The evening world. Newspaper, February 16, 1918, Page 7

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How to Clean and Repair the Differential and Transmission When Overhauling Your Car. mobiles. While engaged in this work the motorist would welcome Suggestions regarding the proper treatment of the differential and tranamiasion. ‘The casings of both the differential and transmission sould be washed | out with kerosene, Gasoline Is better, as it removes the heavy greage or) Mest weather moans the start of a general overiauling of auto WOMEN MOTOR DRIVERS DRILLING IN CENTRAL PARK 6 1GSSOEE IESE HHH SEES DOD ED d BODE GHG MG + oil more readily than does kerosene, but its use ts inadvisable at this time. | ‘P Pay particular attention to the heavy? accumulations in the bottoms of the| oases, for you will find, on closé examination, that these are literally filled | with small pieces of steel, chips broken from the gears. After all {s clean, examine the bearinge for wear and, if any is found, take {t up by means of | adjustments provided for such purposes, If, in the case of ball bearings, wear is found, this can bo rectified at a small expense by having the bear- {ngs reground, or they can bo exchanged for reground ones. Some transmissions have the counter shaft mounted on plain bearings, usually of bronze. In this case tt will be necessary to install new ones. Before doing this be sure that the end of the shaft ts not worn. lif it is found to be worn to any refinished shaft. Automobile Kuitor Would you kindi ne know what | 1 Hair tor on the driver. Using low gear with| T could use on a mohair top of a car| tn ie eve ee Onn Pexcellent | 0 pr@ent it from eguard, particularly on a bad and at the same tin cracking it| grade. hen folding it back? ar is two! 4 nobile Feiior and a ha alf ‘ems that Kindiy adv ise = O. K. to fil | so, how in to battery charged to a BW \ dvise using | battery, od re Would certainly melted snow | se only distilled water ¢ | sults. not Automobile Edit What would be the res | 80x3%% shoes on front whe tourin constructed by manu facturers to use 80x3% rear and 30x3 on front wheeln It is now possible for the driver to) 88 oN front wheewe protect himself from the terrific glare) a notably lame your aon ef approaching headlights. This on the road, Would advise sticking achieved, says the Illustrated World, ¢., 50.3 or changing the front wheels through the medium of a little shade | en:ireiy which rolls up on the windshield ie | throughout the West—way out in § r : Mollmat when not in use. When the driver) Do you know of any way that 1) Louis and Chicago—as tho man with shing 8 strong headlights coming to-|conid take the rubber out of old! tho big volce that brings in a recruit jew flag up in ward him, he needs only to pull the|“utomobile tires and where T could Is thero little shade down, and atill see re plage: i New. Fork where {} enough of the road ahead while be-| could learn vulcanizing in the ing protected from the other car's; ning S. NEVES glare. Do not know of any process fc ——<$ jtaking rubber out of old tires, Won the top {s dried out, as there are a few | SUBSet You seo some eaky spots, which I would like to do ymething for. H. VD. food concern | atomotdle Bititor What con I do after having the | only way to stop yourjcarbon removed and the valves f "i is to entirely cover |atound to keep the carbon f t. It is practically Impossible to re- | °ecting, oF helping to do so? valr holes in a top and make hem | There aro a number of devices on | ‘ak proof, | the market which are suposed to ‘i 6 Euitor: |help keep carbon out of the cylinders 1 a Pack Tein-Six. When trae ‘ in t own to elght or te fle | troduct inders. jrottle down t he or ten miles TP ty tip: asible to ke ° nour on high speed the car will | tire} ts not possible | ul at eigh 1 my clutch and trouble? | ROWMAN from ¢ - due to either 1 . r valves or| : t ustment, | Column? PRANK MY! Sreahonuee Broad > an are and a Spark are the same thing, If one bases words understandin 1 please sta ug: I have a four-cyh > and eylin | | | if Tam an | ie te th damage like fancied beilef that t AAT t busing only two | ble the ised for lig >urposes ‘other | or trieal furr If you from the auto. Ww between the tw und Wdo, 1 would suggest a Metions » point of v rds, if A nsult degree, the new bearing must be fitted to the| ; Canadian and British boys, Jumps up | stood penect learning this business, Me MOTOR CORPS RE DEOEES Members of the Woman's Motor ¢ of America are shown en- gaged in practice work in Central Park. Ail are expert drivers who have offered their services to the Government in any capacity in which Sede oeDe4e 's CENTRAL it may see fit to assign them. T! acting as chauffeurs, me many ways, other duties, THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1918. ( PAR who is Chairman of the Own-a-Home Campaign, sald to-day that the com- mittes hus been swamped already by demands for country places with land | enough for ¢ | t ee carers profiting | ty ave seeking out two to ten acres ta imbe nald che in Long Island promoter, wh v tract at Smithtown rec MUST SAVE . Meyer report re Mover the t rising prices in spite ot 1 condition of more con- investments, certal ymouth, a farm journal jal readjustments war will shift the vetween elty and | eatt ty still, but will | ¢ orm manual lahor 1 iis in the greatest war the world has seen, it sepma tne ble that the land hunger whi lows it will be unprecedented.” o DEATH PLOT LAID TO SHERIFF axed prod ne Simpson o: Ittee to-day Aes] has from any oth Complaints |to meet the * County Attorney en drafted Into dof Pine to KML PASO. Also Tex, Feb, 16. shortage | Stato in charged wit engers, &¢., and releasing men for ant whes 3 a bushel |Man With the Big Voice Brings in a Recruit Per) Minute—That's 'Em, Joe!” Why They Call Him “Get Joe Taylor—"Get ’Em Joe"—has "s no cop near, take ‘em to jail! towr elf, If there's no jail near— He made his debut the other day in, cull an ambulance and send ‘em to of tho post office. Among! the h tad prominent who at- y laid up and John L, ou , the fighters haven't all Joa is the boy that told the of East St. Louly—-the r if he didn’ was most of fur-collared Wall °f and no-collared Pedro from the | l#ft | ut stand Mayor mded, Joe Taylor of the British and Ca-/ neck town that new flag nadian Reerulting OMfce is known minute, Im Joo x ‘em yesterday "s the way {t's done rides up in a machine full of | Liss: men that drifted in the au out again whe! or cheered and dien’ got blue the me ty ttle bo-peap ext to a young deacon. time Joo let loose on the deacon winced and seemed to f the bo-peep blonde, ne tish subject that Dionde Every Kaiser on top of the front seat and begins | to swear. He tells you “there's no such thing as a German-American— you're either a loyal American or a| take « vis naturalization (blunkety-blank) — traltor A blue) and fi or enlist under ring curls up about as high as the | the Prit Woolworth Building across the way | —and by that time the street is] ene blocked. | “If you hear any one say against President Wilson,” 0 the doesn't his breath to explode. id his~and looked at ep bloade, a-boy! Giro blonde, and ¢ hi eered while Joe did as she yelled hing says Joe, authorities. If You never arrived at the an the dea¢ conclusion teil » has ov fackay Companiea—Yea a M18—Balance common stock equal to tbat « pared with $6.24 a share pre allable six months on April 1, ompany—Report — anda Dee 8) anda jean Powe a uk any 74, cont cn aahoie quarterly dividend ¢ nt HeviO in provieus quarters Som ‘common stock, payable to in previous quart stock record Fob. 19. National Condujt & Cable) Company: Slose-Shiefield mi Wor Nine m Nat prota teen months ed were § a shan tock, com barges pared with $15 'CLOSING STOCK QUOTATIONS, ADVERTISING PIONEER DIES, | wi wet canes tom " en Away at His . clair, 1 dito SIMPLE MUD CHAINS. : t : nt be kind en \ of the * wing: I 1a! ry ou uso the t 1 n thie 4 the differentia at y day at his \e transmiss . Dodge t N. Ju. followin: un | i i ‘ th 1a of thi. He is sure . ou ¢ se nd ed t low and tive echildre 4 ‘e ‘aso for these parts te. Batt » In Gloucester Fig 1 uso in sumime received his 7 . 5 neces: f and entere ty HR 3 Pr differential " n as @ repre . . 4 and how oft Qn at aid s be done? nt eligious publications, | jute if 4, When olling up the parts, Is St} « ng the firm of Fu & Ms R uuvisable to use a ge ainount, | There is no necessity now for the wlia In 1891 he went ith : * ‘auae ea vine? Bey Mi troubled motorist, stuck in a mud/inio ¢ advertising business for ts “Nb. Is {t not a fact you need to |hole on a deserted road, to struggle! l:imarif > continued until the ue + 1, give more gas and lesa spark in g0- |to put on mud chains, The Illustrated | | death, Ho devoted much . i? 4 ipm up a hill or do you give Plent | World relates how @ thoughtful in-| mo fo quite 9 pists ‘i yh 4 . t ry b e attle f which he had a| 4 . In going down a hill {9 tt advis- ieee etana a to the rescue. The nut his New Jersey} ; ato do eo in first apoed or ia It bete con: not of one large . : to have the car in neut hain, but of a series of little chains, << " at off all gas and let! of which may be independently mentum OBrry 107 amy apped around the tire. There is 2 KILAUEA LAVA FLOWING, ‘ plate, four or five inches square, to 1 is yo se th 1 ig olee) Lake in Volo ae t » wh, ame, Zou, ase th which is attached a strap, This strap | ©?” ineame. t foo 2 Use same tn sur sin wins |¢omes directly in contact with the, , H, Fob, 16.-The ma : i wooden part of the wheel. Tho plate |) nleano has ‘ . 1 About flye pints on an average Of jg held firmly against the tire so that | ; sud nd ia at the : HO NMR alan it cannot roll or turn. The tread | ! within fat RN & Plenty of both. plate well corrugated so that it t rding to 8. Driving down bill d i takes a firm grip on the around. ‘ day ‘ « For cOnOoMY S$ eee you should certainly use the genuine : : ee | NEED COAL FOR SHIPWORK, Bath Concerns Appeal to Faet\!),° ‘ " inls and Navy. West, Md. . ie is \M eM 4 Ain ats ; BATH Sath Tron | W nd » . . . | Work t Company | alee, 26: 4t x ‘ompan all |NEW YORK COTTON ExX¢ HANGE. wt ged on goverament | Open. tis The freshness of the leaf assures the maximum |/"". : 1 vy sh yleld of finely flavoured tea, ous |! pend, ai weit! vided to Give ARS FOR SPRING. DRIVE TWIN > WAR Older Men, Women and Chil- dren in to Start Big L « must win the wa Hil win for the f The firet tow f sp’ 8 ne the 4 to gre Alre is a iiry for :, alt within | fifty to 100 miles of the matropol |Many want to rent country places, Jothers seek to buy them. Eagerness to help. win the war by getting at | work early on food crops | | multitude. | Men past the age for a service are striving to dot farm cultivation, Women Jdren are aglow with the atistios completed by the 8 to-day than $ and country pr pass by May Movement—Peace and Boom. lively In mpela the etive war und chil PEACE TO START RUSH FROM CITY TO COUNTR iv, Experts who haye iny le ditions give mat ts fy t conclusion. Wide fart 1 coun cleats have followed a si wars, have been financed and simulated by the vast amount of ap l{tal seeking long-time — Investment Daring the prost war, enpitulists und Tending Inst eop thelr inoney in fu for any emerg | ing of howtilit idiers, trained for vig 0 r J Make Friends With Your Carburetor AND SAVE GASOL vend EVENING CLasstD the tection. furious city rush of war indust: r wing masses of factory o! mployment, and they farm or co also will ed enough from thelr wages to buy | heir own little farma or homes. With mplaint against Combest and | allegen they spired to take | nie from Jurisdiction @ the El Vaso Detrict Court for the purpose of ing him THREE YEARS FO FOR DESERTER. ers, he said farmers fo was that feeding y could tho labor problem tending | mon toward solution, the farm movement | load of corn: Will be hastened by the spread. of | Bosten Soldier Sentenced to Gover- rapid tranalt facititles-—public uti: ners Island, | the aoe airomel Pea tee il AYER, Mans,, Fob, 16.—John J, Curloy me cheaper and’ more lige wanker MeAae Gh tha HGamalines with the subsidence of urgent war de. | Of Boston, a member of the Headauar- | geatistician manda upon the resources of the big| ts Company of the 30lat Infantry | by rtlon, wis Ifacturers, Impris Such conditions would nat population drift WASHTD ment of Roger W. urley was cities which started just Dee. § to dan, 4 clan, who ts a war and was checked by drast | a tment due to the New G. 0. P. Oh as director of a newly spread of the conflict, Just the x tary fash needed for an enthusiastic! INDIANAPOLIS on Public Information, venewal of the movement is expected “i 1 James B. Reynolds day ye return of th ds of hardy ¢ ” er boys, fresh from the epoch | Nang Th contact making victories for democrac: m the St mamitter WAR PROFITS GO INTO FARMS| Sey chalrene ways a's ty rat NEAR METROPOLIS, en eet in thirty dave hereee ty, President J. W. Doolittle of the) appointed the eight members. of the lof the asa Matate Exoha Island, ‘executive committec ment can lend to WOMEN WORKERS, ~ SENATORS WAR Only Their Manual Labor Will Incréase Production, Ok- lahoman Declares, and ss nate »w feeding wheat to hogs on of a shortage of corn and/ Feb. Babson, spectal agent of the La- 4 bor Departinent'a Employment Serviee, FARMS, ll grow ama | WASHINGTON, F per ee ens ASHINGTON, Feb. 16.—Women larger. Perhaps | Must go to work on farms and pete before an ft an be @ffected, ¢ Weatherford, Agricultural A larger percentage of farm hands the army tham, he sald, “amd tho services of should be pro- rmers full pro- ~~ Price fixing has discournged farm> The reason given by wheat to hogy not haul a load [of wheat to the market and for the obtained for it bring back @ WAR WORK FOI FOR BABSON, 16.—Appoint- | the statieti- created Division | charging tacy to murder were) women must be had.” | fied ear ¥ Against Shorift T Before the Government fixed the jaare 1 Hier ereey \ price of wheat at $2.20 many farmers, nn County, * Oklahoma received $2 paon 1b Oe kd ead hn ROTO BOG Comt 1 Martin Jett t (eaiaceds, Ho gale wtG0k valiael | ison a via tis loclared. He said stock raisers were | are already alding the Government in |0. : ‘ of Industrial Relations of the Comtittes | was announced | the Information mployera. THE EQUITABLE LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY OF THE U. 8. 120 BROADWAY, NEW YORK By the thrift of the people the Nation is strengthened. The most effective teacher of thrift is life insurance. The Equitable’s Outstanding Insurance now aggregates $1,754,868,908. The New Insurance paid for in 1917 amounted to $251,344,000, an in- crease of $41,637,000 over 1916, and the largest single year’s business in the history of the Society. Its payments to policyholders in 1917 totaled $62,831,172. The following items are from the 58th Annual Statement, which will be furnished on request: ASSETS, December 31, 1917.......4..+% INSURANCE RESERVE. $471,914,234 OTHER LIABILITIES... 13,620,304 SURPLUS RESERVES: § For Distribution to Policy- holders in 1918..... Awaiting apportionment on deferred dividend policies For Contingencies $576, 837,343 $485,534,538 $ 16,065,192 63,592,355 11,645,258 $ 91,302,805 $576,837,343 During the year the (Equitable $45,869,556 at an average yield of 5.24%. The Mortality Rate in 1917 was the lowest for the last twenty-five years. The Equitable issues the following special poli- cies in addition to al) varieties of Life, Endowment. and Annuity contracts: A LIFE INCCME POLICY under which the insurance ts pels to the Beneficiary in the form of a monthly income for [Ifo. A GROUP POLICY by which an employer ‘protects hie ecuavans A CORPORATE POLICY to protect business organisations, A CONVERTIBLE POLICY which can be modified to meet changing ‘onditions. A BOND providing an income for the declining yeare of a man or a woman, A LIFE ANNUITY providing an Immodiate Income, under whieh the torel return may be more but can never be leas than the price paid for the Annuity. . A NEW POLICY under which (f the Insured becomes totally and crmanently disabled ho will receive a fife income without reducing the amount payable at his death to the Beneficiary) and under which the Benefictary will receive double the tace of the policy if the Insured’s teath is the reault of an soeldent, invested For full particulars apply to the Equitable or to any of its agencies. W. A. DAY, President new division will serve as @ potne | Labor Department | be

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