The evening world. Newspaper, February 10, 1917, Page 7

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ee What You Should Know ' About Your Auto; How To Drive and Keep It Expert Advice How to Keep Automobiles Running Smoothly and the Best Way to Remedy Machine Trouble—Traffic Suggestions and Pleasure Routes for Evening World Readers. By GEORGE H. ROBERTSON. SEORGE 4: ROBERTSON. Automadiie Biitor Thave a “Studebaker” 1915 6-cylin- der, which, up to the present time,| p, has given fine service. About two months ago I had the engine overhauled, and since that time it seems to lose compression when attempting to climb any kind of @ hill, no matter how small It ts. Will you advise mo the cause or causes of this trouble and will you advise me if it is convenient to have new piston rings in cll th Can loss of compression be attributed to_bad carbureter adjustment? What can be the cause of a car jorking when traveling at a slow rate of speed? J. SIMPSON, Poor fitting pistons and rings would tons? | in quent in Central Park after midnight. As a rule, the only traffic in the park after the the- atre crowds pass is made up of night hawks who prowl around under all conditions and speed: The most effective way of stopping this reckless driving would be the closing of the parks at 1 A.M. This may seem a@ little severe, but it should be remembered that pedes- trians are not permitted to enter the parks after a certain hour. To my mind there {s no reason why the parks should be used as a sort of public speedway for reckless drivers in the early morning hours. a A UTOMOBILE accidents are fre- creased, to change the period of vi- ration. This merely corresponds to “tuning” th mp bracket for a dif- motor is run. Awomnbile FAltor: Where is the best place to carry my tire chains? I have no room under t and do not Hke to get my uddy and scratched by plac- chains in the tool box. | WM. 13s | If you will wrap your chains in canvas bag or in burlap they may be | carried in the tool box without dam- ago to the conten suing. A sim- ple chain receptacle, however, con- Frederick L, Richards, - Pp a Ter ae ee ne tem een THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1917. KATHERINE CARROLL | ©0€000000000006066666606600060000066066-0660006060 | “tare ls © A LASS OF THE LUMBERLANDS CEREMONY AT ST. REGIS soeeeneetsee> ~~ Suddenly Holmes swung about. There 3 came the angry bark of a revolver, and '¢ Holmes clapped his hand to his breast ¢ and crumpled up. © READ IT HERE—SEE IT ON THE FILM OOOO04O00008 :64.6546-0000-00000006646966465400000000008, By E. Alexander Powell. (Copyright, 1916, by B, Alexander Powell.) Eraluced by the Signal Film Corporation, Released through Mutual Film Exchanges, ° | tt t “ “" 33 s 8 : PHOTOES HDING OHAPTERS, SYNOPSIS OF In nh Wooda, disappointed et becqming the father of a Aavahier Inston at ‘aml chikh to the river, ‘Thinking them dead, he allies himself with the lumber trust howe daniehtes, Le, marries, ut, the deserted wife ‘aod baby are CM od head. Picked wp and cart tor by one Taare Dew Maguate, fighting the iodeyendents around bl Hie daughter, len, ba AY ‘J pitention, by fw heroic ects Bhe helps th a =| jm Tabet thie (ovarion, Rad fy adelsind oy Tu "Demon, young engticet™ aint for fower fgehen, Dave Davo. Vivian mem, hie abandoned wife, Virginid, ‘whom the inad Thier dead, and feeras his own danghter is fighting him, Hie wile dies, Episode No. XV. N the sult brought by Little Bear, son of Sleepy Dog, against Rupert Holmes, boss of the lumber barons, every legal resource was brought to bear by Holmes's lawyers, They won. The jury dis- agreed and to have retried the issue would have cost more money than the independent lumbermen could command, Helen Dawson was defeated for the time being, but not crushed, With extraordinary success Helen had been addressing lumber workers in the various towns of the range, telling them the truth about Holmes and his mechinations and winning friends right _and left. Helen had organized a committee representing all the employees of the Amalgamated Lumbermen and this) "My i0" i ” comumitteo had journeyed to Seattle to! some very caarillnne teva tor sone place its grievances before Holm + | news so startling that perhaps you ‘The men demanded an increased scale = merely, ve able to credit it. In-| of wages, shorter hours, better f00d, | when 1 frat heard tr Mise Daveon, and an improvement in the sanitary! your father is still living. He ts in| conditions of the camps. Poy Foom waiting for you. Your “ js Rupert Holmes, ‘And if the Amalgamated does Leed | ‘Hones lay dying Tbe stern whenge see fit to grant these demands?” | that had reflected every phase of vil- Holmes asked the committee, “In that case,” sald the spokesman, | lainy for more t! @ quarter of a} century was now shrunken and the “we shall have to strike. But we trust, . Holmes, that that will not be hard lines had been ironed out of it nec- ary. We will give you @ week in by suffering. ‘Tee Jumberman turned his head . wearily as Helen entered. His eyes bak bid yy answer now,” | Pfightened and he seemed to rend a erled Holmes. “Strike and be = of hope in the young girl's damned!" Oy The day before the strike was to be! called. trainioad after traintoad of | Whispered Holmes, reaching for Hel- gtrikebreakers began to arrive in|" hand. Merced Falls, where the largest of m A Saturday wedding of note takes Place at the St. Regis to-day when Miss Katherine Carroll, daugh- ter of Mrs. John F. Carroll of No, 777 Madison Avenue, will be united in ‘marriage to Thomas H. Hall, After the ceremony there will be @ recep- tion, Miss Carroll will have Miss Kath- erine G. Farrell for her maid of honor and her other attendants will be Mrs, Mrs. Elston ce, Mrs, Archibald Tappan and Miss Grace B, White. Joseph Hall will walt upon his brother as best man and the ushers will be Frederick L, Richard, Innis O'Rourke, Edwin A. Strong, Charles C. McCord, Foster Crampton, J, Willet Hall, Charles W. Marsh and Carl K. Palmer. ready discovered that the magnate | was her father. eae ae mere ems mes mee oe eae oe mely Notes in Society | Mrs. Walton Oakley of No, 18 East | “Fairohild has told you the truth?" © answered, “he has told EVENNG WORLD FORUM IS HERE Twenty Nations to Be Repre- sented at a Lincoln Birth- day Meeting. A citizenship inatruction meeting of the Americanization Forum under | the auspices of The Evening World will be held on Lincoln's Birthday, Monday evening, at Public School No, ing} 4, in the auditorium of the building, which is at Rivington and Pitt Streets, Every one who attends will receive a United States flag. Tho situation of the echool, the population centre of the cast side's great melting pot of 1,000,000 persons born to foreign languages, custome and laws, ia such that the attendance at the first great instruction meeting of the series which has been under- taken for the coming year will repre- sent no less than a score of nations, Noticea of the meeting are being cir- culated especially in the immediate neighborhood of the school, The same speakers and others will address other meetings later on the same subjects, go that there may be room and oppor- tunity for residents in all parts of tho district below Fourteenth Street and cast of Broadway to have tho advantages of the discussions. Arthur Woods, Commissioner of Police, will be the principal speaker at the first meeting. He will talk on the opportunities and appeal which patriotism and wholo-souled absorp- tion of real American ideals offer to new citizens of alien traditions, He will speak also on his ideals of the relation which should exist between the people and the police—a friendly, helpful, protecting, elderly brothe: relation, rather than bullying, con- tempt and oppression in the name of physically enforced “peace and or der? on the one hand and cringt fear and smouldering anger and de- fiance on the other. Justice Aaron J. Levy of the Mu- nteipal Court will preside and will make a brief epecch. Nissim Behar of the National Liberal Education cause the mention. loss of compression you It may be that when th metor wae overhauled, the timing of either the valves or the ignition was not done correctly. Poor timing or a poor oarbureter adjustment will cause of a box attached to the under- je of the running board, the latter of which should be made to form a |covering. If holes are bored in the bottom of this box the chain may be put in when muddy and you may Forty-eighth Street gave a dinner) last night for Miss Elisabeth Rem- the Amalgamated’s camps was situ- ated. So tense was the situation that League will also address the meeting. “I wish I inight undo what I have| “\fue fh, spoaking a number of in- done,” Holmes falterd. “Dying @: see more clearly than the eyes of youth and early ambition. It is too late for me to undo the harm that I have done. Helen, who was staying at Merced Falls in order that she might be near the scene of action, did not go to bed. Shortly before midnight there was @ sen, debutante daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Charles Remsen, afterward tak- ing her guests to see “Her Soldier Boy.” formation desks will be opened on the floor, At them will be men qualt- fled to give advice to persons desiring to become citizens or to perfect thelr a jerk at low speed, Automobile Bittor: * Have a 1910 Hudson, goleg. UP @ short bill or running gouple of miles, sho boils over ve badly and consumes most all t mine | wo bot ehe loses power. and when water. At any distance she will go) when power has been shut off. Gets READER. ‘This trouble may be caused by a fouity Ignition, lack of oil, poor water circulation, or a loose fan belt. be sure that the dirt will even- tually be jarred off and will find ite way through the openings thus pro- ‘vided. | do not think you will find &) much trouble from noise if the chains TY | are carried here, especially if the two he| or four chains, as the case be, ma: entirely fill the space reserved, for them, | Automobile Editor While I understand that the ordt- nary motor governor {s built into the | motor, is there not one that can be | Mr. and Mrs. Blair S, Williams gave ‘a small dance last t at No, 146 East Seventy-fourth Street for Miss Annette Blake Moran, debutante | daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Anson B. Moran of No, 133 East Sixty-fourth | Street. Mrs. Charles B, Alexander gave a) rap at her door, It was Tom Daw- son, “I think you had better come over to the camp, Helen,” he said. “There's trouble brewing and you're| the only person who has Influence enough with the men to stop it. They are in a very ugly mood, but they may Hsten to you. Holmes and Behrens arrived an hour ago andj applications. An expert who can speak at lost one of every one of the languages expected to be represented at the gathering will be at one of thesw desks, There will be a full stock of blanks for the making out of Orst papers. Music for the gathering will be furnished by the Hebrew Orphan Asylum band, which ts rehearsing all The man's voice was falling, eyelids fluttered to the dying His Helen moved nearer gnate and placed her arm about his neck. The long, thin fingers of the sick man groped Siindly for the cool hand of his daughter, “Can... you... forgive mo... my daughter?” was the faltering question. “IL forgive you... father,” sobbed. she “i there's no doubt that they're trying tant ete at No, 4 Weat Fifty: |i o°ttart a row: ‘That would put th 0 | 8 strikers in wrong, they figure, and| Six months nfter the d Mre. Hamilton McK. Twombly will Pert Holmes there waa a would give them an excuse for wu the patriotic airs it knows for the occasion. Under the plans arranged for the Automobile Editor: ‘What shall I do with an Exide ba tery to keep it in good condition over Have noticed cracks, the winter? ig the paraffin which covers batte: thro: h which solution overflowed, eerious and what shall I do Ile » for 1t? Have also noticed a whi attached to @ car, so that the speed of the machine can be regulated to sult the desires of the owner? ALBERT SAUER, A combination speedometer, with which is combined the de which | you refer, was recenti: ited at |the New York show. By meane o t- ry | te give a dinner to-night at No, 684 Fifth | Avenue. | | |__Mr, and Mrs. A. H, Gleason of the Hotel Ansonia and Mr. and Mrs.) Henry Gleason start to-day for their annual trip South. They will be at ’alm Beach for a month and then go c their weapons. The strikebreakers are all armed and {if they once start shooting it'll be a massacre.” When Helen reached the camp she saw ata glance that the situation was critical, The strikers had barricaded themselves In the low-walled bunk and mess houses and were defying ding in the little ehurch at future programme of the Forum, the ville, When at the conclusion of the| instructive and explanatory lectures ceremony the slender, dark-hatred| nd auestion-answering by officials bride emerged from the church on| of clty, State and Nation will be held her husband's arm she found the}! series in each school auditorium street outside packed from curb to|centre in succession, and when the curb with men of the lumber campa,| Schedule ts in full operation fifteen As Helen appeared in the church door| or twenty thousand persona alto- "MEXICAN REBELS CALLED ON TO LAY DOWN THEIR ARMS Withdrawal of U.S. Force: | moves Last Pretext for Against Carranza, Says Manifesto. | CHINUAHUA CITY, Mexico, . |10—Gen. Francisco Murguia has ea- | tablished headquarters at the railway | station of Diag, a point between Santa | Rosalia and Jiminoz, in the campaign | He is personally directing against | Villa. Gen. Murguta has issued a mani. | feato to the people of the Stato call- ing on all rebels to lay down arms on the ground that withdrawal of the American expeditionary forces has ro- | moved the last pretext for armad op- | Pomition to tho de facto governmont. \ COLUMBUS, N. M., Feb 10,—of j early 2,700 refugees who accompan. fed the American troops out of Mex- foo, only 600 remain in the camp here to-day. More than 500 of these Are Chinese and the remainder are Mexicans. Tho American refugees left camp after one night and tho Mexicans aro scattering to various pointe In the Southwest where work has been offered, ——_~ H. C. OF LOVING. Roses now coat ae much as cabbages. Re | War nina GRANDMOTHER KNEW © | jor Colds | on Mustard — But the old-fashioned mustard- plaster burned and blistered while it acted. Get the help that mustard plasters gave, without the plaster and without the blister! Musterole does it. It is @ clean, white “sony bak made with off of mustard. It is scientificall; |pared, 0 that. it works wonders, yet does not blister the tender skin. | Just massage Musterole in with |the finger-tips gently. See how juickly it brings relief—how speedily the pain disappears. Use Musterole for sore throat, bronchitis, tonsilitis, croup, stiff neck, asthma, neuralgia, headache, |congestion, pleurisy, rheumatism, |lumbago, pains and aches of back or joints, sprains, sore muscles, bruises, chilblains, frosted feet, colds of the chest. ee ee World \Wants Work Wonders. Store will be Monday, Linc \ This telegram quests and urges no’ Americans Rally About the President closed all day oln’s Birthday from the South re- t only whole-hearted | ! - 2m] ‘ sticky substance on metal bracket dial controlled by a tumbler lock which holds battery in place, What instrument may be set to cut off th: ig the cause and remedy? Would it) nition id desired. Such be all right to change ofl in crank | a devi useful for pre- case now in preparation for going out venting ‘joy riding,” for there are but im March? If I do not permit the few chauffeurs re to motor to stand idle in cold places re trip in a car that had f@ it necessary to put alcohol in 1 by the radiator? Would it be a good idea ght or ten to atore, with some firm, your bat- tery away over winter? MISS J. DARCY. The general method recommended ia to discharge the battery completely ‘and then recharge it, making sure the fluid is at proper level in the cell and that fluid tests about 1.250 asp. gr. If fluid has the proper specific gravity the fri g point is lowered. Have cracks you mention filled in order that fluid be kept in coll. The white substance results » from action of the acid upon the metal. This should be scraped off and parte thoroughly cleaned. Parts sould ‘be rubbed in oi! to prevent @ recurrence. The cil may be changed at any time before the car is put into use. Would suggest drain- ing of the water circulating system. Turning the battery over to manu- facturer for care during the winter is a@ very good idea. Automobile Editor: How can I take out a New York and New Jersey license? W. KRONNER. If you take out a car licens New Jersey and drive with th numbers you must have a Jerse; , driving license. If th numbers are used the ci New fe must by be permanently be visible both front and with no obstructions. Automobile Biitor I contemplate storing my motor eyele for the winter Would it be if I should remove the) spark plugs and flood each cylinder with kerosene ofl and then rew on he plugs and all th i tay in the cylinders over the winte JOUN J. SHEA Would suggest that only a small amount of kerosene be used for this, > purpos: Auicanobile HAitor At certain spec vibrate violently well as the lamps se * Can you accou for vibration? = If your lamp brackets vibrate only at certain speeds of your motor it would seem that there is a sort of synchronized” vibration set up that similar in cause to the note that will be sounded by one musical in- strument when the proper chord from another is struck, It would therefore seem that your trouble could be elim: | inated by changing the height at which the lamps are set on the brack- Sts, so that the length of the vi- will be shorter or ins MOTORISTS LEMS SOLVED Americu’s foremost whens rod uF Fvening Classest also private on at Hours to suit convenience, Special Classes for Ladies Call or write for booklet, Stewart Auto School WEST 57TH STREET (at Broadway) Automobile EAttor: I have recently installed an electric truck in my business and want to keep track of tts performance, In ad- dition to the various types of speed- | ometers, Odometers and recorders, is there not Jome device that will reg- ister the distance travelled with no attendant current consumption? K. HEINZE A device similar to the ordinary type of speedometer h: . recent! n perfected that re~ ‘8 the total mi travelled by the electric vehicle a also the distance that the machine run when the current is turned off. In other words, this device ks the distance that the vehicle ‘sd Naturally the greater the percentage of coasting to the total distance trav- elled the less will be the co: tric current and the higher will be the efficiency of the vehicle—providing of course the time schedule is not se- riously interfered with. Automohtle at | Will you please let me know how many races there were at Briarcliff | Manor? One was run In 1906 or 1908, |T am not sure which race you ran off a bridge and was injured and did not compete. FRANK J, HAUBY, The Briarcliff race was run in 1908, | was not injured at the time, but drove a Packard throughout the en- tire race. Strang won in an Isotta and Cedriuo was second in a Fiat. Automobile KAitor Will you kindly inform me the best automobile Conn,? Leave New York by Pelham Park- way to New Rochelle, Larchmont, |! |Port Chester, Stamford, Norwalk, Bridgeport and Danbury. Through how deep water ean tha car be made to travel, and © the Vital points that water will affect? L, A. FAIR, S| Of course, it is not advisable to al- |low water to re of the car, such as tho steer knuckles, rims, where the ti to be ru and the like, By the use of waterproof magneto | covers, however, and water and dirt |proof desian of several portions of \the running g r intake of the road leading to Danbury, AN La IE Holmes and his atrike-breakers to|there arose a great roar of affection- to the West Indles. | ate greeting. oust them. A huge bonfire had been} started and the leaping flames jllum-|. “Now, then,” erled a big lumber. {nated the forest clearing in which| Jack, waving his cap In the air—“all| the camp stood as though {t were|together—three cheers for Mrs, Tom day. By tts Hght Helen could see;Dawson, our Lass of the Lumber- that most of the strike-breakers were | lands.” armed, That they intended to use (THE PND.) vino Pt | Mrs, Henry Clay Frick and her daughter, Miss Helen Clay Frick, of No, 1 East Seventieth Street, start to- day for Palm Beaoh. | The second of the three holiday |dances arranged by Miss Annabella thelr weapons there could be no pos- | sible doubt. Moving about, evidently | Girphant will bo "given to-night in| M'e dou Moving ah ween INCENDIARY FIRE DRIVES Pay ee spied the tall figure of Holmes. From the fashion In which he was disposing | ‘The last of the subscription dances given by the St. Christopher League | was held last night at the Hotel a his men it was evident that he In-/ tended to attack the entrenched lstrikers. If a pitched battle were to be prevented, Helen realized that she SIX FAMILIES T0 STREET Following a fire which damaged | CALLS FOR DAY OF PRAYER, | :nust act quickly. ‘There was no time |two three-story buildings at Nos. |to spare, The only posstble course! 541-8 White Plains Avenue, the In recognition of the present national| Was for her to pocket her pridevend Bronx, Fire Marshal Tierney has be- lerisis, the Federal Council of the) go to Holmes and beg 0 cH crepe ‘ | Churches of Christ in America to-day | the men. If he would consent to that ; Sun an Investigation, Tho fire was |tssued a call to its constituent bodies, | the impending clash would be at least the eleventh in the nelghborhood and all Christian people set aside Sun- day, prayer | In the call Christians are urges ite! temporarily averted. And ff he re-| within a week and the work of an Fused tO ESEED 0 her—well, she could | incendiary 1s suspected. jo nothing more : Pushing her way through the line of The two buildings are occupled by | strike-breakers, who had been drawn | six familles and the Bronx Republi-| jUp in rough formation, she, started can Club, The Rev. John Farrelly, walking towar nes, who, con- | , : Temptuous of danger, was standing in|fector of Bt. Mary's Churoh, saw the the full glare of the fire in consulta- smoke and aroused the tenants, An- \thony Canf tion with his Heutenants, Tom Dawson was still at Helen's | 3541, was asicep on 4 cot in h. side, and Morrissey had also joined! where a fire was discovered them, Suddenly Holmes swung about. | weeks ago, Canfordina was wate! | At that Instant froin one of the knots | ing for the Incendfary. Last night's Feb, 18, a8 @ national day of make united intercession to God, His Spirit may, guide and sustain President of the United State |direct the steps of our represen in the Congress of the United States, in all the momentous decisions of this solemn hour in the life of the nation.” CLOSING QUOTATIONS. ‘With net changes from previous closing: Tigh dina, who lives in No, lar, Low las. Cha'ee, Of strike-breakers came the angry | blaze began on the floor above him, Alaska Gold M! ‘ iw 1% + | bark of a revolver. That it was a! eueeaae SN BN |. |deliberate attempt to assassinate om Oe PRs at iat t 1if| Helen or ono of her companions there | Am: Can : 2 + 3) could be no doubt, but the bullet | Am. t dora | missed her by @ hair's breadth, finding | [its billet Instead in the body of Ru- ert Holmes, whose sudden movement ad brought him within range. He ‘clapped his hand to his breast, reeled, stumbled, attempted to recover him o the ground, So onlookers by the ‘Am self and crumpled | stunned were the sudden tragedy that no one saw a man replace in bis pocket a smoking revolver and «is ar in the dark who, befuddled 1 thought to kill Helen his employer instead. carburetor become: lowest point is ated that will be vitally affected by water 9 1% wins afte pneaa Balen bird | er enters the c: F a fat he in Dawsonville when tho| buretor BR 1S | telephone rang sharply, NO WONDER auxiliary 1a é “This is Mr. Fairchild, Mr, Holmes's s Yl lawyer, speaking,” sald a cold, clear ih | voice. st wish to speak to Miss Helen % wy Dawson.” See te tha simplest method of | his it SR] "You are speaking to her,” eaid od of 1 elon. clearing the gasoline pipe that leads p thy : | FeMlins Dawson.” eald the lawyer, chance—try a |to my carbureto? — Find | "Mr. Holmes is dying. He has only a DANIEL CROW Bree mash ER leew ‘hours to live, Ho has asked to | A simple and effective way is to Aiattuck Arizona BN %\ kee you, Will you come? T'll send a unscrew the pipe at the point where *"\) |* : 4, | ear over f ou,” it joins the strainer, then to force a *| «or course T will come,” she an few sharp blasts of air through the 9 | swered fuel pipe by means of the tire pump. 2 t 8| When she arrived at the little hos The only objection to this method is ae) pital in Merced Falls to which Holme: the fact that the impurities will be 1 ecae Pa been taken she was met at the forced back into the gasoline tank 2 'Rldoor by the lawyer, a gray-haired, land will probably collect again in the § 4 Q| kindly looking man, Who ushered her pipe, It, however, serv: aan 44 | into a small room next to the one in| shift until @ more perm Wind “$ Ql whtch the wounded man was lying out can be accomplished, Block He did not know that Helen bad al- Jon. Central A SAFEGUARD YOUR HEALTH TAKE NO CHANCES—BE SURE gether will be bined courses, There will be a masa meoting to- night at Public School No. 63 to ex- plain the purposes and plans of The Eventing World's Amertcanization Forum, preliminary to the opening of the sessions of the Forum ittaelf. Dr. J. W. Wronker will preside. Joseph Baronde of the Board of Fducation and Louls Diamond will speak on the rewards to the individ- ual and to the family and community of good citizenship, and Harry Schlacht will outline the scope and subdivisions of the work of tho Forum, following the com- —_——— TWICE TRIED BRIDGE LEAP. ‘The man who Jumped to death from the Willlameburg Bridge last Thursday was arrested June 26 last for trying to do the same thing at the same place, The di wus made to-day by pollcen: Bureau of Untden- fie k finger-prints of u 6. oa Morgue. ‘These printa were identical with those of « prisoner who gave his name as Rudolph Weasley blackamith, of 3 discharge was really Wendal Szabak, an Austrian, A policeman found at No. 211 Central Avenue, Brooklyn, Mra. Rudolph Wes- ley, who said the suicide must have been her husband. soon overtakes those who have become indifferent to the the stomach, liver and bowels and have allowed Indiges- tion, Constipation, Biliousness and Hele m Dawson en the first the wounded man. hile ported his head Tom 8 acer re Sickness 2a ‘ wound he shook his head P rough the un, he said, “He 1%} nasn’t much "After the wound |} had been hastily bandaged with strips i} Cal which Helen tore from her | condition of f | sitet, Holmes was placed on an tm. | {| provised stretcher to be enrried to! 4! Merced Falls, where he could receive , 4. | medical attention 8 With the shooting all danger of ¢ 4 clash between t atetkees $4 a strike-brenkers disappeared, ‘The lat. 4, [strike Drona without ® leader, and Malaria to develop Slthe mtrikers themselves wore frankly | * | startled at the tragedy which had 6o | suddenly iken the President of YOU FEEL SO POORLY Waken up—give yourself a fair nd improve your gen- eral health, with the assistance of HOSTETTER’S Stomach Bitters support of the President, but the im- Philadelphia— arsenals and the tion, including school of mental ceremonies, first 251 commissioned veloped. Two are now office army. active service on the M North, South, | faithfully. The clock has Life, law and | mediate, thorough and enforced organi- zation of all the men who in past and present years have been employed and | trained in the militar | of our two Stores, | —tounite in preparationsto makereadyfor | any call the authorities at Washington or Albany or Harrisburg may make for | military service, in guarding the national Philadelphia and elsewhere, and in per- | forming any other duties that may arise, as the National Government may order. In these two stores 642 boys between the ages of 14 and 18 are now receiving military instruc- squad, company close order, battalion drill, regi- | work (with flags and wireless outfit), elementary map reading, rifle practice, body building. Since 1891 this military training has been part of our store organization, and in these 25 years it is estimated that more than ten thousand men have received military training at our hands, 32 have been commissioned as officers in the regular army or national guard. our Stores were (and some of them are still) in ONE irrespective of political parties, | creeds and colors, in duty and patriotism | at this time to follow the President quiring loyalty to the flag of this nation under which we have lived as brothers, rs in the United States Ten commissioned officers and 156 men from Fast and West are Signed, Long Key, Florida, February 8, 1917. | organizations ew York and ports of New York, the soldier, school of the aid and sanitation, signal officers have been de- exican border. struck the hour re- iberty are calling.

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