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MERMAID'S BEAUTY MADE LONGBEAGHS WILD HORSE WL Two Men, Including “Red” Randall, Also Saw Her, and They’re Wild Too. “Red” Randall, the Night Rider of Randall's Reef, thoughtfully —————— Cocoanut Oi! Makes A Splendid Shampoo || if you want te keep your hair in food condition, be tareful what you Wash it with, Most soaps and prepared shampoos tontain too mucn alkal!, This dries the scalp, makes che hair brittle, and f very haruful. Just plein muisifie eecoanut oi! (wh'rn is pure tirely grease!ess) 6 much better than the most expensire soap or anything this can't vossibly injure the hair Simply moisten your hair with water and vub it 'n. One or two tea. Spoonfuls will make an abundance of | nses the |, seh, creamy lather, and cle: bair und » nses out particle of dust, dirt, dandruff and eacessive bil. The hair dries quickly aad evenly, and it leaves it fine and ‘iky, bright, fluffy and easy to man age. You can get mulsified cocoanut ofl at most any drug store. 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IN THE Look forthe New Windmit” NEN PACKAGE 15 dt |sand dunes began to see | shifting, ly and removes every | | went whirring through the alr, Tomorrow morning, your appetite with delicious HOLLAND RUSK Warm weather demands particularly light, dainty dishes for breakfast. golden- brown product is different from ordinary toast. It is exceptionally appetizing and digestible, Made tor twenty-two years in Holland, Michigan, from an old Dutch recipe, and highly popular wherever it is known. finest fr-shest eggs and rich, creamy r ‘Your own@rocer has the original Holland Gere for for you Mf you insist it was broad daylight. and then wandered ashore. Randall's Reet. ‘She's @ peach!” he exclaimed. his mission on the Beach. much to the sul wa clenchoft teoth. And “Red” Randall had never been up this early in the daytime before. His gage trailed over the azure sea ‘The sand dune on which he had been standing suddenly took fight and “Red” found himself in a valley, Another moment and he was on the beach again, his thoughts still on the Wild Horse of A dainty figure floated before him. He didn't know it, but it was one of the maids of Beachdpolis who hed come down to the sea to bathe. “Red” Nandall's breath came thick and fast. All thoughts of the Wild Horse and nd dunes passed from his mind, The maid pirouetted before him in one of the most beau- tiful bathing suits ever seen on Long It wasn't that there was so but what there wonder the horse went wild,” muttered “Red” Randall, between his Suddenly and without warning the w. Now up, now down, the sand continually feet he had and he didn't want to lose them while the search for the wild horse was on. Never had he seen anything like this before. It was some day in the ife of the Night Rider, Ho was seeing things. The sand dunes were stirring lke the “witching waves" of Coney Island. For once in his life, “Red” Randall was at fault. Tho shapely mald had disappeared and the Night Rider of Randall's Beach found himself being borne by some subtle force—away, away, away, Then the awful truth burst on him suddenly and with crushing force. Tho sand dunes had gone wild! But why? These were some of the awful | thoughts that took possession of the | mind of the fearless Night Rider and |Jeft him mindless. He was still guess- ing when an object high above him For moment the Wild Horse aled to his vision, and with a blood-congealing neigh disappeared in the sand storm which was ap- proaching, A low, mocking laugh fell on his 8, and looking down he saw Vic lly, the chamois of the Pallisad in hot pursuit of the Wild Horse of Randall's Reef. He had his climbers on. “Red” Randall gnashed his teeth, put It was no time to gnash, He was on his wal one brief stood r tempt This flour, | it was with diMecuity that ese you can use for shatspooing, as | Med kopt his feet. They were the only but—and Randall wa wrong way. The witching Anybod WHAT Mabe The HORSE WILD > stanter, But “Red” Randall had never heard it. It came from @ pack of sand dune | hounds in full cry. They were coming or going. No one not used to their ‘ways could tell whether they were | coming or going, for their front legs | were on behind. Before them, or \ hind them, theif tails, or rush: were working like rotary ploughs. Each blow of the brush overturned @ sand dune. Overturned! Demolished ts the word. Urged by an unerring scent and driven by a master looking for the money, they had flushed the Wild Horse and were making dust of the sand dunes. Sand flew like snow in the winter blast. All Sahara seemed at work. A sandstorm was seen at its best, or worst, It spread out, @ curtain of sand, billons upon billions of particles whirling through a clear, bright day in Flatbush. Randall, game but almost blinded by the doluge of sand, figured that his end was near. He covered his finish, In that agonizing moment | the smallest detail of bis wretchod life flashed through his mind. Then he clenched his teeth with determin- ation, He would sing. Presently through the densely swirling dirt the clear soprano that has long been the pride of Point Lookout was exhaling “Brighten the Corner Where You Are.” Also, Ran- dall was exhaling sand, In the midst of the second verse the sound of other voices reached the ears of the now resigned Randall. He listened intently, he did so surprise showed behind his mustache, The voices grew more distinct. “We have him! was the triumphant reached his ears, (To Be Continued. > We have him!” chorus that More letters continue to come in anent the mystery of the Wild Horse at large on the sand dunes. We can- not answer these letters except through the columns of The Evening World, Here are some of the letter Wild Horse Exlitor, Brening World Sir: Tam an inhabitant of the sand dunes described in your art- {eles anent the Wild Horse of Randall's Reef. Perhaps I can ex- plain the mystery. My little boy, four years old, rode his rocking horse away from our cottage at 10 o'clock in the morning of a stormy day, two weeks ago. Late.in the afternoon he returned on foot. He sald he had been blown off his rocking horse by @ particularly strong pressure of the gale, or words to that effect. I formed myself into a rescuing party but was unable to find my son's rocking horse, for which I paid $3.36 at Abraham & Straus's, to say nothing of the trouble I had in transferring it to Randall's Reef. Now my candid opinion ts that “Red” Randall—posaibly under the influence of grape juice, or what- ever non-alcoholic beverage he ab- sorbs—ran across my son's rocking orse careening over the dunes, nd mistook It for a nutty equine, I have my suspicions that he has swiped my son's toy for the use of his own offspring. If that is the case I serve notice that I shall hunt him down and demand satis- faction, My deduction In this case {s rea- onable, “Red” Randall, trying to get away from what he thought wan a wild horse, fell over a sand dune and the rocking horse caught him and pinned him down, Event- ually he conquered the department store Pegasus and took it home as @ trophy after the manner of the dwellers on Randall's Reef. My son's rocking horse was chestnut with a brown mane when he disappeared and answered to the name of Cyril. JOSEPH Q. DOAKRES. Wd Horse Editor: Sir: “Red” Randall's wetning be Dlowed. Of all the “phoney” de. tectives In creation he's the double zero. Where does he got off at with his warning to keep off the sand dunes? They don't belong to him any more than they do tb Rameses the First. “Red” Ran- dall is chucking a bix bluff, but he's up against the real thing for the first time in his commuting career, for when Willie Ferret gets after a man that man's goat and everything else is gone. Let “Red” Randall go get @ rep- utation for himself, ever detect? As a ¢ the triple extract of Incidentally I might state t did he giving @ bit of attention to “Red's” activities In these parts and when I've completed the investigation he'll wish he was an ostrich and could bury his head in one of the dunes. I don't like to toot my own trum- | pet, but if "Red" Randall ts to be | permitted to vilify me I've got to say things in self-defens I'm the detective that located Denny Lindsay, the sage of Rough Neck, Long Island. As you may recall, Denny was missing and all the crack detectives In those parts and a score of amateurs from the Hook and Ladder Company had scoured the country for him, Every road house was dragged In vain and then I got busy and found him in his bed. He was so seldom there that no one thought of look- ing under the sheet for the sage It was my brilliant mind, the same mind that will fee the missing nd dunes lef him down on @ rock. For just one-oight! of a moment there was silence, and then a weird, eerie noise smote bis ear and made holes in the atrflosphero. | y who had ever heard that noise wotld have recognized it in- the gritty reminding one of nothing so much as gazing out to sea. It was some time quick to recognize it—it was Ane before he could get his bearings, for i his | eyes with his annual passes in order that he might at least be able to see | | sent Its ships over to the N. NAVY YARD TIE-UP NSTRKE SUE |Protesis Against Work Being Done There for Out- side Firms. “No men of this union will work in | the navy yard on ships belonging to companies against which there is a ‘Woe will tie up the! navy yard very promptly by cailing strike on now, out every man over there the mo- ment they are asked to work on jobs of this kind.” This was the threat made to-day by E. J. Deering, busi- neas agent of the Machinists’ Inter. national Union, at his office, No. 116 Nassau Street. Mr. Deering made this statement after word had come to him that the firm of Fletcher & Co, _ had vy Yard The union gave @ sample to-day of what it purposes to do if pressed: by tying up two small plants in Hobo ken, one of them that of Fletcher & Go, the other of Neggen & Lyons, both in Hoboken, Mr. Deering sald that about 600 men struck. He claimed one of the firms precipitated the |atrike by discharging some men on | Saturday. It was said that more than 12,000 workers jn shipbuilding yards would have walked out this morning but that the urion wanted to show it is not the aggwssor. The union has given the big shops twenty-four hours’ grace, and it was said several had| signed up before noon to-day and that others had asked for conferences Federal Mediator Roland B. Ma- honey is in town trying to bring about a conference between union eaders and the representatives of big firms. Mr. Deering repeated to-day his charge that engineers from the German ships recently taken over by the Government had been employed by American shipbuilders and that he present proof of his charge to nt authorities if asked. The members are demanding a The strikers’ unton minimum of $4.50 a day. chairman reported to headquarters at 9 o'clock and immediately pickets were thrown around the two plants affected Wild Horse, that brought joy to Rough Neck by the restoration of Denny. Another thing T want to kick about while I'm at it is the butting in of Vic Kelly, the climbing boy of the Palisades. He's joined in with “Red” Randall's crew and they're messing things up fine. I was on a fine lead last night when “Red” and Kelly, the chamois wand dune and frightened away my pack of gasoline hounds which I had on the trail. These hounds were educated on the Merrick Road and they've got some speed. The only trouble about them is that they won't start without crankin, and I lost the crank when “Red” and Kelly butted in. But I'll have that Wild Horse in a few days. Willie Ferret never falls down on an undertaking. As for “Red” Randall ana his double- fisted crew, I defy them, WILLIE FERRET (Old Sleuth). of the Palisades, stumbled over a | 44 East Mth Street 47 Cortlandt Street Exclusive Kuppenheimer Deale: Broadway, at 49th Street 1456 Broadway, at 42d St. 125th Street, at 3d Ave. Come in or write for Kuppenhetmer style book. announcement of the regulations the do their work fearles tially and to remember that armies at the front will be strength- THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, JULY 2, 1917. UNION THREATENS WILSON ISSUES DRAFT RULES AND LISTS OF EXEMPTIONS FORARMY (Continued from First Page.) about Sept. 1, or as soon thereafter as the cantonments to house them can be completed. In a statement accompanying the President called upon the boards to ly and impar- “our "The regulations which I am to-day causing to be promul- gated, pursuant to the direction of the selective service law, cov- er the remaining steps of the plan for calling into the service of the United States qualified men from those who have regi: tered; those selected as thi sult of this process to constitute, with the Regular Army, the N: tional Guard and the Navy, the fighting forces of the Nation, all of which forces are under th: terms of the law placed in a position of equal right, dignity and responsibility with the mem- bers of all other military forces, “The regulations have been drawn with @ view to the needs and circumstances of the wh country and provide a system which it is expected will work with the least inequality and per- sonal hardship, Any system of selecting men for military vice, whether voluntary or invol- untary ‘in its operation, neces- sarily selects some men to bear the burden of danger and sacri- fice for the whole Nation. The system here provided places all men of military age upon an even plane, and then by a which neither favors the one nor penalizes the other, calls out the requisite number for service. “The successful operation of this law and of these regulations depends necessarily updn the loyalty, patriotism and justice of the members of the boards to whom its operation is committed, tion of whether a man between the ages of twenty-one and thirty,js en. jor physical gation, It is made very clear, ty of less than 45,000 elty of 30,000 with additional 90,000 population—will pass dintrict boards. All ca of the local boards. ally investigated the case. made by panied by the wife and by the head must be accompanied by two porting affidav' famille: authorized to file claims witp porting affidavit board must be the dependent or dependen: Local boards are required, #1 by which in the National nated person by mall, boards firet will and I admonish every member of every local, ard and of every district board of review that their duty to their country requires an {mpartial and fearless per- formance of the delicate and diff- cult duties intrusted to them, They should remember as to each individual case presented to them that they are called upon to adju- dicate the most sacred rights of the individual and to preserve untarnished the honor of the Nation. “Our armies at the front will ‘be strengthened and sustained if sed of men free e in their mode of selection, and they 1 be inspired to loftier efforts in behalf of a country, in which the citizens called upon to per-, form high public functions per- form them with justice, fearless- ness and impartiality.” “WOODROW WILSON.” EACH CASE TO BE DECIDED ON ITS MERITS. Exemption regulations add little to the terms of the draft law, the ques- Holiday Palm Beach Su pinch-back models. Priestley Mohair Special Khaki Trousers. Special surgeons, the question of exemption, titled to exemption because of do- pendents, the nature of his occupation unfitness being for the boards to decide after proper invest.- how- ever, that there are to be no class exémptions and that each individuat | case must be decided upon Sts merits. The local boards—one for each coun- pulation or boards where necessary for each additional ‘upon claims for exemption except those based upon tndustrial or agriculaural occupation, subject to appeal to the involving agricultural or industrial exemptions will be passed upon by the district boards—one for each Federal judicial district—which also will decide appeals from decisions Claims for exemption because of dependents may be made by the man himself, his wife or other dependents, or by @ third party, who has person- A claim , the husband must be accom- y supporting affidavits signed ofa family residing in the same territory. A claim by the wife or a third party sup- 8 migned by heads of Similar rules govern claims onthe grounds of other dependents, the dependents or third parties being sup- In each case the tisfled before grants exemption or discharge that actually are supported mainly by the fruits of the man's mental or physical labor. bject | to appeal, to pass upon claims for | exemption or discharge within three days after tho filing of aMdavits. THREE FORMS OF NOTIFICA- TION FOR MEN SELECTED. Upon organizing the local boards will take over from the registration boards all registration cards, whioh they will number serially and list for posting to public view. Then, aftor having been advised of the method the order of ability for service shall be determined and of the quota to be drawn from its ter- ritory (minus credits for enlistments Guard or regular army) each board will prepare a list of persons, designated for service in| the order of their Hability, post the st, give it to the press and within three days send notice to each desig- As the men so notified appear, the make a physical examination in accordance with spe- cial regulations to be provided, bear- | ing in mind that all persons accepted | by them will be re-examined by army If the physical examina- | tion is passed sucessfully, then comes | District boards must decide appeal ing of proof: service, 8 within five days after the clos- and their decisions are | If the ruling of a local poard | affirmed, the person in question| stands finally accepted for military | In passing on clatrhs for exemption on the ground of employment in necessary industrial and wgricultural | occupations, the district boards must | be convinced that the particular en- | terprise affording such employment actually 1s necessary to the mainten- | ance of the military establishment or national Interest during the emerg- ency, “The evidence must also establish,” the regulations say, “even if the pal ticular industrial enterprise or ticular agricultural enterprise par- ts found necessary for one of the above purposes, that the continuance of such | to the person therein Is necessary maintenance thereof and that he can- not be replaced by another person Specials in Cool Clothes, for Men— s, of genufne Palm Beach cloth, in Norfolk, plain and Special at $6.50 ; “Cool-Cloth" Suits, in smart Nor- folk, plain and full-| belted models. Special at $10.00 Suits for men. Special at $10.00 Shantung Silk Suits for men. Special at $15.00 & $20.00 Flannel Outing Suits for men. Special at $15.00 White Duck Trousers. at $1.25 and $1.75 at $1.25 and $1.75 Special 279 Broadwa: t Chambers White Flannel Trousers. at $5.50 Kuppenheimer Suits, $20 And up to $40—cool featherweight fabrics. White Outing Shirts, with collar attached. Special at $2.00 Cool Brill Suits, at $15 The Very Limit of Value in Summer Clothes, Straw Hats for Men Now Reduced to $1.65 in New York and Brooklyn 2 Flatbush Avenue, Brooklyn YW Vs KN Wo YW it without direct, substantial, material dee and detriment to the adequa and effective operation of the par- ticular industrial enterprise or agri- | Ma" Who Claims to Bet cultural enterprise in which he is en-| Ware Family Hetd for gaged,” t A. Francis da who lives in Warringt MAY Tar rione Caan. EX: sonable apartment house at NO, |hurst Avenue, Washington Hf Later the President may from time | removed from hi« home to time designate certain industries or | 4nd taken to Bellevue Hos; classes of industries that are neces- | servation, sary and the district boards will be| Du Pont Is aid to have so notified. It will be the duty of | munication with Washington, each board, however, to ascertain the available labor supply for such In- | dustries outside the men called for military service and to take the re- sult into consideration in determining | A.F. DU PONT IN tly depressed’\him, He people In the apattuient house connected With the qu Pont Delaware, and is In the gunpo iness. \ = ‘The ngture of his business witht | Government is not disclosed, he has. been acting sttamgel, duct and language reaching @ late yesterday He is nm and with his wife, Mre. Sie opinion of district board,” ction of the regulations con- “the direct, substantial, mate- to any such industrial or ag- ricultural enterprise outweighs the loss that would result from failure to obtain the military service of any such person, a certiftmate of discharge | = Naat may be issued to him * * *,” Certificates of exemption will not| necessarily be permanent, They may | be revoked with changing conditions, | A a or may be granted only for prescribed | periods, i . cnet Mother the Baby Want to Fi: m Altman, Missing. Sam Altman and baby Samuel of M: No. 893 St. Ann's Avenue, the Rronx, | tei are secking the whereabouts of Sam Pp Altman, the husband and father, whe | we vetord; nice emples eam Eruptions? Why endure them?! ply Poslam and drive them away. Poslam supplies precisely the tive influence so soothing to inflamed irritated skin Itehin, Relief is fi : redness is remove Undue | night. | housands know that Cuba to Help Rockefeller Fisht) compare with Posla in auleuit hea Yellow Fever. \ing Eczema, Acne, Herpes, The Cuban Government and ‘the| Pimples, Itch, Scaly-Sealo Rockefeller Foundation, through the | skin diseases, » |International Health Commission, have old everywhere. For FREE § mapped out a campaign against yellow) PLE write to Emergency fever, it was announced here yesterday | tories, 243-5 West 47th St,” by the Republic of Cuba News Bureau. | York.—Advt. disappeared from home four weeks ago. Altman, who 1s thirty-five years old and employed as a newspaper deliverer, went to work one morning and has not deen heard from since. Hig little fam- ily 1s in sore distress and 1s being cared tor by friends. | i} | | is All Wheat and every single _ tiny shred is thoroughly and deliciously toasted. Look for this signature HH hlogy t Sea’ (IN COLORS) A wonderful picture showing six types of American fighting ships. Combining the skill of the most famous marine | photographer and _ a: skilful artist. ext.. unday World Order from Newsdealer in Advance, Edition Limited. .