lost?" 1 wonderingly “Most of them,” he admits Finally when you get ing on other peopl know that fights of their youth, and dodge about a pet bulator runway, then down another | infant Might, and you are in the en- virons of the old Fourth Avenue Sub- | Way and the multitudinous entrances | through ¢ rund Central Terminal you end w in the Grand Central Ter- | Vincent Astoriaites, who are wutch | ne the stalactites grow while they t for their traing, If you had n the #tairs by the elevator and e down, you would prubably have ended up in the power house, which sen route. Then if, after some had put you out of the dynamo sery, You had continued down a run- way, south by emt, then east, and finally north, you would have come to the aame place that the elevator takes you to. Another entanglement of deception leads onto Park Avenue, Only one thing 8 familiar about the new sub- way foyer, and that is the steps lead- the first time in, think that it's a new entrance to their trains that Mr. Shonta has prepared for them. This is neither hither nor yon. Tf hattan subways and a Brooklyn sub- crossing each other. There | vels in which to get lost, ex- | clusive of the power house, and a score | of entrances in which to go wrong. | If you don't take this advice, remem- ‘om Sawyer and jon't go near the you've had the third Betty place at all afte drink, rennet a Fifteen Killed, Fifty Hert, in French Railway Mishap. PARIS, July 18—Fifteen persons were Killed and fifty injured yesterday when a $790,000 GERMAN STEEL PLANT INU. S. SEIZED BY PALMER; of Manufacturing “High ‘The property of the Recker Steel Company of America, capitalized at $750,000 and with a plant at Charles ton, W. Va., was setzed to-day by A. Mitehetl Palmer, Atten Enemy Prop- erty Custodian, and the plant will be run tn future by the Goverment. The seimure of this German-owned steel company in guid to be of the utmost importance because of its Pompesian af & secret process of mans, With the Government taking possension, this secret process will | become the property of American ing to a statement issued from the office of Mr. Palmer, and is now doing “considerable work” contracts, ‘The sudden seizure of the company and its West Virginia plant followed investigations made by Francis P. Garvan, assistant to Mr. Palmer, the on Government statement continues, “Previous to Mr. Garvan's investi gation,” says the statement, “Adolp! J, Becker, Vice President of the com- | saying | stock issued in his name 6,000 were (MAY BEEF EXPORTS — | *r cent tion of a separate labor | STATION Yj Hote Fcolng ite ptaternent on internation belied the eagcus, wil ed or di from Washington, board ex. vara takoryacismen i ese GuRRACE Sventean plained that during the early part ot artisan Learue the year Eng nd faced ie ae acute food crisis of the war, and ~-MADENEW RECORD | 50,000 Tos Sent Abroad, England’s Quota Relieving Her W forst Food Cri The Federal Food Board announced here to-day that beef shipments for May had broken all records, amount- Enemy Property Custodian saying the property was entirely America wned. But as a result of Mr. Gar van's Investigation Wilhelm Peters President, has made a formal report that of the 6,297 shares of hel4 in trust for énemy interests, “This stock is belng held for Rein- | hold Becker and the Aktien Gesell- schaft of Willich, Germany. “This report disclosed the fact that in the fadl of 1916 Adolph J, Becker had purchased tungsten and ferro- denadium claims his brother gave to him claims this "was a personal transac- A land vario le i o tion Becker sald he purchased medium adopted by us. this rey feartece port from youn org:| | ans Thereby Get Secret | povetn ot eunewten wri fo || north) atid take to a flight of staire,| smlericans Thereby Get Secret) or tnis anoney, which was shipped to| Germany by the German submarine | minal somewhere newr a side-arm n ‘ ; He also purchased . * oe canteen and baggage way. ” Deutschland | cap of higher prices and ‘‘de ee Lig ee AEG Speed Steel. Sg ge My len downy and, son wel we ite eee *: . $26,654, but was unablo to ship this | it's down) and you em! up with the to Germany and later sold it at ® profit of $6,000. “In his investigation of the affairs of the Becker Steel Company Mr Garvan discovered a novel attempt to camoiflage the enemy ownership. Adolph .|, Becker, Vice President of the company, is the brother of Rein- hold Becker, Managing Director of the Stahlwerk-Beoker A. G. of Ger- many, the business of which is the manufacture of parts for high power motors, engines used in ‘aeroplanes and accesyories for aeroplanes, Ir there were no enemy Interests in the Becker Steel Company. He claimed that the 5,000 shares of the 2,500 of these shares were cancoled because his brother, Reinhold Becker, had failed to live up to a contract to deliver certain machinery to the Charleston plant. He that in June, 1918, he went to ( many and purchased 2,500 additional shares from his brother, and that later he tnurned this stock into the company and had {t cancelled. The alleged cancellation of stock we supposed to have taken place early in with $140,000 which he} He! pite submarine activity that month Pork exports were 281,336,000 pounds, as great as in April. This has enabled England to build up a pork reserve, as only 8,374,588 pounds went as fresh pork, the remainder being bacon. ham, lard, &c. | Of the beet exports atmoat all the epee eT TE ARTAT of the tallow and Belgitim 71 per een. of the pickled beef. Of the pork ship~ ments the Unite 1 Kingdom received TA per 11.6 per cent. taly 741 per cot Y deigiun 34 per a owing to a breakdown of imports, |that country was consuming nearly 450,000 tons more food a month thaa te margin of safety permitted. Even compulsory rationing would not ba met the situation if it had not been for meatless and wheatless days im the United States ¢ use Of sugar substitutes was urged on confectioners to-day by the board. They are limited to 50 per cent, of their requirements iast yeas, |but the board says the Bureau of Chemistry and private institutions fre working upon sugar pubstitutes And it is thought practical formulae The use of 40 per Many hotels, the board says, have discontinued the use of cane or best sigar in pastry and ice cream and are using instead maple syrup, boney nd corn syrup. Milk. chocolate manufacturers, @x- cept in cases of increased capacity, are limited to 75 per cent. of their fresh beef and oleo went to the United Kingdom, France took 83 per cent requirements last year if they eon- dense their own milk, and to 60 per cent. if they do not, SEMI-A SA AT ALL ing down to the Lexington Avenue| manufacturing “high speed" steel 5 Sart abi ay cout 516 Fifth Ave., cor. 43rd St. 419 Broadway,cor.Canal St. trains, And even th eset une, , he made 6 rn report A 4 spitfail and with gine The perch ertea | hitherto exctustvely hedt by the Ger-|1 0 ‘in. Alien Property Custodian that 411 Fifth Ave., at 37th St. 297 Broadway, at Duane St. Broadway, cor. 31st St. Broadway, cor. 38th St. HANAN MEN’S AND WOMEN’S SHOES “I’xceptional reductions are offered in many of our choicest lines of seasonable goods.” SFOS NNUAL LE STORES Broadway, cor. Fulton St. 35 NassauSt.,cor.LibertySt. wert oe a ee ee train ran off the track near Vierzon, northwest of Bourges February, 1917, and shortly after the United States severed diplomatic re- lations with Germany. He produced no voucher or documentary evidence to substantiate this statement, how- ever.” In speaking of the Becker Com- pany’s possession in ch 8 count the patent right steel manufacture ment com ess is very important in the facture of aeroplane and aut omobile engin Otficers of agreed, the st appointment new board of done within the pany, made a report to the A SHIRTS In Our First Season-End Sale Shirts of Printed Madras, now $1.25 Shirts of Woven Madras, now $1.85 Shirts of Silk Striped Madras, . . Shirts of Fibre Silk, Bull Buothers THE KUPPENHEIMER HOUSE IN NEW YORK Now $2.00 Smart Hats of Soft or Stiff Straw, Panamas, Toyos and Mackinaws. DIAMONDS $- ABSOLUTELY PERFECT 139 Lb eri Choice of * ZB AS Several Desidad® \ a ryws ue While ~Set i in Plain iL These Genuine ‘erter Tiantinumn, Settings For Weak, Anemic Children; for pallid young girls; for over- worked men; for exhausted, run- down women; for feeble old people; the ideal tonic is Gude's Pepto Mangan “The Red Blood Builder’’ ween including “tebma coo ni SUDES ny have lds, to the nment of a rectors, which will be next two weeks, — | —— Nifcaienban Wow rare went ’and most writette hand Admiral Mansfeld Dies, unusual. No dealers suovited cy Wate, nag 44 East 14th St. Broedwer at ish Hs AT Careiandt Bt 2 Matnuah Ave.; Pepto-Mangan te made only by wok Rear Admiral! Henry Buckingham ¥ refunded if you ean duplicate th rh 279 Broadway 1456 B' way, at 42 . t., at ve. jrooklyn Study this pictare ee you M. J. BREITENBACH CO., New Yor! Mansfield, U. 8. N., retired, died yes il Anew Rew, gensine , Manufacturing Chemists terday at hla “home, No. 3s Hei dor 182Broadway,N. 2G WALTER & co. 182Breadway,N. Y. , Pepte-Mangan looks. » of paralysis, after an Sold by drogdiste everywhere kan fourteen years ago. diamonds for ona We appraise and buy diam eatates, from Individuals The Kaiser as I Knew Him for Fourteen Years By ARTHUR N. DAVIS, D.D.S. Who From 1904 to 1918 Was American Dentist to the Kaiser BEGINS NEXT MONDAY IN Est. 1891 Mfg. Jewelers, Special Notice to Readers The United States Goy- ernment through the War Industries Board has called on all Newspapers throughout the United States to CUT OFF allow- ances for unsold copies on and after JULY 1s. in order TO SAVE WASTE. Therefore newsdealers will order only what they can actually sell, In order to get the series, place your order with your newsdealer AT ONCE. If you are not convenient to a news. dealer, send Fifty Cents in stamps to cashier, The World, and copies of the paper containing the This series of articles, nineteen in number, will appear in The NEW YORK WORLD, Morning Edition Only, be- ginning next Monday. The entire series ,will be sent by mail on receipt of Fifty Cents in Stamps. Address Cashier, The World, Park Row, New York, N. Y. Nineteen Articles will be daily ag Cp sent to you issu