Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Se aaa What You Should Know About Your Auto; How To Drive and Keep It Eapert Advice How to Keep Automobiles Running Smoothly and the Best Way to Remedy Machine Trouble Trpftic Suggestions and Pleasure Routes ~ fer Evening World Readers. By GEORGE H. ROBERTSON. RAFFIO oonditions here would be greatly improved if motorists a who have only driven machines a short time would refrain from colng on the busy thordughfares until they heve gained the nec essary experience and confidence that is so important before @ car can be successfully handled {n crowd- ed streets. The trafic police every day have frequent trouble with the novice driver who ventures through the city only to hamper the street regulations and in many cases actu- ally loses temporary control of his car. As @ means of caution novices ang suciler are all playing good, con- | CORNELL HAS MANY CANDIDATES 10 FILL OLD STARS POSITIONS Outlook Is Promising for Itha- can Football Team This Season. (Bpectal to The Brentng World.) ITHACA, Oct. 14,—Cornell’s football | team, handicapped by a late start. and the loss by graduation of such stellar performers as Barrett, Cool, Collins, Shelton and Jamieson, ts fast rounding into form. Of the players lost, Barrett and Cool are the two men whore positions it will be hard to fill. The two principal problems seem to be at centre and quarterback. However, in the latter position there is Brets, a member of the 1916 team, and Shtverick, reguiar halfback of the 1916 varsity, rated as ono of the best Kickers of last season. Both are doing very good work. bi In the backfield Benedict, Hoffman should restrict thelr early driving sistent football, with Benedict alter to the safer’ and less frequented nating with Shiverick in the kicking. streets in the country and not be Mueller, captain and fullbeck of laat in such a hurry to rush to the city, year’s championship team, is playing where successful driving is @ strain his same steady game in that position on the most competent pilots. QUERIES ANSWERED. Automobtin 1ifttor ‘What is the amount of pressure on the head of @ piston of an automobile engine at the instant of the explosion? Does the pressure vary according to the size of the cylinder? What Is ap- proximately the pressure on th ton In the Ford engine and t Cadillac? A I In answer to your first question | 400-800 | °, would say approximately pounds. @ pressure varies with such factors as displacement, com- pression, &c. | have no information re on the piston in a} jac automobile. | ‘a lleense for an I get @ rd touring | HAYE At Commissioner of Motor Vehicl Trenton, N. J. or any of his sentatives. Almost any second-hand automobil would have one or you could advertise. Agtomobtle Bilitor T have a Cole 20 in which the the teeth on the gear are worn, abe one-elghth being off tne corne: there seems to be plenty of cc used by anything *, GOODBPRNE, The trouble is undoubtedly caused | by the lock, which is supposed hold the gear in mesh, needing at- tention. Automobte Editor: el hove a 1916 Overlu top. which leaks. cons rout in rain. y for this w would not necessitate the changing of color? 4H. J. 1 do not know of any preparation which would make your top water: | proof without discoloring it. The best| way is to have it recovered | ihe Eaitoe jueaks terribly eaves spread, but lent. What do A. W Have Could not say what causes the qqueaking in your car, as this could} come from many different parts. Ha | the Makers Service Station examin it, or put it in the hands of some good mechanic, pv one wheel at a ti here for that pur: both wheels pushin A GOOD Everything better health is keeping the stomach normal, the liver active-and the bowels regular. With those ing in harmony will be keen—your fo be properly d blood will be your general health improved. As soon as there fs any:devi- ation from the above conditton try | cifth STOMACH MEANS BETTER HEALTH he nity from the fact that while goin a turn, the wheel on t! @ shorter distance ick most badly in mud, 8 at the slowest rate. When the on both wheels is equal, 80, both wheels revolve a vol Automobile Editor: Is there a car called Cace or Case? RB. C. Yes, it is made at Racine, Wie. Automobile Editor: ° Can a person be summoned to court for allowing his auto to stand along the curb with front facing the wrong direction? OSCAR NILSON. This Is a violation of the traffic law and tho offender ie liable to arrest or a summons, Automobile Falter: T have a four-cylinder Willys-Knight and after running 3,500 miles a grat- ing sound has developed, It occurs only when I disengage the clutch. How can I eliminate this noise? GR 1 would say that the clutch throw- out collar or bearing is dry or badly worn, Try lubricating it, which may stop the noise. It certainly is not right as noise is usually a sign of undue friction, tomotile Faltor: nan owner's Ieen be obtained Wille st Harry Willy st Harlem Sport night in the ‘ound bout Ray Marto. m administered a Tony Marto of the ‘ar bout of ten rounds A. A. last night, Ends Life Holding Photograph, Mrs. Ning D'Averon, sixty years old, killed herself with gas in the rooming Hasbrouck, at No, 136 enth — Btreet r hand as sho died her husband, Chi ton conducive to encouraged by organs work- your appetite will igested—your enriched and ‘HOSTETTER’S ' STOMAC H An Excellent Tonic and Appetizer to! jolding that position. fh Brets, Houk and Van Horn there are # four good men to fall back on, | The loss of Shelton by graduation ould turn 8nd the temporary loss of Eckley, the out- two ends of last yp Qreat-- so miserable for Mahan of Harvard, eel on is keenly felt, sthat Kilenberxer and Ensworth are fight- &c., re- jing it out for that position, | round | inside covers! me rate and both drive the car. | | | arreste this yea:, Hoffman, a first string man of last year, Is doing well at right half and should have no trouble In Speed, ar that made life but Ryerson, Zander, The line is showing better form ars. The most are Gillies at in, right guard; right tackle, Ar Miller, left ¢ Brown, centre; Jewett, left tack nd Tilley. In all probability Tilley will be tried out at jeentre when he returns to the gamo on_Monday, The allegation that the champton- ship team of 1915 was a one man team will be disproven this year, In all probability, conclusively as when Barrett's ices were lost to the team in the early part of the game with Harvard last tall. DE MARCO WAS SLAIN TO SHIELD MEN WHO ~—ILED HS BROTHER | Had Appointment With Detec- tives To-Day to Name Feud- ist-Slayers He Accused. Salvatore dg Marco had an appoint- mont to meet Detective Frederick F {Franklin to-day in a Harlem coffee house and name the f his brother, Joseph » belleve this is why he was found murdered | yesterday in @ lonely spot on the As- torla side of the Queensborough Bric his head crashed, his throat cut the death sign “slashed into his fore and cheeks, the third brother tu be 4 Killed in 1¥13, and Jo: swore vengeance. Ho was murd 3 Street a short time ago. slain, pa Sa get me" ad had an tive to- day and furnish the n There in 1a fourth brother, Grekko, but he bas der Stable” which two wo! ar have been killed wit A collateral cause, the De Mareo k tempt of Harlem p business on t police pwn di men th nk could tell who killed the De Marcos, but who will not Jalil for Anto Speeder Romeo Galant!, a chauffeur, of No, 208 Mott Street, Mar was 8 ed yesterday to thirty nd strate Vporhees in Alu Brooklyn. He w ing. Traffic 1 was Galan by Mag of — (wor PICTURE NOTES } Naom! Childers has left the Vita graph and is « ng a rest 8, Rankin Drew Motro's staff of dir 8. Gervaise Siadd ly that Olga O son Staint Mys the ancient sir While act os to supy full grown man witu loney for th weeks and « half The formal 0 the will be paid prize will be $750. While Ethel from on: appear with "Tho Mystery,” Grandin was irrying Loew theatre to a Crim hautte a urs wer Stain tp an aute randip. REGISTER TO-DAY To-day is the last day of renistra- Registration places open from If you do tion, 7 A. M. until 10.30 P, M, not register you cannot vote, HOSPTAL RE WTH NICKEL A DIMES GIES FE Open Air Carnival in East New York Will Save Run- ning Into Debt. THE EVENING WORLD, SATU AY, OCTOBER tents and pavilions that cover tho block in Hopkinson Avenue, between Pitkin and Sutter Avenues, They will be full of things that go to add happiness to Ufe—dancing, ames, a tea rooms, candies, moving picturen, &6.; also of solid comforts like things to wear and to eat. There will bo performances in a theatre holding £00 People, And the finest thing about it Will be tle spirit of the neighborhood, «| the epirit of 9,000 devoted men am women of small meang who have Worked and pinched and contrived and already managed to get together $60,000 for & fine hospital. Seven years ago they began it, Poor Workingmen held @ meeting and aeaet 4 society to bulid # hospital ere they and all in the region could To-night is the night, To raise $78,-| enjoy the benefits that modern science 000 for the Brownsville and Kast New York Hospital t week or 10 cents a pital the people of the abluty, nefghborhood will open the biggest and finest outdoor carnival ever held in this city. It will be unique, un- paralleled, diversified, gorgeous, glit- tering, educational, amusing—eimply too wonderful for words. The only thing to do ts to go and ses it, Take money, You'll need it. The carnival and bazaar are to held for five weeks in a long row o} puts in a hospital, They solemaly pledged ghemscives to give 6 cents a week, each ac- cording to his , and the result jis the buliding of @ handsome seven- [story hospital at East Ninety-elghth Street and Rockaway Boulevard. The jouter wails are finished and the roof on, There is not one penny of debt. Of course, having the and the they ‘could | -ettegg Ls Wg Need easily mortgage enou, money to complete the Hobe. But oi the people of Brownsville have good judament; not one penny of debt wil! To Our D 14, 1916, be allowed to grow Hence the carnivas and basaar. . They Will supply the means of finishing the butlding and equtpping it. Twenty thousand men and women will open the carnival at 6 P. ke, with ed by three ‘ he line will form at headquarters, No, 112 Glen- @ grand parade enily. big bends of music, more Avenue, and the march will through Stone Avenue, Dunn Street, Paul Street, Pitkin Avenue, Hopkinson Avenue, Prospect Plac Howard Avenue, Sutter Avenue an Hopkinson Avenue to he baraar, The Hospital Auxillary Soctety will parade through Van Sicklen and St ter Avenues to the bagaar, 7 Reverend H. Masilansky will deliv the Invocation; there will be addres.es by Dr. Krass and Dr, Leventhal and and Vice Chairman Joseph A. Seidman, Gov, Whitman has been Invited, and by Chairman Shepard J. Goldber he will attend If he can possibly get away from the exacting duties o! the campatgn. Borough President Marke and Henry Ambassador to Tw Morgenthau, ex ident Lewis H. Pounds of Brooklyn, Judges Mitchell May, A. H. Geiaman and Leonard A. Snitkin and Bteinbrink. Oticers of the People’s Auxilia: baraar, are William H. Cohen, M. Deuteoh and Miss Dora Markowit: Incidentally, they are wing to hold fair bewinning Deo, 2, You airymen Patrons Referring to our announcement_posted at the plants of our Farm Products Division on the 12th instant, we have been asked by some of our patrons to clarify our position in respect to two points: 1. We have been asked why we are unwilling to deal with the Dairymen’s League. 2. Will the dairies in any district be discriminated against in the manufacture of the surplus milk into but- ter or cheese? We answer the first question as follows: We have not, and will not, oppose the organization of milk producers to protect their interests and promote their welfare in any lawful manner they may devise, and acting through Any responsible representatives they may lawfully select. We have had no opportunity to meet any such condition. .We have been advised that the League in cornering a food product has raised a ques- tion as to whether it has any legal right to exist, and that question is now the subject of a court inquiry. If the . League is a lawful corporation there is no legal reason why we should not deal with it. Aside from that ques- tion, however, we have been influenced in our attitude by the fact that the representatives chosen by the League have not acted in harmony, and the authority of one faction to bind the League is denied by the other fac- tion. Furthermore, the acts of violence and the intimi- dation of farmers, local tradesmen and others as prac- ticed by some of the agents of the League, are methods which are not sanctioned in business relations, nor are they supported by public sentiment. We would welcome an opportunity of doing business with a farmers’ organi- zation acting within the law and represented by fairs minded men, who are willing to take into account selling conditions so that the whole industry may be placed on a sound and lasting basis. With such an organization we would be glad to try the plan of having the monthly price to be paid for milk in the various localities or coun- ties to be determined by committees representing the farmers in the different localities acting with represen- tatives of our plants in those localities. If the Dairy- men’s League is willing to abandon so much of its pres- ent methods as are not in accord with the law, public - sentiment and reasonable business practices, we see no reason why it could not be the instrumentality through which the dairymen might work with us in bringing about the plan we have briefly touched upon, and wc be- lieve to the mutual satisfaction of all. And could be put into operation in time to consider the prices for January 1 and subsequent months, and as a substitute for the arbi- tration plan proposed for those months. In expressing the foregoing views we have no in- tention of dictating to the producer how he shall organ- ize, the methods he adopts, or who will represent him. On the other hand we expect him to recognize our right to decline to sanction unlawful methods or to deal with individuals whose attitude offers no hope for continuing satisfactory relations. Our answer to the second inquiry is as follows : In paying for surplus milk on the basis already an- nounced, it is our intention to discriminate against no one and against no district, but to pro rate the “surplus milk” prices over the whole supply purchased for the Farm Products Division. BORDEN’S FARM PRODUCTS DIVISION. on thetr tad. Marcus M. rkey, are among the patrons, as well as Borough Pres- Meier ng » Which planned the Rain or down alone —BUT t it I Start The Absolute May Remain On Mortgage 70% Take B. R. T. Elevated Train from Brooklyn Bridge or Borough Hall, Brooklyn. Get off at Sheepshead Bay and take Marine Railway through the property. HUDSON @r RIVER AY NE sa SUNDAY OUTING Up the 2 | Round Hudson Trip ¢ Mountain, New! hb and Str. “BENI. 8. ODELL” Sanita ego Wy, leaecticns mates MeN EAL WUBCON LINE MOTORNEN and CONDUCTORS WANTED, Good opportunity to secure permanent position, | | Apply 168 West 50th St | 7 A. M. to | Office open from | oP. M. | NEW YORK RAILWAYS | COMPANY. | | | } | MOTORMEN AND CONDUCTORS WANTED, | | SITION. APPLY 82 ALABAMA AVE. (NEAR FULTON ST.) + EAST NEW YORK, OR 8908 FIFTH AVENUE (NEAR 59TH ST., BAY RIDGE), BROOKLYN, OFFICE OPEN FKOM7 A, M. tov P. M, NEW YORK RAILWAYS | i) COMPANY. | THE NEW YORK WORLD SETS THE PACE! The World Sells 100,600 Copies More in New York City Eech Weekday Than Any Other Morning Newspaper, To-day’s the Day © Good Weather or Bad Weather Come down with your raincoat or your overcoat— with your wfe or your best girl—or come COME DOWN At 2 P.M. Under © well heated and Mabted tent of 642 Lots at Manhattan Beach Title Guarantee & Trust Company polictes free of charge Savings Bank Books taken as deposit Sale will last till Office op Shine BY ALL MEANS Auction Sale 10 o'clock to-night datas 31 Nassau St., N. Y. Telephone 744 Cort. WANTED~ MOTORMEN and CONDUCTORS. . Permanent Positions: Good Runs. Pay while breaking in. Apply at office of THIRD AV. RY. CO, 180th St. and Sd Av. 9A. M,to0 P. M, Sundays included, ) MOTORMEN and CONDUCTORS WANTED, . Good opportunity to secure permanent position, Apply 19 Cortlandt st. Office open from 7 A. M. tq NEW YORK RAILWAYS COMPANY. ealthy man to give bi wot “weigh Jew tha mombig. Oct 30. aft tal, Gh ys 22 +) Wee! et Wee Kly TuRoay erat 8 Owen Ri ashingoo: 4 office Woolworth Ride Phone Karelia TROS, “Leet apd Found" articles advertined in The World or reported te “Lost and Found Dep't.,” m+ formation Bureau. World Bulldiag, will be listed for thirty days, These Unie ean de seem of Gay of The ekman, New York, or Rrooklyn Office, 4100 Mat y eee