The evening world. Newspaper, February 22, 1918, Page 6

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BROOKLYN BEAUTY «= in Kismet Temple ier the auspices of the Clin mmandery No. 16, Knights in Brooklyn # lare AND CHVALRY AID = eet was not of Nrooklyn's fine from eee to elehteen and look i Aniy Peck, who has been playing the | come Of life for eighty-two years down to the pretty mystic maids > And 8 wae A Costume ball Every. | nation “THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1918.- « 10,000 OF ‘CITY'S OWN’ DOYS MARCH IN SNOWSTORM ¢ (Contigued from NeaAy hands saved her from falling, and when she recovered her boy Rob- ert ond his regiment had gone, r Page) 8 serious way business, A . Al ie further down the avenue a é ; } a Jory were all dre@sed up in their) ("0 ond down the avenue in # snow up trom the east aide with no Spectacular Fancy IS- regalia, likewlae the visitors from | seem never endings atream of | Protection against the elements say 1 the sd gen he ‘ ere ria ; - la ) ow id tume Ball. Home eg Ghele wives were girls) sent god KAA were POWMerEA deep |a hari over her head stood in th in evening dregs, and the flower girls, With enow, Snow to the depth of | front dine of mpectators polidly bank~ e motdierw of © Minion iness themaelve than an inch lay under the|!ne tho sidewalk. She was faint with ers Of | peaitted fn their lives tha the thousands Jamming both | fort and hungér, and she crooned 7 ; there ts ‘ beauty with ape that N85) he ou and of the elect who filled i weeds: snatonhes of Yiddish, oof ana Wluring eh «ow ‘ ’ rue pki Whon the fugite atruci oo fer ‘ of DCIS At the reviewing | A woma@iP with pch furs, whose auto rie first dance of the ball, which fo: 1 Pneumonia wan the unseon| Was Parked down Fifty-firat Street - - ; n| &tmbor of war pioturen, the foene enemy lurking 10 be paid and who had bullied her way rather fp the Kale WIN) was one Not soon to be forgutten ‘ nl fori: u 0 the war when the girls at home at4| the hundreds present. Statd business! ! aie . * avenue was panes sea be i we ja the fightir " rd as the bows in the; Men who had, perhaps, not danced for, aimos! in an hysteria of santimens, |* Dace de the little body from the Lt fo for ine | 040% forgot that time ages one and! Mothors, ta sweothearts-—n_j | *hemente trenches? Over in Brooki a ig fell bare into their days of youth) qh, scanned the passing| “Mein sohn, mein sohn!” chatteréd stance, thero is more patriotism | with a joyous swi the | are ean « in the whole of the Ger T » Nicholson (Lit-| faces to caten the lineaments of q| STOWE apace pikes she hs a i is), Past Grand! beloved one bad but one th , | Pecognize any of the faces under the man Empire—that mitch and more too nander, State of New York. He | >®! : ‘ ouRnt: | renked “trench cape” of the march- was proved last night the Red| denied that he really danced—just a|Thi4 i8 our army; this ia the army | Peaked “tr San whe . h around the ballroom, he lor as apring in hia step. And DRINK A GLASS leray hei avers Bide ae men with OF REAL HOT WATER ||, BEFORE BREAKFAST, ||' e, though here are a nlibis would not hold in a court of | | | il | law Carlisie Louden, Past Grand | Commander of the Grand Command. ery; Alfred Past Com lloayn we will both look and feel) sae. cy nandery: John 1 clean, eweet and fresh H. Ratmer, Commander Trinity Com. | id Hines and avald Minees, Recorder, York Grand Commandery, and Sir Lafayetto Wingate ssimo, Clinton Commandery. But how could these men help be ing gallant on such an occasion, Aside from working for the war through aiding the Red Cross, the femiuine loveliness was an attraction that was simply irresistible, There is something about the womon and lasses of Brooklyn that is different— | l Sanitary science has of late made rapid strides with results that are of untold blessing taymumanity. The lat- est application of its untiring research is the recommendation that it is as necessary to attend to internal sanita- tion of the drainage system of the hu- man bory as it is to the drains of the me kes one think of house something that makes rreatic of he Al- 5 ; omed to] Woman ap the ereation of the Those of us who are accustomed to mighty for which men are born to feel dull and heavy when we arise, splitting headache, stuffy from a cold, foul tongue, nasty breath, acid stom ach, can, instead, feel ns fresh as n die. And wheg they are in costume portraying every pleture of womanly charm from the days of the original lik maid to the twentieth contury Crone wary is {t_any won der that men too old to fight envy the youth in khakt and in i Mitch credit for the success evening ia dua the members Ladies’ Auxiliary Committees. Among the prominent workers were: Men- dames John A. Morrison, Henry mu. Rynehart, Charles A. Brockaway, EF. the whole of the internal poisonous stagnant matter. Fveryone, whether ailing, sick or well, should cath worning before breakfast, drink a glass of real hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone Phosphate in it to wash from the stont ach, liver and bowels the previous day's indigestible waste, sour bile and polsonous toxins; — th cleansing, sweetening and purifying the entire alimentary canal before putting more food into the stomach, The millions of people who are both- ered with stipation, billous spells, stomach trouble, rheumatic stiffness others who have sallow skins, blood disorders and sickly complexions are urged to get a quarter pound of lime- stone phosphate from the drieg ‘store. This will cost very little, but is cuffi- clent to make anyone 4 prowounced H. A. Derr, UW. David Shannon and Henry Working in conjur Executive Committ put their whole heart and soul in the work and that they @ucceeded in evidenced by the fact that nearly 1,800 wil] be turned over to the Red Cross War Fund for the boys: in France, ‘The mombers of the Execu- tive Committee were: Emt. 6ir Henry M. Rynobart, Chairman; Emt. Sir B. & Dubell, PC, Secretary; Emt. Sir Wiillam Bamber, P Right Emt GC Right Emt G. C.; Emt. Sir Edward Cooper, ; Emt. Sir Marcus O. Burr, PC, Hint, Sir Charles Little, P.O; Emt | Sir Jonn 1. Barker, Kmt. Sir Alfred S. Hughes, Sir Thomas Edward Pot- Fieken tion with these . ‘Treasurer; crank on the subject of internal sani- ~Advt tation Rut there was a mighty | Metropolita guilty as he, | thousands and the blatant band muatc To name them all would be imposnt-| from few Whone| singin electr mandery; John H. Bonnington, Grand | marching New| Richardson Senn, Robert M. Rogers, | Stevens, J the | women | loved sons—-New Yorn's| (Ne blocks. ‘The woman who bad se- cured her place by bullying looked down curiously at the sobbing bun- die of old clothes beside her. Then bande surged the| S00 loosed tho rich fur cape from thought, cogent to the | Mtr shoulders and dropped It over the | minds not only of the kinsfolk on the | Sént shoulders near her. sidewaiks but of the men shouldering| “J have a son here, too,” was her ateel only comment. So they waited to. he gether in the snow FIFTH AVENUE HOMES OPEN TO BADGE WEARERS, So great waethe press a half dozen dlocks either side of the reviewing stand that the wearers of “relatives of our Division And under all the cheering of the regimental : next Lime we wee these boys Will be afier—after the acrifice has been made and the vic- | |tory won. Then how wili they look? Brig, Gen, Edmund Wittemeyer ana his staff oMcers began to get the men of the Provisional Division, ag the badges" distributed by the Mayor's marching host was called, into thelr | Committee on National Defense had a Fespective parade unites at Ibo'ctock. |hard time gaining precedence along \¢ Wittemeyer took up hia head- quarters at the Sixty-ninth Regiment Armory and to him came staff officers to receive final instructiona for. the | marshaling of thelr units and courters fitted between his armory headquar- ters and the various pointe of mob- Nization in chug-chugging side cars BRITISH WAR TANK A FEATURE OF PAGEANT. It waa 10° o'clock when the heada of the two columns coming from the the curb. Everywhere, however, po- League did what they could shoulder a place for them, | Many of the homes along Upper Fitth Avenue and the offices and shops of the lower stretches opened th doors to these badge- wearers. It was shortly after 2.30 When the head of the parade, Gen. Wittemeyer and his staff in the lead, passed the to reviewing stand, Secretary Dantele cast and west side along s7th Street! ang Gen, Johnson, supreme come reached Fifth Avenue, Just @t 2) meander of the Provisional Divi o'clock the order t6 march down the} anawered the veteran warrior's avenue was given, and led ty a lute, then Gen. Wittemeyer turned Platoon of police under Inspector | our of tine and, with his staff, took Myers, the provisional division #tart-! nix piace beside his superior oMcer 1 down Now York's great promen- age. Previous to this a British war tank, commanded by Sergi. Blunt and manned by six men, all of whom had seen service on the other side, camo lumbering ihto the avenue. Sergt Arthur ¥. Kraussman and ten men of the 205th Infantry Regiment were taken aboard and then the war en- gine ran up and down the avenue for exhibition before taking ite place In the parade. This was only in the stand to review the long cole umn sifting down out of the snow of the avenue, Early comers began to arrive at the reviewing stand in front of the Ubrary shortly after 1 o'cJock, to find street sweepers valiantly trying to keep the snow off the seats. . The Union League Club had given a luncheon at 12.30 fo n, Evan M. parading hosts, Lient. Gov. Schoeneck who represented Goy. Whitman and one of the features llceren and men of the Home Defense | mu Johnson, in supreme command of the | thought. tachment of 150 mén of the Home De-|Camp Upton men will bo in town to fenae League and a company of the new Tist Régiment were thrown into he breach and only after the iost | valiant work did the lines hold. | About 4,000 men comprined the mo- bilizing units at the Sixty-ninth’s Armory. By units, these were the '3024 Eneinetrs, Col. C, 0. Sherrill ‘commanding, and the 1634 Infantry Brigade under the command of Col. Wiliam Snedberg jr. Two regi- ments of iffantry comprised the bri- gade-—the 306th, Lieut, Col. Garrison MoGasky in command; the 306th In- fantry, Col. George Vidmer, and the 295th Machine Gun Battalion, Major Gharies Winnia in command At the Sixty-ninth, as wél @s all the other gathering points, nearly every man who reported for parade duty had somebody clinging to his, arm-—-somehody who was reluctant to yield ber hold when the order to fall in was blown on the bugie at a fow minutes before 1 ‘o'clock. | Mothers, with paper begs of gooties under their arms; girls who gwero emothered in aff flags and pa- triotic rivbons; proud fathers with cheats extended @nd a “‘sea-my- | ndldier™ look tn their eyes—there were ‘the hundreds who formed a volunteor escort to the soldier have as they cltletered about the armory doors For such falling anow had no ter- ‘rors, Ons mothér outside the armory doors insisted in Qundiing a muffler {around a six-foot vate’s nok as lit he were @ baby with,tho croup and only reluetantly unwound the atifling folds of wool when the “fail in” blast from the bugle took her boy awiy trom her. MANY REUNITED WITH Sons AT 7187 ARMORY. At the 7ist Regiment Armory the men were marshalled by companies and regiments on 334 and 34th Streets and down the length of Lex- ington Avenue « full hour before the onle: for start was given. The chilly bias searched them viciously and they stamped their feet and beat the snow from their shoulders. Here, too, a crowd of home folks clustered close about the men in ranks who were “at ease,” and therefore ap- proachable by mere civillans. Somebody in a band started up with a piercing tenor the favorite Camp Upton song “ en They Eat the Watermelon on the Rhine,” words and c by Song Writer Ernest Brewer, now Private Brewer, The booming chorus wafted down the solid ranks of waiting men, This ts the way it ran: home, boys; home. It's home we ought to be— Home, bo; home. Home from Ger- man: For when we lick the Kaiser the beer will all be free! Home, boys; home. it's home from Germany. It was about 12.30 o'clock that one of the officers in command of this division of the parade got a bright In a minute he had the management of the Hotel Vanderbilt on the phone: “We've got a lot of men over here who've had nothing since breakfast and won't get anything until dark,” sald he. ‘How about 1,509 patriotic sandwiches?” The hotel manager, being a good and true patriot, instantly got the Waldorf-Astoria and the Park Ave- nue Hotels on the wire and split the order three ways. ‘The 1,500 dainty TRY ; tchardaon Senn, the various officers of Gen, Johnson's Bet i st ‘ir Maries HH |of the parade which atarted ie eee mene eved at the stand A. Morison, crowds’ pulsas madly throb avarity! aiar efehoan te he selned YTHMODI greater reception could ey pn tej[iater by Secretary of the Navy corded to the President of tho United | yer ar ag acting Mayor At Bmith, RECORD MUSIC ROLLS | fitLannurnis: rep sea) Seafleny gud calaren | Denil and satin Mayes A aipiUy ° |gree of Doctor of Lawa was and waved flage and hat) si owing police escor of the University of to, .}They went wild at the sight of that] oc wwing stand we Note the Differe by the University of Pennsylvania at| cjumay-tooking old roat-getter of the! Gor thea, Gen. Johnson'w Chief of LCE Five snnaet Univornts Day enering ‘if | boohe Staff; bis Adjutant, Major Griscom, the inftitution today. Fifty rd ticue Mawnan: Rd. anon HOWer liens Mie sien Geek eenek cae Warero No hiaadernes bserion tha Pert | curew open their doors to tho crowds] rieuty, Hills, Morgan and McCoo! tt ['4 SRoge549) a " psticalea pacitiat wan ARS nd every available bit of space FOUN) Major Gen, Ballou, Brig. Gen. Hay, tizen NF Curb to wall wan Aled. ?The pave-lGen. Rees; Feat Admtral Albert Jment wad slippery and horses and! Gieayes, accompanied by this aide, men frequently skidded and there} yjeut, Commander T. A. Symington; BRONK. STORE were several bad falls, But the sol-lGon Rene Radiguet of the French AUMANN3 (6 149th Street O@ Sr Avenve Vy Apartments Furnished From $50 Up 10-Piece Adam Period Jacobean Oak Dining Room Suite at DINING TABLE, 48 in. wide, 6 ft. ex- tension, 6 re PIECES NOTE: Goods shown in this advertisement will be sold at © ad-erti ed prices only during thi: week, on 149 ** STREET VENING' diers were quick to regain their feet Army, accompanied by hin aide: and were rewarded with cheers, With-| Rear Admiral Nathaniel R. Usher, out a change of expression, the sol-)with his aide, Capt, Edward 8. dier would recover his gun and in Al Kenogg: Yajor Gen, Willlam A. flash would be back in line Mann, accompanied by Capt. John B. MOTHER SHOUTS A GREETING | Gouiter, aide-de-camp; rig. Gen. W. TO “MY BOY, ROB!" At 49th Street in the avenue Mrs Mary Bryan, aixty years old, of 201 Kast 80th Street, was waiting sight ef her two sons. And then the 405th Regiment came along and sie A. White, C. M. G., bead of Britain and Canadian Recruiting Mission, ac- companied by Lieut. Col, FL om 1 Athill and Capt, G. M. MaoSwiney; Charies B, Hughes, President of the 4 Union League Club; Lieut. Cot. rail, beheld one of them gy { MaMor Moore, Lteut, Col, Burleigh, “Robert, Robert : YI} Major Belmont, Commander Joseph- boy, Rob" thal, the Marquis of Aberdeen, Major Then, overcome by her emotion, she Connolly, Major Smith, F, Cuntitte- nto ad collapsed and passed into a Owen, Major Kingsbury, the Rev. ———E Wiliam T. Manning, ST. D5; Sheldon, James Wilkinson, J Pmery, John W. Herbert, 4 Morse, William H. Remick, tcher, Major ¢ ton, Commander Bortram Hi omimode Caunt, R. Rok A.C. § Cornelius N. Bliss jr, George T. |son and Henry , Quinby Bofore the head of CATARBH rt wu. aire: hot water aad Just a Utils rected im wa packs, Take 4 ‘ablecreanset Ftimee a day. ‘This will often bein Parade from the swung down Fifth Avenue past the Clogged reviewing stand, the crowds which }had been pressing Inst police |tines rom 99th to 45th Streets bee jeame Ko great that the police tost anne iment f | control completely for many minute fe Just what you Beed.—adve, The whole width of the avenue be- % | camo black with people and Borous { |Inspector O'Brien sent » hurry call eee nich ivisvieeieP for 200 more police reserves. A le. | When Knitting for Army & Navy Men Use | The Betsy Ross Yarns 65c per hank 5 Pound! or More $2.50 Per Pound. Colors, Khaki and Gray. his strong yarn embodies warmth and strength, . Sold at 354 Fourth Ave., Corner 26th Street. 366 Fifth Ave. (4th floor), Bet. 34th and 35th Sts. Phone—Madison Square 5525 er ler yet wholesome sandwiches wero being delivered to the waiting ranks within half an hour. “Which I call good mobilization of the commissary,” guid Capt, Ronald of Company B. ORDER TO "GET UNDER WAY” GIVEN AT 1 O'CLOCK, It was promptly at 1 o'clock that Gen, Wittemeyer nodded to his aides at the 69th Regiment Armory and they jumped to the telephone and sent the order to get under way to all the mobilization points, Then bugles began to Dlare, sharp barks of com- mand, “'Tenshun!" were repeated in a dozen different octaves all up and down the solid blocks of snowclad men, Somewhere up at the front of the 3024 Engineers Regiment a drum marled and ruffled, and then—Um- pah!i—the band swung into “Garry Owen. The head of the patade was off! Gen, Wittemeyer and his staff, on horses, headed the Provisional Divi- sion's first segment down 28d Street to First ‘Avenue, thence north through the long-long street to 57th, far uptown. And right here let it be told what a-surprise these 4,000 sol- diers from Camp Upton received along the upper reaches of this street. “Lite Germany” is what people call the cross streets off Fret and Second Avenues and along the ave- nue itself in the upper Forties, Hero was the greater registration of en- erffy aliens two weeks ago of all the five boroughs of the city. Inspector Cray had taken added precautions and ‘scattered the district thickly with policemen and plainclothes of- cers from the branch detective bu- reaus, But ‘here was loyalty such as no part of the city exceeded, Flags ware everywhere and from the dense crowds that had watted mutely in the snow for more than an hour came deep-throated hurrahs, tinged with the Teutonic guttural To-night probably the biggest mili- | tary Dall ever seen will be held at the venth Regiment Armory. Brig. Gen, fb M. Johnson, Division Com- | mander; Mre. Charlies H, Whitman, | wife of the Governor; members of the Governor's Committee, the Mayor's Committee of National Defense and other organizations will be present. Besides the woldiers who will take part Lie the parade, some 6,000 additions! j attend the ball. ALUMNI DAY AT YALE | A MILITARY GELEBRATION | Graduates Return im Khaki and Blue and See Drills—912 Stars on Service Flag. | NEW HAVEN, Conn, Feb ite te Birthday, long a play day at Yalo University, with Its snowball fighta and fence rushes, and now Alumni Day, took on new aspect to-day. Grad- uates came back for their reunion, but [it Was a gathering of serious-minded (men in khaki and navy biue. The chief guest was Brig. Gen. W. G. McNair @f the 15st Field Artillery Brigade at Camp Devens. With him came more than a hundred artillery of- ficers who are Yale men and Yale men Who are in service at various posts in this rection. The visitors were welcomed by Preal- @ont Hadley, They saw a boat drill by the Freshman Naval Training Unit and jthén the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps and the Yale Naval Training Unit were reviewed by Brig. Gen. MeNatr and Rear Admiral Chester. 1 8 ON. (row tired). A university service flag with 912 stars, from Sanucl P. Retts, was accepted by President Hadley, Mean time W. W. Skiddy of Stamford had given to the Scientific School @ Mg with 284 stare on it 2 OED TOA MAN RATHER THAN QUIT Held Council of War and Vowed That Not One Would Surgender. LONDON, Feb, 22.—The authorita- tive story of the gallant stand Brit- ish troops made when the Germans attacked them in overwhelming for near Cambrai ts told now for the firet time. The Gercest fighting of the battle took place on the Bourlon- Moouvres front, and the story Is so brimful of heroism that It aéserves to take ite place in English history. The most determined attacks of four Ger- man divisions, with three ather Ger- man divisions in support, were ut- terly crushed by the three British di- visions that were in line, Nov. 30, 1917, wiil be @ proud day in the lives of all those splendid British soldiers who, by their single-hearted devo- BRITISH COMPANY jtlon to duty, prevented what. would have become a serious situation had they givem way. After considerable sbeiling during the night on Bourlon Wood, the en- jemy attacked in force, Four posts on WASHINGTON’S BIRTHDAY; | PARADES IN SOME CITIES | the right of the Second Division were Entertainment for Men Arranged-by Reeet The survivors of the Second Di- ‘i nd Kni N's posts, however, succeeded in Commission and Knights ~ | getting to ahell holes’ further back of Columbus. and held on, and the enemy was WASHINGTON, Feb. 22.-—-Wash- ¢¥@Mtually driven back after three ington's birthday was observed in ail #OUre’ hard fighting. army camps throughout the country | Further west, the enemy's advance with various exercises and the gol- Pfoke upon the 17th Royal Fusiliers diers enjoyed a rest from military Which were withdrawil from an ad- training, Atcamps where there were V@ced #ap and trench, and judged no formal celebrations the men en- 00 €Xposed to be maintained in the gaged in holiday festivities, many of f8C@ of an attack so powerful. Owing them being granted leave. to the enemy being concealed in ‘The Commission on Training Camp 444 ground, the attack doveloped Activities made provision for enter- With unexpected speed and the vom- tainment in all camps, and the pa- Dany holding the advanced position triotic section of the Knights of Co- Wes ordered to leave a rear Ruard to Lumbus directed exercises, ‘There Cover tho withdrawal of the re- were parades of soldiers in New York Malnder, Capt. W Stone, who wags in command of the company, ce and other cities. x y. sent bac 001 In Louisville, Ky., six thousand DACK | three platoons and elected to remain with the rear guard, | soldiers of the National Army from togethor with Lieut. Benzecry. Camp Zachary Taylor paraded. The This rear guard, ‘assisted by ma-| were reviewed by Brig. en. Wilbur) chine guns, held off whole of the E, Wilder and Gov, Stani ARMY CAMPS OBSERVE 22.—Conkrt ss to-day observed Washington's Birthday annivermry, in accordance with tine- honored custom, Washington's farewell address was read in the Senate by Ben- ator Gerry of Rhode Island and in the | House by Representative Aswell of WAVY EL | Louisiana German attack until the main position : of the 17th Royal Fusiliers was fully A parade of 5,000 men of the now! organized, and they died to @ man Ilinois Reserve Militia was a fea- meen eRale panes so mee here aie . glsken 5 oy-| Luter in the evening another attac ture of Chicago's celebration, Gov-\ iy“ torce was made southeast of ernors of seven States, in (hi tO) Moeuvres, and the enemy once more | attend the Congress of National s*r-| effected an entry, isolating a con vice, reviewed the parade, Homes of pany of the 13th Essex Tegimen 14 a wy z h the city were thrown open to the s9)- JoRrOURWIING ofr Leite SatcaTEN diers from Camp Grant, at Rockford. | nei a council of war at which it was Il... 20 per cent. of whom are allowed | unanimously determined toMight to | to spend to-day, Saturday and Sun- | the last and have no surrender, two | Bein? Chicane runners, who succeeded in getting | lay in ied . | through, were sent back to notify the | Augusta, Ga. saw the members Of) battalion headquarters of this deci. | the 28th National Guard division 0a| sion, Throughout the night of Nov. | parade. Units of the 8ist Divinia | 3 eel ant wor made to effect | . svhes ded at Colum. | the relief of these bri men, but ail at Camp Jackson paraded at Colum-| ii iots falled againet the over: | bia, ¥. whelming strength of the enemy. ‘The last that ts known of this gal- | lant company {s that {t was fighting | ft out and maintaining to the last | bulwark thelr stand against the tide | of attacking Germans. It {s impos- ible to eatimate the value of thin roagnificent tight to the death, which relieved the pressure on the main line of defense. YERS FACE PAY CUT. American Idea for World Urged by Danlels Recommends Abesition of Dr. Dewey. Patras and Allowances, NORTHAMPTON, Mase. Feb. WASHINGTON, Feb, 2% —Secertary America, now “in the world,” mus Dantels recomended to Congress to-day tribute the American idea to the wi that {t abolish the extra pay and al- {natead of being influenced by the Euro- | }owances for naval aviators and provide vey, P ead a reagonable increase in death pean idea, Dr. John Dewey, Professonginsten ; nde of Philosophy at Columbla University Jiability compensation In Govern: con: insurance said in a Washington Day address at Secretary of War haa Smith College to-day, T dea was mmended repeal of the pay and allowances of t to be found in the two great positive PiU Pit oe achievements of America and releage of cultural political dictation and con! emai sition erests from New Ser ol. | NEW HAV . Conn., Feb, —One incident of alumni day at Yale (Uni- | Wisconsin Senate Blots Out Ger-| versity to-day will be the. flying man Insign |by the Scientific School of a service MADIBON, Win, F ~The Upper | flag, presented by W. W. Sktddy, ‘63, of Stamford, Conn., for 284 students o p Wise in Legislature to- Bones of: the an and faculty’ members. This flag is day passed @ resolution to blot out the German. nperial insignia 4 i one of the figures In a paintin wall of the Senate chamber distinct from the university service fing with 912 stars, which is the gift ‘ot 8. P. Betts, Up the Steep Hill to Recovery ||| You have just recovered from a wasting illness, and are now in the convalescent stage. The devastating action of the germs and fever have laid waste to muscle and nerve- cells. As you must rebuild your body by rebuilding your blood, you will do wisely to combine Gude's Pepto- Mangan with your diet and fresh air treatment, Gude's Pepio-Mangan “The Red Blood Builder’’ | Gude’s Pepto-Mangan is not # mere temporary tonic butea real blood builder. It improves the quantity and quality of the red blood cells 80 that they can rugh nourishment~in the form of oxygen-—to every cell and tissue of the body, G Pepto- Mangan is | easily digested and i pleasant to the tast scribed everywhere by ph Friendly Warning’ There are many imitations of Pepto-Mangan on the market, but you can sure of getting the genuine If it bears the name Gude" and le put up in the bottle and seuled pack pletured here, Ask for it by its fall name—"Gude's Pepto: Mangan," For sale at all grug stores. GUDES Pm a M, J. BREITENBACH CO., New York jetur Manufacturing Chemists thle ou # s x hnow “at ‘SHE SUFFERED | | | Pepto-Mangan ie made only by \| | RIDAN’S BROTHER DIES. U.S Ae Brige General Retirea WASHINGTON, Feb. 2 Michael V. Sheridan, U. 6. A., retired, died at his home her terday, aged seventy-é¢ight. Gen, @herida a brother of Gen. Phil Sherida tive service at his own reque 2, He was & ative of Ohio, but had lived in Waehington for the past fittee care He will be buried here to-day, OLD FOLKS NEED “CASCARETS” FOR LIVER, BOWELS Salts, calomel, pills act on bowels like pepper acts in nostrils. Enjoy life! Don’t stay bil- ious, sick, headachy and constipated. 4 Get a 10-cent box now. Most old people must give ta the bowels some regular help, else tl suffer from gonstipation. The pif dition is perfettly natural. It is just a¢ natural as it is for old people to walk slowly. For age is never 60 youth. The muscles are fe. And the bowels are 1 old peoplt need Cascarets, One might as well refuse to aid weak eyes with glasses’as to neglect this gentle aid to weak bowels. The bowels must be kept active. This is important at all ages, but never so much as at fifty. Age is not time for harsh physics. Youth may occasionally whip the bowels into activit Insh can't be used every day. the bowels of the old need Is a gentle and natural tonic. One that can be constantly used without ha The only such tonic is Cascarets, and they cost only 10 cents per box at any drug store. They work while you sleen.—Adrt. a FIVE YEARS Finally ‘Restored to’ Health by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. “For five years { suffered from tr- regularities, with terrible pains and an awful weakness in em my back. The doc- tor gave me dif ferent medicines, but they did me no good. A friend asked me to try Lydia FE. Pink hamn's Vegetable Compound, and I found it to be the best medicine I ever tried because it made me well, and I can now/do my howsework. Tam telling my friends about it."~-Mrs. J. M. Camus, line St., Key West, Florida. Many women at some period in their fe suffer from ailments peculiar to their sex and which in most cases may be readily relieved by this famous root and herb medicine, Lydia FE. Pink. lham's Vegetable Compound, just as Mrs. Camus found it helped her after suffering for years and trying everye thing else in vain. If vou have any annoying symptoms you fail to understand, write Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. The result of their 40 years’ experi+ ente in advising women on this subs ject is at your service.—Advt, Checkand Abort a Bad Cold In Five Hi With in Five eye MENTHO. You Buy It Concentrated and Mix With Pint of Syru; —_!) Doubtless every reader recalls hi ing neglected a slight cold until in 2& hours it settled into a “Bad Cold* and then about 72 hours of distress, discomfort, if not weeks of bron- chitis or pneumonia or catarrh, Now confess, if you've had such an ex- verience, and take time by the fore- lock by preparing to check and abort colds, coughs, catarrh, — difficult breathing, watering eves and painfag headach It can be done by taking Mentho- Laxene cither in its raw state—ten drops to the dose-—r by making a granulated sugar syrup and mixing fn a pint bottle or jar. A pint will last a whole family for a lone time and keeps cverY member free from the distressing after-effects of a bad cold, Mentho-Laxene is guaranteed to please or money back by ‘The Black- burn Products Co., Dayton, Ohio, and any well stocked dru~~‘st ean supply Don't take a substitut:, r you. There is really nothing to compare with Mentho-Lagene.— Advt RELIGIOUS STATISTICS =—————— 1918 World Almanae + (War Informat.on Edition) Twenty-Five Cents —

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