The evening world. Newspaper, December 7, 1918, Page 4

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“TLS PAVSTRBUTES the celebration and to help bring British atmosphere still closer, H. M. 3. Berwick, carrying veterans of | many battles in whioh the British have won distinction, has dropped anchor in the Hudson River, Lieut. Commander 0. C. C. Dallas, whose forefathers, he said, founded Dallas, Tex., came on board the Ber- TO BRITAIN TO-DAY; WAR HEROES HELP wick. Also Sub-Lieut. C. Michard, Be eet aa formerly of H. M. 8. Geott, which/| i : was torepedoed and @unk by a Gity’s Big Celebration De-| boat. Lieut. A, MacKellar, who been conveying American troop- for montha, is also here. The urgeon, Dr. A. R. Upton, who board the Lord’ Clive at the bombardments of Zeebruge and Os- tend, as well as the ship's com- nander, C. H. N. James, are great plovers of America. Prince Fushim! of Japan, here rep- resenting the Japanese Emperor, is ulso helping or Britain to-day. Vith the Hippodrome and Madison Garden unavailable, it was to postpone the meeting 4 for to-day until 3 P.M. to when it will be held in the ppodrome Edwin O, Holter, | man for the flayed a Day Owing to Failure to Get Auditoriums. | Uficle Sam John Bull Walking arm in arm throughout th United Surygs to-day. This is Brit- dob Day, and though New York has @ modest programme for to: the city will pay Aitine style to-morrow. British fags are entwined with the and Stripes on almost every and are day, tribute in more | Square | recess | schedule! morrow Mm New York Chair- Committee on America’s Tribute to Britain, said the meeting Will be one of the greatest ever held lin America and that much will be | said by distinguished speake warm the hearts of our Brit panions-in-armas, Alton B. Parker skin is yellow—complexion wlimen any tg sin cp! taste in your movth— v8 you should ih ’ Olive Tableta—a sub- | for calomel—were prepared by (ond after 17 years of study dvrards Olive Tabletsare a presid.e Among the speakers will be Chartos will ans Hug! Dr. George EB. Vin- t of the Rockefeller Institute, and Henry Babington Smith, who repre- Meee! f sents Lord Reading in the United ible compo “A tnang epee of tobe States, will be present ax a repre- evill know them by their olive colots | sentative of the British Ambassador ‘ohave aclear, pink skin, bright 4 a feeling of buoyancy like |°"1 will accept the tribute from youmustget atthecause. | America, David Bixpham will be the . owerds’ Olive Tel iets act on the soloist The Pilgrims of the United States will give a Juncheon at the Kite- Carlton at noon to-day for dis- tu 1 British and Canadian oth. cers, Several of the Britishers who will be present and later attend the SUGGESTIONS THAT SHOULD AID YOUR CHOICE .- Repeater WHTARS $ W take TAMONDS Lady's Faney Bink Waray" se Beate Call or Write for NFIDENTIAL Book of Gems. REDIT 1374 Broadway Pare 4 2 BOORS ABOVE 57% St. nae arya oe How often has an attack of indigestion interfered with your work or spoiled your pleasure? Good health is mosily a matter of sound digestion. Whenever you are troubled by dyspepsia, flatulence, sour eructations, sick headache, biliousness or constipation, take Beech am’s Pills. They quickly and effectively correct digestive disturbances, stimulate the supply of gastric juice and Tone the Stomach Directions of Special Value to Women are with Every Box. Soid by druggists throughout the world. la boxes, 10c, 25¢ —~—or-— The Sunday World Hand of Destiny Map Series OLAN Size 18x22. In Colors, strect tn the efty, To take part in| dinner of the Canadian Club to are Col, MeKelvy Frederick Hamilton, E. Canadian J. B, fmeilte. Smith, Admiral Sir Witllam Lowther Grant, British Naval Commander-in- Chief in Gen, J.D. Lac of the British morrow in the churel VENING WORLD Jesse L. Livermore and His Bride On Honeymoon at Atlantic City, 10'BE TESTED BY EXPERTS ODODE OBOOOIOG at be GLLNL® GOGLDOOGAGGCOS! -night Lieut, Col H. Scammell, Commissioner; Bell, Ho Rabingtton North America, and May Military Atta sy ial seervices to- | ‘There will RED FLAG NOW | Now BARRED. The red fag ls now ¢ is now “taboo” in this city. The Aldermanic ordinance, for- bidding its display in street parades and all public places, has been signed by Mayor Hylan, ‘The black flag, too, falls under the fame prohibition, as does also any gn or sign having d to orga is sacri ‘ogatory to ous, or which public morals. The penalty on of the act may be a fine not eed $100 | or @ jail sentence of not more than ten days, or both fine and imprison- ment —___~— CLOSING ‘QUOTATIONS. * j Anwooada Mining Aue Gut & WY 119% Dacivrip Lecomotive f s Sim, | Swiss ratiroads are suffering from a 4 [last week “ oy % | % Of your young! Your little pete Need candy ‘Cascarets!” Bell for a dime— “Work” every time, When the kiddies’ tongues turn white) breath feverish; stomach sour, When yonr little pots become croas, pale, billows, sonstipated or havo # cold, give Casrarets aa dircoted on each 10 ont box, Cnscarote teste like candy tut work out the nasty bile, parr formontationa and poleons better (han easter oil, mlemel of pill To-Morrow’s Sunday World Order from Newsdealer in Advance Children weed never he onawed (o take Cite armies oandy eattarite, Gro earets are given to shildren aged one year and upwards, They never gripe, Never disappolat the worried mother, lon camp in West Prussia landed at $ | eith, | whom were in an emaciated and piti- - %|ful condition, | captured in the spring offensives of | Sl1918, and relates largely to the em- | “it! prisonera who escaped to British or | dysentery Watch tho tongue | | lack of | | FOOD AND LOTS AAOALLALAADAL LIAL ILIA DUAL AAULIALAL EL DAL ALAL LLL TDDOLELLELTLLLELIL LLL EL ALMA OULD LODEDETORODTOPTD TIE RUSHED TO 2500 US. WARCAPTVES Swiss Physicians Leave Berne for Germany With Aid— Freed Men in Scotland. PARIS, Wednesday, Dec. 4.—Three | trains loaded with food and clothing | have been rushed by the American Red Cross from Switzerland to Ras: | tatt, where 2,500 American prisoners | The Red Cross! Commission in Switzerland ranged for the United Sta ernment to pay all costs due Switser- land for transportation, and also for France to furnish oll and coal, as have been confined. lack of fuel. Two Swiss physicians left Berne with funds for American Three hundred American | officers arrived at Berne yesterday. | LONDON, Dee. 7.—Thirty American soldiers released from a German pria- | prisoners. Scotland, yesterday, British prisoners of war, with 1,000 | many of | Two further reports have been ts- sued by the Government committee hvestigating the treatment of Britisa | joners of war. The first deais, nly with the treatment of men | | | ployment of prisoners directly behind | the German lines. Following are typ- | teal extracts from testimony given by | died of ctarva- ‘Later deaths of even more numer- “When [ left Bazancourt about 150 men were suffering badly from and haif of them starvation became were living skeletons.” “There was a lot of sickness at Cappey, caused from ‘ood and exposure, No at- tempt was made to remedy these con- ditions.” Large numbers of prisoners no longer fit to work behind the Ger- man licns wore sent to IHeilsberg, East Prussia, or Treion, in iussian Po- land, A witness, describing the ar- rival of about #00 of these prisoners at Hellaberg early in October, says they wore mostly atrotcher cases and wore taken to the hospital, but many of those sont to the camp were so woak thoy could hardly walk, Ho says that youths of twenty years looked like men forty yoarn ofa, Trelon, auppowod to be a hospital for prisoners disabled while working on the western front, was supposed to accommodato 400, but there were About a thousand there, Thore was but one doctor to attend tho men, many of whom were in shocking condition, At tho Deynaa hosplial for the Fourth Gorman Army, although Many AUpplies Wore short, prisoners B d careful treaimont and ace food, iNeluding wine and ome Necessary, 9 second report, dated Oot, INAL the Conoiielon wad reached f t events in the eamps attaohed .o 2 10th Army Gorpa point to a doe hibernate potiay of vin | Geanite mirpore Hof ator f 28, (paiva spr ny German authorities an wan directed by them, The War Ministry did not interfete for the ff reason that it had no authority ove: the commander of the army corps. CAR IN ELEVATED WRECK | Action to Place Blame for Accident | teh The caused nineteen persons on the Second Ave- nue Blevated line nea Jast night was taken to the 129th Street barns under a pol!ce guard to- day on the order of Assistant District Attorney Talley. ‘The car will be railroad men to determine whether the motorman, Edward J. Coyle, the motor box was the result of in- adequate inspection. officials of the Interborough would reported. charge of criminal negligence. Coyle says the brakes refused to wo: a curve and crashed into one ahead Taken by District Attorney. car whose defective motor collision and the injury of 67th Btreet examined by export was fault or whether the condition of Talley said no subpoenaed until the experts have Coyle is under arrest on alc rk when his train speeded around In 5 Languages The 16 Great Departments of Knowledge The United States Dominion of Canada All Other Countries Natural History Our Own Life Plant Life The Earth Familiar Things Books of Wonder Famous Books Men and Wcemen Stories and Legends Poetry and Rhymes Golden Deeds School Lessons ein Bellevue Hoepltal slonor early on CHRISTMAS FuNOs NEEDED FOR FRENCH CHILOREN New Yorkers French ‘ations, All were able ty pre, except Harrie Lin ¢ 109 Findlay Avenue, th Asked to Aid Brightening Holiday for Those in War District. The American Committee of the Se coura Natonal Fund for thes Relief of Women and Children has re- wived from A, Guillet, Secretary G eral of the Secours National in Paris, this message “At Christmas the Secours National of France would be very thankful to re- red injuries tured riba to in CO TELL. Are You Making the Most of Your Children? The Book of Knowledge The Children’s Encyclopedia 10,000 Educational Pictures THIS BOY is happy, and he has good reason to be. stant companion for a year for himself, and he likes it. and wholesome occupations. The Child’s and a half. Great Right What is the child’s greatest right to-day? It is the right to a practical education —an ed cation that can be used —not acramming of the mind with a lot of different facts about a lot of different things, which have no relation to each other, but AN EDUCATION WHICH WILL STAND THE TEST OF LIFE. Thiskind of an education must begin in the greatest school in the world, THE HOME. But THE HOME must be well equipped for the most important of all its duties, — the making of a 100% useful citizen. THE BOOK OF KNOWLEDGE lays the foundations of a practical educa- tion for life. SATISFY YOUR DESIRE TO KNOW BY MAILING FREE COUPON Act At Once for Christmas Delivery. THE 80-PAGE FREE BOOK CONTA! Chieftain’ of a Vanishing Race (Frontispiece INS THE FOLLOWING SUBJECTS: in Three Colors); The Sun and His Family; What Our Skin Is Like; How the Nail Grows on the Finger; How the Teeth Grow; The Nerves of Smell; The Marvel of Hearing; The Lords of The Wild Kingdom; A Concrete Ship in the Water; The Wonderful Birth of the Wheat; How We Dig Up Making the Desert Blossom; Republica of South America; Sunshine; Canada the Wonderland; The The Boy Carpenter's Box of Tools; West Point and Annapolis, and Others. THE GROLIER SOCIETY 2 WEST 45TH STREET NEW YORK No more lonely or idle hours. into his compositions than any other boy or girl in the class. of dates and names of places to him. He can tell you who were the leaders of the greatest periods of history, AND WHY. He can give you hundreds’ of interesting facts regarding the different peoples of the earth, their habits and customs. He does not look foolish when you ask him why England is so much warmer than Siberia, or how it is that the X-Ray can show you what is going on inside of your body. In the home THE BOOK OF KNOWLEDGE furnishes him with all kinds of delightful entertainment and things to make and do, sports, games, carpentry, gardening, and many fascinating It will do all this for your child. Christmas for THE CHILDREN’S GREATEST HELPER. In 600,000 Homes Today Let Your Child Have It This Christmas It Will Cost You Nothing to Examine This Remarkable Work ce've the agaistance of friends in the from, that pein the Zourgel ely United Stat¢e to give cheer to the lit! Bisset’ re 9 8 Br Pitts relay hildren of the liberated districts, Ac ile, pe sentiments of gratitude of the| Don't wait until ‘your cold develops Spanish Influenza or pneumonia, e Kill it quick. « Qiks CASCARA, ae Boy Cd little children of Franee rough, The mothers are wtoloally ring thelr burdens complaint id are deeply America's be Contribut'ons Whitney Warren, Treasurer, No. 16 Bast ATth Street, aro pans Second Writ, as First Not Served, William J. Deegan, Socretary of the Mackay Companies, announced yoe- terday that in vi of Marshal Mo- Carthy's failure t ‘© a subpoena Burleson in the eaulty suit brought by the Com- Cable Company to restrain h | Ptandard cota ees ot” bra in 24 pesrp-cretaves ot back If it fale, Sie mercial its lines, second subpoena to be issued, ——tipe Der, Roux Quits Parts Pastear Institute, PARIS, Dee (Hawis).—Dr, Pierre Roux, Director of the Pasteur Inatizute ot Paris for many years, will ret're SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK MONDAY WONDERS 350 Color Plates Answers Every Question a Child Can Ask Things to Make and Do How do flies walk on the ceiling? Why can we see through glass? How can we judge dis tance? Is the earth hollow in- side? Why do loud voices make us deaf? Why do we dream? Why does salt melt snow? Why do we feel hungry? Why can we not breathe in water? Whatmakes acaterpillar turn into a butterfly? Can animals reason? Why are flowers never green? THE BOOK OF KNOWLEDGE has been his con- His teacher says he puts more new ideas History and Geography are not mere lists He is wide-awake and thinking Do not keep you child waiting until another IT PUTS THE CHILDREN OVER THE TOP. The Key to Success THE BOOK OF KNOWLEDGE is a new method of education in the home. Over 10,000 delightful educational pictures and brief but intensely interesting articles tell the children everything they need to know in plain and simple language which they can understand. It is the first work of reference which a child ever really enjoyed reading. The encyclopedias of the day were not written for the young, with their hard words, long, dull articles, and tiny pictures. They do not attract and hold the child’s interest. THE BOOK OF KNOWLEDGE develops the mind of the child as naturally as the sunshine develops the flower. It is the preparation which is the key to success. ALLL LLLLL LL CLL LLL LLALLLL LTDLELLT ALOR L LDL LOU LOLAAADUDOA LU LEAASLEAALUESSEELLILELULL LAL LULALADALLALALI DELILE TIS MALLE IDEIDELELLELLALLITTAL LI DOULL LEVITT LLADLTLIDALY LUgQUL MEAL TAD LLLLAL LIMA DLAL ETI ELILL ELLA TILA LLM \'Gt FREE COUPON THE GROLIER SOCIETY 2 West 45th Street, New York. There are —— children in my family between the ages” of 4and 16, Please mail descriptive book, containing a little talk on the different departments in THE BOOK OF KNOWLEDGE, and explaining the use and meaning of the work, Naméssscsess Address. a ee

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