The evening world. Newspaper, March 23, 1911, Page 5

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—— EVERY WOMAN SHOULD WORK, SAYS THIS MAN With Most of Them It Is a Makeshift Before Marriage, Sir Frank Newnes Declares NEEDN’T MAKE MONEY. Millionaire Publisher Fears Women Will Control Eng- land When They Get Vote. By Ethel Lloyd Patterson. Here is a millionaire, and incidentally @ titled person, who likes to seo women | work. Doesn't it sound brutal; or rather doesn't it sound Brittsh? Yet Sir | Frank Newnes, son of the late Sir George Newnes, and proprietor of a chain of magazines and newspaper not a brute, though he is an Engilsh- man—which ig not an intentional para- dox. Now, most of its like to eee other pao- ple work, and millionaires are notice- ably partial to that particular form of amusement. Also it is not unusual for| them to combine business with pleasure by Watching other people work for them. that {s not exactly Sir Frank's point of view: ould Have Occupation. wn should have a definite said Sir Frank Srmqy. "Not necessarily a money making occu. Pation. It would be rather foolish for @ girl of good family with plenty of money to go out in the world as a ste- nographer, The same purpose is served for such a girl if she interests herself {1 athletics of some sort. But it {s not gocd for women to remain idle, Though quite 1 on the other hand, I per- 8 vork very Be hat do you mean?’ T asked, trust I glared in @ dangerous an” said Sit Frank, with a ired shrug, “that woman's most of it, is at the best a . The great masses of wom- go to work until such time All Think of Marriage. yer own heart no woman, no ow independent, ever gives up ght of marriage, and most of of ft am a condition under will give up their work ) the care of their And they should. prove of ft h a family should not ties tn the business it means leaving the children to servants—and There is a very del!- women | There are | y un and Forty? Ned] Lock" p confusion Of the Various districts | THE av Seine WORLD, DOROTHY ARNOLD | ALIVE, DETECTIVE® pose. 1 know he n't know wher na THURSDAY, MARCH | LOST FUNDS SPECULATING. BRITISH PUBLISHER WHO BELIEVES ALL WOMEN SHOULD VOTE. | ccomd and will sh j Show where o and tn the Jeate the « Lay a note in Ww J ne had lost the funds wa assigned hi membership. in Trade, his stock In the she is, and 1 | family does, Heiress Now Missing 100 Days, | When Grisc don’ eve the Arn There ts Only One of leaving Atlantle City was | but Pittsburger Says he rena Pittsburg “a \ ShelRetun, leather, owe) SOMO fei ve Quinine a —— two-year. 3 fellows made { \ | Roger O'Mara, the Pittsburg detect- ive, to-day reiterated his beltef that | too much ‘th am tatk last time he saw you.” Dubious About Marriage. That ts Laxative " i Bromo Quinine ‘4 Dorethy Amol, the daughter of "t you believe Grisco | Francis R. Arnold, of No, 108 Hast ry the girl?” you mw) Seventy-ninth treet, who hea been First Hou mm missing one humdired days, is alive. The for ihe talk of ma Pittsburger says his visit here has only | replied to do With a trip to Matteawan to see) O'Mara belleves, he said, that Gris Harry Wire be ;com jr. and his father will atri gal whose trustee he M. He! pittsburs within & few days, ‘The Used The Werld Over te went to Matteawan to-day j have no ho give Cure a Geld in One Dav. | O'Mara refused to divulge the nature! it up seve of the conference he had last night | the sum with Deputy Commissioner Fignn, but |e wint admitted they had discussed the Dor- othy Arnold case. and 1s ni “7 WIM, bettevb che wont away of hee'l of the ju aoe | Always remember the fall same. Look tor 4 Ma ket, Mass. ani thie signature on every box. 20. # R. Arnold said the fam ‘ nothing about the Gri “ ested in the movements | iviscom ' UNITED CIGAR STORES In our New York Stores, alone— Over two hundred thousand daily. More than one million five hundred thousand each week. About seventy-five million a year. Seventy-five million times a year our representatives serve customers in our New York stores alone. We donot speak boastfully of serving customers seventy-five million times a year but there is one big thing about this service of which we are very proud— We receive more letters complimenting our rep- resentatives and our service than we do the other kind and it has always been generally understood that we welcome and act promptly on all complaints or suggestions toward improvement in cur service At certain periods everyday our men are cused to the very limit to handle trade. It must happen that in giving this service at high speed we occasionally slip a cog. Think of it! Seventy-five million transactions a year! Of course we go wrong once in a while— perhaps more frequently than we suppose. Now here’s the point—we don’t want to leave this important feature of our business to the imagination. We want to know whenever, through press of time, or error of judgment, or lack of interest, or for any other reason, our representatives behind the counter do not carry out to the letter the United Cigar Stores policy—to serve the people best. Largest Retailers of Cigars and Tobacco In the World Because We Serve the People Best | el 1911, CRIPPLED NO LONGER ~ THANKS TO THE MARVELS OF B ;Remarkable Results Obe| tained by the Modern) Orthopedist—Sceminge! ly Hopeless Cases Set Aright. Roth’s Astounding Orthoe| pedic Feats and Some! of the ccivab!e tained. Almost Results Mr. Edgar, K. Rhoads, Chief ¢ of the Long Islattd Express © Pany, Long Island City, was many years suffering. y h hip ease and had to move around on crutches. He can walk miles to-daw without | g | crutches or even a cane. Michael Kohen of No, 230 Baltic Street, Brooklyn, cor sis when an infant shaped limb and a club foot. Now he can walk and work as good as most people. Agatha Sniffen, of No. 131 Keay Street, Brooklyn, 12 years of was in a similar but still worse con- . HIP DISEASE, Copyright, Moth Orthopedic tnatitute, 10z Wee. 73th Bt, Now York City. dition, Until a short time ago the child did not even know what it t to stand up. vy well able to attend] i‘ 1 ! era EB Guldi, of Sayville L. 1, had ar de » which at times w wreat pain She s a 1 almost} s up { being 4 | " i rougat back het Bal yivania R, R, with 75th Street But Prof, Louis R three sons, Incon- Ob- ed paraly- > add to his y he also develope? a mis- who share his weil-| impregsion LOODLESS Nerk ‘om for dis Copsriaht, Roth Orthopedic Institue, jrot call them ‘ward these barflir ern orthoped To th al occurrence, speaking of. Were it not for the fact that the suTerers whom they have helped would spread the cheerful news among their fellow sufferers, much of the work done by the Roths would perhaps have remained un- Noticed by the great masses. But Providence has decreed otherwise, and to-day these orthopedists, the only exponents of their rare art in Public interest. For them the road to success has been strewn with thorns, for the medical profession \ at first regarded them as invaders. \Yet they haye’ fought their way y hrough and won recognition, | | yntracted dur- &, Prisco, The é but his wife ve in the ad Lord, Jr, a high offi- | created the that they could cure tentionally, hi | Perhaps ini | of mankind, «| Out of the question was obs this country, stand in the centre of | Sire SURGERY SCOLIOSIS DEXTRA. 102 West Thth St, New York City, | Paralysis, ong of the That h enemies a thing, is medical. men, and for th .| they were prone to cor less surgery as not y vestigating. “Not until they had proved by actual results what) th ¢ complishal by the new the world take notice,” Prof. Roth said recently. “We first of all seek to create an improvement in the condition of the patient. If the paralysis of the legs, our first aim is to make the patient walk, thus enabling him to gain and to preserve the muscles 1, which also would un- der attet circumstances slowly but surely become useless. Our task, f course, is easier when we have to deal with Other afflictions of the bones or muscles, which’ are con sidered, and really are, curable.” y had ac- ence did case is one of The greatest achievements the Roths have attained in the treat. ment of hip disease (coxitis), spinal deformations (hump back), wry- neck, club and flat foot, inflamma- tion of the knee joint, rickets, of the bowleg, the X-leg and the knocknee, fractured limbs, rheu- matic contractions, atrophy, &c. Insteqd of putting the affected |timbs into plaster of Paris, whieh coasionally may stay the progress of the disease, but hardly ever will bring about an Improvement, not to say a cure, the highly scientific, \invisibly worn appliances of the | Roths enable the Patient to freely limbs while the case is be- ted, thereby improving his 1 and general condition from ery beginning. To a number of physicians who some time ago were invited to the Roth Orthopedic Institute the Roths 1a boy who had met with nt while riding on a bicyele Shortly hip disease set In, a year previously. , helpless and shorten- of his Jegs by a number of a few months this back to its normal eously the prog- ress of the disease was checked, iouks hale and hearty, i an entire cure is prac! tain, Another 4 to the mastrate { suffered the fracture of a knee- ho now can walk without though the injured kn n removed ar |even Ms te with,—Advt, ence, p has not b i — set ae

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