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| i r] of thr No higher praise could be given any salad dressing ths commendati THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1016. n the enthusiastic Mn. bestows on — err * | please YOU oney back. o—= National Plection Is Onl / Means to the End of 4 City Triumph | | MURPHY PLANS VICTOKY Won't Retire Until He ( | Leave a Triumphant Tammany, By Samuel M. Williams. leaders may prociaim t! rte! ot difgent campaten of at political preparedness that the polls has ever known and Republics: Tammany organirn The Canoeist Says: ~ -- Iam a canoeist. my wile for happiness Is the old rule A trim little canoe on a shady stream. A pretty girL A “Helmar” Turkish cigarette. You can’t beat this combination. The mildest tobacco for cigarettes is Turkish. The best tobacco for cigarettes is Turkish. Don’t pay ten cents for anyhody’s cigarette wntil you have tried “‘Helmar,”’ a fascinating, elevating, gentleman’s smoke. Makers z ane Epp Cie old A Corporation Quality Superb redness, but in! In both WGHAM SOLD FOR WHSON == TOINSURE PARTY REGULARITY. = AND WIN A MAYOR N 1917 some oo ’ Ts te wolid for Presid “ © hie snubs and f Vedera! ' vatic loyalty this year le for its effect nex po mw jon to the President igwam than t Wut for year ago y the veal in eivin heer for cur peerless leader and then re . planning how to eapture the City Mall neat year DEMOCRATIC suUCcCc } THIS YEAR, Leader Murphy, usually retionn’ in predictiona, makes no secret to-day of extravagant claims for Democratic wuccesa in thie year's election. He telle Bie associate leaders that Wil- SURE bury will defeat Whitman for Gover nor and that Democratic local tickets in all parts of Now York City will be successful. It waa thie confidence that made THE TONIG THAT BRINGS HEALTH “Frult-a-tives’ Builds Up The Whole System Those who take “Fruit-a-tives” for the first time, are often astonished at the way it builds them up and makes them feel better all over, They may be taking “Fruit-a-tives” for some specific disease, ae Constipatidn, Indigestion, Chronic Headaches or Neuralgia, Kidney or Bladder Trouble, Rheu- matism or Pain in the Back. And they find when “Fruit-e-tives” has cured the disease, that they feel better and stronger in every way. This is due to the wonderful tonio properties of these famous tablets, made from fruit juices. 600 a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 25c, At all dealers or sent postpaid by Fruit- a-tives, Limited, Ogdensburg, N.Y.—| BULLETS For CONSTIPATION and TORPID LIVER Baay TO TAKR. DIRECTION: ake a xwatlow of water fret— en wallow @ little bullet (pili Surnit And small large, The 26 will prove HE new, the correct, the unusual, —You will always find them in this large building full of fine the average. KELLNER BROS. S.E. Cor. 15™ ST.e OT AN ' ' ONLY ORGANIZATION MEN NEED CRPECT ARVTHING They lack of lowe for W - ‘ ton of mM +he no longer @ Wiliam Che » Murphy of « PD this year 8 that » the Mayoralty neat year In making the few to tio quired thin y etralene organisation able breach of etiquette but what can been applied. The bi-partisan aaree-| he done about it | nib ei ment with Republicang for a joint “ don s Very questionable ticket of Judges, which prevailed last | 2t ae thie way +7 hae been cast amide Justicn| The regiment had #iven @ very fine i ro Del nant Par'tae, Court, and | review tn camp and etar out for | ehanty of General Sessions | joy Pa Th aunt ae \ed nominations {field p © They were crossing une they are classed as independent bem orate MURPHY'S RETIREMENT CON- TINGENT ON 8UCCESS. Stories of Murphy's re from (he leadership are pr by hie intimates to be p On the chief's behalf this # Wis made by One of his closest asso. rement a ure. son Ie certain to be elected, that Sea- ejute “Murphy # considering retiring from leadership, but not until after the next. Mayoralty election at the earliest, He feels that he has had everything that @ man could desire from Tammany tn the way of prom|- has had enough. more for himself, he considers that the leadership might well be passed on to some one else, “He has said to me, however, "When I retire I don’t want to hand ceived it. I want to pass on to my @uccessor a triumphant Tammany, not a Tammany in defeat. | would Nike to soe a Democratic President, « Democratic Governor and a Demo- cratic Mayor all in office and then let my successor come in on a wave of success.’ All this is likely to happen after November, 1917." REPUBLICANS WANT STRAIGHT GOODS TICKET, TOO. On the Republican side, figuring and charting are going on as to local con- ditions, always with the ultimate goal of next year's election in view, The shifting tides of population, particu- larly in lower Manhattan, are being tabulated and each year the G. O. P. think they see decreasing strength of Tammany in its old strongholds. The uppermost problem for Repub- lican organization leaders in next year's campaign 1g whether to go it alone or form another alliance with independent Democra’ So many of the regulars are disgruntled with the Mitchel administration, because Dem- ocrats got most of the plums, that the sentiment for a etraight goods ticket 1s strong, particularly if there should be a victory next November for the National Republican ticket, CHECK THAT ~ ECZEMA BEFORE __ITGETS SERIOUS} That little patch of eruption may be nothing more than a slight annoyance now. an uncomfortable way of spreading and becoming really serious—turning into itching, burning skin troubles that make life almost unbearable. | So don't take chances. Nip it in the | bud with a few simple treatments with Resinol. Usually the first bathing with | Resinol Soap and dressing with Resinol | Ointment stop all itching, and soon the irritation is entirely cleared away. Doc- | tore have prescribed Resinol for over 20 ars, so that it is not an experiment, | but a remedy of proven value. All drug- | cists sell Resinol Ointment and Resinol | But if you want a sample of imore, Md.-—Advt. | ‘ure, because our expense is and Volume of business the price is always below LTT Bsus page < William and Mary Dining Room Suite; American Walnut; 10 pieces . . 150 completely furnished instructive and entertaining. rooms SINCE 1891 ' 7 Tt was looked ment | hence, power and profit, and that he Wanting nothing over the place tn the condition I re- | ut, if neglected, such things have | P free, write to Dept. 54-R, Resinol, | at S INENROUNTER MIT = AREIGHT TRAN Wig-Wagging ‘Brakey’ Didn't Understand the Signals of a Hiking Officer rte! trom 6 * orentoes @ Ge Brening tan Aus 11 The f our finest feld ar «up tte big guns to on are fondly stroking r yesterday the Firat of the ¥ tailed by « ordinary, ev os can Teras frognt train, tt wan « 1 the right of way the fn, and the rough the artillery rank A As AN UNnQuestion the tracks of the Gulf Coast The headquarters were already across | the tracks when the tail end of a} | freight train turned the corner, @| |brakey was on the car wig waxing to the engineer, who was at the other end of about forty cara. Down the line rode a Captain and held up his hand to the brakey, | “Stop that train,” he commanded, his voice sounding like @ whisper tn @ foundry What the trainman answered Jeouldn’t be distinguished, but It sounded somet! “Goto Texa A sergeant galloped down to the side of the captain and waved his guldon, The brakey wig-wageed back to ulm, flopping both arms like the wings .of a wounded road-runner. And the train came on and on, The soldiers who were going to cross the track used good judgment and didn't cross, They waited till the forty cars went by. Then the captain shook his fist at the engineer and doffed his cap and waved It. He didn't know what he was waving for, but just waved anyhow; then the first went across the tracks. Dammit. The Third Regiment foined the hikers this morning, marching from Pharr to McAllen, with Brig. Gen William Wilson and his staff at the front. Three Brigadier Generals are now in the field, Brig. Gen. McNair of the Artillery Brigade being with his troop in camp. The Seventy-first broke camp at Mission at 7 o'clock this morning and marched to Alton, six miles away. The boys appeared in good fetter afte: their march of yesterday, when only two of them went down and out, and one of the: bad nose bleed and the other wasn’t in condition to march, having snappe: a tendon at a ball game on Sunday. The boys of the Seventy-first had water in their canteens at the end of their march and that they were in good condition was shown by the lung power they exercised when a car with newspaper correspondents came along and they k it for the pay car of Adjutant eneral Stotesbury. With one vol “Where's our p: The Fourteenth, which made the hike to Alton, continued to-day to Sterling's BR. ‘h, a march of seven of Brooklyn made a howing alongside the Seventy- first of New York. Twenty-nine of their men succumbed to the heat, crumpling like crullers in a pan of fat. Very few, if any, of them had any water left in their canteens at the end of yesterday's march, while all the men of the Seventy-first con- served their supply for the end of the day's hike. The First Cavalry goes out for another hike Saturday and Squadron A is already on its way to Sam Fordyce and will tap the border at Hidalgo on its return, The First will go to Kingsville. The troopers are never better contented in this coun- try then when they are in the sa It is significant, perhaps, y are being kept busy hiking ani yecoming hardened, for to them will fall the lot of advance work, if the troops are sent across the border, and then again, the men who return from the infantry hike, which won't be finished until Sept. 6, will be in | the best possible physical condition. | The Second, Seventh and Twenty- | third leave for their eleven-day hike next Tuesday and the Sixty-ninth, Twelfth and Seventy-fourth on the |a7th. ‘Thia includes all the infantry. The Twenty-third Regiment was paid by the State at Pharr yesterday afternoon, Gen, Stotesbury says that it was Impossible to pay before the for reasons of mistakes in the But he is here for the pur- of rectifying the mistakes on ground instead of having them {sent back for correction in Alban j/under which arrangement payds | would be extended to late. in He contemplates going to S' Ranch to pay the troops 4s they \/arrive, although he deprecates the \|fuct that the men will be encumbered | with the weight of so much currency, The men are not worrying about being thus encumbered, ‘To-night’s the night on the parade ground of the Seyenty-fi About eight bouts are going to be pulled off sing Uke: they yelled; tween men of the Twelfth and the rat Field Arti and bouts for | blood are promi It's going to be a regime matter, and surprises od for on both sides. Col. | Gordon Johnston of the T n looking over his book and boldly | nounced to Col. H. H. Rogers that 4 fight him any class from fly- weights to full fledged Willards, So what could the other Colonel do? “ri show you,” he sald. “Yes, you will," returned Col. John. | ston, And there you are is gone from the shoulder and it's up | to the flghters. | on sentry and six botsterous ld Artillery men celebrating their pay all to morning. mp early yesterday Notwithstanding that the The chip |i saloons close at 9,80 in the free State! rine “ood of Open Saturday All Day Yor the Convenience of the Shopping Publie Ne Connection With Any Other Establishment in the World WORTH 43 & 45 West 34th Street sive Fashionable Fall Frocks Surplice, Tunic, Basque and Redingote types in rich Autuma shades with trimmings of wool and bead embroideries. New Dresses Satin, Charmeuse, Serge, . 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