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| -wii| | REFUSE TOJOW IN ,ZcWOMANCENSOR oo dnt SHOPMENT STRKE) 5 “nti! There's a WomMAn—at last—to (Continued From First Page.) do some of the official censoring “The steam pressure,”’ said a state- . WASHINGTON, July % (Copy-|ment issued from strike headquarters 4 Hight).—President Harding has enun-|in Long Island City, “‘should be at 200] 4+ rropoken sald to-day there would be ated the |Pounds. We know it is not much ; 4 ® new interpretation of e above 90 pounds, Novices cannot fire| 2° serious interruption of traffic on ; group or bioc system in Congress. [11° hotiers in the Front street power | tat road due to the strike. ‘They de- {ne clured arrangements had been made to » The President reeognized as house. We understand that some of] } ite the holiday rush and no ditt evitatie the development of groups|the $10,000 « year officials of the-rall-| Sit way expected, ‘The places of the to champion particular measures and/foad are trying to operate the me-| i wig walked out have been filled, chanical stokers, They can't stand . be has no objection to the activity/ i. gaff. About 150 of the 250 men| cording to the road officials, they may show in putting thelr legis-/in the power house are on strik The King: 1 (N. J.) power house about them. SS dd. Test of Legislative} tne operation of all Long Island Add tay BESO "ria ; . |trains and all Pennsylvania trains} for when a bunch of fla ¥ ; Groups Is National Inter between the terminal in Manhattan] came along with white face ‘ ' est, President Declares. Jana the sunnyside yards in Long tsl-| knickers and Samboyant coats { and City. The railroad management | {he Woman ctwor didn’t Iift a | , By David Lawrence. ascribed the admitted delays in the Ghe's Mrs. Mare. Sennett. au _ WBpecial Correspondent of The Eve- eta of trains to the heavy! Half a dozen men serve with | 7 ning World.) her, but nobody cares much i lative proposals through Congress.! C. D. Baker, general manager of| Wan tunning it | Piaetically normal But he has made it plain that the|/the Long Island Railroad, admitted] capacity this m | Perahnie tae H there was considerable delay in train] f the installation of,an emergency ‘ test as to the sincerity of any group service last night and also during the|crew of workmen to replace those ¢ @r bloc will depend entirely Upon} rush hours this morning, but claimed] Who struck on Saturday. whether that group uses its political/that delays are inevitable when the ‘ eae at HAGEREIRS Gro ieserce ‘ a | Pe sylvania Ra al 1e¢ foot o power to bargain with other groups in|road is swamped as it has been since| Pennsy ‘ getting sufficient votes to put through |Friday and will continue to be until] Tenth Street, Hoboken, said the ef- Wednesday. fects of the strike there were neg- 4 measures which afe not of national) “sme power house in Long Island|ligible, as few men had left their jobs. value. City is functioning,” said Mr. Baker. The positions of the striking shop- In other words, the farm bloc is|"Train operation delays were caused] men on the Pennsylvanta Rallroad in indamentally displeasing to Mr. |by the rush of travel ‘arising from the| Trenton, N. J., and vicinity are being vende “44 iy on h Saf of hot weather and the holidays. The] filled by former employees who had raing. Hs would mus * Or [traffic yesteraay to and from the|been laid off. Many of them were course, have efficient party organiza-|Rockaways and Long Beach was the|employed during the war when there tion so that the party leaders would |heaviest:in the history of the Long|was a shortage of help. According to to give detailed attention |Island Railroad, ‘The trains were|officials of the Trenton division not Ra euehipinat rar every section ana {Packed lke troiley cars, Naturally] more than 896 shopmen are out. At this condition placed an extra pull on|the Trenton car shops, where about ‘The Gaylor girl and the pon: a pound: clean shaven; brown hair; class, But in the case of agricultural |the power. 1,000 men are employed, there are 245 | cart were sarried several huvined nns| and ordered him’ to drive to the po- | dressed ins biue bathing aie with a WEDNESDAY JULY 5th, 1922 conditions the President realises that | . few more than 100 men struck on strike. At Coalport, at the Bar-Jalong the track. She was killed, as| lice station. ary ne Laer planes SteiDos, 0 Representatives and Senators from]! the power house. We have replaced|acks yard of the Pennsylvania Rail-| was the pony. The Duffy girl was|under arrest and called an ambu- DOMESTIC ‘thoes States are Mkely to look at all of them with experienced men al-| ad, and at Phillipsburg, 151 men are | picked up unconscious and taken to| lance. Dr. Tanzer attended Sulli- Sermons at Sst. Luke's Episcopal things from much the same view /hired a single strikebreaker. I¢ the|out at South Amboy. point whether they are Republicans |strain of traffic gets too heavy for a or Democrats, So long as what the/the Long Island City power house we DENIES BUS INJUNCTION farm bloc demands, however, is in}can get power from the Interborough line with the national interest, Mr./and Edison Companies of New York! BECAUSE OF RAIL STRIKE The railroad strike caused Supreme Harding feels that it should have the/and the Public Service Corporation of fullest support of the Executive. For | New Jersey." instance, the improvement of market-| City policemen, railroad guards, or ing conditions, the reduction of|special policemen and guards fur.|COU't Justice MacCrate in Brooklyn freight rates, and kindred reforms /nished by so-called private detective| to-day to refuse to grant a temporary have for their objective a prosperous | agents are doing sentry duty at every] injunction restraining the operation agricultural community and this in| carshop, roundhouse, power house and of a bus line in Queens, furn means prosperity for all those} terminal yard in the greater city.| “This bus line is carrying a large Industries which sell goods to the | Thus far the strikers have established number of passengers,’? said Justice farmer. op is iS only a few places, one| MacCrate. ‘The railroad strike may NE. ing the Long Island City power] cause a real emergency. If so, there Mr. Harding was moved to explain! house, Both strikers and railroad of-| will be a real need for every means ‘nals. % Raha ctha byl of fon ot| MANY of the men who are apparently pijcation for the injunction was made ‘agricultural members of Congress to|°™ *trike have simply been taking ad-|by John C. Judge, a lawyer at No. 44 of the last car. beneath the wheels. flung out. Muriel Gaylor was thrown to the| bruised, tracks and ground beneath the rear Grace Duffy hit the| Sullivan gave up trying to reach} Marine side of the car and fell beside the|the hospital in a taxicab, crowded | off 724 tracks, truck of the car, ready in our employ. We have not] reported out, while none was reported | Rockville Centre Sanitorium. condition ts serious. She lives at No. 45 Randall Avenue, | Street, Thomas Muldoon of No. 315 The Gaylor girl had been visiting at No. 21 Randall Ave-| William Murphy of No. 843 East The two girls had been out in] 142d Street, the Bronx. The girl was the pony cart for an hour or more.|taken to Harlem Hospital and will Grace had driven the pony frequently | recover. and always found it docile and easy to manage. She often had to wait at railroad crossings for trains to pass, and in PICKETS WITH ARREST that well-bullt-up neighborhood trains SR SSE seldom pass a crossing without whis-| State Will Act if Local Officials tling. Never before had the pony be- rm trayed the slightest nervousness at] TOPEKA, Kan., July 8—Gov. Henry sight of train or sound of whistle. Yesterday afternoon, however, 1 the other day in addressing |fcials agree that the strength of the| or transportation. I do not think it Lithia bient Se Tat OnIbUE Teeter Oa? ere bea pal pected eves acts: would be wise, in view of the holiday. | ‘1.ough three or four men standing at| ‘“Pieketing 1s a violation of Kansas oli don Meas ioe apibarentty |, aerate nation at this time.” “AD-'\tn6 Crossing tried to seize the: bridie|l law one of them could do so. renee Rockville Centre, IWURED AS PONY} IS UPSET IN TAX CHARGESTRAN AT NEXT CORNER Frightened Animal Through Gate Into Express at Rockville Centre. raised. was a sudden blast of the whistle for baidy vantage of a chance for a four day| Court Street, Brooklyn. He said the pas Shiv Dantas wasik ok rae holiday, on two of which—Sunday and} Nassau bus line was operating {llegal- ‘to the fact that the inland sections of /the Fourth of July—they would not|1y through Edgemere and Far Rocka- country are. not interested di-| have worked in any event. way to Simpson's Beach, no certi- districts the expenditure of|craftamen who have come to New ships (ways seemed | York to handle the strike in the met- ‘an md isan ropolitan district have opened head- NOT,ALL WORKERS *however, is tackling the subject of aesrars atthe aut boise ia eh OUT YET, REPORTS “whipping from a broader aspect than | formed a committee of whic! ef ‘the mere improvement of conditions in| Burger of the carmen is Chairman OF LEADERS SHOW cities. He insists that the|and David Williams of the machinists y= dlane aa eed is Secretary. Mr. Williams admits}! BOSTON, July 3.—Officials of the tonal welfare as a whole, Using as|that he does not know how many of| poston and Albany sald to-day that an illustration the large sums of/the shopmen are on strike, but de-| about 40 of the 425 men normally Taoney appropriated by Congress for|clared that more than 90 per cent. of] employed in the locomotive shops at ing which the|/them remained away from work to-| West Springfield reported for work particularly has wanted-—Mr. | day. this. morning, but that no men were declared that a merchant ma. Leaders of the local unions on/out at fhe Allston shops, employing wine, properly developed for America, |strike have also formed a Joint Ex-| about 800. A few maintenance of “goods roads on the seas.” Mr. | ecutive Committee for the metropol-| way workers failed to report. Dowd, President of the International] nearly 18,000 railway shopmen in Ohio will mean cheaper transportation | Brotherhood of Boilermakers; David|rapresents a 100 per cent. walkout; Products than if the) witiams, Vice President of the Inter-| union officials declared to-day. With are owned and controlled by | national Machinists; Fred Bolam,|600 maintenance of way employees of Vice President of the carmen's broth-|the Pennsylvania lines already out, American farm products and high rates on the ocean is/4 3. Burger, President of the Penn-| word from their leaders. names of all shopmen who quit wo Saturday have been marked off the company's employment roster, Man- r of the Lackawanna im maritime affairs, ‘To the} International offcers of the shopente of necessity has been issued. | PET Banca ada hota 4 tions. were at.a standstill in Gentral City and Keyser Valley. “ ALTOONA, Pa., July’ 8—Up to noon to-day only 44 men have quit work in the Altoona district shops of the Pennsylvania Railroad, while at Hollidaysburg 360 are out and 21 ai other points on the Middle Division of the road. There has been no move by maintenance men here so far. nese? GREAT LAKES UNIONS VOTING ON A STRIKE ‘s emphasizing the fact that} itan district. The members are J. J.| COLUMBUS, O., July 8Strike of |Sailors, Cooks, Stewards, Firemen and Others Take First Steps. era, CHICAGO, July 8 (Associated ‘The relationship between low prices erhood; M. J. McMahon, of the Gen-| similarly employed men of the other | Press).—Sallors, cooks and stewards, eral Executive Board of Machinists; | fivé roads in Columbus are awaiting| ana firemen, oilers and water tenders be <8 fn Mr. Harding's argument. He|syivania System Federation; J. V.| CLEVELAND, July 3.—Strike of| 2 al! boats of the Lake Carrlers' A for that if the Ameri- sociation, operating on the Great sxampie, Ratigan, of the Grand Lodge of the] shopmen in Creveland is only 66 per|roclalom ODA™atnE on | the | Great ocean freight day. bollrmakers, and J. F. Dalton of the) oMeials saying 2,000 out of 2,000/987, | a. counted July a4 at ffices of the Sailors’ Union of The committee at once began or-| TROY, N, ¥., July 3.—Several hun-|the © Prices inside the|ganizing a picketing force and ar-|dred shop craft Workers, on strike|the Great Lakes here, and the offices these same agri-lranged for a series of mass meetings.| at the Delaware and Hudson shops at {of the Marine Cooks and Stewards The first were held yesterday at|Colonte, went to thelr work benches|and of the Marine Firemen, Oilers and Amsterdam Hall, No. 661 Ninth Ave-|this morning, got their tools and de-| Water Tenders’ Unions at Buffalo. ey Firemen; James §. Sause, of the|cent. effective, railroad and union Ye will mean the dumping ce machinists. shopmen are idle. depends solution on the attitude |nue in Long Island City, and in New|parted again. Strikers leaving the Dashes|Third Car and Ambulance Her| van and the three injured passengers, ——-——| State will step In,"” Opera- Finally Get Her to Women at the of the car, wrecked the vehicle against ‘The girl’s head was cut. 408 East 16th Street, All but two cars had passed. There] They went through 127th Street | Hospital in a serious condition. and at the next corner, Lexington| ,, The Letter Carriers’ the next crossing—and the pony went} avenue, a northbound taxicab, driven mad. He crashed through the lowered] by Louis Deutsch of No, 45 East 112th] O'clock mass at St, Patrick's Cathedr gates and charged straight at the! streot, crashed into thelr tax! passing train. He flung the cart against the side Pony and cart went Both girls were|injury, but Sullivan and the three other passengers were cut and] Brooklyn, was appointed foreman, ‘he body of a man about 20 years old taken to-day by the police of the Division from the North River Street. The body was described all his charges into Deutsch's taxi| ® 5 feet, 8 inches in height; weight 160 and upset it. The girl, firmly clasped in the patrolman's arms, escaped further The east end, THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, JULY 3, 1922, ~ surrs voor coop {GIRL KILLED, FRIEND|GIRL HIT BY AUTO World News in Brief LOCAL. Fifty working gir lew .York, Workmen's Compensation Act. ' 1, Hospital. Gutta en ee iad Nalatborhord | & plant of the Atiantic Refining Com: Houses of New York again have ap- Grace Dufty, twelve years old, and! Nine-year-old Rose Gravito was] pealed to commuters to share their flow-| ent yesterday. Many firemen dropped Muriel Gaylor, eleven, sat in a pony| knocked down by an automobile Inst cart at the Centre Avenue crossing of| night in Third Avenue at 127th Street, the Long Island Railroad at Rockville] Barnett Weiner, of No. 477 Bedford Centre, L. I, yesterday afternoon, | Avenue, Brooklyn, owner and driver as an express thundered along. now spending | who prefer to sta; y home or play golf] St. Louis was elected yesterday Supreme thelr vacations at Camp Josephine, 0D | rather than go to church, the pastor an- Lake Mohegan, four miles from Peeks: kit, are beng taught ow to preserve | NOUnced yesterday, the highest legal office in the order, fruits and vegetables. The girls will re-]_ Thomas Cyril Long, known among! fart sucteeds Joseph C. Pelletier of main two weeks as guests of the Fed-|M®wspapermen of the South and Bast e8| poston, who held the office for fifteen eration for the Support of Jewish Phil-| “Cy” Long, a cartoonist, was killed by| years and was a Supreme Director for c Soct: ok Ocdibseneuna. Service Department | 8. N. C., on Saturday, ‘Willan @. Prout of Boston was for working women has been established by the Women's Trade Union Le of New York. The de thelr rights under mont will help | Yesterday, due to: a cloudburst, One| Prout {a the National President of the the | an. was killed by lehtning. American Athletic Union, ‘ers with persons in ‘the congested dis- trlots of the.city.. Flowers may be left “Share Your Flowers’ lower level Station.” ‘The booth is open week days from 8.80 A. M. to noon. Four new lodges of the Independent *. Travelers, at the car windows.| a pillar of the elevated structure in an] Order Brith Abraham have been named | CANADIAN THEATRICAL smiled as they glanced at the giris,| endeavor to avold hitting her. after prominent men. Muriel holding @ parasol primly erect] Patrolman Sullivan of the Fast above the varnished sides of the cart,/126th Street Police Station, hailed a] No. 82,;Max §, Levina Lodge No, 138,,| MONTREAL, July 3.— William C. and Grace with the reins gathered In} taxicab which was passing with| %%4 Aaron J. Levy Lodge No, 39, her hand, ready to chirrup to the!three men in it, climbed In with the Pony as soon as the train had cleared! girl in bis arms and ordered the |slass window in the Forelgn Exchange ite eradil the crossing and the gates werelariy Bank, 16th Street and Avenue A, Jo- z Gtiver to speed to Harlem Moepithl, |e wacias twenty years cldzcdt io | A ‘Nols wis thaw aldresbed tu is in Bellevue | “Maude,” which read: lowers” booth: | yesterday, Alfred W. Pearson of Fitch: The lodges are} MAN COMMITS SUICIDE Warren G. Harding Lodge No. Philadelphia, and Nathan Straus Lodge Ml of | Strachan, Canadian theatrical man, was As a result of falling through @ plate! tube, attached to an open gas stove, in Branch of the Holy Name Soclety had corporate communion yesterday morning at the 8 {7S Of act, and laughed. Tell them to Archbishop Patrick J. Hayes was tho | ramily plot. celebrant. Kings County Grand Jury for July was sworn in Reuben L. Haskell In the Court Hous = William Welge of No. 710 Elmose Place, early ninetie YR eT ld to-day by Judge | started by his wife, Lotta Linthicum, a HART IS K. OF C. ADVOCATE. ee Order's Highest Legal Office Gees to St. Louis Man. Church, Evanston, M., will be broad- 5 casted by radio for the benefit of people| CHICAGO, July 3.—Luke @. Hart of Advocate of the Knights of Columbus, lightning white playing baseball at New- | twenty-five year: é For the fourth time in four weeks|elected Supreme Director of the K. of Carbondale, Pa., was swept by a flood|C., to take the position vacated by Hart, A biasing gasoline tank containing 500,000 gallons at tHe Point Breeze, pany gave firemen a fourteen-hour at their posts exhaust While trying to ‘assist a fellow climber on Mount Monadnock, N. H. burg, Mass., fell over a precipice and was seriously injured, , 642—After Coffee Set Grecian Wage, $1 SECRETS HE secret of Oving- te-’s reputation for always having excellent found dead tn his room to-day with a a a “"Fou doubted my word this afternoon |} Salat they reece when I told you I was doing the jump- ee ey reject as | does in whatthey display. cremate me and not bury me in the|\>y} Scatter the ashes." OVINGTON’S “ TheGif Shop of Fifth Avenue” ¥ifth Avenue at 39th Street There was also’ a newspaper clipping which referred to divorce proceedings 0 well known Canadian actress of ‘the’ (t Vincent Walsh of No. 881 West 141st Alexander Avenue, the Bronx, and gee. GOV. ALLEN THREATENS He Warns. J. Allen threatened to-day to arrest all railroad strikers who went on picket t he said. ‘If logal official unable to prevent, picketing, then the ‘The question arose when several strikers were reported to have picketed the Santa Fe shops here. country, perts Predict. WASHINGTON, July 3. rents will follow BOOM IN BUILDING BIGGEST SINCE WAR; LOWER RENTS SEEN Will Drop Materially b Fall, Government Ex- The biggest building boom since war days is on in all parts of the figures compiled at the Department of Commerce showed to-day. Low wake, in its economic experts of the department stated, Home and apartment building will hit the peak of the curve dur- ing the latter part of the summer, and rents may be expected to drop materially by fall, they said. THE GOODY SHOP cordially invites you to the FORMAL OPENING OF ITS NEW STORE at 507 Fifth Avenue, 2/275 NEW YORK CITY SODA —_ LUNCHEON CHOCOLATES TEA ROOM The Government re- werves the right to re- ject any or all bids, ‘The list of sales below 1s an index to offerings you will want to investi- gate, Detailed adv tisements of each will appear regularly. Fol- low those advertisements the bene- fits of the War Depart- ment a jource of sup- ply. heck up the ad- vertisements with this Mest and mak sure no off ings are over- looked. = ai, > loc. The President from| Jersey. Mr. Dowd addressed several| shops asserted only one union man nes tha Lege ag Reopen of them, A mass meeting of New ewer ta cae ar support the legisla-|-York Central shopmen was held » July 3, — While another class whenever | at 2 o'clock this afternoon at Bryant] union leaders declared the strike was is in the national in-| Hall, in Sixth Avenue, and the Balti-] 90 to 100 per cent. effective to-day, wise the farm bloc willjmore and Ohio shopmen met at| railroad officials countered that in forieit the sympathy of the rest of the /Staten Island at 9 o'clock this morn-| most cases only 10 to 75 per cent eountry when their own measures of|ing. The Meadows shopmen had al of the men walked out, N, P. Good, ational interest are being debated. It|meeting at the Orpheum in Jersey| President of Pennsylvania System is not in a bargaining spirit that the|City. Federation No. 90, admitted he was Administration approaches the farm] Train service was about normal at| without definite information as to the Bloc and courts its support for the|the big terminals this morning, but| situation in Altoona, where 9,000 men Bill, but it is an attempt | congestion began at noon and tn-|are employed. 8, A. Peck, General fe apply the Golden Rule to party|creased as the afternoon wore on.| Superintendent of the Baltimore and Although it is estimated that 1,000,-] Ohio, said the strike on that railroad Byerybody, including the President, | 000 persons left the city Friday night| was 75 per cent. effective, has a better understanding to-day of |@nd Saturday by train, boat and mo-| ALBANY, July 8.—Maintenance of the why and wherefore of the bloc| tor, the process of emptying the city] Way employees of railroads hers feystem in Congress than a year ago.|®4 congesting the country and sea-| struck to-day in sympathy with the p outburst of the representatives in| *hore over the Fourth promises to] 400,000 shopworkers who walked out Particular sections of the|¢eP Up until late to-night. The big| Saturday, Coal passers of the Boston jam will come to-morrow night and] and Albany and New York Central Wednesday, when traffic that was| Railroads at Rensselaer walked uot : four days in going out will try to] OMAHA, Neb., July %—Union transition period in Republican |°°M® back in twenty-four hours, leaders assert more than 97 per cent, ‘The passing of the old leaders| _ TD® first arrests in the strike in] of shopmen ‘employed by the Union ipoincides with the arrival from the| t™!* territory were made to-day in| Pacific have joined the strike, while fest of new members who have not },{'Mt of strike headquarters when Pa-| company officials say about 70. per fine same faith in the effectiveness of ‘trolman James McDonald ordered| cent. of thelr shop men have walked party leadership| Patrick Goley and Thomas O'Brien] out. Union claims at other Nebraska timers have had. What Mr. |‘ Move on and they didn’t move with| points and at Sioux City, Ia, were to establish an en.| Wt he considered sufficient celerity.| similar as to the number of men join. numerous groups in| Magistrate Conway discharged the] ing the strike. ripe phn i men in Long Island City Police Court} CLEVELAND, July 3—D, R, t U to-day. Macbain, Assistant General Mana Sredually be brought together in|“ Omoials of the D., L. & W. Rallroad|of the New York Contra Lin er ‘oenterence and thus. welded to-day that about 160 strik unit again, Mere shout-| nayea the bi " Th ibe striking shop bles ed loc system. © Presi-|craft employees had returned to work pw oF group system dent has found in the ship subsidy|béetween Buffalo and Chicago, All tile chiefly because the| problem extraordinary opportunity to| railroads reported passenger and organizations — of-| bring special groups into harmony for| freight trains moving without delay. better opportunity to achieve! the national interest. If he succeeds} BOSTON, July 8&—The full extent in making the acid test of every meas-|of the strike of shopmen on railroads ure sponsored by a special group|in New England will not be known revolution |/whether the measure would beneft| until Wednesday, union and railroad iy evolution. /the whole country directly or indi-| officials agreed to-day. Union officiais farm repre- | reotly he will have discovered the lev-|ussert Wednesday will show that the are significant of @ con-|erage which will deal effectively with| strike Is 100 Per cent. efficient. Traing Maposition, in marked con-| the numerous proposals of narrow and | were leaving here on time but many Umited worth as contrasted with those|incoming trains were late, hej likely to be of Nation-wide val SCRANTON, Pa, July §.—The i if di ets if seaeeenye ety PRACTICAL HAIR CURLERS Three Sizes For Long or Bobbed Hair Sold at notion counters, If your dealer docs not carry them, oA a aR RYICR SUPELTES—Buftato, + Atiction. GELLING PROGRAM aires hicles, ha: equipment, raw materi Ordnance Quartermaster Material mi machinery, Jala, eto. Material Includes; Machinery and (ois, chemicals, iron, steel, ‘copper, brass, electrical suppl a Material = Planes, ® Hinen and cotton fabri o a me lumber, equipment, Faw materl- Air Service Includes: engin lubricant machinery, ‘photographic ete, Your hand can dam the mighty Missis- sippi at its source. Litt your hand, and the labors o1 a nation cannot-halt the majestic sweep of the waters near their mouth. Business is like the Mississippi. Remove the barrier at the source of supply, and the stream of trade will grow in volume as the nvulet becomes the nver. The War Department today 1s the greatest single source of supply the business world has ever known. Impounded in its warehouses are millions of dollars worth of materials— bought to meet the acid test of use by your Army in the struggle “over there.” Their — nature 1s as vaned as the demands of diversi- fied industry. Better business depends in large measure upon unhindered distribution of, thig_surplus in the channels of trade. Do your part in re- leasing these stores. The catalogs of offerings show the way. Write: CHIEF, SALES PROMOTION SECTION, Office of the Director of Sales Room 2515, Munitions Bldg., Washington, D.C,