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oO ete OS ye 10 SS ‘BIG BILL’ EDWARDS. IVES A RECEPTION ~ TO FICE FORCE Collector Entertains Those Who Assist in Gathering Income Taxes. William HH. ( BN") Kdwaris, Oolector of ‘Internal Revenue for the @eeond District, gave a party at the! Hotel Ansonia last night, and some of dhe party wasn’t through at an carly hour this morning he Collector had for his guests the men and women who have been working with him, day and night, for the past several montis in the gathering of income tax return and the collection of real money to Delp our boys in France. In the big fmoome tax drive Mr. wards had @bout 600 employoos, and he and they @ollected about $500,000,000, | It was a patriotic reception and ball at tho Ansonia; that’s what it! was, The capacious ballroom was| a ———————— EEE CAN’T FIND DANDRUFF | and the dance programmes were Lib- | Gill was 1 Patriotism Dominant at Dance DANCING wit MiSs LILLIAN € MRS HERBERT Kk, TWITCHBLEL MR RDWAR decorated with the national Tom Mc- | 1ontes, intro- | colora | glad feet o Jerty Helis for the other belles, Rather {ducing all the performers, including Every bit of lected dina Mare | neat that and worthy of the genius|the Collector and Enrico Caruso, both after one or two applications of Dan- | of the former football hero of Prince- [of the latter getting great hands, derine rubbed well into the scalp with | ton him: the finger tips. Get a small bottle of | Iwards told how glad he was me his employees and their olf. In the centre of the brilllantly dec- Danderine at any drug store for few/orated ballroom hung the first food | cents and save your hair, After! 1 of the Food Administration. tions come and go, but several applications you can’t find «| Millions of them soon will be acen vernment forces go on rticle of dandruff or any falling Fair, and the scalp will never itch.— SYRUP OF FIGS POR GROSS, SICK (ook, Mother! Is tongue coated, breath hot and stomach sour? Harmless “fruit laxative” best to clean tender liver and bowels, Mothers can rest ¢: California Syrup of after givin, igs,” Motel] yy. moves out of the bowel ave a Noell a child again. simply will not take the time they tight! hed, i me tightly packed, liver pets sluggish and atotanen disordered. cious “fruit laxative.” ildren love ft, and it cannot cause injury. No @ifference what ails your little one— if full of cold, or a sore throat, diar- | member, a gentle “inside cleansing” should alw Mt oe un iepak diol for babies, | o ages and grown u| Bre printed on each bottle. a ur druggist for a bottle of ifornia Syrup of Figs,” then look | earefal! the “California Fig Syrup Company.” We make no smaller size. Hand back , with contempt any other fig syrup.— Advt. Marion Mason’s Suffered Tortures in during the time | was ill with rheumatism of the joints,” said Miss Marion jason of 20 Roosevelt Ave., Beverly, Mass. “One specialist had me enclosed in a plaster cast. He said | might | have to remain in bed for months or possibly a year. Thad 39 X-Ray pictures taken. One doctor said | my stomach was displaced; others | said it was the fault of my diet. I was gradually growing worse. “(My jaws were closed. One doc tor clad that K my ie we re not ated on they would become fecked in six weeks. 1 had to live almost entirely on liquid food. “*My knees were very stiff. My hands were half closed and stiff, fing tiffand usele: “1 was helpless. However, In two months’ time after taking Var-ne. sis | was able to open my jaws, wu ler Var-ne-sis for rheumatism co: package and always hi of Mr. W. A. Varney on the front. dosigned other ho: in getting men in the United States In line for the conservation of food. of the flag is a United States stand- Placed on high an American flag in electric Ughts, which flashed o: guests continually. The first this particular ensign was displayed Atlantic officers of the fleet in the ballroom | #!! of the Biltmore. flag twinkied and finshed and the big audience was on its feet with y. and cheers for the army and navy. Collector Edwards was a | Well, maybe he isn't in the sense which, Broadway applies it when the | friend of rubes come to town in the off season, But, he sure enough comes from a fm @ few hours all the clogged-up family of farmers in Lisle, Broome | Be waste, sour bile and peg t band food County, New York. Is, and Mayor of Liste, was one of the Slus- wards of Yale “ lay to empty their bowels, and (ont as big as Bil, but that was not to be expected. At that ho Isa very |{he punch with exquisite grace and When cross, feverish, restless, see land is much handsomer than wens ff tongue is coated, Hiss gre this de- | Mayors we have known and have had. _ Brown, a colored professor of Prince- the dase when Wittara |stunts with the pigskin in Princeton; thoes, stomachache, bad breath, re- | that 1s, he was the professor of the colored band, which used to play the 8 be the first treatment | boys to victory and play them home jto play the mandolin at 8 o'clock in {render every assistan Eivare of counterfeiting syrupe, {the morning, without missing a note, 0 and see that it is made by/entrance of Recovery from Rheumatism and Hands Stiff—Jaws Closed IMPORTANT—Don't take a substitute, Re the picture and signature uu men and women are a portion of the great machinery of the the Liltmore, the Ansonia and a few |Government which makes things go. Is in New York; and who is|I deeply appreciate your good work Neutenant of Mr. Hoover |and do you not think it is an nspir ntel and restaurant | ing thing for us all to be here amid te noreL ana restaurant | iit, wondertul diipiay of the red, | white and blue, catching the true American spirit as it has been in ev’ throughout the country. The flag was by John McE. Bowman of tho chief ‘The body ard, surrounde, heave dence here to-night? We are truly a Wheat RO ity crete “Toaves OF nation nt war, but it does not mean slogan of the Food Administration, | that we must go around wearing long “Food Will Win the War." — ‘I faces. We are in dead earnest, but that does not mean we cannot’ pass and enjoy an evening — together. | Patrtotism reigns supreme.” | There wa no doubt of this when Miss Bell late of “Her Sol- sang the “Star Everybody was his or t the moment she started the national anthem, and with the flags and draperies and a bunch of the Allies’ flags in ono corner, nothing was left to the imag- ination as to the patriotism of the crowd ‘ Anybody who expected to hear Caruso sing was doomed to disap- polntment He was not there to trill, He was just there as the the host, but he could; ot resist Joining the refrain of the tar Spangled Banner,” and those r him drank in his notes, “Kid" | McPartland, who 1s now one of the| popular hands of the Internal Rev- | enue service, was there t not to don the gloves | coll, one of Tom Foley's leutenauts and also one of the Collector's, served At one end of the ballroom was rthe time was three years ago, when the North Fleet was anchored in the Hudson, A luncheon was given by the city to President Wilson and the Whenover the Pros- ident made mention of the fleet the ls Nobody would ever suspect that farmer. His brother, the trious guests at the party. This farmer brother 48 Hichard H. Ed- Yaughty-one.” He tact. The speech of Augustus Thomas, | the playwright, made a wonderful hit | and got a thunderous amount of ap- plause. He sald in part: very click of that electric motor which you can hear so plainly (he referred to the motor which operated the electric flag) means a@ life going out ‘over there.’ We may have to use the ‘force’ too late. You remem- in the colored hours of the morning, {ler that famous poem “Too Late,’ It He gave an imitation of how he used |is up to us to make every effort, to| » in our power the boys ‘over there.’ Wé must | {have patriotic meetings like this to| |rouse the slumbering patriotism in a was a terrible nolse at the 73d Street |lot of the people; to make them un- the hotel, and Healy’s|derstand what our work over here cabaret came trooping in, They had|means to the boys ‘over there.’ No just heard of the party and broke | sacrifice for us at home !s too great loose from the Glades to go down and |to be made, Our whole soul must go give the glad hand, as well as some |into the work to save our boys, to save our country!" Wonderful of humantty i} Leading the orchestra was old Ed. He waa professor of music tn was doing and the hit was Immediate, It wae about 10 o'clock when there Of course the party couldn't be complete without the presenc: of |"Bummy" Booth, Edwards's partner jon the Princeton gridiron and his present part in business, The there was Gene Woods, who stopped lobbying in Albany long enough to run home to share the hospitality of his old crony, the big Collector, Then Job Hedges came in and so did Frank Be r, singer and actor, — Daniel Donegan of the Internal Revenue | force, and the only living member of the old Bryant minstrels, was on the floor, but refused to sing becau ail he could remember was oof! Don't Bother Me," and all he could | dance was the Essence of Old Vir ginta, and he declared both were too! old even for the evening's h Secretary McAdoo of the usury nt his regrets, his compliments and congratulations to the host of th Jevening. "Johnny" Mullaly, famous short distance runner, showed his old astride when he spurted with Terpy chore, and you could hear “Arch | Burke even’ while Ed Brown's or- |chestra was in open wide operation, “Hou Janeway, old time football hero, loomed up like # giant among the girls--and oh, weren't there sor pretty girls at Bill Hdwards’s p who wanted to dance “House” just had to say dancing are over, girls It was impossible to get the Custom House on the phone last night, Oh! Bill Edwards's party was a wonder- ful affair FINE FOR RHEUMATISM Plaster Cast—Knees my hands and get about the house Now, I consider myself entirely free from rheumatism and not say how wonderful it well again.” Rheumatic sufferers should “know the truth” about Var-ne-sis, The complete story of Miss Mason's - iF 5 recovery, with Musterole Loosens Up Those everal photo Stiff Joints—Drives Out Pain fraphic | Mustrae You'll know why thousands use mailed free. Musterole once you experience the glad relief it gives. Send to W. A. Get a jar at once from the nearest Varney, 25 Ham- drug store. It is a clean, white oint- iiton Ave., Lynn, ment, made with the oil of mustard. Mass, for Var ne-sis, Or et it | from any reliable | druggist. Better than a mustard plaster and does not blister, Brings ease and comfort while it is being rubbed on! Musterole is recommended by many doctors and nurses, Millions of jars are used annually for bronchitis, croup, stiff | neck, asthma, neuralgia, pleurisy, rheu- | matism, lumbago, pains and aches of the | back or joints, sprains, sore muscles, bruises, chilblains, frosted feet, colds of | the chest (it often prevents pneumonia), 30c and 60c jars; hospital size $2.50, mes in a GRE! j still ow: | trials. THY EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, APRIL 13, 1918. ' SOLDIER WEDS AT 2 A, M. AFTER BATTLE WITH MUD Lieut. Charles De Rham Jr. of Camp Upton Takes Jeanne King of New Rochelle for Bride. RIVERHMAD, L. L, Aprit 13.—Lteut. Charles De Rham jr. Company 8, 405th Infantry, Camp Upton, sald to be @ member of a well known Man- hattan family, was married to Mins Joanno King, daughter of Mr. and Mra. David King of New Rocholle, in the Long Island house, here at 2 o'clock this morning after @ battle with mud, sleet and wind. The cere- mony was performed by Chaplain Duncar Brown of the 305th Infantry. Lieut. De Rham and Miss King, ac- companted by Chaplain and Mrs, Brown, | started for Riverhead In an automobile at ® o'clock last night stalied in knee-deep mud. Lieut. De Rham went to @ farmhouse and brought back a fariner and a team, but the ma- | chine could not be moved. A passing automobile was comman- deered and the party arrived at River- | head at 1.30 A. M. Acting Town Clerk, Dugan was awakened and a license pro- | cured. August Puchmuller, the hotel keeper, was asked to open his parlor for the ceremony, Lieut. and Mrs. De Rham returned to Camp Upton to-day. centile HEAR U. S. MAY TAKE DOCKS, | Control Shore Fort Lee. A report was current to-day In Edge- water, N. J., and Fort Lee that the Gov- ernment was about to take over the shore front along the west bank of the| Hudson river extending from Hoboken to! the Fort Lee line, including docks and| factories and plants in Edgewater, and| Cliffside and the shipyard of the Coney Island Steamboat. Line, Mayor Wissel said he had heard nothing of this plar but asserted the Government had been making inquirtes regarding factories and avaliable space along the water front If the Government took over the water) front the plants would have to suspend business, the mayor said, ——__ ELECTION OFFICIAL FREED. jector Acc! From Hoboken Adolph L. Simon, an election inspector | in the Twenty-ninth Precinct of the| Seventeenth Assembly District, accused of making false returns in the Repub- lican primaries last fall, was acquitted to-day by @ jury before Supreme Court Justice Goff, Simon was charged with certifying that Mitchel received twenty-seven votes to Bennett's seven, when the actual count was fifteen votes for each candi- date, Hin defense was that he had merely entered the results on a. tally sheet as they were called off to him by the chairman of the board. About sev- enty men were Indicted in connection with the primaries, and Simon is only the third man #0 far acquitted. “ a NATION BEFORE FAMILY. Court Holds Buying Liberty Bonds Valld Excuse for Non-Support. Oscar Christenson, No. $26 Tenth Avenue, 1s probably the only man who ever was complimented in open court for failure to support his faintly, He ta in ‘rears for the iP ort of his daughter at the Brook frn ‘industrial School "I contracted to buy three Liberty Bonds,” Christenson sald. $14 on them, and I figur Nation ts first.” O'Keefe, “is ever heard | that my duty to the “That,” sald Justice the only good excuse I in a case of this kind Christenson was authorized to fin- ish the bond payments first ia WALL STREET GOSSIP. Brokers’ holdings of U. 8, Steel com- mon stock since close of 1916 have de- creased and investors holdings in- creased 687,856 shares, or 13.34 per cent. of total issue. As ¢ with normal, present broke now & decrease of about 40 pe These two facts Indicate that tre securities during past year has into hands of investors, loans ent t en It 1@ also worthy of note that pro-| ortion of railroad stock offered as nMateral for call loans now average about 20 to 80 per cent. of industrials, While in some cases the proportion is 10 per cent rails to 90 per cent. indus- American Chicle Company, year 1917; Balance of earnings after pre- ferred dividends was equal to $5.14 a share on common, against $4.84 a share tn 1916, General Cigar Company — Regular quarterly dividend of $1 on common stock, payable May 1 to stock of record April 24 CLOSING QUOTATIONS. With net changes from previous Net ad m 100 * ET hie & T,'bo. 104 Mining. this % & WT 1081 ie in Lacomotira 74 n= & Ohio n Mteel i Cal," Petroieum Petroleum ‘vf Leather Tiortg Lan Iwt 40 Mor 7 Mo, ‘ Toimany Proriuicte yw MN OM United Oiga e of +1 Union | Paci Wi 1k ‘. H. Ind. Alcoliol, 1 S. Hubber hey f 6 8m. h : i ’ { t t UB Stee . UL 8. Bteel ya Ww x Union ‘Tel. ty reat thd 1 ales, 1 NEW YORK COTTON EXCHANGE Open. High. Low Last 1.73 pi points, The machine) iste STORIES AND POEMS © a Risks Life in NoMan ’s Land Picking the Currants Out of Current Events That’s a Simple Matter Compared to Disentangling the Spaghetti That Was All Snarled Up When Wife Got the Vote and Could Cast a Ballot to Decide What Hubby Should Have for Supper, Using the Goldfish’s Aquarium for a Ballot Box—La Foolette and Limburger Are Both Strong in Wisconsin. BY ARTHUR (“BUGS”) BAER Coprright, 1918, by the Press Publishing Co, (The New York Brening World.) ~~ 7 ig spite of his pro-yellow sentiments, La Foolette is just as strong ae | | | | ever in Wisconsin. So is Mmbureer. Some men’s idea of economy fg to wear hulf-soled shoes*in @ taxicab. Winter came tack and soused New York with barrage of loose chilblains and a blizzard of perpendicular hailstones. We thought the old doy had curled up on the edges and absconded for the season, but he had something up his sleeve for an encore. Which is pretty good dope, Some folks carry all their eggs in one bundie and carry the bundle by the etring. When the time comes for an encore they haven't anything left up their slocve but their elbow, Tho of] in the moral is te always eave something for an encore, Consensus of statistics shows that a department store is a place where @ lady goes to try and get enough samples of ribbon to make a MR GQIFFITH SETTING UP CAMERA INFRONT LINE TRENCH Lesh 50 YARDS FROMENEMY LINE Creator of “Hearts of the World” Once Knocked Senseless by Shrapnel. When women get the vote it is certainly going to tangle the tourne- ment up into an awful piece of spaghett!, The works are going to be smeared up into a flerce knot, If a husband wants beans for supper and the wiff wants herring, the matter will be referred to a plebiscite of inhabitants, Instead of curving the crockery off hubby's skull, wifey will com- mit the question to the usual routine of parliamentary proceeding. Hubbo will vote for beans, Wiffo will vote for herring. ‘Then they will evict the goldfish from the aquarium—that 1s, tf the goldfish haven't got a vote by then—and drop the ballots into the bal- to the trenches, The touch of a but- ton would set the machines in motion, photographing whatever might occur in the fields covered by “So that,” said an Evening World reporter yesterday to Mr. Griffith in a back stage office of the 44th Street Theatre, “is the way it 1s done Mr. Griffith smiled. hat's the way: quite so simp! ie sal: An attack was expected. In the trench men were waiting front lin not it ds for ft. Farther back the eclences of "Fou aoa, some ight happen} ot box. mathematics and explosives werel ig decane aes might happe Waffo will count the votes, combining in preparation for the bar-| “Or to the camera man?" One for beans, rage He shrugged, then spoke earnestly. And one for herring. Shadows moved In No Man's Land,|,. “Don't think,” he said, “that we do Deadlock. fun of it war-curt this sort of thing for thi One vote for beans and one vote for herring. nor merely to ¢ jd th i And what will hubby eat for supper? sé were men, working out use a there in the night, arranging a cam-| public, You should : Zs : ouflage for two pieces of modern ma-| Motion picture men of the Frenc n and A etka woe later he will be picking herring bones out of his i * Bditish Armies, They ording sophagus, chinery. Disguised, the machines| the truth about t » greatest events in The goldfish will limp back into the aquarium. looked like bullot-riddled bushes or|all history, 1 tried to help." And households will be run just lke they were before wiffo got mero piles of debris, such as a shell/ Mr, Griffith, who created the great] equal suffrage. may throw up. A closer inspection] motion picture spectacle “The Birth Gong. would have shown, peeping out from the camouflage, two convex circles man: “pi that,” neers of a Nation,’ seems to be better pleased with’ this new creation—or rath record—in which the passions 8, again over a captured German | dug by tndustriows Germans who had of glass, lenses. of the actors are not pretended, but pox.” sa tot of mim" ne | ereected, to, Ree it. “But in war the eal, Yes, wo unwound a lot of film,” he| unexpected happens sometimes, mare Wan & man who in whispers} "tre took pictures at Passchendaele | confessed, “We used up 600,000 feet | “It was a useful trenen at irected the work of those who were! nigg, when British and Gerinan di- | between March and November. Half|QriMth eaid refiectively arranging the machines. He was tall,| visions were drumfiring each other |a million feet of film—and about 1,000 | nad lean, agile, with the quick eye of a] for possession of that eminence, He | of it good enough by hal ‘a ace he LINES SUNK 780 SAVED. motion picture director, and that 1s| tok pictures at Arras, at Noyon, at}you can’t always find ideal studio i : : Chaulnes, on the camouflaged j conditions when you're working on a/ just what he was. His name, D. W.| Jullen Koad, in. the trenches ali {battlefield and when the actors are| American Ship Rescues Pi Griffith. His purpose, to stage 4|through the Picardy region, w rip ying rapiied instead of motion in Indian Ocean, ne 2 o play. Re-| the battle for the safety of the world | picture direc eiteaes COMA WHINE SeRtNe 18 Bo AY ee ehow renin, antic Ih, the midday: |. he luokiont thing that happened to wenn bearrsblep torte Cal, April 18.— sult, “The Hearts of the World, Flanders flats. *He sat in the front |Grifith was when a chunk of metal| Word of the sinking tn the Indian While the darkness still served a8 @/ seat of an aeroplane that hovered |from a shrapnel shell tore a hole in| Ocean of a French liner and the res screen—save when star shells searched | just beyond the range of the shrap-|\the top of his steel helmet and |cue of 780 persons from the vessel ain and every living thing in| el shells reaching for it and photo- | knocked him unconscious. Why lucky? |"by @ steamer whose home port ta rhe ate bd | graphed combats in the clouds, And | Because he fell into the muddy bot-|San Francisco, was conveyed tacdag ho man's land must become as if in-/ now and then, because ho and his |tom of a trench and lay there while @|in a despaten from MNEAGRPA a animate oF invite a torrent of metal—| helpers harpened in the path of |big shell burst within @ pace of] coeqing tos, local neerenron” the work was done. ‘The machines,| French and British photographers, ho |where he had been standing. ‘The | Thetis ot the PICA or wae motion picture cameras, were ready.| figured in their photographs—once at | trench walls saved his life, ‘That was! not mentioned, nor was the manuee From each an electric wire led back| a sentry post near the hidden Ger. east of Arras and the trench had been |{n which she was sunic given KIDDIE KLUB MAGAZINE: * Edited by Cousin ELEANOR: Interesting Contribations From Our Own Kiddie Klub Members Cut Ont and Save These Magazine Pages and Make a Complete Kiddie Klub Year Book Vol. J OVER HERE Saturday, April 13 ORR D TRIBUTES 10 THE CLUB} orn. THE KIDDIE KLuB, RRR enn | A WINDY DAY. | dy day in March a little ; Ques Waney Oey: PaaS Te Kiddo Kib, aways Bevpy and D0 ¢ ve to| read ha a note tied on tie at ka. On th Have their pins of silver gray, env ope it sald “venting World Kid T love their colors of gold and blue. Sle Klub, No, 63. Park Row, New And ‘cousin non ove het, x He ; 2NCE DUYER, ,No, 896 ‘ork City.” Cousin Eleanor was tak- i ° ing a walk and the kite landed where Eagle Avenue, Bronx. she was, She wondered where It came from, | She opened tes A KLUB I Love. and it said: “Dear Cousin Elea | cue ste Will you kindly send me @ Al a club in this big world, Klub pin, for I want to be a member She put another note on the kite and the kite went back to Tom, The Kiddie Klub, ‘tis true, Tho emblem on tte staff unfurled. A pennant gold and blue, 4 He got the pin and certificate and Thera are many tributes to this became a membe his is'one of the Klub, pew ways to send notes, Tom got a Some poems, atories, letters, too; reward for inaking the new way to And oft I think of the Kiddie Iclut, end a note by kites. Hoe was #o gla nd love ft dearly tn all Td [send percould not sleep all night By MARIB IRMA’ SPITZET. No. jy EDWARD KONRAD, No, 12 : 249 West 139th Btreet, age twelve Carlisle Place, Yonkers, N. X. DRAWN BY ELMER COOPER, NO, 262 LEONARD STREET, - THE DUCKS THAT QUARRELLED. |- ——_—_—— wo Fs enone at poom mara negnare mamaria A TOAST Te THE KIDDIE KLUB | three Anq here's to tal f | : never agree q | alented members And two of fould go to the pond to} fae 3) Hoedhe, 'erke onea and the emai \d n Eleanor, | play ‘ a With whom the Klub's { | phe other wanted at home to stay. | OUR BANNER. | DOING THEIR BIT. And here's to Uncle Harry, # uack, ack, from | 5, ‘ > 4d al The Sammies go across to France Who writes some stories th as quack, quack, qua See them coming, one and : Who writes « ries there [Twas worn till night, Bearing the banner that will never|o fight for liberty; 6 ey BUATRICE LIM, No, 139 Hoyt | And the Speer ele aie: Brass’ higt |The Jackies on the man o' war j Sereeh Bppakizn which was right / ravely it waves on hi ay T J aie nih, at yy : which tie duckling made nol prove? ,it waves op Blam git ney do thelr bit at wea; ARR nnn Ann nnn nnn nn nnn ado, nother, “I'll stay with | We halt it as it passes by Unt ¥ iy ‘ jaye eAld 50 Dia manner Our hearts with joy beat high jUnul their pockets cramp, \g you we know where e'er that banner| And we, the members of the Kiddie | 9° One day as usual the two fell out, may fly, | ilu, Dear Cousin Heanor ‘one could what {t w4siye will ghicii some mother's boy. Feri eeer = ft ltneeian eine ne And aout From ATMEL GOTTSCHALT, age | BY ae HEA sic tne Keladic lab pin eae you, for | phey quacked so hard and made such| ton, No, 1931 Madison Avenue eae S Ponnayivanne Anne | thts morning and w wenn . twelve, No, 21-2: vennsylvania ve- h Was Vory a ash ? pleased with indeed, re ul ‘That @ fox cropt up and caught them OLD GLORY nue, Brooklyn lt ve a Klub pennant Nate h i use te me o aR | prize shall try to get Home of wae von iELEN FLEMING, age ®% |Our t in khaki are figb prize, T shall try f ootm In tie land across the sea THE UNITED STATES OF |think by what 1 J 1 shou! ®| They'r ; he Stars d K {tm rr They're fiiiting for t AMERICA, Ibe an interestin it stripes lLar ery please " i Se anc NOTICE TO CONTRIBUTORS And for democracy. U 4s for our Union, which has pros-las there. ure m a member Hereafter no Kiddie Klub “Old she shall wave pered by uniting. Bath, I used to live in a we, ba ! smber will receive f redit Int nd across the 6e N 1s for our Navy, which will help |ealled Port . place member dee Rost i For Aw n heroes, one and all, — us do our fighting, Janother Engils ety SOA tor contribu publishe Pig for the right that will) y 4s for our Iron—from it our can-|sauthamnin member at the Kiddie Klub Korner or the never f hnons come Southampte Iam near Kiddie Klub Magazine Ry CHRISTI WOLDT, age) 1 ty for our Trainedboys, that are|her, Now ‘ ke to call or welve, No, st 145th Street sure to make things hum She ARS Site clos y . n in f th tif Bronx E is for Mternal—so will our Unton|f remain, y F 4 club ent of the « certific un, | K ‘ DOROTHY STRING the poem or story 1 D is for dear Dixie, sending men on| claude Avenue, Thy % that !t has 1 LIBERTY every hand, ad ; " from @ book, magazine, news 1 1 freed ood to al iNiiiarae ; , ther publication 3) Liberty shall never 8 Jy for our Soldiers, who will show | Dearest Cousin Dleanc paper or any ¢ b fs Wh yet in sight thelr loya Thank yo n for sending and ig not a selection that the 3! Gr ¢reedom'a right I is for those Teutons, that we'll|my certificate a rngending 1 Liberty shall never fal drive out, you'll see! LATE tk bsg / © to Ki sntribution is orig A is for our ly, off to win tor| It was lovely, #0 very nine original’ at the Liberty shall never fai right ‘ ; tle tn Pig ase * that a - While yet she can sce & t eship's| T ts fo ir Territories, that will|asked he : furne 1 y w ume and ; stren un mig Jdancing on t | who was pe . ce ull neve i 8 is for our Service—we are ready} Your loving cous have ¥ ‘ I JOSEPH CUDNEI at the call | SUSAN ROTHPNBERG, we eee : om JOBPH CUDNER C | By CONSTANCE BENSON, aged|toen yours, No, 637 Hunters foun, errmsg, | Drool, [tuirtewn yours, Avenue, Long Ialand City, _