The evening world. Newspaper, October 15, 1918, Page 8

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Keep Your . Telephone Book Handy Sor Ready Reference ‘It is more important than ever that telephone COAL MEN ADMIT GULM BANK FACTS The Banks Yield 15 to 60 Per! Declare. The Anthracite News Bulletin, sent out to the coal trade, carries fresh proot of Tho Evening World's con- tention that the Fuel Administration at Washington has ignored the culm resources of the country to end coal- less days and lightless nights. Here fs the circular: “Misinformation and consequently jout in June that Cent. in Good Fuel, They = |!" _THE EVENING WUKLDU, FU BRVAYX, VULUDED 49, 1018, | ear as he t m6. of hh re tonnage for that ye aMcient for this ear, as this town they want to’ lay, » United Fuel Administrator for Kings Coun- Pile of orders on hand he refuses to extend my allotment at all. And ag yal yard in this town to seo where people their coal for this | coming Iam now compelled to cancel all orders ani yard, Engineer and © oF Tells About Culm and Its Value, To the Editor of The Evening World 6 to the ¢ situation paper is tak to say that I am surpr is just now becoming known—that/ the shipping of this culm bas been) going on for the seven or eight! ‘dt i misunderstanding exists in certain | years frow directories be kept handy for ready reference near quarters concerning washery coal, | ,,2,HAve worked in the coal mines, tn Under all prevailing circumstances «| ones you refer to. You need not go the telephone. To save equipment and labor, “Information” is now asking subscribers to look up numbers that can be found in the directory. is being patriotically supported by our subscribers. It is estimated that a saving equal to the entire time of 100 operators will be made. | i 4 This necessary and important war-time request i ’ ‘ Will you help save telephone resources for essential war work by keeping your telephone book handy for ready reference, and by Always Looking in the Directory for Numbers Before Calling “Information?” correct understanding is important, even more so to the public, as con- sumers, than to the anthracite indus. try. ' “With the present great labor shortage, the culm banks are the salvation of the situation, From them anthracite can be and is being recovered in large tonnage with a labor expenditure about equal to that required in the preparation of coal after it has been mined and brought this frees proportionately more mon for underground work in getting out new coal, “Possibly 15 per cent, of the an- thracite now going to supply urgent demands for coal is being extracted from culm banks. Washery breakers, with special equipment, have been provided. In some cases waaslery and freah mined coal gows through the #ame breaker together and is pre- pared simultaneously. The washery operations, which separate good fuel from waste, are thus supplying an- thracite of large tonnage which otherwise, with labor conditions as they are, it would be impossible to provide. ‘Thus is washery cual enabling thousands of familles and concerns to have necessary fuel. for ton, it Is just as good as—in fact no different from—tresh mined cual to the consumer, “Culm banks yield from 15 to 60 por cent. of their bulk in good coal. Most of it Is pea and the smaller steam sizes. Some of it is of the larger prepared sizes. The longer age the culm banks were formed the more coal they contain. For several to the surface of the ground. In effeot, | hundreds of buildings and industrial) | Consequently it is worth just as much | as far as Shenandoah and the other A Wartime Recipe for Gray Hair Groy, streaked or faded hair can be immediately macs black, brown or light brown, whichever shade you de- sire, by the use of the following rem- edy that you can make at home: Merely get a small box of Orlex powder at any drug store. It costs very little and no extras to buy. Dis- | solve it in water and comb it through the hair, Full directions for mixing and use come in each box You need not hesitate to use Orlex, as a $100.00 gold bond comes In each | box, guaranteeing the user that Orlex powder does not contain silver, lead, zine, sulphur, mercury, aniline, coal- |tar products or their derivatives. | 1t does not rub off, is not sticky or | summy and leaves the hair fluffy. It will make a gray haired person look twenty vears younger.—Advt. Unions branded onsoleitienot Supposed to get as much coal this places you mention. ved the allotted York City, ar, but £ found above Mauc! would not be find the conditions you write about. It is in what ts known as the Pan-| charge of a iarge plant and ’ jhas grown considerably in two years; ther Creek Valley, where the mines| this culm forced on us last winter and| limited the fireman would be unable |and another thing, people who never sre owned and operated by tae Lehigh| there were times it was so poor Wel to keep up steam. Jaid it in before, are laying, or rather Coal and Navigation Company. The|did not put it in the furnace but put| Two dollars a ton would be a good ty. Chunk, and yon wiil|price for it, coal in, the coal from this point is carried to New York City by the Central Railroad of | paid $9.60 p es New Jersey. 1 must correct one error you make) out of coal ¢ r to in reference to this culm. You claim} When ew thy that this culm is good coal. It was| mines ubou ived good when mined, but it has been! culm and 26 1 ve a lying out im the sun and weather coal. This cv . ee nena — ; ——- a - rman a badjers. But wh complain fc ber cent, are used for MINE ' Ore To nrerthe and loa Teme Cok te meet be haliivr eect —“we must be patient” Think of it! This boy at the front—giving his young body—his happiness—his future—that we may be safe. Suffering all the hardships and dangers of the cruelest of wars, longing for a word from home, he says simply:—“We must be patient.” That is the spirit—the unbeatable spirit —of our men in France! ee You can comv| and hag lost its good combustible/apartment houses, as it would not bt in the year of thirty or forty miles nearer to New| matter and has a very low beat unit} burn, It is of too poor a quality, but just six or seven miles yet the companies charge a bigb/{it can be used in large plants where there is an excess of boller capacity I am an engineer in this city in] and the furnaces arg fitted with blow- boller capacity ts it in the ash can and sent it out, Wel price for the culm in New York for it and dared not!” [ dare not put my name to th we would be shut] above stated, I am an engine ly should the coal company know of m: rs are taken to the] giving any information I might have | rouble in getting fuel for my ENGINEER AND FORMER COAL WORKER. Let us show them that we can bring to our tasks the same unconquerable spirit. If their high service thrills us let us re- spond as they do—100 per cent. years now the anthracite industry | has been working over the culm | banks. Already a large number of | them have been entirely cleared out.” | NEW YORK TELEPHONE COMPANY Good Buy—Lyberty Bonds. Good Bye—Kaiser F May Have to Clone | His Coat Yard, | ‘To the Réitor of The Prening World: | Seeing how you are investigating the coal question for next winter, I have decided to call vour attention to the position of Canarsie, Kings County. ‘As you perhaps know. Canarsie D Let us show the same spirit they show— Let us buy bonds to our utmost Foch Needs You! buy bonds, whether the Germans are talking peace or not—to buy to your utmost limit. LIBERTY LOAN COMMITTEE Second Fed Reserve District 120 BROADWAY, NEW YORK CITY This space donated to Winning the War by FLETCHER’S CASTORIA EL A ee ee -f ee -— Sn eae eT 52 A Ea ——3 : a As long as there is a German army in the field, the soldier’s job is to fight, whether the Germans are talking peace or not—to keep on fighting with all his might. Happy Feet for | r | All the House { We are winning battles. APPY, healthy feet are those free from corns, bunions, in- Our biggest war need right now cators bring such feet (to the is an oversubscription of the Fourth Liberty Loan. | grown nails, fallen arches, Edu- | | And the men of Foch and Haig and Pershing are fighting with all their might. whole family. For you can never have happy | | | | | feet as long as they are bound with unrelenting pressure in nar- | ||] row, pointed shoes. So get into { | | | | | | Educators today—into shoes that “Tet the feet grow as they should.” | As long as there is a German army in the field, your job is to Buy as you never bought before! Double your subscription! Foch Needs You! The Safe Deposit Companies of New York and the Safe Deposit Departments of the New ‘ron P-sks will accept for free storage $200 in Liberty Bonds, MADE FOR MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN There is no protection stronger than the EDUCATOR tradem: Th means that behind every part ofthe shoe stands They sive— We must lend— To the utmost a responsible manufacturer— Rice & Hutchins, Inc., Boston, HOE® | = \ | | RCE @ HUTCHINS | iFDUCATOR | | | | THIS SPACE CONTRIBUTED TO WINNING THE WAR BY Atlantic Safe Deposit Company National Park Bank EquitableSafe DepositCompany Pacific Bank Lincoln Safe Deposit Company Safe Deposit Company of New Madison Safe Deposit Company York Manhattan Storage & Ware- Standard Safe Deposit Com- house Company pany Mercantile Safe Deposit Com- 34th St, Safe Deposit Company pany United States Safe Deposit Metropolis Safe Deposit Com- LIBERTY LOAN COMMITTEE Second Federal Reserve Distri:t 120 Broadway, New York City Company pany Yorkville Bank

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