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\ | a “removes soreness and SISTER ay a. PASE % “WOW 78920 WITH “OAT LISTED TODAY 14,066 Have Been Killed in Ac- tion, 40,851 Wounded and 7,759 Are Missing. WASHINGTON, Nov. 16-—-Army sud marine casualties abroad now number 78,920. These include the “Yatest army list of 547 issued to-day.) The army casualties total 74,714, the marines 4,026. In the army 14,066 have been killed in action, 6,362 have died of wounds, 3,835 have died of disease, 1,839 have died of aceldents) and other causes, 40,851 have been wounded and 7,759 are missing. The list of killed in action In the Intest army list is given in full, those trom New York, New Jersey and Con- nectiout being Nsted in the other dl- visions, of the roll. Tht list follows KILLED IN ACTION. be . Captain. WORSHAM, Biijah WB ite, Lieutenants. m1 q Woodside Ave, Q\QARLSON, Arthur E.. Anacortes, Wash <ARANCE, James W., Charlottesville, Va, RGARD, Prank J., Glendora, Cat - WCULAMUOM, LeRoy A. Chicago. 230¢06 229603060. 2 Gacrienserncac 06040-5464 ae 444% ® NEWLAND, Charles J., Cadillac, Mich 1X in Saeette bottom sien. Suntory, Then Me + ROBERTSON, David M., Sen Diego, Cal Mac wig ¢ORLAYMAKER, Harty B., Peabody, Ken TAOPP in Wilifamaport, Pa TRRHONE. Eimer 8, 68 Mount Promet ave, | Pere fe Sin Newark, N. 3 HPATURY. William MC Heaire,, WALRATH, Carey 3, Terkimer, N.Y, WESTLINO,. Joho’ Re,’ Topeka, Kaa. SINNEK, Béward F., Geneva, 6. Meshanic. Battalion Sergeant Ma VHILLIPS, Albert Conrod, Utica, N. ¥ ROVE, art H., Rastoo, Pa. Wagoner. y Sergeants. YHOMANS, Dantel 8. Ridgewood, N. J. * PCVULBON, Cay A, Nashville, ‘Tenn \ Cook. New York _QNGEINCHEY, Wiliam Jownn, 696 Previeat 8, | DAViS, Mernard F., Peoria, SNDYS, David W., Hetlam, Pa. ; Privates. 2° Decperaie, AKG John BU, Hoy. Out sanath, cette 'b cy AELTRGiN Seat wA Ate % . AMUKNG, Jolin, O16 Vanderbilt ave., 4 ult Seth ta fidsucin: Wiutam, ee kse | Aves Bevonie WH, oidon Maxwell. “Lebainee: HanNha, Whilau, ¢ BRL LM ONY, AN x bonita, Vonard th Ataron, 0 [OMACH UPSET? CANTRG, Vidoucie. i Mrackstiie, ‘es, | Cott sutao ‘Aye. New York City , Baris, tt t bat wi thang N.Y Bt ONCE | NE mite AE Se el akon mt, ends Dyspepsia, acidity, + carta, Rethampion, ase Tuchanond Welghtay Bo, gas, indigestion. Your meals hit back! och is sour, acid, gussy \Mloated after eating or heavy lumps of indigestion pain or headache, but never mind. ‘Here is Den’t stay upset! mm, gases, acidity and eal stomach distress ends. wd Diapepsin tablets are the juickest stomach relievers in ri Kata manpage . nd jiapepsin and iminediatel: Jo i pep iy Marshall, " nt, MH Woatuang, Pas Bridgeport, Conn, 3 Hand. Lea, Min ‘a Hiehmond,. Mi Ga Maire Mills, Da i. Doninan,” Mo, t the .wor! hew eost very little at | iawiey: usorse HL) lrighton, Canada , drug stores, —Advt. Hoy,’ Ogle ute” a Instant) Relief. lui Sore {Gums When ners of false ‘Yeeth find the gums be- ‘ginning to grumbls, it ® warning that these nS are shrinking and fins tender —that the res.ef a loose, wabbly Plate are not iar away. DR. WERNET’S POWDER Patse Teeth sprinkled daily upon your . plete will make it St tixht. Its use dispels irritation, makes the gums firm and igorous. A poorly cleaned dental © plate isdangerous to health | A clean, hegithy mouth }, means a hellthy, vizor- Haws. body —use this ,» Powder daily and be free from false iteth troubles, | Satisfaction, ruar att by Wernet Dental Mig. Coy * 116 Beekman St., New York. All Good Druggists. Two Sizes | Cl, RODE. Willem ¥., McKeesport, Pa | Wyona Si, Brook'yn vyinerile, Ten re Flintrille, ; Omaha. rs a. + Fiatburh, fount Ver- West 91ur- Bt, New There Wes Nothing So _ tor Congestion and Good Coids .. Rut the old-fashioned mustard plasier burned and blistered while i, acted, Get the relief and hel; mustard plasters gave, plaster end without the blister, Musteruie does it, p tha ithout th: It is a clear, white ointment, made with oil of mus tard. It ls scientifically prepa: that it works wonder: net dliste: @Geutly red, sc Ps nassage Musteroie in with the r-tips. See how quickly it brings re finj fe alway epee?” = pain disappears. Use Musterole sus ore threat, bron: chitis, tonsilitis, croup, stiff asthma, neuralgia, headach tion, pleursy rh umatiom, ft pains anc aches of the back or ferpics, sore muscles, bruise {it oft h prevents pneumonia), 30c and 60c jars; hospital size The DIET ee te en ade . Advertising Agencies. telephoned directly to The World. Cal! 4000 Beckman, New York. oF Brookiva Office, 4100 Main, During and After The Old Reliable INFLUENZA Oth neck, conges: imbago, ’ joints, % chil- ins, frosted feet, colds of the: chest $2.50 GRANDMOTHER KNEW \ | SY NNE, Maward TACKY, Victor, 0 si0ee SPARK, Mor Wellston, Mo. TICKIIY, Harley, Franklin, Neb, TARPINIAN. Marr Ma ‘Conn. NGS, John, Ade N. . Chicage. OF WOUNDS, Sergeant. MAGOVERN, Albert J., Troy, N.Y Corpora FLINT, Albért N., Little Falls, N. ¥ New Hudwn Ratte, N.Y Iti BC, Now York City, CAROIN, Art y RANSED, “hi le Ave., New York MAYMURY, Richard T., 131 W. 284 8t., New ark City PAIS, “Apostolie P., Rrldgenort, Conn. DIED OF DISEASE. Main at., White Pioine, N. ¥. WOUNDED SLIGHTLY. Lieutenants. FRELER, A. Arthur, 38 Lee Ave., Brooklyn. NAULY, Prank Patrick, Cochactom, ‘N.Y OKDAN, John J. 1810 Decatur t., Brooklyn Corporal BH St., Now York NAN, Patrick, 200 W. William M., 221 B, 624 Bt, New y N. Prank Joseph, Buffalo, N.Y. Mechani: LINDAHL, ken C, 6% New York WARDELL, Ivan, Oneonta, N. ¥. Private: ANDGUSON, Cyril, 92 Sterlin kiyn. BUCK Danial Jo ph, m Ave, Now. York City. DIAZDINSEE, Joweph M., 68 B. 25d St, Pajer REY es Mrooklyn. LW! Lisdi Bt, New nena! M., 1298 38th St, Brooklyn. BUERNURN, Frank Asher, Castle Crook, N.Y, MISSING IN ACTION. Lieutenant. | SHOEMAKER, Harold G., yeton, Ns a | Corporals. ir Charles F., 68° Metealt’ St, Staten IDOUX, Adelar, Canajohari Privates. astus It. Wosthury, N. jeyer, 6) Kast Lith St, New An Henry, 96 Johnson Ave, Jamal OAPOZZOLA, Angelo, 201 B. WIth St, New York City CORN, Walter M., 108. 118th Bt, New York Pity, : ORL Hiaggio, 198 Hoeerum St, Hrooklyn, Hay Joule B,. 110 Bast Hanover St, ton HURLEY, Jota M., 20 Wood Place, Yonke KORNAMRENS, Brod W., TK” Lincola Place, 65. Uni Loremso, St, Mrooktyn, sith Ave, Long th Mt, New York City, EY ond. Bre itvoadway, lnhiarst Cosco, ¢ N Rt lyn, NY a, Conn, X ¥ N Ave, Brooklyn, Co N.Y Hanchester, Coon, in, Bou New Bri } Mobort J i THRL A, STLEFEND. I Brooklyn, WOLDK ANIM, ‘ave, Bay ward 06 Lao Bronisiaw, AT) Vern: » Gerard, Ation. N En Nive i ae Semuct, den St ® hi fon 1 Joseph hiya, PTEAS, William C., 193 —— POLICE RESERVE ARRESTED. Brooklyn, Frederick Rosenstein, thirty-eight, of No, 605 West 204th Street, a member of Fund Game at Polo the Police Reserve of the West lyth 5 Street Precinct, was arrested yesterfay Grounds. on @ charge of attempted grand lar- eony fs 1 yn ‘i POLO GROUNDS, N y YORK, Nov ous el, manufacturer of waists! yg —p on at No. t 30th St told the pos | L0—Prin si -=9 Jump on the lice Uh he rned from lunet Army team of Camp Upton here thi Jeon ye day he found Rosenstein in|afternoon by scoring a touchdown in | front ot safe, He sald the safe had |¢ | been opened and on the lay $29,000 In Liberty bon and sey. eral thousand dollars tn ci Horlick’s Malted Milk ob Very Nutritious, Digestible: The REAL Food-Drink, instantly prepared, Made by the ORI from carefully sele Used successfully over % century. Endorsed by physicians everywhere, specify HOrlick’s the orig S Abe imitat {AL ‘Horlick process and ‘ted materials, « en jp EF THE EVENING floor before It | ORL § {CAPTURED GERMAN POSITIONS AT OSTEND 4292490099000 9O800OF “EVERY RETURNED SOLDIER IN OLD JOB, 1S PROMISE |Clothing Association Gives Its) | Pledge at a Meeting as An- swer to Workers. The American Men's Clothing Manufacturers’ Association | pledged itself to put every returned | soldier tn his old job immediately after; application, ot a meeting held last night at the ossociation's headquarters, 152 Broa.way. This pledge was an answer to the cluim of Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America that one of the reasons for their present strike was thelr desire to insure a Job for the man in uniform Leon Mann, managing director of the Manufacturers’ Association, irsued & statement ast night in which he denied the union's charge that the manufac- turers had declared @ lockout. Mr, Mana said that jf the demand of the union for « forty-four-hour week were granted the effect would be to drive the clothing business out of New York City. The Amalgamated Clothing ‘Workers A announced yesterday that ved word from twelr s10p Crairmen manufacturers of army uniforms were taking advan‘age of their position with the Governmont by compelling thelr workers to work on | clvilian clothing. ‘The 20,000 workers in and Boys’{ the army uniform factories, by agree- inent with the Government, have not in the strike. been involved 1 $$ GEN, PILSUDSKI TO FORM A GOVERNMENT IN POLAND Bitter Enemy of Germany To Have Control of All | Troops. | AMSTERDAM, Friday, Nov. U.— Brig. Joseph Pilsudski, of the Polish Legion, has announced that the Polish Regency Council has intrusted to him the formation of « national govern- ment and control of all troops, according to a Warsaw despatch received here. Fen. Gen, Pilsudski was arrested during the summer of 1917 while attempting to flee from Poland on a false passport. His imprisonment caused great indigna- tion in Poland and. requests were made t# Gen, von Bessier, Governog-General Jof Germon-occupied territory in Russta, |for his release, These requests were rejected by von Besster, who accused Gen, Polsudski of organizing a move- ment against’ Germany. ‘The , Polish leader was still in prison in October, for on Oct. 30 Polish bodies in the United States urged President Wilson to de- mand his liberation. ‘ov, 16,—The Galician Social- Daszynski has been appointed of Poland and charged with formation of a cabin by Gen. Vilsudski, according to a despatch from Warsaw, TIGERS SCORE TOUCHDOWN OVER UPTON ELEVEN EARLY Crowd Late in Arriving for War first quarter, s after the kick-off Har- | vey grabbed the ball on al imble and ran 40 yards, croasing Up- |ton's line. Murray kicked goal. Ten minu t end, &—Princeton, 7; Camp Upton, 0. | The crowd was comparttively small Jat the start of game, but the big slands w slowly filling and there | were prospects that a fair gate would jreault second Quarter—Princeton, 21 Upton, 0 Camp [ HAIR COMING OUT? | Dandruff causes a feverish irrita- tion of the sealp, the hair roots shrink, loosen and then the hair comes out fast. To stop falling hair at once and D, ‘SATURDAY jerick G. Archer of the 88th Infantry, ~ WRECKS HS TAN Mortis Plains Boy, Who First Drove Ambulance, Slain in France—Other Deaths. Corporal James McVicker Whitney, son of Stephen Whitney, and grand- son of Mra. Stephen Suydam Whitney of Morris Plains, N. J., was killed in battle in the Argonne Forest on Oct 7. Young Whitney, who was under 21 years of age,. sailed in July, 1917, to join the Ambulance Service in France. Turing the winter he was transferred to the Italian Ambulance Service and in July last, he enlisted in the American Tank Corps and shortly after reaching the front was | made @ Corporal. One of his com- | panions in writing from France about {his death under date of Oct. 25, said: | “He and his tank were missing sev- jeral days. Nobody knew anything | about him. Then they found the taak , and ‘Whit.’ and his driver had both |been killed in the tank. I suppose | they must have been hit head-on*by an explosive shell.” | Young Whitney was educated at St. Paul's and Manlius Military Academy. After fighting side by side in many battles, two sons of Dr. and Mrs, Ed- ward H. M. Sell‘of No. 137 West 94th Street, fell the same day, one dead and the other seriously gassed. Sergt. Edward Lioyd Sell, twenty-four years old, was killed in aciion on Sept. 29 and Corpl. Charles 8. L. Sell, twenty- two, was gassed while searching for his brother. Both brothers were in the 107th Infantry, having joined the old 7th Regiment several years ago. At the outbreak of war they were at- tending Syracuse University. Accord- ing to a letter from an officer of the regiment to the boys’ parents, Ed- ward, who is erroneously mentioned in to-day’s casualty list as a private, was cited for pravery by an English colonel during the drive in Flanders and was soon to have received the Victoria Cross, Charles is convalesc- ing in a base hospital in France. Lieut. Elmer Stanley Terhune and Lieut. Clarence C. Borcher lived in Newark within a block of each other in Woodside Avenue. The two names appear together in the new casualty list to-day. They were killed within five days of each other—Ideut. Ter- hune on Oct. 8, Lieut. Borcher on Oct. 18. Terhune was born at Milford thirty-two years ago, graduated at Cornell, became @ cilvil engineer, and entered an officers’ training camp in September, 1917. He was in the ar- llery. Borcher was married. A few day! before he was killed he wrote a letter to his wife telling her that be was about to go imto a battle in which he thought the chances of survival Were very slight. His com- pany, F, of the 118th Infantry, had been cited for bravery. Lieut, R. A. Byrns, Company L, 107th Infantry, was seriously wound- ed at Le Catelet Sept. 2¥. after spending six weeks in a British hos- pital at Rouen he is now convales- cing at 98 Lancaster Gate, London. “Jack gave his life trying to save a pal. It was one of the outstanding feats of bravery in the Black J was the word about his son that came © Hugh R. McGlue of No. 2619 Bedford Avenue, Brooklyn, in @ letter from Franklin Copeland of No, 28 South Bergen Place, Freeport, who was in the same company of the 107th Infan- try with John K. McGlue. The youth was prominent in athletics at Eras- mus High School when he enlisted in the old 7th Regiment. He was grad- uated from the school in June, 1917, in uniform. The day before he was killed he wrote his father of plans for an \\t- tack on the Hindenburg line and said they would be “lucky if anybody came out alive.” ‘The Athletic Association at Erasmus is planning a memorial to him. McGlue's sister Ann, @ teacher in the Erasmus School, is so weak from an operation that she has not been told of his death. Sergt. Arthur F. Doherty of the 808th Infantry, a member of Lieut. Col. Whittlesey's famous “Lost Bat- talion,” that “held out against the Germans for four days after being surrounded in the Argonne Forest, was wounded on Oct. 11, He tried to get into the service at the outbreak of war, but was rejected on account of his sight, bet later accepted in the draft. Doherty ts a son of the late Arthur Doherty, a newspaper writer, and lived with his mother at No. 168 West 120th Street. Death finally came to Private Fred- one of the first regulars to get into real action, He had gone over the top several times and died late in September from wounds received in his final chi His father, George Archer, No, West 1234 Street, re- ceived a letter from Regimental Chap- lain John A. Nesbit, in which the lat- ter paid high tribute to young Archer. A brother, William, is in the navy, Philip Goldstein, twenty-three, was one of four brothers in the service, two in the army and two tn the navy. He was killed in action Sept, 26, ° had been decorated for bravery and wrote his parents at No, 330 Wyona Street, Brooklyn, that he had been in ten battles, killed a lot of the enemy and had escaped without a CORPL WHITNEY INO MORE WOODEN CARS scrat | e Edward H, Steffens, twen- ty-seven, Co. F, 818th Regiment, re- | ported miesing, Wrote hig wife, Mae, jon Oot, 8 that he had been gassed {and was in @ hospital, Mrs, Stet fens, who lives at 195 Lenox Road, rooklyn, 18 a yoewoman in the navy, |The soldier hag two brothers in the service. rid the scalp of every particle of dandruff, get @ small bottle of Dan- derine at any drug store for « few cents, pour a little in your hand and mb it into the seal After several e hai roriing aut | AG you Cams Jind MAX danaruty nine- >rivate Alexander M. Gardni ‘teen, another Brooklyn lad, killed ‘in action Sept, 29, He was a stretcher bearer with the 107th Infantry, 274) Division, He joined the 14th Regi- ment when the call to arms came and vraduated trom Erasmus High Reboot ) bla un His parents live at [Blo 200 Joeat Jeb. . et of the body, you get Directions of Special Value to Women are with Every Box. fae uneaner Nice wimieas lade, Sold by druggists throughout the world. Im boxes, 10c., 25¢ (Advis ‘ ’ ' \ : —— henna IN BROOKLYN SUBWAYS What Is Public Service Commission. Going to Do About Violation of the Law and the B. R. T. Contract. With the People? T* LAW—"Passenger care shal) be constructed, as far as prac- ticable to do so, of steel and fireproof materials. The design, materials and construction are to be such as will give the max- imum safety and comfort.”"—Section 38, of Contract No. 4, entered into March 19, 1918, petween the city and the B. R. T. HE FACT—More than 200 wooden care are being used daily ‘by the B. R. T. through the Centre Street loop, ower the Williams- burg Bridge, to Canarsie and Jamaica. They are being used during the rush hours.—Information obtained from the Public Service Com mission, ' EST WE FORGET—Eighty-nine killed, injured when B. R. T. Brighton Beach train of all wooden cars left the tracks in the Malbone Strect tunnel. We IS THE PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION doing to put an end to this menace? A former Public Service Commission put an end to wooden cars in the old Interborough Subways. The Evening World then led in the demand for action! NO SACRIFICE HERE. TO FEED GERMANS,’ DECLARES HOOVER (Continued from First Page.) ‘ that will give stable government. “Uniess anarchy can be put down and stability of government obtained the indemnity which Germany owes destruction that has been done cannot be paid. “E would ‘certainly problem with mixed feelings, heving been jong a witness to the robbery of food frum women and children gnd the destruction of millions of tons of food at sea and to the misery under which the millions among the big and little Allies have suffered under the German yoke. Justice requires that government be established so as to make ameuds for wrongs done and this cannot be achieved through the spread of anarchy. “Famine is the mother of anareh: Hoover will visit England, and Belgium. “He declared, as he knew, he would not go further food problems that have aris- en as a result of the signing of the armistice,” said Mr. Hoover. “The food problem in Europe to-day is very complicated. Out of a 420,000,000 pop- ulation only Seuth Russia, Hungary | and Denmark, comprising about 40,- 900,000, have sufficient food supplies to last until next harvest. Some must have an immediate relief. SITUATION CAN BE HANDLED Germany or confer with Ger- BY PRACTISING ECONOMY, | Sue °Gefure, Meatling MA Hurley stated that, following negotiations which had been under way with. the British Government since st March. “We will have a surplus of 18,000,- 000 tons of food by practising econ- omy. The situation can be handled if an agreement had reached supplies can be transported. whereby the rates for transportation “All Continental Europe has re-| of American troops in British sbips was fixed practicully at cost, but Guoed herds of stock and is conse-| fised to say what these rates Would quently short of meat and fats. ‘These countries have their last harvests in and under orderly government thoy would furnish breadstuffs and vege- tables for from two months upward, depending upon the ratio of industrial population. More than 200,000,000 people are now in social disorder. “With transportation and financial demoralization, the tendency is for peasants to cease marketing their surplus, and this causes trouble in the Aboard the Olympic also were Ad- miral Jward Seymour of the British Nav who commanded the Allied expedition in China in and two Canadian Commissioners t the Peace Conference. The latte were Lloyd Harris, head of the Ca dian Trade Mission, and C. J. Dough- erty. Minister of Justice. ————— BOWIE WINNERS. FIRST RACE—Sel! cities even when recourses are avail.| Six furlongs.—Relari vat able in the country. tral cit Clasnee “The problem has narrowed itself to | §: .30,, second; Apple 2 (McCrann), show $2.60, the support of the citics pending res-! Hine 14 Waren Your Rtiteh, toration of order and the establish-| The Dauphin also ran ment of confidence in future supplies, | Pg where cities are the centres of LATONTA ENTRIES. anarchistic infection. “arrangements have long since been completed by which France, England and Italy will be provisioned. Our first and deepest concern now will be! for the smaller nations who were un-| der the German yoke, such as the Beigians, Serbians, Roumanians, Greeks, Zechs, Jugo-Slavs and others, | “There are 75,000,000 people in| \ these groups and they must be helped| /i at once. We have already doubled the stream of food flowing toward ¢ Belgium. be two-year vot 100; ju! Hag iipe, Kloothe, vale, 112 $700; theoey tm M ia ” 104 1 sinndiey Ameiita, 104; Frow $800; two-year War Me Weber “ 1 Carrie Moore, 1 Too, Jovtad, 1; | ‘Qur next concern will be to relax) Serre, Moure. 100:, Delin, 100: Joxtul 1 blockade measurés as far as possible | 100 je pag : in order that the neutral states in| om he dale Gai Europe, which are all on short ra-| 10 tions, may be able to take care of their people and prevent anarchy. “Another problem lies in 90,000,000 people in North Rus: | large part of whom are inaccessible because of the breakdown of trans- portation and anarchy. MILLIONS ARE BEYOND HELP FOR THIS WINTER. Ping, $1,000, "three year olla Wanting, g0s, and ‘one mile an Pity. 100 Mistrrne “Millions of these people are beyond | jis: Nleene) los: Mom iionn help this winter. These groups are| Jigar dame oT the ones that must enlist the sym-| * Apprentice allowance pathy of the American people and for whom we are prepared to make any necessary sacrifices, “There is a great problem in the situation of the enemy, numbering about 90,000,000. It is not one of go-| Triple Ship Celebrath: CHICAGO, Nov. tions were scheduled for to-day at the shipbuilding yards in South G! the first at seven o'clock wh Lake Mattato passed from the Chicag Shipbuilding Company to the Shipping forrd. the’ second. at toon when. the ing to their relief; it is the problem |feci or ‘the one shundredth | ahip "to. be Built ‘at the yards was to be {aid and of relaaing the watertight blockade, | Weltitra ‘ac four o'clock when the Lake which continyes through the armis-|Graften, aiag for the Government, was to be unehe tice, sufficiently so that they may ob- tain for themselves the bare necessi- RUB NEURALGIA. AWAY! END PAIN Instant relief from nerve tor- ture and misery with old “St. Jacobs Liniment” Get a small trial bottle! Rub this soothing, penetrating lini- ment right into the sore, inflamed nerves, and like magic—neuralgia dis- appears. “St. Jacobs Liniment” con- quers pain. It is a harmless neuralgia relief which doesn’t burn or discolor the skin. Don't suffer! It’s so needless, Get small trial bottle frem any drug) store and tly rub the “aching nerves” and in ‘nst a moment you, will be absolutely free fro bern ache and suffering, but it wil please you more is, that the misery, will not come back. | No difference whether your pain or neuralgia misery ts in the face, head eadache, slee laxative for over sixty ye: abit-forming drug. to France and Belgium for the fearful | | @ approagh ‘this 1900, | BEECHAMS PILLS Constipation is the arch-enemy of health. Conquer this enemy and you rout a whole army of phyeien! foes, including indigestion, biliousness, sic piemnem and nervous dyspep- Beecham’s Pills have been a world-favorite the cause of many ills and remove it. romptly, pleasantly and surely. strengthen the stomach, Constipation Leaders of New Jersey industries will meet in the Hotel Robert Tr at Newark on Dec. 11 to prepa comprehensive programine for the Te of industries, New Jer- firat State sey i¢ the j such @ plan, | On Monday, | built by the Society ¥ | the Destitute Concourse and 19% dedicated by iated by . Bi will also be a sale of articles by the inmates of the home. to announce | | At the Church of St. Anthony of § Padua, Suilivan Street near ‘est How: Btreet, at 10.30 to-morrow Morning there ‘will be a celepration | of thafksgiving for the arrival of | peace. The church ie in a district {imhabitated by most of the nationals | tes that fought with the* United States and the celebration will be international, John Benedetto, thirty-two, of No. 400 ¢ | East with Stree bricklayer, wiyile working this morning on the ‘snoke- stack at the seventh story of the Commodo: at 434 Streot # Lexington Avenue, fell to the pit of the smokestack and was killed The campaign expense siatern | Wiliam J. Browning of Camien. cosaful Republican candidate for ress in the Firat New Jersey tacrict, lod to-day at ‘Trenton, showed tha, he yas the only contributor, having givem 000. é J phine eyed» nineteen, No. 7 Thitd Avenue, was held in $100 cail for Special Sessions by Magistrate Groen! in Yorkville Court to-day, and Mrs. ve | Bailey, twenty, arraigned with ue wet Both women are eleva r wey, No, 149 Bast 4th 8! Louls M, Kardon and Adol stereich of the brokerage fi c 67 Exchange Pl ch. received $19,000 of the ty bonds stolen from Suong ‘were arraigned to-day be- Crain in. General Sessions 4 for trial In $2,000 bail each. al thousand citizens of 8 t fore Judge nd met in St. George to protest against the p establishment of the garbage posal plant at Lake Island, follow publication of a@ notice ‘that bide would be received for use of the plant next Tuesda $<. RUTGERS SCORES FIRST OVER GREAT LAKES TEAM. EBBETS FIELD, Brooklya, 16.—The first quarter of the Great- Lakes football game lafternoon ended with the sailors on thé |short end of a 7 to 0 score, Rutgers carried the ball down the field in a series of rushes, and Kelly. the collegians’ half back, went over on ww straight line buck. Gardner kicked ¢ First quarter—Rutgers Lakes 0. “MOTHER KNOWS” When I feel scrappy and meas, | mother never scolds, She usually finds my tongue is white, my breath bad, then she says, “My Pet needs « | Cascaret.” I gladly take Cascaretp because they taste like candy... Next niorniig I wake up feeling dandy. Do you give your children or nasty castor oil, pills or ed Cascarets never hurt us kids, Cascareta, candy cathartic, cost only 10 cents and mothers will find directions for children’s doeage at all ages on each box. Cascarete work like a charm when the child’s Little etom- lech, liver and bowele need oleansi: and regulating. —Advt be ars. They go straight to it. They act Contain no These time-tested pills stimulate the liver and leve.