Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
a ea eee me = POSES NESE 5. ir By Se een Woman Held on Asonalt Charge. ‘Mrs. Maria Lauricetia, No. #18 Second to-dey. | Avenue, was held in the Yorkville Court scuna wn OUR GREEN Vv PLANT Fresh From Se. Shunshineand Pure Air NCIL Meats are prepared among shelf offers a happy solution to meal -time problems—a variety * of meats for all occasions. » InpiAN Packino Company OREEN BAY, wis. “IL MEATS REFUSE 0 FOR FOOD ON SH DEED LANG Fifty-Three War Workers Complain of Meals on President Wilson, Fifty-three representatives of the American Red Cross, Knights of Col- umbus and Y. M. C. ‘A, returning from service with the A. BE. F., were held on the Presidente Wilson of the Italian Line, a commercial troop- ship, to-day because they refused to pay $19.50 each for their meals be- tween Marseilles and New York. They asserted they had paid passage as first class passengers on @ oom- mercial tranaport and were entitled to first class meals; on the other hand, they complained loudly they had neither Grst class passage nor edible meals, Lieut. Sykes of Port of Bmbarkation ordered them held aboard until he could get in- structions from the office of Gen. Shanks. ‘ The troops on the ship of whom there were 2,098 were not a bit be- hind the civilians in their complaints as to the insufficient food and its lack of cleanliness and poor 5 One of those who met the ship United States Senator Howard Suth- erland of Kikins, W. Va., whose son, Capt. Richard K. Sut! land, was a passenger. The Captain made sug & report to his father that the Send- tor promised a Congressional investi. gation. Gen. Leroy Eltinge of General Head- quarters in France was among the passengers. Col. Clifford Carson, C. A. C., was in command of the troops on board. Among the civilians who took a lead in preparing a memorial to the War Department about condi- tions on the ehip were Betram Dobbs of Peekskill worker for the Red Cross, and Daniel Brown of No. 79 West 127th Street and A. J. Mallon of ‘No, 64 West 98th Street, both of the Knights of Columbus. The Pesario with 1,293 troops from Marseilles docked at the foot of West @th Street, North River. The Roma with 86 docked at the foot of Sist Street, Brooklyn. Both sailed trom Marseilles. Other transports due to-day were the Kaiserin Augusta Victoria, Brest, 6,620; Liberator, Brest, 3, the huria, Gt. Nazaire, 4,788, will in a a srgett Moores «= © | Horace Was a Poet Piker wives, three children and one mother- in-law, according to the Government | Most of the ~ ~ In Describing Farm Joys; advance information. units are casuals and small detach- ments, CONVALESCENT SOLDIERS GUESTS OF YALE CLUB Spend Afternoon at Theatre and Drive to Dinner at Pershing House; to Dance Later. One hundred and fifty-seven con- valescent soldiers, led by @ young giant of a sergeant who was wounded sixty-three times in five major en- #agements, were luncheon guests at the Yale Club to-day and are spend- ing the afternoon at the Palace Thea- tre. The Yale Club part of the pro- gramme was similar to that of parties iat have been given there weekly for 4 number of months under the direc: tion of M. N. Buckner. The convalescents came from Long Island hospitals, from Fox Hill Hos- 8 Service Croms and as reminders of Cantigny, the Argonne, St. Mihi: the Somme. White is 6 feet, 4 inches tall. ‘The schedule o ly called for a visit to the Polo Grounds, but when rain made baseball impossible the boys voted vaudeville. Miss Mabel N. Beardsley, for the War Camp Com- munity Bervice, is rei with motors ra drive to dinner a: ing House and after dinner 150 giris will be mobi- lized in the Gramercy who dance. JOBLESS, HE LEAPS TO DEATH FROM BRIDGE Queensboro Span Victim Refused to Live and Starve—Dies in Hospital, Unable to get work, John Vinchell, « barber, of No. (42 Bast 79th Street, Man- hattan, leaped yesterday from the Queensboro Bridge to the Bast River. He lived for five hours after he was rescued and taken to St. John’s Hospi- tal, where he died. Vinchell was seen to leap by Svend Degier and Albert Ogerson, employed on a dredge at the foot of North Jane Street, Long Island City. They Sinohen ‘by tho hale’ ashe conte “Meg = the second Ga batbaed ital. ‘The man regained co: ness and told Dr. Fieissig he had unable to get work and Broferrea death to starvation. Then he died, The House of Kuppenheimer Clothes Cool Clothes for Vacation Days ACATION DAYS, Week-Ends and Holidays afford a most welcome relief from the ‘‘daily Summer grind’”’—and the clothes a man wears play abig part in making his vacation and holiday enjoyment complete. The Brill Stores have the kind of clothes you want and really need—clothes that will serve you all Summer ‘round. Made of approved, feather- weight Summer fabrics, tailored to wear well, to keep their shape and to feel as cool as they look. Air-O-Weave Suits from The House of Kuppenheimer— Palm Beach Suits, Mohairs, Tropical Worsteds and other Summer weaves in plain colors and fancy patterns, Styles and sizes for every man. LIGHT WEIGHT AND RIGHT IN PRICE—$12.50 to $50.00 Many More Straws All shapes, all styles, all braids, $2.50 to $6.00 Cool Underwear Athletic Shirts and Drawers of Fancy Madras, at 85c each Shirts of Silk Shirts at $5.50 fine cool Shantung Silk, with collars to match 278 Broadway 44 East 14th St. Broadway, at 49th St. 1456 B’way, at 42d St. 125th St., at 3d Ave. 47 Cortlandt Street 2 Flatbush Ave. Brooklyn - Hear Mike’s Tale of Woe For Mike Listened to the Siren Song of Isadore * and Agreed to Go Cows, but He Made Mistake of Telling the Girl “Jew Farmers H, for the joys of « farmer's life —the getting up at four bells (Eastern, not nautical, time), the milking of the cows, the relieving the onwary hen of the luscious hen- fruit, the cross- country run after Potato bugs and the fishing of the family cat out of well, Isadore vans had a sotlgspot in his heart for Hor- It Horace had suddenly ap- |Peared on the Bowery Mr. j Would have reported to him the im- mortal sayings of the two im- mortal governors. The chirp of the bullfrog on the pond, the ory of the Mosquito calling for its mate, the | purplish tint of the waters which filled the road after the river had | overfiowed—all these things, en- | 6rossed jn perpetuity on the annals of the world by the famous song | weiter—were heartily seconded by Mr, Evans, a farmer of Sullivan County. But there is more to farming than Horace confessed. One must have a certain number of understudies to cajole the milk from the cow when one is away and perform sundry other duties. Mr, Evans desired a helper, and, with rare+lack of fore- sight, came to the east side of New York for him. At the employment agency he en- countered Mike Stepenchek, a Polish gentleman. He approached Mike on the glories of summer sunsets and other things and incidentally men- tioned a liberal recompense, Mike cared nothing about the money, of course, but the thought of the cows 4nd bullfrogs got him. “Sure, I'l go," he declared. Mr, Bvans then rounded up several other would-be rustics and was ready to start.ror the farm. Mike went out and had a few drinks ror himself. Then he came back and started re Free Bier nvaee wae Decl Be fore Judge Blau in Essex Market Court, M claimed that he had been assaulted, ‘What is the trouble?” asked by His Honor. “He told me to go to work, and I said I wouldn't until the contract was signed. Then he walloped me one or; two.” “Did you have anything to drink?” “Yes; a little.” “What?” “Beer, of course.” “What did you do?” “After he hit me, I asks, ‘For why do you wallop met” “What have you to say?” Judge Blau asked Mr. Evans. “He told a girl,in the office not to) work for me because the farmer Jews never paid anybody. I never hit him, I merely put him out.” “I make $65 a month besides room and board dishwashing,” volunteered Mike. “How long have you been in this ” country “Twelve years.” defendant is honorably dis- said Judge Blau. “Men like Evans \the books and he was) th: Up State and Milk the Don’t Pay.” « NEW family has moved into A the Essex Market Court, and is prepared tc remain for the winter by all the signs. It comprises three large rats. When the court) from the present palatial | and anpopular | abode, the dust | was brushed from! the records which had the history of | east side crime in| ® nut shell, and boxes were piled | neatly and chronologically in the basement. They occupied one side of the room. The other day Bill’ Beirns, the fingerprint expert, went on @ tour of exploration and found thatthe boxes were strewn the length and breadth | of the room, and the case of Mary | Ryan, who was arrested for stealing & cow in 1876, was in close proximity | to that of Harriet McNamara, who was taken in custody thre months ago for smoking in the subway, All was chaos, just like an omelet. It looked 4s though some one had tried to res- cue hig record and had spent a fever- ish half hour, followed by delirium tremens. Last Sunday, the biggest rat saun- tered into the court and nearly caused & panic. Then it went down to the Judge's room to see if His Honor nad yet arrived. And in the rear followed two others. ir. Rice, clerk of the court, named Mr. Beiras as official custodian of the mascots. The fingerprint man de- Vised all kinds of traps and other lures, but without ‘avail. Finally he succeeded in finding the fingerpnnts of each ih one of the cells. The largest one is Rachael, he now declared, and the medium one is Herman.’ The pag mse a not exactly one family, it is Rachael's = “eoan a ye Py tag Pieces of paper have been pasted over the holes in the rat-proof walls of the new court, so that Mr. Beirns will be able to tell at a glance when they are pierced, whether the rats were coming or going. By means of the fingerprint system the identity of each will be known. ‘esterday a new ruse was tried. A loaf of bread was tied with a rope (o @ broom of the court, with the obvious implications that whon Rachael or her court followers ‘ook the bread home, the nest or hive, or wherever oe live, would be found. Rachael ate the bread where it stood; Moe jr. digested the rope and Her: man was doing well with the broom when the feast was called off. Mr. Kunsli, the complaint clerk, yes- terday wrote out a summons for Rachael for disorderly conduct, and subpoenas for Herman and Moe jr. as witnesses for the people. Mr. Beirns, assisted by Warrant Officer Murphy, is now trying to serve the summon “There, is no doubt that we shall get ‘em,” declared Mr. Beirns to a re- porter for The World. “You may quote me as saying authoritatively that science and the law never fail. I have the fingerprints and the rest is easy. I intend, when they are ap- prehended, to train them to guard the records rather than destroy t and in that way they will serve the double purpose of pets for lonely prisoners and unofficial, yet none the leas efficient, custodians of the rec- ords of the City of New York. But eternal vigilance is the watchword.” Finer Than The Van Camp Soups as made today are the finest ever served. are based on famous Fate NSpes A. noted chef from the Hotel Ritz in Paris brought them to our kitchens, But here they were perfected by, scientific cooks. By men with college training— culinary ¢x- perts. ne They compared countless blends. A single soup has been made by them in several hundred ways. Every ingredient was studied ands "standard fixed for edch. Also Van Camp's Spaghetti ¢. Camp's Pork and Beans Van Camp's Evaporated Mith VAN CAMP’ Surprise Soups Paris Serves Step by step they attained in each soup the pinnacle of flavor. Then, by exacting formulas, they in- sured that every dish — forever — would be exactly like the model. No Extra Price Now these exquisite soups — finer soups than Paris serves -—can be served in your home in a moment. And they cost no more than ordinary soups. You owe to yourself a trial. Ask your grocer for your favorite kinds. » Soups 18 Kinds Van Camp's Peanut Butter COSTLY ROADS FOR DANCING. | 25" Will Allow Miock Parties Protect Autoists. When rece: I Bers: County, New Jerseys, rs spent $1,001 000 for good roads they had no thought | automo! that the public would want to dance on | wi them to the exclusion of motorists. But has happened and scores of clubs | No. jons have asked for block oven. party Pate: ron, it wae finally decided by the board to/held without fague the permits provided eacn muniel-' exonerated hi Bergen Cou ry by cutting off the main for dancing purposes. Nothing stops me betweenthe - grocery store and home when I have a package of, sss Ord SS OUT The patent on Aspirin having expired in 1917, the United States Patent Office cancelled the aleged trade mark “Aspirin” and the name is now public » Aspirin U “Aspirin U.D.Co.” is anteed pure and genuine by the United Drug Company and solf in. all Liggett Drug Stores. Per 100, 5 grain tablets, 89c. Mazpic Soap of Rainbow Tints - Colors While It Cleanses AGIC Aladdin Dye Soap will keep your clothes new and make your home beautiful. It colors anything which can be washed in exactly the new, beautiful color you want it. It does this magic dyeing while you wash—exactl as you would wash wit plain soap and water. Hard to believe—but per- fectly true. One trial will prove it. Women who love pretty things use Aladdin to give them the bright fresh colors they want for blouses, rib- bons, veils, gloves, stock- ings, corsets and all under- wear. They dye their draperies, illows and hangings the Beautiful colors which make their homes attractive. ALADDIN PRODUCTS CO., They say it is a waste of time to simply wash when you can both wash and dye with Aladdin Dye Soap. Aladdin Dye Soap comes in 15 fashionable colors — flesh, peach pink, salmon pink, pink, old rose, red, orchid lavender, light blue, dark blue, tan, gray, khaki, orange, yellow, green, After you try one color, you will find it convenient to have the full set, ready to use wherever and when- ever you want it. Price 10c. New York and Chicago (0B) “The Best Newspaper Maga- zine Supplement in the United States of America’’ —the Sunday - World Magazine