The evening world. Newspaper, December 4, 1915, Page 9

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‘ L J | } | ' Crease the number of street accidents. But extra laws would not be s0| What You Want to Know About Your Auto and How To Drive It and Keep It Expert Advice How to Keep Automobiles Running Smoothly and the Best Way to Remedy Machine Troublee— Traffic Suggestions and Pleasure Routes for Evening World Readere, By GEORGE 8. ROBERTSON. UTOMOBILES caused the death of 249 persons on New York streets A in the last eleven months. Traffic conditions instead of improving are becoming alarmingly worse. Police Commissioner Woods in- tends to enlist the services of the Legislature as a means of stopping the wholesale slaughter caused by vehicular accidents, To make New York streets safer for both pedes- trians and travelling public before the Legisiature could give any aid, I suggest the following recommenda- tions: A vehicles should come to # dead stop before crossing any right-of- way except at points where trafflo officers are stationed. Rogitlate the speed of trucks ao- cording to tonnage. The speeds to be controlled by automatic gover- nors and the Bureau of Licenses to bave full authority in the regulation. Substitution of bicycle policemen on all main thoroughfares instead of motorcycle and foot officers. They would be vastly more effective and their presence would stop reckless turning of corners and indiscriminate speeding between blocks. A stricter enforcement of the rule against glaring head and side lights, A law making !t compulsory for pedestrians to cross streets only at the cross ngs. These recommendations if carried out would, I belleve, materially de- GEORGE H: ROBERTSON necessary if drivers would only be more cautious and not be 60 anxious to | “take a chance,” the greatest peril both pedestrians and other operators have to contend with on the highways, Auternorle Eetitor 5 Why is it that the engine chokes when I throw in high speed? F.C. ‘The carbureter is not properly ad- Justed Have a repair man do this for heavy pulling. Automobile FAttor Four of the spokes tn the right front wheel of my car are loose, ( eee [If 1 don't do this she will come for- ward when I turn the engine over. LESTER SMITH, The grease In the tranamission is no doubt too heavy. Try a lighter grease and examine the bands and see they are free from the drums. Automobile Rditor Is any damage likely td result from Rave tried to tighten them every! the ure of amall amounts of ether or tie, | #0Me such volatile liquid, as aa ad- way I know, but they stilt ratte: dition to the gasoline in the tank dur- Have had the wheel painted beard ola the cold weather? the Dut even this docs not overcome CAREFUL, aerate a BUCA | .,, The use of other or any othor vola- — se tile fluid is uaually unsatisfactory be- he wheel taken off the ca and soaked over night.; Wooden wheels have a tendency to dry out and loosen up, and soaking wit help to overcome the trou! Aatomobile Editor: ef the fact that it is iquids constant. | fuide will have no di le. | on the motor, other than the moving parte to a heavier Having just completed a long trip! awtomote! flitar, through a hilly country I tntend{ What !s the cause of a clogged cyl- going over my oar thoroughly, The |inder and how may I overcome tt? brakes on the oar have done a jot of} i work, and while they do not look) No doubt your meaning of a clogged very well seem to hold al! right! eylinder is one that is choked with Would it be necessary for me to re- jearbon. Would advise you to have a Nine these brakes tn order to get full) good repair man uss the proper @ficiency from my car next spring. | method in cleaning out the cylinders. AW. LL. Automobile Fditor: 80 you men-| sty brother is the owner of an au- tha: you reline! tmobile, Can I drive the same car pet and. hand brakes with without a license y rake lining. Ge sure an You are permitted to drive your of the standard makes. | Erother’s car if he is with you, detomobile Editor: 4 le TAitor I have an old two-cylinder Butck} “yam in business with a partner and which bas been made into a truck. nave a commercial machine in use. Recently I have had it overhauled. The iconse was taken in my part- @il new bearings, &o,, and It will pull pers naine, Can T run on the same @me on low gear but not on high. jicense? Or can I take same Hoense Can you advise me what to do to @vercome this? 8. K, YARNELL. The fact that the motor will not Mt the load on high ge talon a trip of thi th: and have it made for both iat You can have the license issu is no, both names and this would overcome ma: | all difficulty, Me ould | Ststormnble. Raliene: ttain speed, and; How can { polish up the ailver undoubtedly too Plated reflectors of the headlights? | atio. | They have become tarnished and the would lower the gear ratio, putting) east touch of the softest cloth on e larger rear sprocket. BCratCha@g (NED, ne MELEON, Astomodtle Editor: te have jt In probably necessary Ie there a book published on car | these reflectors replated. Polishing an wiring which covers everything eleo- Diaclon cp i tate caret old reflector does not help any. A READER. | Automobile Editor: Would advise you to write to the| I find that I have a continuous Norman Henlv Publishing Company! squeak in one of my wheels. T have | ef thie city. They publish numerous books on motor car repairs. \ wero put on. ‘The wheels soem t9 be in food shape, and I am at a loss anere cant get a naw or accond |S2,t0, what to do to eliminate the hand oylinder fora alx-eylinder Acme? | eiuenk. Sour aavieg will be appre: Is this properly time when she fires | i at dead centre? A.M that you describe is no i ‘ hine Com- | doubt duo to the demount rim Prada A Sad Puritan Machine com, j being loose on the wheel. | Would ad- fire on top centre when the spark ie| you to tighten the wedges. fully retarded. he noise continues, graphite the rim just a little, Automoblle RAitor: pace rt Can you tell me why T have to jack be back wheel of my Ford up in or-| Can you inform me as to the Intest —— ns | Cylinders Of my Buick 267 1 have ns ’ taken the eight vaives out of the top, MOTORISTS Any better way to get Ine carbon out except by scrapping. Do you know pri rteon, America's foremost | Kasoline in the tank It 1s supposed to SOUR cise: sare +s eliminate all carbon, to start her in the winter time? practice of removin; ‘bon from the and I would like to know if there te PROBLEMS SOLVED :yvin5,a023* pygnemarscgee gies J, BASHMANN. Fautomotile, owners, oh Baste wet “fell 't You can use either @ liquid carbon Cree ee remover, @ chain carbon remover or Der you can remove it by burning with conven! d Evening Classes: also private ine 108, struction ut hours to » the oxygen proc The liquid you mention | am net actually familiar with, hence | oi net give you the proper informati ou ask for, Th J {quid carton removers on The chain oarbon remover le used | by taking out @ valve cap and drop- i soft ann cl ‘on the The cap ing @ Read of the piston. (8 put Special Classes for Ladies Gal) of write for booklet, Stewart Auto School 225 WPST 57TH STREET (at Broadway) = Men desiring to be trained as noticed It since the demountable rims | = pena THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1915. By Diet and Exercise Miss Furlong Will Reduce Weight of 210-Pound Mrs. St. James BATTERING DOWN RHEIMS CATHEDRAL It is not alone the French people in the audience who gasp when the views of Kheims Cathedral as it is to-day are shown among the official moti pictures of the fighting in F\ ch have been loaned by the French overament to The World, through | its war correspondent, E. Alexander | Powell, and are being exhibited at the | Fulton Theatre. ody Kasps, The flims give t torie Cathe ara} from a point of view which shows | More of tie wctual damage done than | hus been seen in any puotoxrapha| that have come over, most of which have shown the famous front. The official camera men of the Brene | Government Kot bac bt in the of the U 8 the pas- | sage that cut throug the city mght up lo tue Cathedral and then the wreckage Even a8 the inotion pictures were being taken the ancient Cathedral was | under fire, The treaches near the éncred edifice are shown and the men fn them are seen to duck cover as a shell bursts over the iy stall a part of the dally lite of! Rheims that every evening from 6 to 7 P. M;. the city ts shelled. But the beautiful old towers of the Cathedral still stand as if defying the foe as they have defied the centurins, Rig plecos get knocked off here, Walis | fall in heaps of ruins there. Yet it| looks an if some of the great build. | ing will be left no matter bow long Soap clears away pimples, ‘The soothing, ‘ealing Resinot balsamsin Resinol Soap,combined , with its freedom from harsh, irritat- ing alkali, give to red, rough and | pimply complexions that whiteness back and the motor rim. The action of the chain has a scraping tendency. Tho chain, of course, should be re- moved, Motor Truck Drivers or as Chauffeurs ormation without any obit fon St expense ty talking with Sr) foc Masdgoaly Satuniay’ evening at the West “AuroM: NILE SCHOOL, HOR W. PTth ot.. New Yor! the me consumes all th in contact with. and velvety softness for which women year, Askin washed only with Resinol Soap is usuaily a skin to be proud of, Sold byalldrugrists, For sample free, write to Dept, 10P, Keaiwol, Haltimore, Md. Beginning Monday, Evening World’s Authority on Woman’s Physical Well Being Will for Four Weeks Devote Herself to Im- proving This Woman's Figure. Mrs. St. James Selected From Many Applicanis Who Responded to Invitation Recently Published in The Evening World. By Pauline Furlong. Today 1 am introducing to Evening World readers Mrs. A. St. James. Mrs. St. James to-day weighs 210 pounds. For four weeks I am going to devote myself to the task of reducing her weight through a course of diet and exercise comprising the very rules I have laid eee down in the various articles on “reduotion” which have | been published in The Evening World } My work with Mrs, St. James will begin Monday At the end of the four weeks I confidently expect not only to have considerably reduced her weight, but to have helped her attain a genefally bettered physteal condition and a markedly improved figure. Mrs. St, James was selected for the purpose from a number who applied in response to an invitation ro- cently published in The Evening World, Her home ts in New York City, in the upper Fifth Avenue section, in the netghborhood of the sixties, Sho is thirty-five years old and her helght ie five feet three inches. Her physical measurements in full will be pub- Mehed in chart form in Monday's Evening World, accompanying an article which will give details of the course to which she has agreed to submit herself. e Three days each week, during my @————————_______ work with Mrs, St. James, her PrO®- | nows tn the mouth and what will cure |food. It may be used ae a body mas rangement, owing to the perversion| Saye Grace Marshall Will Not Ree of the bod secretions. cover Her Reason. —— BALTIMORE, Dec. 4.—Grace Marshall, | helping so many, I thought you could|manr St. Michael's, Md, for twelve advise me, as I am a very miserable | yoara, and who is being treated at the woman, My stomach acems to swell] Henry Phipps Clinic, ts tmproving phys up and 1 can hardly breath after at-licany, but will never fully recover her ng. Please tell mo in the paper mental faculties, according to Dr. Lewis A. Sexton of the hospital, He anid to- ‘omach i# evidently in bad|4ay that a woman at the age of Miss Thin feeling in caused by| Marshall, who t* twenty-eight, seldom regains her lot mind, condition, formation of gas in the stomach, dur to fermentation, Kat less and exer- cise more and you Will get, at least, temporary relief. ABOUT OLIVE OIL—MILDRED T. Aska: we tell me If olive oll is & good substitute form if not, what does it lack? Is it good to uae A’ 4 massage for the body, when one tw trying to develop?” Olive oil in a valuable food, but ts deficient in aatts and proteld, and is | therefore not a perfect substitute for sage and aide nature in building up the tissues and nourishing the body. PAIN IN HEART- ins. ED. 1 by a com- exercising will advise you if you | with the more strenu- ous ones. If the pain comes from in- digestion, or simply @ side ache, the exeroiaes will improve this condition in @ short time. Do not exercisa with. in two hours after eating a meal. ANAEMIC— KATHRYN ©. askat "What fooda can [eat to mak blood? Tam anaemio and pale lool'nyr." Keane, nach, FAW cabbage, oars | ° rots, Rrapes, raw eggs, milk, ao, will) make blood. The vegetables named | contain iron and are of grost benefit for those who are anaemic, Served 50 Ye WASHINGTON, Doc, 4.—Frank Witl- for fifty years a colored servant in household of Mra. James T°. Bar- ington's leading hos Assisted when Oiae |tne war lasts, The damage seen is ap- rese will be reported by me, and I will) it? Many of m; roadera may take the entire course at the same timo in thelr own homes Each Saturday during the course a | Jchart of comparative measurements | | will be printed, showing all changes 1n the wolght and moasurementa of Mra, | St. James. | rmring the period Mrs, St. James ta my charge | will personally super- | vise all her efforts to follow my In- | structions, A practising physician, Dr. Victor L, Polrce, has examined her thoroughly and he pronounces her an oxcellont subject for the undartakieg, 1 advise my readers to place an {m- mediate order with their newsdealers \ror The Evening World for the entire [period covered by the undertaking, for you will want the complote course palling, heart rending, but the specta- 56° tngtruction and treatment, and, tor is surprised that so much remains. gging by the great number of dally! duck (or avoid teathe ic is somewhat requests for back numbers of the paat | he to avold death, it . at orticies, the demand for those mis: Of a shock to feel fbat the shell ter in tule mew series|ot articles Wil bo omnlt of digentive or ne: youn de many places in #0 Twice the men go dow Tho crowded audience shudders ‘The | trae articles on the days alternating scene is xo real that even sitting in Mre St. James's the Fulton one gets almost exactly | between reports on, Mis oe lite the same fooling the mon in the progress tw : ‘obesity and interesting facts Sea era pret on it and to answering the | questions my readers undoubt- | Te will desire to ask concerning the! irse of treatment administered to trenches must have, neanny touch which brings the re- f war home to all who see it. ay and to-morrow there will ed! be continuous presentations of these ¢ Exposition, wit oficial war pictures at the Fulton my subject. ' from 1 A. M. until 11 P, M, Yester- day the house was crowded all day jong, and many notable people were Among the audiences, These are th y War pictures that are authe ‘ed by the Frenen Foreign or and the only ones that have been shown at the French Embassy in! ORYNESS IN THE MOUTH— Washington. ‘They show life on the MRS. K. M. P. asks: “WII you pleaso ttle line In France In all Its phases state in the paper what causes dry- Letters From kvening World Readers Followiny Mies furiona’s Lessons. exceeds that of — = . power. REAL ESTATE AT AUCTION. | REAL ESTATE AT AUCTION. ~ ENGLISH settled in N. Y. from 1660 to 1770 THEY BOUGHT LAND. Its increase made them and their descendants wealthy. AMONG THE EARLY ENCLISH SETTLERS WERE LIVINGSTON, MORRIS, McALPIN, HAMMERSLEY, DELAFIELD, PIERREPONT, LISPENARD, MOTT 241 LOTS At Elevated Stations On Main Avenues On 100 foot Streets Westchester Ave., White Plains Ave. & Leland Ave. On and near Jerome Ave., 162d to 170th St., Bronx. of SCHRENKEISEN--HUBER || Will Have To Be Sold For Whatever They Will Bring || at AUCTION. ||} If you buy any of these lots at the right prices | YOU ARE SURE TO MAKE MONEY. |! REMEMBER i cessfully broug cient servant 424 Broadway 126 Delancey Street 10 Irving Place aes ‘or We True Any Mor The 14th of December 5 ey 14 Vesey St. BS Sab inh 70% can remain on mortgage. Titles insured free. | LW Sweet E. For Maps Apply to Jeseph P. Day, 31 Nassau Street; i J. Clarence Davies, 149th St. & Third Ave., Agents and Auctioneers. Las D} MOHOS ON LYORTER SCO GMADEN LAI ry 170 Wire These OFFICIAL Motion Pictures taken by order of the French Government of the Fighting in France, and loaned to The World through its War Correspondent, Mr. Powell, are the ONLY motion pictures that have been exhibited at the French Embassy in Washington. N»pw being shown. friends have derived |t ono of many things, but is usually 2} During the week now ending celebrations have been held in contributes to the industrial supremacy, the general welfare and the prosperity of our country This week also marks the close of the great Panama-Pacific tricity in countless ways h it enters into every phase of modern life New York has an electrical service which in variety and extent one, whether the want be large or small. It is for the greatest structure using thousands of lights and horse-power, to the smallest consumer with a single lamp or a fractional horse- The standard for the largest is the standard for the smallest — and for all Our congratulations are extended to those who have so suc- modern agent of universal service —to those, who with their inventive and industrial skill, have provided the ways and methods and the myriads of appliances through which elec- tricity is made available for every purpose — and to the public to whom electricity is ever becoming a more useful and effie The New York Edison Company General Offices: Irving Place and 15th Street Branch Office Show Rooms for the Convenience of the Public Night and Emergency Call: Farragut 3000 Ent itiours, Ambasaadorn, 4: in fresh and clear. ment. They keep the | Kreat benfit from your wonderful 4 th {also outiine fully the exact programme} reat bent é be 2 gs , © in the paper. ea whe mn F Mail to which she is adhering, 0 that MY} Pi Condition may be due to any!” Senne dtaiton Samples Free by w Frank, | Cutiours Soap and Omtment sold everyohern. me Of his Lideral sanple of each mailed tree with 43-9, Dost. Address peat-oard so, ~_ am recognition of the extent to which electricity h its wonderful illuminations and where elec- hown how, in the public service, any city of the World. It is intended for every ht to the attention of the public this great At Your Service Telephone: Stuyvesant 5600 Spring 9890 *124 W 42d Street Bryant 5262 151 E 86th Street Lenox 7780 "27 E 125th Street Harlem 4020 *362 E 149th Street Melrose 9900 *Open Until Midnight Weel sie weeny FOR SALE, _ GOTHAM TAILORING iy BROADWAY, For Sale—Qur model sulla and overcoate, “Cail while you hare Use opportunity, |ELP_WANTED—MALE, — Wanted, & blacksmith's wede and mare ¢ employ- vy 218-224 SLITS OVEROUATS ETO,, HIDOWN WEEKLY |BLACKSMITH’S HEL! strong and experiei jhe per, prefer ed, for steady @ ment, Mercede HELP WANTED—FEMALE. : 2 in family; CONTINUOUS TO-DAY and SUNDAY FROM 11 A. M. TO 11 P. M. Management MORRIS GEST...

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