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‘VOTING FOR MAYOR OF NEW YORK IS ON __ AT SPARTANBURG y— —’ One Battalion of 105th In- fantry’ Cast Ballots Two Days Ahead of Time. m_a Staff Correspondent ves} The Evening World.) SPARTANBURG, 8. C., Nov. 3— Voting began in camp this morning fm the first battalion of the 105th In- fantry, formerly the 24 New York. Although Monday had been decided tapon as election day for Camp Wads- worth, the 105th boys were given special permission to cast their bal- ote because they will leave for the thirty-mile distant rifle range on Monday. ‘Tho instructors and soldiers also in tamp will be greatly pleased when Monday is over. The visit of Gov. Whitman interfered with the drill sohedule and so does election day, but with reveille on Tuesday morning the 27th Division will settle down to work with a vengeance. Hara and all as the soldiers are, a Jot of work must be accomplished in the division in a mighty short timo, It 4s realized that this division must receive its training before ombark- ation for France. Gen, Pershing in recommendations to the War De- partment laid stress on two things— the necessity for training our men at home and the necessity for making this @ division of expert riflemen. ‘The General has pointed out that the areas for target work in France are restricted. No finer range in the world could be had than that at Dark Corners in the shadow of the Blue Ridge Mountains, Altogether the Government has secured some 16,000 acres for rifle and field artillery prac- tlee. The battalions and regiments will be marched over to the range, bivouacking for the night en route and spending a week or more at a time in concentrated rifle work. In a few Gays artillery detachments will be sent to Dark Corners, where, under {dance of French officers now ecw: they will be taught the lat- est in barrage fire and camouflage. ‘The arrival of the French instruc- tors nas accomplished wonders in be- atirring the interest of the officers and enlisted men in their studies. ‘There is no humdrum to tne teach- ings of the experts from “over there.” They are all wearers of rib- bons that betoken possession of med- als for gallantry in action, and this stimulates? the imagination of the boys from New York and makes them more than willing pupils. Classes in hand grenades are in operation, and in a few days the trenches will be occupied by battal- War Diet for Americans Will Make Them Trim Men And Prolong Their Lives Oto STYLE! AMERICAN FIGURE Meatless and Wheatless Days Will Reduce Them to a Condi- tion of Dapper Slenderness, Insuring Better Health, Says Dr. Louis Welzmiller, a Living Example of What Moderation Will Do—For the American To-Day, Eating the Best and Too Much of It, Is Too Pudgy Dr. Herbert Hoover. Uncle Sam needs. preserved a trim cartoontst’s Hooverized—so m actual fighting fronts. In Germany, 12, following the shortening of meat 46 A'S avhealth measure, wheatless and meatless days, conserva- | tion of fats and sugars and reduc- tion In the quantity of food con- sumed, will be at least as beneficial to America as to her allies,” Dr. Louls R, Welzmiller told me, At the West Side Y. M. C. A. Dr. Welzmiller has y for many years against the York trenches of General Ob: | ; By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. uses LE SAM 1s being put on a diet “for the duration of the war” by And the other doctors say dieting is exactly what leense. tically, scientifically and over and over again, that the average mature American 1s overweight. overeats is as definite a fact. And-if his tummy can be Writing !n Medicine and Surgery, Charles O'Brien Suggests that American doctors shall put the Nation | on a diet for obesity, to conserve health and not merely food. out the recorded fact that in the war period of restricted food, Germany,! yp. England and Belgium have all reduced their death rates away from the| “Our work here Is the most exciting KEOGHS HANG OUT SERVICE FLAG FOR 4 SONS DON BI One Who Won Honors at Ver- dun Writes Under Fire at Salonica. Justice Martin J. Keogh of the Su- |Preme Court and Mra. Keogh, havea Service flag at thelr home on Pelham ‘toad, New Rochelle, for their four ;80ns who are doing their bit In the ‘war, Martin J. Keogh jr. is in the officers’ training camp at Plattsburg; Richard Emmet Keogh ts in the Sig- nal Corps and now In Washington; Grenville Temple Keogh is in the Ambulance Field Service at Salonica, Greece, and John Keogh, also in the ambulance service, Is “somewhere in Grenville Keogh, who was wounded while driving an ambulance loaded with wounded soldiers near Verdun, and decorated for bravery on the fleld, has written to his parents from ‘somewhere in Greece.” “T have agreed to remain here two months over my regular time. I hate to do it, because I have been looking forward to getting back to France and in some other service. However, now that we are in war, I figure It Is up to me to stay wherever I will be of most use. So much for that. “Our work here is terribly hard, so much worse than they get on the Western front, that there is no com- parison. We are working day and night right up at the lines, which of course is terribly exciting. The weather is perfectly frightful. I didn’t know it could be so hot. The other day my work nearly ended with a crash when I got sunstroke. I fell down and hit my head on the wheel of my I was unconscious for four hours, and when, I came to again had to have three stitches taken over my left eye. 1 am all right again. “The other night we had an attack here and certainly had a very warm time, Our roads were simply torn to pleces by enemy shells, and three of our cars were pretty badly smashed up. Pictorially, the old gentleman has | and dapper slenderness. But that's It has been established statis- That he uch the better for him! He potats | I have been in. All of it is in plain view of the lines, The other night 1 had four rifle bullets pass through y . It happened when I was that I can accomplish much more | Oniy 300 yards Prom the first tin than most men of my age.” |The Bulgars sent up @ star shell an S47) ON'T you think,” 1 suggested, | SW MY car” “that some of the people who! are trying to conserve food are under- taking their task in the wrong spirit? If they would really be better off by eating less, is it necessary for them to consider themselves martyrs on mortality fell from 18.2 per 1,000 to| rations, WARNS AGAINST TRYING | TO GARRY WAR AS “EXTRA” ; Reserve Board Member Tells Finan- FACE GRAND JURY ACTION U. S. District Attorney Prepares for Prosecution Following Decision Against “The Masses.” Newspapers, magesines and other publications which have published mat~ ter in violation of the Esplonage and i Selective Draft Acts will be lable for criminal prosecution unless steps are taken at once to comply with the law This was announced to-day by United States Attorney Francis G. Gaffey after he received the decision of the Circuit Court of Appeals, which upheld Post- master Patten in refusing to grant #6 ond class mailing privileges to the Aug- ust number of The Masses. It Is Intimated that the Federal prose- cution of publishers who attack the gov- ornment’s war policies and its equipment of a national army will extend to ex- press companies and dealers who trans- port or offer for | matter con- demned as unmailadle. While Mr, Caffey declined to announce his plans, It 1s belleved that promulmat- ore of seditious news matter and car- toons will be summoned before the Fed~ eral Grand Jury, beginning next week. Charges will also be preferred in other cities against certain pacifist publica- tions, It is believed. Max Eastman, editor of The Magse: ‘a crime in publiist may be guilty the magazine, according to the opinion of Judge Rogers of the Circuit Court of Appeals, If so, he may be punished by not more than twenty years’ imprison~ ment and a fine of $10,000, or both, the opinion stated. “HUNS WITHIN” ARE AROUSING PROTESTS Wilson Is Urged by Mail and Tele- graph to Put Them Under Restraint. WASHINGTON, Nov. 3.—President Wilson, Attorney General Gregory, Postmaster General Burleson, Secre- tary Daniels and Secretary Baker and members of Congress now in Wash- ington are being urged by mall and by wire to take action against the “Huns within.” The Department of Justice is told in communications from various States that if such peo- ple are not suppressed there is serious danger of mob punishment. In some communities there is fear of patriotic outbreaks against pro- Germans, Many of the writers de- mand that Senators La Follette and |Gronna and others prominent in pub- lic affaire be dealt with, Some vio- lent protestants go 8o far as to even urge that wilful offenders be hanged. ‘Vhey predict that if Senator La Fol- [lette becomes active in his demands jfor the punishment of those who whipped Herbert 3. Bigelow in Ken- tucky, the feeling against him will be so pronounced that it will be danger- ous for him to travel. The Department of Justice is pre- paring to take definite action against all suspicious persons, Those who are actively in sympathy with Germany will be restrained and Germans who are considered dangerous will be in- terned. ane SIX MEN ARE INJURED THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1917.' SEDITIOUS PUBLICATIONS | Wooden Shoes as a War Economy May Be Worn by Women of Paris SAB0TS Boe As real war economy, Mile. Jardy, a Patriotic Parisienne, fashion by appearing in the Bots de from high wate The droughts were regarded by the superstitious manifestation of the displeasure of and many of them sald the crops would not have failed If there had been an Emperor on the Throne to intercede with H aif of his people. have been construed by the ignor- ant classes as a further proof of ven, on be! Heaven's dis; ‘The agitators, under the direction of Dr. Sun Yat Sen, who have es- & separate governinent have lost no time in making political capital of the mis fortunes of North China, with de- cldedly bad effect upon the Peking tablished at Canton, Government r, No Emperor to Pray For Them Causes Floods, Political Cry in China PEKING, Sept, 29 (Correspond- ence of tho Associated Press).— Chinese politics has been affectod very unfavorably by recent disas- trous floods, following droughts in Chill and several other northern provinces, which are now suffering Chinese as asure. ven The floods starts a new a SLASHER OF FOUR WOMEN IS SENT TO BELLEVUE Karasinski Placed Under Observa- tion After He Declares “Abrasion of Mind” Impels Him to aii Antonio Karasinski, who slashed four young women with a knife LEAT IER Houlogne in sabots, The photo shows a "clone. of the wooden shoes, which a ed with a narrow pat- ent leather toe cap and hand M'CORMICK SEES FRONT, HAS WAR PROGRAMME Congressman ‘k From Front Would Build 25,000 Howitzers and 10,000 Planes at Once, LONDON, Nov. 3.—Congressman Medill McCormick of Ilinots, who aas just returned from a tour of the Ital- jan, French and British fronts, is pre- pared to advocate a definite pro- xramme of military construction. This programme provi among other items for the manufacture with the utmost speed of 25,000 medium heavy howitzers and 10,000 airplanes suitable for scouting, photographing bomb Jropr Tho essential feature of the scheme ia that both guns and airplanes should be regarded as the common property of all the Allies, Gouverneur Morris, the author, who accompanied Mr, McCormick while he was on the western front, explained proposals to a Daily News repre- sentative, What America must have put be- fe her, if she is to do herself jus- tice, sald Mr. Morris, “is an absolute- ly definite programme of war achieve- ments, So far the war hasn't got across the footlights to that audience in the pit more than 8,000 miles away, so McCormick and I say give ‘om something to bite on. So we have drawn up thig programme, bearing in mind that malyy more howitzers ‘an long guns can be got on any given length of front, and also that we have probably got no battleplane engine at the moment which can be turned out, as scouting engines can be, as rapidly as Ford cars. STRIKE OF 12,000 MEN AT ng. IN SIGHT TONG More Workers in the Field— Conferences on Milk and Flour Prices Held. With an additional force of 1,000 girls of the Metropolitan Life Insure ance Company, Food Administrator Arthur Williams was assured this morning that the pledge card can. vase to enlist the housewives in the big food conservency campatgn will bring the total number of signatures up to half a million by 7 o'clock to« night. “We'll make you a present of half a million pledges by 7 o'clock to-night,” ia the messgae received by Mr. Will- fama from the sixty-three Assembly | District leaders in charge of the can= vass, The total number of pledges received up to this morning is 385,305 for all borougha. The Metropolitan Life Insurancé Company closed a department this morning, releasing 1,000 girls, These additional workers, together with @ large number furnished by the Equl- table, Prudential and New York Life Insurance Companies, brings ths total fleld force on the canvass up to 19,000, Tho number of pledges secured In ail the boroughs yesterday is 98,537 Following are yesterday's returns and totals by boroughs: bt Yesterday. Totals, Manhattan « + 95,556 160,176 Brooklyn . 39,171 189,348, Bronx . 10,360 4,797 Queens . 11,054 36,965 Richmond 11,48 Totals 383,024 Undistributed ry 2,281 Grand totals.. 98,537 385, 805 The Food Administration's Milling Division at No. 74 Broadway has an- nounced that henceforth all Buro- pean flour shipments will be handled by the Administration. This, it was said, will centralize exports to neu- trals and insure the receipt by each country of its minimum require. ment. + ° Administrator Williams conferred to-day with members of the New York Produce Exchange, representing milling interests, and delegates from associations, It was, sald that at another meeting next Wednesday the fixing of a price for, flour would be taken up. Commissioner Moskow!tz announced to-day that potatoes were selling in one market at 2% cents a pound, When he undertook his present cam- paign they sold at from 4 to 6 cents, He also said Fire Commissioner Adamson was at work on a series of ordinances intended to safeguard their meatless days?” “Not a bit of it, ON CONVERTED LINER SHIP PLANT POSTPONED ee . 4 ~ 4 grain stored here, which will soon be fons and regiments for a day or two} All of us, except the very poor, Dr. Welzmiller| ers Nation Must Save $5,000- a he slipped through the tu Introduced in the Board of Aldermen. Nranchinedtulta | us, DD eentgnaea leeenttin. Some : crowds in lower Broadway, was ar-| f aaa) ANI at a time, and the Frenchmen | overeat,” Dr. Welzmiller contin ontended stoutly, “Phe food savers} — gq9.000 to Meet Expenses. Three in Hospital Due to Burst-["@#ened before Magistrate Koenig this Federal Official Will Try to Settle] Claus A. Spreckels, President of tho recently from the ditches of Hlan-) ued, “Americans have the best | should go at their business with a 2 eae ree in Hospital Due to Burst-| worming and sent to Bellevue Hospital Dispute at Port Newark Pederal Sugar Nothing Combeay. ae ders witt tell tho lads from the Em-| food in the world, the greatest |real zost, Remember that the very| PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 5.—With @ ing Steam Pipe on George teal liond bectoy bec bl Mallon » a member of the American Retiners’ pire State how to live and conduct| variety prepared in the most ap- | things which we are asked to save—| Warning that inflation already, wee Washinton wera laganl rena abet SSAC Next Monday. Comat, Waited States Food Ad- ve | s > save | Wat Me tae aenaear eet. Ube 3 on. s ministration, e thought th themselves in the excavations, petizing ways. It is served in [fats sugars, starches—ase fat mak- |" wa ee ett told the National 8 “What impelled you to do this thing?"| A strike which would have tled up| sugar situation bad improved aoener Joy is beginning to permeate the) the most pl nt surroundings. | ers, if we overindulge in them." se heaes financing the war here to: Six or more men working on the|the Magistrate asked. all Government shipping work at|what. “It may be straightened out gemi-deserted camps of the Tist, 12th] go there is every temptation to | And remember, too, S.G. Bayne, the © capa reltas aia K Miners must not [converted German liner George} “have no control over myself."| Port Newark, and which probably|bY Monday or Tuesday,” he added, and 14th Regiments of New York.| it at the table and chew and | plucky President of the Seaboard Na-|<iertake to carry the war as an|Washington, lying at the New York} (He Prisoner replied. | “I have an} would have led to a strike of 20,000 Ae Seeaue be aiatectaat ey ‘These units, stripped of their pri-| chew and chew—and we do it. |tlonal Bank, who at nty-four|sectes” but must exercise the vision|Navy Yard, were injured Thursday phree oe Of the mind which irresiat| men in New York, was deferred yea- FORY GONE Te Saee ee a reate c 4 mpels. me to kill, Something] |. vates and the greater proportion of “Consider the change in appear-| has just told Mr. Hoover and Ameri-|qama imagination necessary to see tho|afternoon by the bursting of a steam) (1% annus me to lk Rmnning) terday until Monday, ITALIAN FLYERS GO BACK. ovetd Bee ot pices es [ance of the typical American since) can lovers of fleshpots that “seven | great changes In economic organization pipe in the engine room, Karasinski was taken into court; Federal Mediator Elmer Greon- When the regiments f ate denuded of| the days of the Civil War. Engray-| years of meatless, wheatless, coffeo- | essential to victory. ‘ vara of one gals to mate mee by Detectives Savage and Holton, who] Walle weened ee Hite ee altar Will Wing Way From Mineola Tee e | atesme' r y | let pale: , ve {Mer pointed to the Increase in|burned are John B. Donovan, forty~- e ne uild des men with the organization of the|ings of the statesmen of that day less and tealess days have been the| Mr. Miller pointe ‘ , . i aught him within an hour after the! Giuroil or Newark and the Lacks. eq: 21th Division, it was given out tBat | snow tean, spare, almost ascetic fik-|healthtest and most comfortable | Federal Teserve Bank Investments a9) ae te aye titrate, of No,|fiFat complaint yesterday. Hoth de-| wanna Bridge Company, which “ia| NEWPORT NEV Bee neta eta cor ier, but es the|Ures. To-day your average business years” of his life, jevidence Ma LA Rane ale How. | aga Kingsland Avenue, and. Charles | tectlves told Magistrate Koenig they] constructing the $4,000,000 ahip build. |cording to advic On ae toe | eee aver forte—uniees he fae nade CGF sauhen tho eupeius | partially respons! rise in ¢ hrothy twenty-six, of No. sao? | believed the prisoner to be very dan-|ing plant at Port Newark for uso by | Lieuts. Resnati, Baldoll and Baltrinnt of Bee ree er ase cious: eetiled |e. cen ye keep his tigure—| wheat and moat mont ba senior |modity prices since the United States |rieth Avenue, all of Brooklyn. ‘They | #erous. He had spoken to them Inat/ the Submarine Boat Corporation, |the Royal itallan Flying Corps, who ee rcrastated camps: Now |> Genslto iehort, te ks is SaRBOH 1 eat and meat must be sensible | went to war, and declared that if this|were taken to the Cumberland Street| night of @ conviction twat his “mis-| brought about the postponement. | made flights recently to New York and Saves the information, from high|'* Podsy and plump. The nisoll and in reach of the average | increase continued it was not unreason: | Hospital, nion” was “to shed female blood.” Vico Chairman Raymond B. Stev- | Mineola, Lx I. will return from Mineola COON Cae at the eld regiments wilt | the physical inactivity of hin life,’ pocketbook,” Dr, Welzmiller |abio to expect that before long the re-|| Navy Yard officlals sald Washing- Hid Oe ne Untied tate tipping |to Langley Aviation Field to-day. It ts Jose none of their traditions nor their | conjoined with his devotion to the) pointed out. “The prescribers of | serve aystem would be made into a great | ton would explain the explosion, Pay rg alapate “which iewatver understood that with Rood weather ga 27 : ° table. | ; e ) e S rive al P. eettes, ate eels Sat ane eer 2! asures of the table, the new diet must not be like the [engine of banking Inflation, Mave Department OMe! HERTLING WINS SUPPORT wages and a closed shop. Ho will aleut. ‘Adam, who made the fight ath and 14th een utaly will be| “Yet the death rate of those who| woman who won a prize for the Estimating the annual actual savings " arrive there Monday, ‘The Newark |iast Thursday, is also expected to re- he aioe See oF ether’ division |are 88 per cent. overweight is ¢0 per| best menu for a dollar dinnera of)". auiice wueaeored gi 3.0ous SEE See | OF ALL BUT TWO FACTIONS AHINA: w OUTS eTeent T2008) WORemRDEiamn te8ky, * hie WOR | are: 25. Der 08} ‘ a 000, Mr. Miller aug WASHINGTON, Nov, which is snarty to be sorme ad | . above normal. what the fat) and then started out with a dol- | 00,000 would be. left Gepartiment) oMistala: Geolarea\ to ze s PS ‘ Much speculation has been in-| iin ts risk Moreover, he {8 not| lar, to find that it would purch; after deduct POLITICAL. _ POLITICAL. _ ay taxes coming ye 000, he « dulged in concerning the 47th Regi ment of Brooklyn and the 10th, made of companies scattered through the Hudson River Valley, It is stated | day they had received no report of| an explosion on the steamship George Washington, They suid the fact they | of the Conservatives and Radical Socialists | 5 Alone Oppose New Chancellor nearly so eficlent as he would be if about one course of her brilliantly he carried less flesh. improvised bill of fare. Some of e nation’s savings if the wa the people who are telling us re to be met added to “I know what I'm talking avout,| not been informed ox How to Vote the d authority that these twe expenses ta prod A of Germany. Geamnces wil be filled up to oes from personal experience,” Dr, Welz what to eat remind me of the ———_S>—— ve een eae necessarily mean it GERUER. Duhks Web ailevtan Strength and will act as a depot bri- miller added with & mile, I should| French Princess who recom. |CANADIAN HERO IS KILLED. 2 i Re ce cai . ade to the 27th Division, As a depot| say he was not much under six feet! mended cake to the populace as Leeiempeaecant Justifies Belgian Inv: ta) ROMER GONNON se eas " F i T k t Brigade they ul ase ae acer in height and he weighs 160 pounds.| an economical substitute for |Capt- Papineau, of Princess Pat's, Forced to Kiss F jeved’ of much of the labors of the us on 1C e ties in the 27th Division. | His well-knit leanness is the first| bread,” Mad Won Military Crose. WELLSBORO, Pa, Nov, An-| post of President of the Prussian Min: | i. . Mado) ee |thing one notices about him. “Speaking of economy, nobody but} MONTREAL, 3.—Priy : vices sortions that Germany was justified | istry by the actection of Vice Prest- | To vote for Mitchel and the entire Patriotic Rally tm School. “Eight years ago, when | was | Pluto © fat now. [from Enal the death I \in her invasion of Belgium caused aldent from the ranks of the Prussian|— Fusion Ticket, put a cross (X) ‘The pupils of Hunter College High| forty, | cut down my food allow- rest of ua {acon of Captain Talbot Me Papineau ‘crowd of several hupdred men guth | cacutien 1 | ae are | Oto Ahn ciche oe Gchoo!, Park Avenue and 68th Street, , ” ausnesa (ce ee Stacy esis ered to honor drafted men to-day to| ... ‘ jf in the squi 18) fotia realy 1 h ance two-thirds,” he explained. usages, |yignt Infantry. He waa killed in the “reo 1° ee ss The Chancetlor will control Prussia's " d Bull's E: Yer Planck, teacher of history; John feel veer for Now 1 am al: Cap in to Kins an American Flag, 7 poy eee Anh pteal Dy DI Od the ballot. . Cashman, who spoke 0} rhe| ways well and good-natured an Almost | seho! ver KHON took sefiee in Lia ¢ avaclan 0: ue of hit late office . United States tn the Great Wan and | work from 8 aA che marntiie til fona {2m while the crowd marched to the| he @ tomatically becor Prussian || Don’ a on hip lop erase james BE, O'Toole, Assistant 2 eadit tation, where eighty-one Tioga| aubject In his new capacity ‘ : ou make o? tary gf the Senate, whose subject| 1230 at night. Lane by sents nie aay fencing hounéy men left for enmp. Gnaccallen won eteriinia @vigadil will ss ee bee! ballot sad ot a ‘ was “Democracy, | paring my record with others, n jet rid . no start with the united support of al ake, re} = nape anr pans er Jpartic: in tho Reichstag except the! for a new oge. You are entitled The Fusion Emblem POLITICAL. POLITICAL. ee nd stored up in the eee | to will racetves A formal y ne of ont to it. : body, whic ly not use, dence from the majority after his * - PED ne nea Set BOY IER ews ICS |apeech cullining “hia policy. The Vote for the Fusion |buy more than they Aeed, oF November Bus aia waste | Sanaa Boar f Estimate g nurtured body always con. AT THE 2 OF 118, Octave Fri 8, a nogro,| wu a Board of Estimate rtain amount of fat, but the cael ‘ te at New Orleans |WINGDALE “TRUSTY” FLEES. unday, November 4 at 8 M ESN Vi ne > unsuee y | be For Mayor ’ , . . dition ought to sell a | : ee eaeie . r | maker, for there is @ serious short UNABLE to determine whether man at wheel or} "eee! pearste is Fath Senrish John Purroy Mitchel Globe I heatre, 46th St: & B way Heaven kadwa how (hel very near Lissa Ms oat aes Bnd them Voth) Large forces vison k For Comptroller President Board Aldermen nd * h to eat ju non. re je cr le drunk on the OMAC | oar 4 ‘ond oF " SPEAKERS: fuged be Welam Hut “the | PRR: sumone tae Wm. A. Prendergast Robert Adamson -! foreed economy in © substi. City, serving enten 7 i \ Hon. CLARENCE DARROW tution of green, bulky and fish eran! STE WILL DUCIE evar bonn Pr PTA prises eal oaks “i For Borough President for meat, and of si shes for 8 2 ever seen on Minsis- enys y Hon. WILLIAM O. THOMPSON } |e rately ‘sauce will be of sipp! River was k 1, Wisconsin, [prison farm at | Whur Dutsives Marcus M. Marks - = Manhattan tremendous physical | to the ee County, last meh nis ds the tire i AND OTHER PROMINENT LEADERS brain workers 0 and to : _ escape since William Moyer assumed Lewis H. Pounds - ~ Brooklyn : ; 4 ahntae JOHN BROWN of Pennsylvania ts a widower for ps BMaxor Mitchel has protected the rightaist labor tena miles os tne nutrition. seventh time in thirty-five yea PR MAND AMEE RYAN ONG Thomas W. Whittle - = Bronx le has improv: e condition o! ing man in New York. SHRORIS | SUOPe Ie ETON be mah sy Wingda m came un arden = . He has made the f labor a business of the City. loser tucaecume get's 1 uo Frank S. Gannon, Jr. - Richmond He has i ved the buildii d fi ij A rawled f ag ; le has impro' e building and fire laws. ACKSNAK yled from under altar as jig recalled the prisoners work sone s E He has made the employment of the unemployed a public duty. xe salon’ $k Grama fala Iadslccniat ska ge ey Robert W. Higbie ~ Queens , je has fought against sweat-shops. ve, but can't blu me,” sald whaver was one 7 } A istri ) He hae secured for labor ite legel and equal right, protecting the - ut oan 1 Thay i An Vote for WM. L. RANSOM, for District Attorney . jaboring man and labor organizations from political graft. ies te ‘ en pags ts 10N COMMITIEE OF 1917 NO TICKETS REQUIRED FOURTEBN-YERAI D INDIAN GIRL took first ‘ FUS c T brig Mia ir for best louf of bread, Io was or about «