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THE ‘EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, SOCIETY GIRL HEL) |Day Gone When a Wife Must Abandon Career FORBUYING FINERY IN NAME OF FRIEND Pretty Yonkers Miss Seeks Re- lease Here to Face Theft Charge at Home IS ARRESTED IN STORE Engaged to Aviator and Had to Have Nice Clothes Mother Wouldn’t Provide. Mies Dorothy Palmer, the pretty nine- ten-year-old Yonkers society girl who charged with obtaining goods by fraud from the Altman store in Fifth avenue, was tearfully engaged early to- day in trying to think of the name of somebody who would ball her out of Jefferson Market Prison so she could Bo back to Yonkers to be tried for stealing $1.05 from one of her boarders. Though the Palmers have excellent social standing in Yonkers, they deen in somewhat straitened ct @tances since the death of the gir father, C. B. Palmer, who died o' his injuries after he was sandbagged and robbed in Canal street ago. He was secretary to the President Walker of the Santa Fe. In an effort to define her social pao- late sition to a reporter of The Evening World to-day Miss Palmer gave the re of the following p as in timate acquaintances of her family Miss Edith Haas, Mrs, Eugene Clark, Mrs. Ransom W. Diedrick, Howard Skinner, marsfacturer Harold Bartels snd John B: prominent in Yonkers politics, John J. Sloane. W. H. Palmer, young woman's brother, is an ¢ trical engincer for the New Xork Cen- tral DIDN'T THINK LOVELLS WOULD CARE IF SHE PAID BILL. “The Altman people say I took from them more than $70, which I had charged to the account of Mrs. Jolin K. Lovell, who used to be our next door neighbor. ‘That is exaggeration. I did have about $21 worth of goods charged to Mrs. Lovell. 1 meant to go in and pay for them before the bill ‘was sent to her. I had the feeling that if the Lovells found it outthey wouldn't mind so long as the bill was paid. “You see I had to nave nice clothes. I’am very fond of a young man up ta Yonkers who |s an aviator and [am practically engaged to him—though I suppose it will all be broken off now. No, I won't tell his name. Everybody whe knows me knows, It's not the business of anybody else.” “I simply had to have nice things. My mother has never done anything except to give me a place to sleep and feed me and I couldn't go about with the people we know up there looking shab’ of aeroplanes; dy, both and the “[ have sent for Mr, Willlam H. Porter, who is In the office of J. P. aorgan and Company, and Her! K. Twitchell, vice president of th Chemical National Bank. They were doth classmates of my father at Mid- dlebury College, Vermont, But I have not heard from either of them yet ARRESTED WHEN SHE BOUGHT SHOES IN STORE. Tho arrest of Miss Palmer at the} store followed a checking up of the Lovell bill by Mrs. Lovell found herself charged with things she had mever bought and asked the store to put detectives on the case. Yesterday the salesgirl, to whom Miss Palm ! the name of Mrs. Lovell! In buy a six dollar pair of s! gent word to John F, Larkin, dete of the house, and she was arrested, ‘The charge against the girl in Yonkers, ghe says, amounts to nothing, She bor- rowed $1.05 from the family boarder and when she was not a y promptly was charged John K, Lovell, wi wife's com- plaint started the charge against Miss Palmer, 18 employed in the claim de- partment of the New York Central. He visited the girl in prison yesterday ‘an@ told her he couldn't understand how she could nave used his wife's name, but that he would try to help her out of ‘her trouble. ete SHE BORROWED A BABY TO IMPRESS THE JURY. But Woman Failed to Save Her Husband From Conviction on Burglary Charge. CHICAGO, Sept. ° Borrowing a baby to display as her own in an effort to influence a jury to acquit ly hus- band of burglary falled to imp sa Benton Harbor (Mich.) jury, and Mrs, Mary Gilverton barely escaped a charge of kidnapping the borrowed child, Solly Smith, four years old, The mother re- covered her child yesterday by the ald of the police. The Gilvertons had no children, so Mrs. Gilverton, believing In fury persuasion by sentiment, borrowed the obiid of Mrs, Rosie Smith in Chi cago. Unknown to Mrs, Smith she Doarded the first train to Renton Har por, where Gilverton was on tri Bolly played his part in the drama to perfection. All he was supposed to do was to cry at Intervals and Kaze on the jury, But the jury did not live up to expectations. In the closing plea for the defense counsel asked the jury in behalf of little Golly not to send “Papal to jail. There were tears in the law- eyes, in ‘s eyes and also in the “mother's eyes. It was a dramati ecene, but the jurors voted gullty, Mean- time Mrs. Smith be a ned when Soy was not brougit home told the Chicago police and they got trace of the child, which was returned to the mother at Benton Harbor She yites to Dance, embly District will m ‘The First As from the Battery to Fourteenth street to-night to attend the ball of the Jo- geph Auer Association in ‘Tammany Hall, Dick Molloy and Charlie Jacobs, the Irish marshal, will be on the Job with @ Une of wise talk and wet goods, mother's | have | um: | ne| Anan ew, AAAS? wine “Our Work We Have Always With Us to Make Life Worth the Living; Love, Even the Best ot Love, ls With Us Only in Moods. for a Happy Marriage Lies in Fostering the Different Interests Which Keep a Man and a Woman Independent of Each Other. “The Man Who Insists That a Woman Submerge Her Lite in Being His Wife Is Worse Than Stupid. “The Woman of To-Day Who Gives Up Any Vocation She May Have at the Request of the Man She Marries Soon Degenerates Into a Mental Parasite.” Distinguished ” French Actress Says: BY ETHEL LLOYD PATTERSON. On the stage she is Mme. Simone, the most fa- mous of the younger tragediennes. In private life | ’, 7 the late President of France. | | at the Hotel Plaza, she appeared in a new role, that of the philosopher, before whose magic the befogged problem of modern marriage cleared. “The day has passed when a woman must give up either her career or her husband," sho said. “The man who insists that a woman submorge her life and personality in the vocation of being his wife is con- sidered worse than stupid. What is more, he re ceives his punishment, for the woman of to-day who it the request of the into @ mental parasite.” 1 “But if a choice is forced upon ber?” I suggested. | puere is only one way for such @ choice to be forced upon a woman,” “spied Mme. Simone, “It must come to her through the man, And it is my belief it would be far better for a woman never to marry than to marry the Early Victorian person who tells her she | must ‘choose between him end her work,’ | five years | “In My Opinion the Only Real Chance| We she is Mme, Claude Casim{r-Perier, wife of the son of! Yesterday, in her suite) ~— WHEN PULLMANS ROLL DOWN GRADE to make life worth the living. Love, even the best of lo is only String of Cars Run Away and Dash Into Detached Car in Melrose Yard. with us in moods, making us finer or Uttler according to the waves of unselfishness or jealousy which it causes to sweep over us. In my opinion the only real chance for a happy marriage lies in fos- tering the different interests which Xoep a man and a woman inde- pendent of each other.” HAS PATTERNED LIFE AFTER HER OWN IDEALS. Certainly Mme. Simone has fashtoned her own Ilfe after the doctrines she ex- Pounds, From the time, some few years ago, when she divorced Le Bargy, the leading actor of the Comedie Francaise, and married Paul Casimir-Perler, whose father was one of the richest men in France, she has unfalteringly porsued the light of her own genius, To-day she ranks second only to Bernhardt on the stage of France. “But do you not think a great many of the modern women of mediocre tal- lents who are out in the world earning thelr own way would be far better off I asked Mmé, Simone. t know that I do,” she an- third was seriously hurt shortly before 2 o'clock this morning In the Melrose yard of the New York Central when a string of heavy parlor cars, running away down grade, crashed, into a de- tached car under which @ repalr crew was at work. swered slowly. “Anything which takes| Albert Lorenz, forty-three, of Val- f& Woman's mind away from herself for} Malla, N. Y., was dnstantly killed; Jo- seph Lodis, thirty-five, of No. 19 Ed- some part happiness in of the day makes for greater | married life, Suppose a Woman does not succeed in making her- self famous! Suppose, even, that the world would have gone on just as well | without her lttle effort at work? At! least she has given herself something | to think of, and when her husband re- turns at night he does not find « woman HUSBAND © “OF THE : BUSY WOMAN | 4v¥enue, and Is traversed by the road's n _ main line, There is a mesh work of montis. per-| ‘acks, the main line being of the elec- mone || Mme. tric third rail system and switch en- | fectly, with anly, tae A ee ee gines doing duty on the sidings that | Sones oor lat of view. BOL In are not electrically equipped, All the son ntes she taas irrevocably labelled | power care are stored and cleaned peatttan as te the luggage with Which |thia yaré, vhere the trains are | she so recently landed in America, Per-| up and sent down to | tion, haps her mouth 1s what fascinates oni most. pet Up) {es 8ne and 100K) “mine three men were working under wards avenue, the Bronx, after belng removed to the Lebanon Hospital, with a fractured skull, a broken em and internal tnjuries, and John Batley, thirty, of No, 23 Bast Fit- tleth street, 19 in the hospital with a mangled left arm and internal injuries. The Melrose yard lies between Ono Hundred and Fifty-first and One Hun- ed, shortly jand ¢ racetully Mie the winks | neath a detached parlor car on a siding jot a Pt ars ve oe gazed | at One Hundred and Pifty-third street. Mia, Upon the boulevards of Paris, | A block north stood a string of several tnd her nose is a little blunted at the|cars with brakes set to bold them, tin In profile It makes her chin seem | ‘There 1s a down grade from where the than it really 1 | string of cars stood to the siding oc- pre prominen y nands are mall and very rosy upled by the single car and suddenly ld's. dresses @ little care-) ihe whole string began rolling down | trusting to laces and floating | ward the lone ar Owing to the rumble and roar of the continuous traffic the repair crew had warning of the approacning danger, ‘Phe string of heavy cars crashed bh ly into chiffons rather than to safety p! But what of the husband of | woman with a vocation?” 1 queried, Mme. Simone threw Monsieur Caal- mir-Perier a smile across the room, the ingle » catching all three im “Lr. th he husband of such the ne a OS aan Meeoe "she said. under its trucks and twisting Lorenz's een ne eae ia the sort of woman |DOdy around # Journal. The jone car was who absorbs hia timo and interosts and |Jolted nearly a hundred feet down the feeds them as fuel to her work, they |®% tri be Wy MER Who Jur aboard will not be any hap! than {f the | coul set the brakes and b io « clreumstances were ed. For a | 80! Man oF WOMAN tO Wien of the one they | Word to lebanon Hospital and Dr. Br [pletely Hie Deeeae came with an ambulance. Lorenz as a mate Jhave chosen as a mate, been killed instantly. Bailey was ess, not love, rue love nmediately to »spttal, but Lo the most possible of life. aitended for an hour in a nearvy pa ran and a woman take car. He died a few minutes ufter reac the side world the jing the hospital ) give each other, | sie recilsoecaee d@ woman should be ‘wo hunters. joining forces. Alt) PASSENGERS VOTE THANKS Jay long they pur: the ch, | ee oastty 5 at, TO BIG LINER'S CAPTAIN, e meet by th fire each other | Passeng: nee of th spoils, gather! courage AN Lenatier 1 . j other for the next day's labors, If te sell Rais | otner tone marthers aite at home: ali {Presented Capt, Poncelet with a ° day, abe never can learn the perils of |Tesolutiona thanking him for bringi @ tract and she never can sympa-|them over the water when he did no ” want to. nothing of eating half the, The unions to which the twenty-five a contributing “nothing t9| cooks and hundred and thirt I added W stewards of La Prvence belong had not what matters,” con- 1 between themset F Mine. Simone, “It ts not having 4 Renin abate “haters d be, t t6 08 ine {ed from Hayr all food that bi he offlcers motored over to it is having to le and hired waiters who w about to return to Part lo sentence, that |of the season, 1Wth will atching all ng the stateror tewards the pas Md not have Hang. tho most comforta in the world ’ .—Dmitry Bos jrut they were glad and uveful that asassin of Premier Stolypin, they came back on time under any tried by court-martial and. terms. > y hangigs. Bogroft! Among the us Adele Rteht rs "old and a! who lost a with Lew Field ity, He was a/by not gott « a week ago but the secret police and also| who will uke a new en: a revolutionist. Bagement with A, H. Woods, Two car repairers were killed and a! rand Central sta- | ‘AIRWOMAN HERE WITH SPEED PLANE Horse Power Farman and Will Compete in Races. On the de French Une when day from Hayre w e fitted with tiny AARAAL AARRAAY AAe TO FLY AT NASSAU Mile, Helen Ducrieu Brings 50- of La Provence of the vhe arrived here to- Farman mo- tor of fifty horse-pow It was on \of only four machines of the ty |made, built for the highest possth} speed, and it belonged to Mile. He} | Ducriev, a tiny won » Who s admitted at sin first rod bleycle ahe bas been “crazy about thet speed. With Mile, Dy Gilbert and Virgil! ns, She was vei ship came tn, t ments to have the » Novell, busy w ig to make a Mttle flyer taken to Nassau Boulevard mec eu were her brother could get into the air with the Hon. Wood- ruff's tralned trouve of alr pe:former this afternoon Switching her close fitting biue and pushing back her flappy white hat from her forehead, she snapp ful orders at her helpers until running around in Between orders # s interviewed. were ie wa SHE HOLDS RECORDS AMONG | WOMEN FLYERS. vdmitted bashfully She held th 1d's records for he and distance for women flyers, p sailed for ) kilometer Mile. Dy fore s\ this side s flight of (nearly tnt | felt 1) 1 that Just be- AR ARR A ern Because She Is Married, Says Mme. Simone RAR AAR ARR ARRAS AR AA ARAN ALARA AN ARA RA AAR RANA AAR ARR AR AAS, WOMAN WHO SHOT ANSULTER' FIGHTS Mrs. McCrea Will Try to Force From Case Prosecutor Who Wants Her Denied Bail. OPELOUSAS, La., Sept. SEPTEMBER 23, 1911 TO LEAVE PRISON, %,—On the ground that he ts related to Allen Gar- ‘SOUTHERN BEAUTY ARTIST BEAT ONCE TRIED SUICIDE HERE Mrs. Ivon Dumont Has Also Figured in Public by Acts in New Orleans. BARRETT HAS STUDIO.! | Violent Quarrels There With Woman Have ‘Roused Anger of Other | Tenants. | Mra, Ivon Dumont, heautiful compan- fon of Artist George H. Barrett tn hts | thrilling escapades which resulted yer: terday In his being held for trial on a charge of assaulting @ photographer, fn the dame Ivon Dumont who five | from the Hotel Seventy. enth street and to Roosevelt Hospital, | prieoner charged with attempted sul cide, She had taken a quantity o | poison, Despatches from New Orleans tell that Ivon Dumont ts the wife of Edgar R. | Dumont, wealthy manager of the Stand- | ard Export Lumber, Company of that | city, and that @ year and a half ago she won notoriety in New Orleans by calling on a polleeman to arrest the wife of @ prominent citizen who carried @ goMl bag which Mra. Dumont claimed | had been stolen from her. ‘The woman arrested proved she had | bought the baubel from a jeweller to whom it had been aold by Horace New- | man, @ member of a prominent New Orleans family, Newman explained that | he had given the bag to Mrs. Dumont | and then taken it away from her, BEAUTY MADE HER CONSPICU- OUS IN NEW ORLEANS. For years Mrs, Dumont’s boauty made years ago was rushed Belleclatre, her a conspicuous figure in New Or- leans. Edgar R, Dumont ts her second husband. She was divorced from her first husband, who was forty years her senior. For the past three months Barrett and and Mrs, Dumont have been much In each other's company in a studio at No, 1 West Mifty-fitth street, whieh Barrett sub-leased from William Otts Sweet, a landscape painter who le now in Parti The Fifty-fifth street building is most- ly tenantel by artists, and the attention of every occupant has been attracted t Barrott's studio for weeks because of the many nots: meetings there of the portrait painter and Mrs, Dumont. A week ago there was a violent scene in Barrett's studio ana Mrs, Dumont rushed out screaming. Barrett came out after her and dragged her in. Because nd, the young man who was ki of thia and other noisy demonstrations ursday by Mrs. J. P. McCrea, the] the tenants had appealed to the agent of family of Mra, Met will seek to have the building and Barrett was warned District Attorney R. Lee Garland retire that if there were any m renes he from the prosecution, ‘Tals dectston 18] would be put out. ‘Then for five or six the result of the district attorney's | days Mrs. Dumont was not seen in the |declaration that he would not consider | putiding, #n application for bail for Mrs, MeCrea.} During many of her visits to the This would mean that she would be] piace she was accompanted by a beau- forced to remain in prison until Janu- | tfut golden-hatred Uttle girl of about jary, the time of the next season Of | ten Mrs, Dumont told the tenants in | court | the building that this child was her With Mrs, McCrea in the prison @Fe] \iichter. she also dectared that her iar 3 ane ae lee, atlas Gatien, oa wae Vat CQ AHAE TAMAY WAS and she Is being cared fe ne bes! siting st Barre orely to hav quarters that are afforded. Mra, Mo-| Visiting Artist Barrett morely ; Crea was not accessible to any one to- |day, and her husband refused to add anything to his wife’s bare announces | ment that she had killed the young map because he had insulted bi sorry to take a human life, regret Killing I am sorry | Naturally, I this young man, [regret it in the sense he forced me to tt deed was justifiable, ao matter how regrettable it is That the statement made by Mrs McCrea when she was arrested, But no further explanation was made and as they were no witnesses to the shout Jing the caso ts yelled in mystery her portrait painted. ‘To prove this sie opened the door of the studio and vealed a portrait of herself in stages of | completio! According to the tenants fn the stu. dio building, Barrett did not return to re- | "Y¥oa, and 1f evry wom- 1g Pec LLB BUA AEE aye jh » in the Hereford Apartments, an who 1s insulted by a man would do| ; § seventh street, near Hiveraide the same thing there would be more vir- tue “and, fewer mandale in this coun. (Drive, last night. He spent *he night | tue er scandals his coun- | one lo 4nd left about 9 try. Am any good woman would be|Slone in his studio 4 o'clock to-day. WEALTHY MEN AIDED HER WHEN SHE TOOK POISON. At the time Mrs. Dumont took potson tn’ the Hotel Belleclaire, five years ago last April, several wealthy and in- fluential New York men came to her ald, One of these was James Shewan otleth street, jr. of No, 303 West Ni son a dl iacitone HAT The verdict of the Coroner's jury 18) of a millionaire drydock owner of that “Have you ever been that young Garland came to his death | qddress, Mr, Shewan sald at the time dent?” eho waa asked Be the mul OF Risto wolnas i! pees he was a friend of Mrs. Dumont's hus- ‘phree times. Once It was stops for the present, until the woman| Pant and he considered tt hia duty to portan ‘A second time I fell evasif talle hoe yor the Distriet.| Call and console her, My poor machine, tt Attorney obtains some new evidence.| The polloe who inventigated the case T was n hurt Anothe Mrs. Mc ea and young Garland were] said Mrs. Dumont swallowed the poison oune; Ont ep urs friends, the McCrea and Garland| after a quarrel with # young min ta an young woman, who ia thirty, have gone beyond bounds und no. at.| 0 When they left the cafe and drove to ten are winger, and]tachment whatever between them waa| the Belleclatre 90 pounds, do ver and | suspected. At this time Mr, Dumant and the four ached the tips of her fingers] One story told to-day that the shoot-| Year-old child of the couple were tr kk s ing followed a quar between Mrs. | their home in New Orleans, Mrs. Du E I the] secrea's eldest on Garland, but} mont had been @ frequent guest at ; ay continue.”” | this has In no way rifled » Belleclairs during several years pre a soy wwitt have] i aerene. w tin the back and tt] vious to the Ume she took the mer ‘ Role? whieh | ane eer ae the Police tat tel curtal tablets, The attempted suicide | ort ine’ lene case against her was dis 1 wher feu 1 she wo je aah ear! she averred that she had ken the N b at by mistake. ' ymon I antil M . ma J r new evidence Hi to _ wee sit ig ecapade iain u " & Vacationist Drops Dead } Important Prescription grin es MOTHER ABANDONS BABY. Who Left ging for Board, ¢ ry y Wheele No, 41 x street, wh 1M ‘ in her with a two-months' | baby up to @ few days ago, Wiliam 1 Hospital gestion. For Stomach Troubles This comes from rellabla medical authority as being nf the most arkuble — presert t var’ a demonatrated in the er lenin for muff tir com eal and at bed mes put up packages, Any t in stock lokly ne For resulta mix Pepsin and the ¢ r nen let ata bout an hour before adding the ( t be mor co tito og dienta from ' wt and mix them at h Th this are enthua antic «prom nd affect netion, If you not bothered w tomach trou p out this Cate preserip and give it to some fiicted friend. Adve Ann nnn rns 510,000 JEWEL | of he | her interview with « reporter after land- | | aald his sister had nothing further to Court then held Mrs. Monro for tt Grand Jury. ‘The girl when placed on the stan was seated #o that she sat directly of posite Mrs. Monro, All the time eh wan testifying her eyes remained fixe on those of the defendant. In that pé sition she told @ story the exact revers of the account of the swindle she ha F THE WiD0 related to the prosecuting attorney short time before. W ‘There is something wrong with th " he “Ther witness told the court, seems to be some Influence here the is thwarting justice. It is imposmit for the State to get the truth out « her.’ In an Instant the court room was 1 an uproar. The girl wept hystertoall; Judge Dolan brought the scene to # end by ordering Miss Hildey to lehambers, There she recovered he composure and in the presence of th court and of the attorneys for Bot sides she recanted the testimony @h had just given and gave the same ae count of the ewindle thet she had tol Mrs. Myers Returns From Abroad With Half of Gems Gone, but What of It? ‘The declaration of Mre. A. F. Myers, a widow living at Bretton Hall, who r turned from Burope Inet night, that she was robbed of $10,000 worth of gems and Mr. Fetrer $1,000 tn cash tn the Hotel Cecil In Lon-|" Steg Monro ia charged with havin don, was discounted to-day by members| scained $1.30 from. Mine HMildey. fo family, They admit that she is shy $10,000 worth of gems, but they do not Indorse her statement that she was) robbed. Mrs. Myers was up early to-day and ordered all the newspapers sent to her apartment. When she read in The World j@ share in a business to turn gray hal black. The prosecutoin asserts that th business was fraudulent and for month nothing was sold Ing from the White Star Mner Celtic last sot, she made known hei re to en: gage @ taxicab at once. The taxicab was at the hoter at § o'clock, Mrs. ers directed the driver to take ler to No, 664 West One Hun- dred and Forty-elghth atreet, the home of her moth Mra, Sargent. There Myers went into seclusion, One Meyer's brothere—not Edward B. Sargent, whe was with her when @he told of being robbed last night— aay. | Fee experts We think,” said this brother, “that vocate liberal she has been romancing. She fs a cor very Jolly woman and fond of joking. diet to beh “My sister went to London in Au- ease germs. To eat gust. She declared $20,000 worth of jew- libe ly you elry. It is true that when she came back last night she had only $100» rate appetite. worth. it rrems to us that this is @ icious matter in which she alone ts inter- Beer not only ented.” Mrs, Myers has told two stories about | the loss of her gems# and cash. In both figures a handsome Cuban, whose card Mrs. Myers carries, She met him on the ship going from New York to Paris. He followed her to London. On Sept. 12, ashe wald last night, he entered her room with a woman companion, beat her into | semi-unconclousness and robbed her of | all the Jewelry she was wearing and) $1,000 in cash. you appetite, but is also nourishment in itself. PALE RIPE RHEINCOLD Brewed by S.Liebmann’s Sons, pred tes Visitors Later sald the Cuban and his to brewery welcome. compan robbed her in a cab while! Sold by all dealers. 24 they were riding through @ quiet part bottles $1 in Grester of London, The loss of her cash, she; New York. sald, compelled her to cable home for | more. She did not notify Scotland | Yard of the robbery, although she | knew the name of the man she accuses. | A mysterious cane. Mrs after she had Jewelry: “Thix Is a good joke on the fudge. He used to be on the bench in New York and doesn't know of the robbery yet.” GIRL HYPNOTIZED ON WITNESS STAND BY THE PRISONER? CHICAGO, Sept, 2.—A court hearing waa adjourned by Judge Harry P. Dolan on the allegation of Prosecutor Fetzer that Mra. Cora V, Monro, defendant in & swindling cane, was exérting a hyp- notic Influence over a witness for th State, The witnes ‘dred Hildey, enteon years old, was taken to the, Judge's chamber, where she related her original story of how Mrs, Monro had defamed the witness’ mother and the “judge” figures in the Myers remarked laughingly, told of the loss of her ACTS LIKE MA Try It To-day Bd kind of ra trouble is relieved by a single application. This , is the time of year you need it for burning, smarting feet, corns, bunions or callouses, Jehasen’s Foot Seap, 200 Fifth Av., N, ¥. ——e B. Altman & Gao. DIRECT ATTENTION TO A SPECIAL SALE OF LACE CURTAINS AND PANELS WHICH WILL BE HELD ON MONDAY, AT VERY LOW PRICES, SEPT. 25TH, Fifth Avenue, 34th and 35th Streets, Nem: York. A Picture Story 1 PAPER THIS IS THE AD HPLOVED MEN to work evenings; good + thoy work; eplendid remunerae Addrene P 690 Kora. a THESE ARE THE im~ 818 ANSWERS Little is the wonder that The World prints about twice as many “Help Wanted”’ ads. every week as are published in all the other New York newspapers COMBINED, |ADVERTISE IN SUNDAY WORLD TO-MORROW!