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TATE MOBILIZES. FORCES 10 TAKE MILITARY CENSUS 25,000 Volunteers and 2,000 | Offices Needed ‘in Listing | All Between 16 and 50, ‘The State of New York ts preparing to-day to put-on tecord the military ability of evety ciffzen between the ages of sixteen and fifty, That means not only the Aghting power of every fhan, but the farming, manufacturing, trapsporting or other ability of every thd vidual In the State. “Wo ain,” sald B. . Goodrich, ehief of the census, nt his headquar- pvtors, No, 261 Broadway, “to give every woman and man the chance to show how she or he can best help to carry on this war, And those who belp at fiome are jupt as important as thowe THE BREATH ' OF LIFE The power of the red blood cells to carry oxygen—the breath of life —to all parts of the system can be increased by commoi living and Pepto-Mangan. \ prink your daily fill of oxygen and you nk as of the finest wine that exhilarates you to the center of your being. Yet it is not tem- porary —ex- hilaration like that — which flows from the a i UDES 1 neck of the ht BA bottle. You mn MAN bate, Yet with the glow 4 of enduring health — with the breath of life itself. You draw oxygen into at lungs with the air you breathe. Millions of red blood cells carry the oxygen from the lungs and distribute it to ev cell and tissue, The result is rich, red blood and a body charged with vigor and vitality. jut if your ted blood cells are deficient fn number and oxygen-carrying capacity, the whole scheme breaks down. The oxygen you take into your lungs is not circulated properly through the system, ‘and all parts of your body suffer from some degree of oxygen-starvation. Then you fare weak, anemic, listless, only half up f your daily tasks and pleasures. } Ef your blood is in such a, condition build it up by means of a well balanced diet, fresh air, exercise, sleep, rest, and Peplo-Mangon. ‘Pepto-Mangan “*The Red Blood Builder’’ Peplo-Mangan supplies the red blood cells with the clements they need to increase their number and oxy i apacity. A treatment find ound to build lasting tality. Pepto-Mangan.is eral tonic z th, ‘a splendid gen- easily digested, the blood, and pleasant to the taste. Friendly warning: —Genuine Pepto. Mfon- gan is put out only in the original bottle ‘and sealed package shown above bearing | e name Gude. Buy Pepto-Mangan in i>Jorm and you get the real article, Mad& by M. J. Breitenbach Co, Manu- factur}_ Chemists, New York, and sold everywhere, 4 OO i SETS OF TEETH $322 UP H Siuver Fiutincs WOR ¥ AVM Maier Wind £ Naw be ] BROKEN PLATES I { WHILE. YOU WAIT. oRr-BLOON } MODERN PAINLESS DENTIST “TWO OFFICES — 1A Weelk S2800-* THE “ROYAL WA" Littl » Week snd Bedding , Rooms turniched a " iow as $50.9 (OPEN EVENESOS ‘the State census will wait until the], Ki ~ | away.” and neighborhdod associations have | who go to the firing line. I speak of | wonton first because they will be of the utmost Importance in carrying | on this war to succe The actual registering of individ- uals will not be begun at once, for} ‘ederal census has been completed. Mr. Goodrich, however, needs help of at least 26,000 volunteers who Will help take the census, in all the boroughs of Greater New York and Also the tise of nearly 2,000 residences or stores In which the work can be dono from 7 A. M. to # PM, during the two weeks it will last. Many civic volunteered to atd, but there is still great need of workers who will be able to give at least five hours # day to registering stations, There must be at least five persons on duty in each office at all times, All of this service and use of places for registration will bo given free of charge to the State. “Anybody downtown who thinks shé or he has ability or property that will be useful in taking the census,” sald Mr, Goodrich, “will be weloomed in this office, Or they oan drop in at our branch office on the gtound floor of the Woolworth Building, The arent thing Is to get at the Job right Citizens of the variows boroughs can get information at their local headquarters of the Census Bureau. In the Bronx this ts at No, 406 ast One Hundred and Forty-ninth 6treet, sub-committee of the Mayor’a Com- mittee of Defense; in Brooklyn, the Brooklyn Civic Club, No, 127 Remsen Street, telephone Main 8066; in| Queens, the Queens Chamber of Com- merce, Bridge Plaza, Long Island Cite, telephone Astotia 1109; In Staten Island, Women's Suffrage Party, No, 115 Davis Avenue, West New Brighton, Staten Island, The State Military Census has nothing to do with drafting men into tho fighting ranks, That is all at- tended to by the Federal census. The object of tle State census is to look all over the commonwealth and find out just what évery one can do, from farming, sewing and cooking and other household tasks, to the most scientific work Persons who ean speak or write foreign languages can help greatly. ‘Telegraph and telephone operators, electricians, rallroaders and those proficient ih any branch of engineer- ing or mechanies Will be most wel- come. Persons who own or can run automobiles, power boats, aeroplaties, or wireless outfit are in demand. Any person who refuses to answer tho thirty-four questions and twenty- seven sub-questions oh the census blanks will be arrested and taken be- fore Director B. P. Goodrich, It he still refuses to answer ho may be sent to prison for six months of less. Should he then persist in his refusal he may get another six months’ sentence and be kept in a cell after that until he | giyes the information. John B, Creighton, Executive Secra- tary of the Brooklyn Civic Club, who has been appointed director of the cen- for that borough, gaid to-day that rious elvic bodies were helping to! nroll yolunteers in the twenty-three assembly districts, including more than | 600 election districts, | “We are mapping out the districts and gathering the workers,” he said. | “Phe Woman Suffrage party of Brook- has promised to furnish 1,000 . Adelphi Academy promises | fifty, Packer Institute fifty, the Y. M.) ©. A. fifty and the New York Univer. | | sity of Brooklyn will cont bute fifty ils, whose clerical labe ill eount jas regular class work expect to | begin the actual registration of citt- and intricate professional | zens early in June.” pS)... | EDITOR IDENTIFIES DEAD MAN Btephen J, Rie tland (Me.) Argus and former cir- ation manager of The New York y identified the man |who died suddenly Saturday at One | ed and Fiftty-fitth Street sta-| tion of the Sixth nue Blevated as | his brother, Frank T. Richardson, | | Until nth ago Mr. Richardson | lived at No. 280 Carlton Avenue, Brooklyn, with his two ebildren, R ently he had made his home with his at One Hundred and Twenty- h Street and St. Nicholas Avenue. some time he had been employed n the circulation department of the New York American. TRAIN KILLS INSURANCE MAN. Albert Stranne Fi Under Wheels! at Orange. May 14.—Albert | an inaurance | tod with the At No, 100 fell under a tatton of the | day and re- ited in his St. Michael's | ss slipped 1a train whieh York, He. lived sons on Holly- Dast Orange ACCUSED OF KILLING WIFE. stigation into the death of Sullivan, who was reported » have accidentally shot her ner home, No. fast Forty- | pecond Street, led to the arrest of the woman's husband, John.sullivan, thirty. | wo years old, & chauffeur He ts ac- pon being questione “ wife 4 revolver which he was ight ivipiiateed Wiliam O'frien, M. Py Antt-Redmond- | ite, to Ret! INDON, May 14 nent from Parlie who tts ndeopendent 6 impending | nt of Wile | r the City | 1» O'Brlen, 1 Hiutterfield of © herent John Redan s finn _ - Governor to Review Parade of Public Schools Athiette Ly ALBANY, May 14 inced to-day that he ade of the Pubtie School \ w Yorg on 4-4 2200) YY my How to open the package Tear off part of the top only, 00 thows. La tac Guaranteed by Dy Va So correo Its made, buttered hot. Toast is an everyday matter of course, but one of the in toasted S you bite into your crisp slice of morning toast, give it / an extra thought. Th + real things: you have to be thankful for. Now you're ready for the special idea on this delicious new Laas Strike cigarette. at give it a flavor though? Well, you know! doesn’t how delicious it is; reshly- ed de The tobacco—it’s toasted; and We've been working for five years to make a cigarerte out of Burley tobacco. It’s “*blame good” tobacco; and you smokers have shown us how strong you were for it. Last year you poured sixty million pounds out of those t's green, red and blue tins. Tha enough for 35 billion cigar- ettes—against about 21 billion ready-made cigarettes sold in 1916. Cossiderable Burley enthusiasm! Big discoveries are simple ideas Until we went back to the toasting fork and (old kitchen ° stove, to the simple idea of hot bu ‘Burley cigarette wasn’t possible. hold. . But ngw it does, ttered toast, a ready-made The Burley flavor didn’t Now Lucky Strike—the real Burley cigarette It’s toasted—and the flavor holds, delicious, full of flavor. e RATES ‘The American Tobacco Co, Lnc., 1917 _ It’s toasted—the result is Keep thinking of that hot buttered toast—and try a Lucky Strike cigarette today. 20 for 10c It your dealer does not City . Our men will demonstrate to you how the tobacco is toasted—at many stores i a i ia meen aN aT eR ISR pe es Se