The evening world. Newspaper, April 6, 1918, Page 10

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CTY BAKERS ON 7%ow WARBREADPLAN TO SAVE WHEAT Will Pool Trade Secrets and Formulas for Use of All. oregano subst The percentage of wheat tutes in bread must be increased from 99 to 95 per cent. on April 14, {t was @@nounced to-day by the Federal Pood Board. Plans for complete co operation between large and small Dakers are also being effected by which every member of the industry. ft te hoped, will be put in possession ef all the formulas and other trade Secrets of bis competitors that will enable him to give the public a better quality of Victory bread “The biggest thing that ever hit any trade in New York City,” is the way that Floyd W. Fiske, Assistant D!- reetor of "istribution and Transporta- thon, characterized the plan. The New York City campaign fs part of @ nation-wide move that was de- eided upon recently at a meeting of bakers in Chicago, Mr. Fiske said. In this city it was determined to organ- ise district service committees and hold mans meetings for bakers in various parts of the city It is estimated that there are 3,000 bakers In Greater New They Storm Bw RAINBSFORD the Theatre and War Thrift Sta Majestic ch Buys mps. sands of Evening World Kiddies THE EVENING WORLD, HAR RL GREENBERG Marguerite Mooers Marshall Thousands of boys and girls, mem- bers of The Eve ning World's Kiddie eM York. Technical lectures will be given Klub, were hurrying to tho Majestic in various languages on baking the Theatre, Broukiyn new bread, and experts will be sent (eke websie ois at ito the shops of the small bakers to C'elock thts morne teach them how 4o use wheat sub- tng, when the tri " “stitutes to tho best advantage. | je wounded me = Twenty-one bakers have been sum- | tise of the Curtain ea moned to appear before the Federal | for the Wlebid Bis 4 Food Board next Tuesday to answer | trloue Party. th charges of violation of the baking Cluse to tov,v0v Mi" rules. in each case they are charged | youngiters bare *\ with having used more than 80 per | Soined gbe Klub cent. wheat flour in the baking of wat | Sibou It waw ormune bread. ized two years next month, Klub Thess are ‘ho bakers summone | | cousins came to the Klub Patriotc TH pPerican Vienna Roll and Baking| Party from all over Greater New in frevess No. 45 Ludlow Street; | York, mm wil parts of Loag bstwad, t fones & Gruner, corner St. Nicholas from New Jersey and Connecticut, for # Avenue and i8ist Street; Louls|to accommodate out of town cousin Sohwarzbiatt 0. 180 Throop Avenub, | with long distances to travel Cousin Brooklyn; Genevose & Faibbe, N».| Eleanor sent them Uckets which f 419 West 39th Street; Reubin Yellin, | *erved weats up to 10 o'clock, Moth- . No. 205 Dumont Avenue, Brooklyn; | “TS, big sisters, aunts even attended th Solomon Schaffel, No. 265 Avenue A;/the Party, for each youngster was ® Kerman Stern, No. 104 Sumner A permitted to bring one grown-up, T. wuue, Brooklyn; John Knobler, No. 3: It proved a great day for Uncle te Lenox Avenue; Abraham Weilts, No. M47 Madison Avenue; Nachman Ker- ontoff, No. 78 Moore Street, Brooklyn; Sehochet, No. 156 Harrison Street, | 0 nal War Savings mo Sam, as weil as for the Kiddie Klub, for the Patriotic Party was arranged for the purpose of assisting the Na- | at of the | Join the School Army In War Stamp Campaign KAR VOLUNTBERS—I am delighted with the way your letters D are pouring in, also the pledges. You know the Government has appointed a lot of Four- Minute Men, so The Evening World has asked me to see what I could | do about It. Of course, It would be impossible to have all the boys and giris in New York get up at once and make four-minute speeches. It would sound as if the enemy was off Sandy Hook bombarding us with big guns BUT. You CAN write essa and girls into ten-minute penmen Here is the plan: Read my talks in The Ev fourth and there will be three more. ‘Then I am going to put a very simple, ordinary, everyday question in The Evening World and ask you to answer it in ten minutes. I am going to trust to your HONOR, because I don’t want an army with one dishonest member in it, I might ask you something like this: “WHY SHOULD I BUY A THRIFT. STAMP?” 1 have formed a lot of bright | boy ening World every evening. This is the Therefore, it 1s wise for you to begin thinking up reasons why you | and other boys and girls should buy TURIFT STAMPS. It would please me very much to receive some letters from boys and girls telling just how ‘they have earned the money to buy Thrift Stamps. | Let us all work together and the first thing you know we will have an army of five thousand TEN-MINUTE PENMBN, and if the contest {s | will fol | win, SATURDAY, APRIL 6, Notes in Society Baron Alfred de Ropp and Baroness de Ropp, formerly of No, 112 Kast Sixty-first Street, but now of Los Angeles, Cal. have announced the en- gagement of thelr daughter, Baroness Vera de Ropp, to Major Eric Fisher Wood, U. 8 N. A, now at Camp Sherman, The Baron de Ropp is a Russian and the family has been {dentified with the summer colony in 1 nhampton, TL, Major Wood is son of Dr. and Mrs, Benjamin | Wood of this city, i Wood of tht | Mr. and Mrs, H. Hobart Porter of/ No, 406 Park Avenue and Lawrence, 1, 1, announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Dorothy Dwight to Captain Harold EB. B, Par- Medica! Reserve Corps. son of tho late Dr, Hnsign B, Pardee and Mrs, Pardee of No. 14 West Forty- cighth Street. Miss Porter {9 a mem- | ber of the Junior League, and recent- ly returned from France, where she was engaged in war hospital work. ‘apt. Pardee is now stationed at the base hospital at Camp Grant, Rock. | ford, 1 } —— { Misy Irene ‘Turnure, daughter of Mr, and Mrs, George Evans Turnure, 1] be married to Rudolph H, Kis- w sell, jr, assistant paymaster, U. 8. N. Ki, at noon to-day in Grace Church. A reception will follow at the home of the bride’s parents, No. 115 Bast 36th Street. | Miss Marion WwW. Vanderhoef, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, N. Wyckoff Vanderhoef and Harry Franklin Morse, will be married this afternoon in St. Thomas's Church, A reception ow at the home of the brido's parents, No. 47 Bast 92nd Street. The marriage of Miss Alice Bald- daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William M. Baldwin, to Ensign Fran- ti J 1918. GOODBY, OLD WINTER But Don’t Get Too Gay About It, for While the Frost Is Out of the Ground, It Has Worked Up Into Our Money Pockets; and What Will the Stenog. Do Now, Poor Thing, With No Snow on the Ground, No Blocked Cars and No Alibi for Being Late? BY ARTHUR (“BUGS”) BAER, Copynent, 10Ls, by The Pres Publishing Company (The New York Rvening World), UTHOUGH spring has offically absorbed the Island of Manhat~ A tan, Gus Wister atul continues his frapped sniping, The crost is out of thy ground, Out has Worked up into our Money pockets. We'a rather have it in the ground, because we could wear thick sthves, Wearing thick poukets can't keep out the fnaacial frost The ice ty out of the civee and inco che ice baron'y storage oungas tows, We'd ratner it in the river, where it doesn’t cout so much, The tPolivy curs aren't Dlucked by snowdrifts any more, which robs us of our only bevel edxed, Criple plated, hand engraved excuse for being lute tu cue vitive. Une stenogs, would rather nave the snow ana the excuse instead of no efow and ay alii, When a man’s nose is red In winter he enn olame it on the cola Weather, But when 16 cattles along and nis beak still resembles a sunset #omewhere in Pactic port, whet alto: hus he then? The best thing he can do is te change che stbject and gossip about the ost style im inen's Winter ain't 80 © When pormidge of sleet und nail DlOWs wi the telephone hut teephoning home tu the with, but what alibi has te th August? He can’t claim that the Wires Were Quzen aud be can’t chuih Chat the wires were melted, Summer is a great Clie for rumance, bul Chere ain't any romance in having @ frying pan wrapped arvuud your week and tet into a lover's knot Tura back Chose cuckve clocks and give us yesterday, Hara dulled sniits huve oeen defeuted py the Nigh cost of starch, from the weagre information now at Nand it looky ike a defeat along the entire front fromm the bottuim button to the neckband, Anybudy dive covered auibushed benind « (vugh-cuoked shirt will be dragged out and aveused of huarding starch ln habit-furining quantities, — of Miss Saily Pastorlous Damon, daughter of Joseph N. Damon and Lieut. W. Joseph Littlefield of this city, who is in the U. 8. Ordnance Depart- ment. Lieut. Littlefield {s a graduate of Harvard and his bride, a Smith graduate has received a degree from finger te wiles down @ guy has suite excuse (or St. Bartholomew's Church Miss Katherine McFadon, daughter ¢ Mrs. Robert Dean MeFadon, will married to John Kendrick Bangs r, of this city in Chicago, e to-day Crocker, rf } ‘ Mr, and 21-8, Wililam. cls Wisner Murray jr, U. S. N. R, “lift. will take place (pay in the Cathe. |hO passed the winter here, have | Radcliffe, hoe carnat sah “ity, {started for California to join their] , dral of the Incarnation, Garden City, phen reef me i iter, Comte and}, The last of the season's Metropoll- wi Comtesse de Limur, who were} #9 Dances will be hold this evening —— beter “ radia ‘ at Sherry’s. The patronesses include he chant thomas's|married in New York last week sine fe Dian ely saclad auat| ‘i i Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt, Mrs, Rich- Chureh a = Mies Janet McLaughlin, daughter of Mrs Frank| The wedding of Miss Georgianna|ard Trimble, Mrs, Walter B. James W. McLaughlin, will be married to|Hawkins, daurhter of Mr, and Mra.| Mrs, Samuel A. Tucker and Mrs, rolls Martin, aviation section, Sig-|Frederick Hawkins of Mo nd| Lew!s S. Thompson: sient are | Albert GC. Miller, U. SN. Rt, also of = Corps, U. 8. An of Chicago, ie wilt the home| In the First Methodist Church, The marriage of Miss Margaret Bt he brid turday | Stamford, Conn, this evening Miss George Chambers, daughter of Mrs. George L. Chambers, to Ralph L. McKee, chief yeoman, U. 8. N. R., son of Mr. and Mrs, Ralph R. McKee, | |wil! take place this afternoon in St. |nounce John's Church, Clifton, Staten Island. Miss Catherine Harris of this city, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Alfred | Dorothy May Purdy, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Franklin Purdy, af Mr rs, Willlam H. Woodin{ will be married to Dr. Theodore Kent of No, Jast 69th Street, an-| Lindstedt engagement of their daughter, Miss Mary Woodin, to| Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Eddy Bailey Lieut. Charles Miner, 109th Ileld Ar- tillery, U. 8. A. stationed at Camp Hancock, of No, 960 Park Avenue announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Jeannette Fenton Batley, to Willtam Fy ane RARE MCI Tete em MAYOR TAKES PEN IN HAND TO WARN DAYLIGHT WASTERS Get Busy or Get Out, He Tells Them; Alo to Kindly Be at Their Desks at 9 A. M, Sharp. Mayor Hylan has written two more letters to his Cabinet. One, ad- dressed to Corporation Counsel Burr, coples of which will likely be sent to others, demands that “daylight wasters” must elther get busy or get out. The Mayor refers to men long in depart- ments who, by virtue of that fact alone believe they are not supposed to work as hard as younger employees. The second letter, addressed to de- partment heads generally, anounces that every city employee must be at his desk at ¥ o'clock sharp. The Mayor calls attention to the fact that at about 9 o'clock every morning the corridors in the north and south branches of the Municipal Building are glutted with hundreds of city employees walting for elevators, The Mayor believes the daily morning wait for elevators is a serious loss of Ume. Charities Commissioner Bird 8. Coler is the first of the Mayor's Cabinet to put his superior’s economy plans into effect. Mr. Coler has dropped about thirty social investigators and Institu- tional inspectors, and he says the end Js not yet. “Up to date I have saved $200,000 in salaries,” he said, “and I have only be gun to save. I shall soon make a re- Port to the Mayor on economies effected BROOKLYN FAGTORY FIRE ROUTS MANY NEIGHBORS Blaze “Not Suspicious,” Say Police, Though Concern Was Doing Government Work. a Several hundred tenants in the neighborhood were driven to the street at 2 A. M. to-day by a $5,000 stre on the third floor of the four- story fnctory of the Thompson-Bon- ney Electric Supply Company, No. 18 Henr: Street, Brooklyn. The company has been doing Gov- ernment work and some of the rest+- dents thought there might be ammu- nition in the building. There fe nothing suspicious about the blase, the police say. It started among some newly completed automatic railroad signals and was confined to one floor. Brooklyn Police Headquarters {s Jurt back of the building, and the po- lice, first on the job, did good work in saving valuable patterns, > s Pi “LY Bari dead” Elevated train on the Brighton Beach ine at Emmons Avenue and East 1th Street. near Sheepshead Bay, caught fire trom qe. fective inulation at 2 A. M. to-day SF was destroyed. It made such a blaze Car o Acar ona U . cs he | # Success (and it looks now as if it was more than a success) perhaps | #farris of Devonshire, England, will - r R. Reynolds jr. of the 306th Machine|many residents of Brooklyn thought Brooklyn; P. Claussen, No. 6614 hheao br agree ae vheaete one | We can continue with something different be married to Edward D. Babcock, Beveral New Yorks s atiende Gun Battalion, Company A, stationed ‘there was a conflagration at Coney Ial- * heatre eae Ub cousin bou one of ~ redding in Newto: a ‘am, pton. * Eagar Avetue, Brooklyn; Gpindler By oor ett temps ‘trom Une If anybody sks you what you are doing for the Government, tell |U. 8 R., of Stonington, Conn, to-day wedding in p Up an eeceay At Ane a Avenue and 1874 | gam’s agente stationed in the lobl them you are one of my TEN-MINUTE PENMEN and our motto ts | — —_ = 7 STS rea: —— Avenue and 135th Street, the Drona, [Sometimes those amilinye agents w “THE PEN IS MIGHTIER THAN THE SWORD.” * | has’ Patranuels, Wark is Geii ‘| nearly swept om their feet by the Oh, yes, one of our duties ts to be prompt, to see how quickly we | Cut Oat and Save KIDDIE «KLUB MAGA { e y i F New Brighton, 8. 1: Toranco Bakers, |CT°%4* of patrlotte boys and yiris,! can obey an order, Your order for to-day is These Magazine Pages Contribations Mo. 2% Morgan Street, Brooklyn; s,|°*#*" ¢© spend thelr carefully hourded SIT DOWN AND SIGN THE PLEDGE NOW ‘| and Make ¢ Complete . a From Oar Own Ad Jallowances, or tho pennies they hud Nass k ° ite OUSIN LEANOR;: Kiddie Kl Kanter, No. 34 Sumner Avenue, | gamed, for the 25-cent green guamp hiinbiniaenenanniniaienen a ae ee ee iddie Klub Members Brooklyn; A. Cohn, No. #6 Tompktos | that Uncle sam is selling to help take THE PLEDGE. ee Avenue, Breokire ainsi rope Avor | ¢ of his soldier and sailor boys, bee airy 2 | eeeeren pai; | iii nue and 138th Street, Sronx; Ko- Very bit of the money collected, of , : " { < A M E AD! sonovitch, No. 25 Monroe Street, «id | course straight to the treasury, George: Henry: Binith; Director svar Antivities: zivening Wend, Saturday, April 6 j Be apeece ee Vol. 1—No, %. Miller, No. 890 De Kalb Avenue, | tv by used for making uiure cumtore- Dear Mr. Smith: Please enter my name as a volunteer tor Posvosweerrocennncer rey . : Serreeerrmusiermeecesrenrveee eet Jable our fighting men, And ever ; a ‘TE PE i@ Brooklyn. {& is La y your army of TEN-MINUTE PE 1 | Kiddie at th yi N nome with A wrePaing to all wholeauie deniern| Mites’ the pure went home with fe ig sige STORItS AND POEMS TKIBULES TO THE CLUB in fruits and vegetables who have not | his or her rift Card—that la ad NAME ’ @beyed the Food Administration's | @tion to the memory of a splendid esis! THE SMILE OF MORNING. THE KIDDIL KLUB. rule to apply for a license to do bual- | entertainuiwat, yacked Cull of leugh- ADDI aks lon, morn! how glorious is thy guiden There ts a Klub good and true, Ech Wah ent OU! today by GLa | teh sirilln and truesbiue Americans| § «sss MR DRIBE co rovneersiontecerererens sosese jou mort F And 8 you see I'm a member too, t Lindner of the Bureau of Licenses, | !8%. HOOL, giesiahevens rerrey ‘on the old barn’s we «beaten I deurly tove this Klub so . He said that all wholesale fruit and It began at 10 o'clock and listed Teone They have such fun and jolly play. Vegetable firms who have not ob-|two full hours. Heouuse all provious AGB iiss eeeeeeereeneeneees : the road that is trampled by By GRACE WOOD, age ten ‘yea tained a permit to do business must ‘ Hebrations of th Kladio. Klub have ae Oa horaes’ hoof, | Nu, 412 Gates Avenue, Brooklyn, heir places at ones ele Manhatta Me vuach | GRADE .. d dewy grase. = OI eee OR Ce. the ene (OF Brouklyn played host this tim jist the tall and deny oes. RED, WHITE AND BLUE. ‘of the United States into the| Th® proxramme was entirely In thi een jin T how glorious te thy gulden I love the old red, white and blue war will be observed by the State) hands of Kiddie Kiubd ern rs living GUORGE HENRY SMITH, {On, eg lg 6 ( love my couyin, and cousin Bleanot Food Commission at the Food Board | 9 mrovkiye sis o4 f gn ane | pe yurple mountains far away too, headquarters at noon to-day. There | OVi gree, Over 100 children toule mart Oe ee smallest valleys indistinct and [ do all 1 can for my dear “Unole will be addresses by Arthur Williams. | rhea wore twentycone. divine | Fane ray, By knitting Cyrus C. Miller and Charles mt Tee et catia ee Een, re » silver shining lake, y Knitting and helping all I can, " acts, In the Kiddle Klub ®horus | go bright on the si qi Let us give three che ' Robinson, | lun eighty-one children aan |Op, morn Splendor thou dos| s Five three cheers for the boys | little entertainer only four years Sra make! NSFORD, age 14, They gave thelr lives while ‘wi BEER OUTPUT CUT THIRD, | old and none were older than atxtecn Oe Lead | yrom BILLY RAL RD. af . ; je We do F 3 et, Brooklyn. our share. ae Th keeping with the aulitary spirit | No, 612 Hast 34th Street, \ And now the ctilldren all should knit 7 We Breweries Now Mak-| Of the tnms, the curtuln was tram | SUPPOSE. ? | And 1 must say tt ine Sabetitute peted up instead of rune up, aud on suppose we think little about number | 0 TIONS They are doing thelr bit. ; CHICAGO, April 6.—<« re-|tachment of the Bath Beach’ Bucci | \=y PATRIO nONUIA PEAMONDSTRI, age ten, strictions and recent dry ements|ion of Junior Naval and Marino | Suppose we help some one else 0) nitlock Avenue, have cut the production of beer 9 per| Scouts and the doughty Ittle drum he have fun; <s akaceaulle ROES. Union Avenue, Mount Vernon,| ,HOW JIMMY GOT HIS PIN. cent., directors of the Chicago Brewera'| Mer boy, Walter Gunther, mascot of Nar] opose we never apeak of the faults), : kala Mi voht deny ™) Jimmy was a poor boy who lived Association suid to-day. Many brewer. |the Hixhth ( neat a at Many lon aad of a triend, yeady our own tO) The world knows nothing about; — /Alpne with his mother, He often les here have turned to manufacture of | the wudtence of Kiddies In autucing Svutb America | Suppose we are I 6 many a brave little soldier OUR FLAG. wishe belonged to the Kiddie + pear-beer. Milwaukee St.| the flag and tn ainging the “stat ; va Micary amend; and not at! Whose strength puts a legion to| American children are we, Klub, of which he had heard, but Louis and other rev Spangled Banner.” Then the khorus einidricda lie WA | suppose we laugh with ’ | ef ! peter tge ge ie ella he was too poor to buy the paper Two St. Louls fern | Sate he "mate yin: OF ANB ke reba other folky one “just for @! And he who fights single-handed We love the colors three, ; This made Jimmy sad, but he neve: ~\. glowed in the last eigh ene es ee we | And never hurt any | Is more of a hero, I say, The red, white and blue, ; complained, because his mother was rn SO PUS AIOETAED POS | ; ce AS sttnate Jokes 4g trouble and show! Than he who leads soldiers to battle, poor. On the corner a newsstand | anche the To, ering | Hs Hl Thalcimer; ‘Herbert’ Teith, A guineas Suppose eee | And conquers by arms in the fray. |, say can you see ioe wines ans one, day as Jimmy A Rolie Maa Waa" Wlaet | 145 Pry pomicliaer Nore Ba only cheer, quite a happy.| From GERTRUDE MARR, age ten| By the dawn's early light val dor here he espled Why Women Suffer | ts :" | “At the: Party Then likely we'll have a 1, | ears, No, 610 West sth Street these three lovely colors, &, young ruflan who way about to | slot and. Lanntor m | I ah ig Ae < ay ALK ‘ é rl . t steal some o} rticles chee seaati cescne Valeo tate : | Meyer, tates Kiddie Klub Bong. From HERBERT PALS tN ¥ HAIR ATAMASL So brilliant and brigh stand, for the owner tes ies on. the there is no need to sufier ' ' pie No. 358 Dean Street, ’ Hush, little Thrift Stamp, We love our flag, ‘ TUUId ate auae Neots une ruflen pain and annoyance which in- yh OM THE AUTOBIOG- Don't you ery; We love our land, ollar and turned hin ee 3 LEAF FR | You'll be a War Stamp We love the emblem re her w Whine ee terfere with work, comfort and Rab! Meminry | a RAPHY OF A NEEDLE. ; Me at by Be Sonate gearide, mee Hate & Walle the owner came \ Pleasure When you sufferagain Pre peepee yeame from an tron mine In Wests! pai SALOMON, age _nine,| Linerty and honor and true lhe wanted, Jimmnp a are tienen try Piso's Tablets valuable, || meee Pennsylvania, and was sent to - Threo cheers for the rod, white and | +t¢ you will please gent the geet healing local application with || \ number vi wico and women iu. |S terse Dullding $n Pittebures to. ie si deig ie : blue, : | World fo wooks Twill be cee astringentand tonic effects. The || eutod in The Ey made into steel, Krom evade into LETTERS ; By MILDRED DOROTHEA MO- | much So Jimmy got the 4 name Piso established over 50 ieee uke sent to New York ¢ ns ue ina dig. § : Brooklyn. paper daily and In > weeks it 0 BH or re aoe nn nnnnnnnnnnnnnnmnnnenn had his Kiddie Klub pin an years guarantees fair treatment. hem wore a needic ome fimo a girl abou HELPIN | pin and cert!- Hillings, | ten years old one, She also) Vear Cousin Eleanor Are you saving, bo: ¢ glad as M you would be rid of Back- rf rundinan, stage | peedies of which I 4 pl eo T received a Jetter from a friend in| Are you doing your bit? By CARSTEN SYL age pala Glan eaten Naresecee: Parenteau, ‘musical | ought a thimble ond tens Mth | France, She ia a Red Cross nurse,/ Are you giving Up your | : 11, No. 172 Irving A 7 nodore tn Ieee day she PI all ‘ol elp! e dogs are| Are you helping to keep the Stu ves ae wiuleuien cata | ae Be or ‘ ‘ as reheat nt a ratty, sowing bag and took Us to & heats ssauteoapuelaidene is tea a Liberty iit ep eaee SP RUA Re ; condition—e trial will convince. | eave Topham and | farge house on Convent Avenue, none) ire trained so 4s to take food] By SIMONE CHAMOND, ago thir-| iso's DIAPEPSIN a aring. the gplon- | Riveralde Dive: Chered her into. the none but a Red Cross nurse./teen, No, 240 West sth Street. | the rolelyn Muat | door and ushere whtias reason for this is because our} —— - Sold ae to the bout five other girls i it sor YOUR MONEY. i Everywhere | wire RenSroUs library, where & for| enemies might give them poison. reat u . be Kendall K. Muse ee aiready busy sewing aprons for} ny ii gle the Don't put {t tway in a stocking, TABLETS ae FOR INDIGESTION | sey ; Charles A. May, Kinwe wedi ae Yino “silver Cross Nur-| They pull sl ldo If you have any money to spare; Ma Mary Cammeyer, profes: | OUaR she was given a Iittle blue-| on esiawes, This: is very useful, | There's a great opportunity knocking Sampie Mailed Pree—addroes 0c stcard ” cea apron and had only thel i eccuse our enemies might cut the| And you should be doing your share. THE PISO COMPANY “ nal coe sewed When I jumped out of] wirey so no message could be sent. |Your Uncle Sam needs the money Piso Bldg. Warren, Pa BIG SIX” MINSTRELS, nenms gd into the soft Brussels care) "09 Ai verican and French sol-| ‘To punish some swaggering scamys oer pet and was lat to nats they | dior haw a medicine kit for When | Cut out the extravagance, sonny, — on “f t ind mi: , a wounds One day soldier uy Thrift Savings Stamps, trela, composed Tooked, but could no {he is wounded ke | ; , unde: © could not apply the rs of Typographical | place. lay wounded, He could 1 ¢| When you have grown wi ti es t ome one came walking|mouicine, because he Was so badly | When you have gro ser and older AN “Loat and Poona” artcteg | Geir annua ibe Bian Stepped on my sharp| medicine: ecw a in pain, no one to| You'll tell of the crisis so grim, yay] pg Siw, reee S ne ] : ae D ae “tp H Street, ne Point. Tie gave such a loud scream Or hear him. He had alm And how you did something to shonl- Soo wena Bubding, will be leted tops ndigestion, yspepsia, eartburn. {WIL follow poet it woke the whole household, n up hope when he felt rea ae iatiat : for ihirty daye, These lists can be ff) 3 a gntertainmen andthe butler caught the burglar,| touch on his hand, It was a Red| | Your Uncles great burden for him, at any of The World's Offices, ac 2 He < bd Led such he was. Crows dog. ‘The dog saw he was liy- | Yor a of . You UCR Gases, Sourness and Stomach Distress for such BO Wien pioked me up andl igtind toon nie hat of and ran to| know ih Gan be loft at any of The World's putme io & bag with many other] the Red Cross hospital and showed It} ‘To help our brave boys in the ca.nps, Advertising Agencies, or can bo Eat '‘Pape’s Diapepsin’’ like Candy~ thin She cherished me dearly and! to the doctors and nurses. He led|So take what you make and don't faleoboned’ cirsctly te, The, Worlds § Males inuath Besmicea, tell dine told to everybody that I had saved | them back to the wounded soldier, blow t= 7 H joekman, Now Yor! « si ac f ine M sherry is: sing robbed, | whom they 1 uy Thrift Savings Stamps, Brookivs Ottice, 4100 rain, n ; ree Peetormance will be repeated | them from Oe TAX KULICK, | 00M he rete, MOLINELL. | From EVA KORNBLUTH (13 yeare), ‘i 7 } Large 50 cent case, Any drug store, Reliefin five minutes! Tima rad | Moran’ Dent AS Camp Merrttt"Tonas| a2) 959 Beekman avenue, No. 24 City Hall Place. No, 37 Clinton Streot, ’ , i sey " (Be “itr ee i

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