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eae Sr nner Evenrnd wo aly Sons of St. Patrick. L Girls of the Cathedral Parish Perform Wonders | Cnet’: In Money Raising for the Knights of Columbus 0s Gace. x Rate es 1918,* 1,000] ana they have responded nobly. 760| benefit of the drive, Patrick Kyne, ARS, ROSE PASTOR STOKES duryi |aetoncrs“Alreaty here, Ta Z| HELD UNDER ESPIONAGE AGT auctioneer. Already there is a large stock of material that will go under the hammer on hand. Seven o'clock Ps Arrested at Willow Springs, Moy and Will Be Taken to Kansas City. Sunday evening ts the time. Gather around the fountain and get’ suime- KANSAS CITY, Mo., March Mrs. Rose Pastor Stokes of New York, was lected, and there !9 a deep muspicion | that a Ite ts being held back for a grandstand fintsh, ~ TWO DAYS 10 G0 In 228 West 42d Roman Gardens, No. Street, Eva Tanguay, Evelyn Nesbit and other top-liners in the vaudeville world will help sell everything from chafing dishes to champagne for the William J, Lee, Director of Pa eants and Publicity of the Heart Parish Knights of thing good for money that will go to swell the fund. -| At the Hiltinore tnts afternoon the Sacred | bridge whist party under the Columbus | pices of the Alumnae Asso | want to express great admiration for | the work you gentlemen are doing,” jsald Mr. Schwab. “It is my pride thet aus- aod Catholic War Camp Drive, an. | trinity College, Washington, D. Cy orrested this morning at Willow Springs, H : nounces that the three pageants of| will be held. The hour is 1.30, and Sy Federal civoers On & chara €F i lee aa neEeT Conine ters ‘he parish, tn which 5,000 toox part on | there are a number of excellent prizes M0. by Hedeval villous ou im tities Oe for ‘he same bone Making money | | Monday and We esday eventngs,| whieh have been given by iludsut, M ie a hers ‘by Francis M. Wile : ‘is no longer the prime concern of | consisting of chtirch soctetie he perfumer, Ariangements are in oUunced here to-Gay oe ee 1 Marvellous Drive of Catholics 7p ..crican business, It lo a question of ‘eraities and {litical organ! Lug hands of Aliss Mirlain Greene, ton. United States dbase eaten bh 4 ; “ | and the automobile pageant o: who 1s the Presiuent of the organiza. MMissourl, Mrs, Stoke a Sure to Go “Over the |nervice now, and we are all serving night, has stirred the west side to the |tion, “Miss Alice John, dauguver of! ‘ arrested by the elty uf Top” of the Goal. junder the same banner of Freedom extent of raising $25,000 out of the| tie City Chamverlain, is decretary, ».\i* neficld, Mo. thuree J jp’ of the " land Democracy, I urge that every- auora of $20,000. t 20th | Ad Miss Caroline Keawin Treasurer, (sy'n e makig # Btrect apeed body give full and plenty, Personally ‘he dial which was hung al t ma All of the proveeds wail be givea to fhe was released on $v bond, which # the fund. Un Monday the 118 Schulte cigar stores will work hard to do their bit for the cause. A general announce- ment has been issued by Andrew 3. Meyer in behalf of the company, and 5 per cent, of the gross saies of the day will go to the fund. It will be “Smoke Day" for the Catholfe War Fund drive, and all smokers are urged In thetr drive for $2,500,000, the I am prepared to «ive my last dollar Knights of Columbus are going “over” to protect the boys who aro protecting ‘and they have two more days in 9% sqrhich to do it. This ts the last day ut) A story of just how Mr. Schwab has given since the beginning of the the drive this week, but there 1s to- war wa circulated, It was to the ef- Morrow and Monday, and when the fect that he called upon @ bank and fast penny has been turned in on usked for a loan, When asked by the Avenue and 46th Street and moved one block at the toll of each $5,000, has reached the point of 60th Street and 10th Avenue, and has one block to go before it reaches the church door at blet Street for the final an- nouncement of victory in the parish quota of $30,000. The most spectacular campaign of the entire city was conducted in the oan Loa oad Pariah consisting of to buy an extra supply of the weed in the | President of the bank how much he etter Herat aint the abeeaee eee March 26 it is a sate wager that wanted, BO Hotiedi "OM abet speaking, the pubiic dial, the appear-| In the Cathedral Parish there is a 4 foal will have been reached and there se sentehe at TWh bn Pech ance of elephants, camels and don-| heyy of pretty girls who haye coy- bb én. aa entre a tarne | a f . @ was informe at je keys to attract and delight the chil-| ered themselves with glory in the wa band el rosdy be had negotiated @ loan in| dren. Every window of the homes| present drive. They haven't been a Proportion. | that sum for war charities, “Oh, and shops in the parish ts decorated with flags and bunting. The whole section from 46th to 64th Street has been teeming with the patriotic senti- ments, showing a great epirit of loy- alty. It 1a estimated that 100,000 people bit shy In doing their bit, but they are | just @ trifle backward in announcing the real amount they have collected. It has been sugested that like all (?) women they are anxious to have the last word, and therefore the Misses May M. Moore, Mary Agnes Bryant, As the fund stands at noon to-day, | pshaw," sald Mr. Schwab, “I bad for- Rhere ts just $2,262,55.77 on hand, of | #etten all about that.” this amount the Downtown Committce| Among those whose names have andor the leadership of Judge Morgan | been added to the list of generous J.O'Brien must be credited with $806,- contrivutors aro f fi i iH — | efforts in other parishes. Jacob Schift. 1,500 | have turned out to witness the Sacred | Marguerite Doelker and Rose and 871, which Is truly a tremendous sum | William Rockefeller + $50,000 James A. H 1,000 | "Heart activities, its spirit having per-| Laura Bonner will in all probabilities for five days’ work. Tne report of | Henry C. Brick... ....+ + 10,000 John Melady 000 | meated the entire west side, This be-| “come across" with a large sum at y ‘th 7 he hat | Joon Wanamaker Btores,.... 6,000 John MacC. B 1,000|!ng a residential section of apart-|the eleventh hour. Until the present i y te committes to-day shows that! juioiph Mayer..... 6,000 Grace W. ; tenement houses, this|time the contributions they have re- | GHA . 0120004 was collected yesterday. In| iiernard M. Baruch. 6,000 | Wilcox, Pe: Hughes. 2,500 Employees of the Equitable Michael employed to reach every | ceived and turned In rival all similar the parishes $1,304,833 haus been col-| Johnson & Higgins 8,000 | Anonymous E 2,500; Life Assurance Soclety.... 2,897) Beer, Sondheim & Co on, woman and child in the district, Mason GENERAL | ankle het ln tte NO MAN’S LAND AS SEEN FROM THE U. S. TRENCHES —— (Continued from Third Page.) | get up again and keep moving.” Bilently we filed down a gentle glope into a trench, Save for the Mght of the stars there was no tilumi- nation at that moment. The tops of ‘the side of the trench, at first knee high, arose beside us as wo descended ‘to @ level with our hips, our shuuld- ers and then over our heads, As the horizon faded from view, the thought flashed into my mind that the descent into the trenches was like walking along a specially arranged ramp into an open grave. I wondered how many of our soldiers, entering for the first time, entertained the same idea— an idea that has come true for some and will come true for many others before the war is over, ‘The trench was narrow and the muddy sides rubbed our shoul ors. “Low bridge!” was whispered along the line from the leader to the man fn the rear—which was The Evening ‘World correspondent—and wo all bent double as we made our catious way through a tunnel, the top of which ‘was upholstered with barbed wire. The steel helmet of one of our party struck the wire and rang like @ bell. sharp turn to the right and the civ- iMans in the party embarked upon their first experience in navigating duckboards, A duckboard ts @ section of sup- posititious walk on the bottom of a trench. It is made of pieces of timber about eighteen inches long and two inches square fastened to parallel horizontal strips which are supposed to serve as & base and rest on the ground at the trench bottom, A section of duckboard stood on end would be called by those ignorant of ts uses a small ladder with the rungs just far enough apart to permit the heel of a shoe to slip through and etick, Presumably a duckboard is 80 called because nothing can negotiate it safely but a duck. ‘KEEP ON DUCKBOARD OR GO TO KNEES IN MUD, Our trenches in this Sector are, as has been » heretofore, extremely wet first duckboards we encountered were afloat, but owing to their epen-faced method of construc- tion they wouldn't sustain any weight. When we stepped on a TO REMOVE DANDRU Get a small bottle of Danderine at any drug store for . few cents, pour a Utile into your hand nd rub well into the scalp with the finger tips By n.orning most, if ot all, of this awful scurf will have disappeared, ‘Two or three applications will destroy every bit of dandruff; stop scalp itching and falling hair.—Advt. RUB RHEUMATIC PAIN RIGHT OUT Don't suffer! Relief comes the moment you mb with “St. Jacobs Liniment.” What's rheumatism? Pain onlyt Stop drugging! Not one case In fifty requires internal treatine Rub the misery right away! Apply sooth- Ang, penetrating “St. Jacobs Liniment” directly upon the “tender spot” and relief comes instantly. "St, Jacobs Lin- iment” is a jess rheumatism and sciatica relief whic.. never disappoints and can not burn or discolor the skin. Limber up! Get a sina trial bottle from your druggist, a1 iu Just a mom ment you'll be free from rheumatic and sciatica pain, soreness, stiffne: end swelling. Don't suffer! “St, J Liniment” has relieved millions o eumatism sufferers in the lust half ry, and is just as wood for se een ‘a, neuralgia, | mbago, backach foenins and wre « duckboard It simply went down until it touched the ooze on the bottom of the trench, Sometim: it came up after boing stepped on and sometimes it didn't. In the latter event the next man reach- ing the spot would have to insert his foot in the water and feel for the submerged board, because if he should happen to step off to ono side or the other he would sink in mud up to his kno Inasmuch as the only Ught at the bottom of the trenches was furnished by the reflection of the stars on the water, it wasn't long before wo were missing duckboards; and it was long after that when, realizing that we couldn't get much wetter or muddler, we didn’t care particularly whether a duckboarnd was in place or not, and we waded in any old way. None of us wore an overcoat, but we were quite warm, Perspiration streamed from our foreheads and faces and our under- clothing was soaked, The New York reporter ahead of me, a man who is particularly well known tn shipping circles is bulky of form and not ad- dicted to exercise. Occasionally he would stop, remove his steel helmet A(and wipe his damp and rubicund EVERY MAN ALERT AND “ON! Oy | | visage with hts handkerchief, “Ch | up.” he would whisper, “the worst is | yet to come.” However, we found tn our three- mile walk through the trenches that there wasn’t much difference between one spot and another. We found no dry ground, Sometimes, following | the contour of the terrain the trench | would run uphill for a short distance j and run down again beyond the peak of the ascent, It was just as wet on top of these sort of roller coaster In- terruptions as at the bottom, ‘The ‘ water in our trenches oozea in from ; the side, and wo encountered many springs, and at one point close to the front line what sounded tn the dark- | neos ke a young waterfall, PARTY COMES UPON FIRST FILING POST. Except for an occasional sentry, who oozed out of the blackness, re- ceived the countersign and oozed back fxain into obscurity, we walked for nearly an hour before we began to encounter signs of trench life. The Major stopped us at @ turn and told us we were about to enter the front line and to keep our heads below tho parapet. In a few minutes we came upon the first firing post. | Three young Americans were | eeeupying the position, Flares had begun to float over the ground between the trenches, and by their light we could see the face of the soldier who was on duty, with rifle resting on the parapet, gaz- ing across into t waste of no | man's land, It was the round, full face of @ boy, but the white | glare showed steady eyes and an | expression of resolute, fearle alertness, He did not look around we grouped below his position, Another lad was shifting the sand- bags, and still another was sound agicep, rolled in a blanket, on a sheif of mud at the feet of his companions, The boy with the rifle set for instan- taneous action wore hia eteel helinet well back on bis head, and the Major called to him softly, Pull your helmet down tn front," commanded the officer, “You are wearing It to protect your face and eyes as well as the back of your neck." "Yes responded the boy cheor- iplying with the order and ly resuming his position of As we moved on 1 passed my left hand over the ankles of the two soldiers standing at the firing post, One of them wore rubber boots; the other had on the regula- tion cloth army puttees which winds around the leg from the ankle to the knee, His putteas were soaking wet and steaming, Subsequently | learned that only @ percentage of the coms fully, cc immedia observation, mand holding these wet trenches was equipped with rubber boots. Some army officers, sitting back in comfortable offices all the way from 100 miles to 4,000 miles from the front are of the opinion that rubber boots are not fit footwear for soldiers engaged in holding | Officers who live in the do not agree with this point of view. It ought to be sufficient to say that rubber boots keep the wearer's feet and legs dry and the servico army | shoe and puttes do not keep the feet ary, Obviounly @ soldier with dry fect and legs is more comfortable on duty and off than the soldier with feet and legs soaked in ley water: nevertheless there appears to be, somewhere, indisposition on the part of supply officers to equip our soldiers | in the trenches with ruvber hip boots —or perhaps it is not Andisposition | but inability, | Many conditions at the front are inexplicable in the face of the stories | wo read in the newspapers about the| wonderful way in which the War De- partment and all the amateur war bureaus are rushing supplies to the soldiers in France, wire entanglements the barbed wire defenses of the Germans, and as we looked we imagined we could see hostile soldiers prowling above over the desolate ground between the two positions. “When you're new to the game,” explained the Major, “your tmagina- | fon works with twelve cylinder en- orgy If you have any Imagination at all, You see a small body of soldiers moving stealthily toward you. The size of the body of soldiers grows. Pretty soon you are convinced that the whole German Army 1s moving in your direction—that ts if you let your imagination get in its deadly work; and if you are a soldier you are more than Ikely to cut loose with your rife and give an alarm and get a good calling down, I'm not saying that a vivid imagination ts not good for @ soldier, but in the trenches he has to learn to control {t, and that doesn't take very long. A few nights of gazing out Into that vista there has tho effect of turning many a thoughtless, vislonary young man Into a evid, calculating, practical sol- dier, and the change comes before he knows tt Tho Germans had opened up their artillery bombardment again, prompt- ly at midnight, and the tops of the hills on our left were almost continu- ally tuminated by red flashes which preceded the booming of guns. Col- ored rockets and white rockets were cleiving the sky from different parts of the German positions, Along our lino we could hear the occasional crack of a rifle, | “You'd hardly think,” said the Major, “from the stolid demeanor of the average German as we know him in the United States that the Ger- man soldier and the German com- mander aro as nervous as a flea on a | , hot rock when they are facing an in- | THE JOB.” | Firing post after firing post was reached and inspected. The Major feund every man alert and on the job, Most of them were, as in the instance of the first post, cloan-cut, fearless Amori- can youths, taking their part of the game as though they had been engaged in it all their lives. Some of them, tn fact, mombers of a replacement division from a rural section of the United States, bad been in the trenches only two days at that time and had been without any preliminary training. The ro ‘ placement soldiers, culled into the SRSHeS. Bosition and bi don't front line to take the places of men KNOW what {8 going on. Thetr curs- osity in such @ caso 1s insatiable, Some nights when they think we are ling in trench warfare right in the | 2's something over here that might trenches on the battle line, side vy | 'Mterest them If they knew what it side with men of experience, and how | #9 they send up enough rockets and quickly they pick up the routine and|#0ot off enough powder to furnish fall into the spirit of intense, un- |? Old-fashioned Fourth of July cele ccasing vigilance so absolutely es-|bration for @ large American city, sential In the trenches ia the con-| THEY |fe Nervous now, Listen. | tinual wonder of Regular Army of-| They are starting #ome machine gun ficers who are in charge of our unit | Practice, BULLETS WHIZZ NEAR HEADS) in the sector we visited, The dominant idea that possessed OF PARTY. |Killed or wounded In action or ine capacitated by Ulness, get thelr train- me as I foundered along was the! “Plop-plop" spat a machine gun a lonesomeness of the trenches, L knew] short distance to our right. “Plop- that somewhere in the vicinity hun-| plop-plop-plop,” and above the dreds and hundreds of mon were cons | echoes of the reports along the hill- | tinually on call, but we saw only the | sige we could hear the searching, men Jn the fring posts until the! metalic whine of the speeding bul- | Major was ready to lve Us @ glimpse | 1444, A machine gun bullet proceeds | of the Inside, ing to its destination cuts the atr| At one point he commanded his orderly to get the platvon commander of that particular point, like a buza saw cuts a knot, One bullet passed about four feet over our heads, and for some The order- ly retraced his steps over the ground| moments there was a sound in |We had covered. I could have sworn| our ears an if @ atiff breeze were that for half a mile back there was} ginging through a nest of tel not a break in (he maddy trench | graph wires. Another bullet hit walls, In less than two minutes the parapet ton f00t away and jorderly was back with the platoon) the mud spattered @ soldier, He |commander and his Where they | gidn't_ move. Jeame from and where they disap-| arming to the right from the front | | peared to after a whispered conversar line trench, our conductor led us through @ trench so narrow we had to elbow our way along tho walls, ‘he trench ran downward, Ina short) time we passed through what we) |knew was @ door into a place that was warm and dry and very hot, The! door closed softly behind us, Holding to each other's hands we edged along the wall, descended @ fight of stairs | cut in the earth and came to another door, Through thie we passed into one of the dugouts In which our boye spend their time when they are not on duty. tion with their superior means of knowing, WITHIN 60 YARDS OF ENEMY LISTENING POST, It was just midnight when we reached the point closest to the | German lines on the front line we had entered. The Major whis- pered that we were between 130 and 140 yards away from the German front line trench and per= haps sixty yards away from a German advanced listening post. He permitted us to mount the shelf cut into the side of the trench flanking the firing post, and between gaps in the sand I have no| up with men, Bunks four and tive bags we looked out over no man’ tiers high lined three of the walls, and land, which the Germans just at jin some of the bunks tired soldiers the moment had accommodating: | were sleeping. Others had been sit- ly illuminated with soaring rook ting on blankets around a stove hold- ets and numerous flares, We ‘ing a wood fire, but they all came to could see through our barbed attention when the offices entered and | privations of various Kinds due to the | It was @ spacious room, but jammed | | remained standing until he told them | to rest. On top of the stove a biz can of coffee was steaming. The wood | in the stove was not seasoned and |gave out a smoke that stung tho eyer jof the visitors. Dim light was fur- |nished by lanterns. In one corner a |soldier, with the ald of a lighted can- ‘dle stuck by its own.wax to the top jof his helmet, was writing a letter to | some one at home. | MEN IN DUGOUTS ACT AS SMOKE CONSUMERS, “You will notice,” said the “non- com” in charge, “that we have no chimney for our stove. We can't let the smoke be seen outside,” “What do you do with the smoko?” asked a visitor. “We breathe it,” answered the “non-com” simply. And it wae The men in the dug- their own smoke con- trenches from a standpoint of safety and comfort, but sorrowfully ad- | mitted that those he was about to visit might not be £0 dry. Despite the warmth of his invitation we did not hesitate to bid the Major a font | au revoir, and in a few minutes we | were bound for the rear under the guidance of a private who had been | summoned from some mysterious niding place close at hand. SCES SEVEN OF OUR BOYS “GO OVER THE TOP.” It happened that our course to the | rear crossed a section of the Amer- ican position over which the Germans were sending machine gun fire In a way that denoted a fixed purpose to} reach some particular spot. We gol to this spot eventually to find there | 1 commissioned officer, two non-coms and four privates about to start our on @ reconnoitring expedition in no man's land. I am not permitted to |say how they were camouflaged or | jarmed, Suffice to relate that almost as soon as they had gone noiselessly over the top of the trench they were swallowed up in the light mist hanging over the ground, de- spite the flares that insistently in- truded their ghostly presence on the scene, The ranking officer told us before starting that he believed there was a German pa- sumere. We had seen the men out tn tt> trenches—wet, muddy, facing artillery, gas poison, machine gun fire or an In- fantry charge at what moment they! did not know, We had brushed by them at their stations, and with the irrepressible inquisitiveness of Amer- {can youth those not on strict watch ad gazed into our faces as we camo Into their lives and faded away again like ghosts, And here we saw them at rest In an unventilated hole in the, trol out near by, and he waa on a ground, happy and seemingly con-| tour of investigation, tented. They were unanimous in say-| | by almost side of the trench wall and waited. Che patrol returned in about half an hour, dropping into the trench Ike seven shadows, They hadn't seen a thing, and the machine gun fire had topped, but over on the hills the red showed that the Germans working thetr artillery and the reports annou using large guns. Our return trip was uneventful, for we were soon in the commun nches and met on! nerged at a point at vhere we had yack to of the big guns gt behind us. The longest mile I ever valked was that Inst mile of road overed going into Kalamazoo. And from Kalamazoo we rode for three hours {n a motor car through a frosty g, part of the way without leh »efore we reached our camp and were able to crawl into bed, As we separated for our lodgings in the early dawn we told each other that we had been through a hard trip. But a long, dreamless sleep, induced te exhaustion, a square meal, a seat by a good fire and a smoke showed us that we had been through a v: enc indeed, for our position of compara- tive comfort drove our minds back to the trenches and we remembered nced that they were and Kalamazoo, with entered walked the sound dually softening com xD | “Wait for me," he said cheer- ing that they were glad to be where) gully, “i'l probably be back in @ there was something doing. | few minutes.” He talked like a One whale of @ youth said that Just! man going out to get a shave. fifteen weeks ago to a day he hat! wwe traced against the! taken his girl home from a dance in a ourselves |into the flar hat our boys were still there, muddy and wet, gaziag out with eyes that must not stake substance for hadows or shadows for substan es of no man’ 1 and that they must remain the r go beyond ther afe for democracy. Hit sp. © Little town In a State 6,000 miles away from that particular trench, and as he was backing his Ford into the garage, his father told him his number had been reached and he had been ordered | to the training camp. | “We didn't stay there very long,"| sald the big lad. “I only saw my girl once before I left, When we went away we kept moving, take it from SHOT IN CHEST, WALKS | TEN BLOCKS FOR HELP. Finds a Policeman, Who Sends Him to Hospital, | led_an ambulance from St. spital, At the hospital Flynn lapse nto unconsciousness and 1s sald to be i war ad wondering sometimes why our army hasn't already wiped the |," 4 ition from of Kalser off the face of ‘he earth, Think — of the big, broad-shouldered boy from| REDMOND’S SON ELECTED.) away out In the country yanked Spike away from the side of his girl and from his Ford car and his parents and home and floundering into the trenches fifteen weeks after joining | Redmond succeeds his late father, John} our fighting forces and sizing up the Hcdmond, the Nationalist leader, situation with the exclamation, “Talk loss 1,243 to 764, | LONDON, March 23,—Capt, Willtam | ent n for the seat from the elect ” nth te lor at Capt, Redmond about luck Gentle reader, this boy or leas a4 sh ° ie nee 460 for bis represents the spirit of our army,and |opponent, Dr. nn Felner, never forget, day or night, no matter what disappolntments may arise at home or over here, that the boy needs every ounce of encouragement, ald ‘and co-operation that the folks back home can give him. This is war, and the war is getting warmer and warmer for our boys in France; and to keep our boys thinking that they are lucky to be in the trenches It ts necessary for the American people to reach the conclusion that they are lucky to have such boys. The Amort- can troops are in actton over here and, in all justice, they ought to be backed up by more action and less talk at home, Back to our dugout, A big drink of steaming coffee, a groping through ‘the darkness and we were out once more in the trenches, The Major asked us if we wanted to go on and complete the trip of inspection with him. He assured us we had been | thypush thiee miles of most euperior APE'S DIAPE Stops Indigestion, D Gases, Sourness an Makes i} Defeats Sinn Feiner for Parilament, pe in| NEARING IN $5,000 BAIL; EXPECTS 10 FUT UP CASH “lynn, Wounded by Negro, Finally | Morris Hillquit’s Plea to Have Ac- cused Professor Paroled Re- jected by Court, Nearing, citiet, Indteted me, and here Tam, fifteen weeks from| Bleeding profusely from @ bullet! oot Nearing. the pacitiet, Indies home, right up against the Germans,| Wound in the choat, Willlam Flynn. |by the Federal Grand Jury for sedition , hi ‘ANB. | twenty-one, a cooper, of No. 263 Marion |:n violation of the Esplonage Act, plead —this with a note of Pride) sireet, Brooklyn, walked nearly ten|od not guilty before United States Judg and an alr of unconscious self-conf- 8 early this morning seeking | Mayer to-da 1 was given the usual dence—"just think, there are guys| policeman ee teat ccetaven sae nia Ti ke that have been over hero since long). ,Fivnn with three friends was walking |" gyirited controversy over bail took vetore I joined the army and thoy | {om LM oes accompanied, by. a|Place between Morris Hillquit, counsel | ain't even heard a Gorman gun yot! | woman passed. thy accident one of Lh |for Nearing, and Judie Mayer. Bail was a te burnped. against. the negro, ; 7 ¥ Talk avuE Ivok! Pie’ said immediately. drew petavalvar | casa Aes ChaOly SLU Aske a and blazed away. One of the fearing be paroled in his ¢ AN SINE RT eeaeen Fan GRUM- | Struck Fivnn.. ‘The negro fled, fc Raat anona otiane IE . by the wom se Mtlor mphie' . eo Grea = Fea eee, then stratzhtened up, |Seittious pamphlet, “The Great There you are, gentle reader, back | and at a brisk walk started up the street | ness,” had been reulated, m1 rk: erhaps in search of a policeman. After goles) «1 think $5,000 {9 very modest ball in| home, irking, perhaps, under high) ifveTiocks he revraced his ates. Nearly | | think #0 te ve Bite taxes and bigh cost of living and de-| hack he met Patrolman Willey. who|this case,” sa . Hillquit cash bath. Hillquit algo pleaded not guilty to the Indiotment against the Amer: {uts’ Soctety for alleged seditt ulating the pamphlet ing. OTTAWA, Mar ualty ist ames of America d—J. EN owing Ga Hate: R.A. McChesney, nnath hy Trooklyn, No Y 22 GRAIN TRIANGULES OF PSIN FOR INDIGESTION Registered tn U. rspepsia, Heartburn, d Stomach Distress Eat ‘‘Pape’s Diapepsin’’ like Candy Upset Stomachs Large 50 cent cas, Any drug pores Religf in five minutes! Time itd, | feel fine until the world Is | said he expected Nearing would furnish | | JounEOpyaN Commarding§ General 27°DIVISION U.S ARMY’ in an Article On, EFFICIENCY..V| ina Coming, Issue of the t GAS ATTACK Will cause a whole lot of official and civilian comment. Read it in the best | and livest Camp paper in America. The pa- per that has made Camp life a joy to the New York Boys at Camp Wadsworth. ' One page will make | you laugh until your sides ache. The next page may contain news of your own boy. {; The GAS ATTACK is \{ better than a letter |} from Camp. It con- tains ALL of the news of the DIVISION. It covers the ground in @ way that is impos- sible for the indi- vidual. Between gasps of sure I se at the very ex- cellence of the "GAS ATTACK" you will | | break out in peals al laughter at the draw- | | ' ing of some one of our i khaki clad artists. 1A weekly dose of the "GAS ATTACK" is worth an even dollar bill. It sells for 10¢ a COPY 3 months for $1.50 Send your subscrip- tion to | The G \S ATTACK, Camp Wadsworth, S.C. \ Help wanted by many women F a woman suffers from sah } ailments as Backacho, Head- | ache, Lassitude and Nervous ble healing remedy with | antiseptic, astringent tonic | properties, A local application | slaple but effective— response | comes quickly causing refreab- ing relief with invigorati } fects, Backed by the nam established over 50 years, ectlee faction is gunranieed, ISO'S , TABLETS ”“* pesteard | All HC “Lost and Founda" articles) jj Sadvertined in ‘The World or reported nd Bureau,” Room Ling, WHT be Usted Theso iste can Tho World's Oftte puna” adverticement t at any of The World's neles, or ean be to The Worlds Now York, oA Brookiyn Oftics, 4100 Main, v