The evening world. Newspaper, December 28, 1912, Page 3

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INPUBUCSOUARE MATURE 1913 Commitee Pleads for “Safe tnd Sane” New Year Cele- iy ration This Year. SONG INSTEAD OF WINE. | you yourself te buy only bubble-| ‘weer, and lots of it, or will you ‘listen | Teagon” and witness the death of, and the birth of 1918 in one of the) Gty squares, to the accompaniment of @ band of music and tHe singing of Abeer of voices, as begs ao digni- ‘an occasion? | ‘These are questions which ‘the Zear's Wve Committer, heade Brt-worker Jacob Riis and Evenge! ir’ J. Srwich, would 1 Qtewered before for tke to have) Plans are completed tres of Mauhattan—City Hall Plaza, | Square, Madison. Square and Square—and the two prominent ints in Harlem and the Bronx whore es will almost certainly be he ly twenty thousand persons hav. @lready elected to ‘sev the old year out’ it one or another of the big public din- rooms of the upper Broadway di jets, that number of reservations—at | ces ranging from $3 to $10 per cover—| ing ‘already, been recorded by the agers of these resorts, ‘ABLES. GONE ALREADY AT) MOST PLACES. Infact, even tf you desired a table at RY one of the prominent cafes for New | ‘*® Eve, you would almost surely | Rave to ve denied, even at this early} @ate, At the smaller and less obscure eating places, however, one may stitl ob- fain a pla wided Wile this hysterta o: tables: the city the New Procesding enthus! 4 ‘oing on In certain sections of, er supper | ¢ Committee | cally with {ts} He for a s.2n and sane observation cf| featel-oceasion., Money has come in| us quantities to defray the ex- of celebrations at the aforesaid Pedlic centres unt!! there is more tian! ugh to provide music and alnging i lem and the Bronx if the necessary Permits are secured. JAt Madison Square, commencing at BM o'clock on Tuesday night, the Peo- ple’s Chora! Union, under the leader-! @hip of Mr. Walter Demrosch, will give ied by a The singing will con-| s the “Battle Hymn | My God, to O Thou Great Je- bovah!" and others, concluding with| “America,” in which the audience is| requested to join. | At City Hall Plaza the music and| le, ‘Guide M. tertainment will be in charge of the} Boanwcicl Chorus of the City of New| rk, which wil! render the same char- ter of programme assisted by choirs oo the boroughs of Brooklyn and/ a8, FO SING HYMNS THAT MARKED! TITANIC’S RUIN. ‘A$ Herald Square the Mendelssohn @iee Ciud, comprised of. leading busi- fee and professional men of Greator Mew York, will assemble to sing songs Of farewell to the old year and wel- ome to the new. The clubd will not as organization, but a great tion of Its lange membership will present. At Union Square the Salvation Army isters and their big band will have rge of the festivities. If permits Sranted in Harlem and the Bronx x wlhging cubs will be Immediately fied and will appear at those places. ¢@ouching feature of the singing of ide Me, O Thou Great Jehovah " at vartous gatherings will be the adop- “gi ‘every case, of the tune as i uty of April last. Both of these were sung as the big liner went) ita grave at tie bottom of the sea. ¢ twelve o'clock the music. wfl and the revellers may do as they fit, though it ts the hope of the com- having the matter {n charge that people will “go slow” and “rid New Fark City of the reputation for debauch- @y erid drunken orgies which it now fas throughout thé country.” otal FURS FOR PARIS BEAUTIES VARY WITH HOUR OF DAY. Different Sets for Morning, After- «moon and ‘Evening Is the Present Fad. PARIS, Dec. %.—Despite the mildness @f the winter, Parisians have never Worn such @ wealth of furs are now @ispinyed by those who can affogi @em. Women keep separate sets of furs for morning, afternoon and eve- ming wear. Before noon astrachan is worn. When madame goes shopping or makes calls tn the afternoon she pre- @ers mink or skunk. In the evening’ has @ decolle! costume lightly immed with ermine, white fox, or inchiile. The complexion of the wearer must ‘ee taken into account, for, while South- @xn beauties enjoy the advantage of fooking well in all kinds of furs, the @oman with fair hair looks best in fox, moleskin, or some gray fur,. tnut hair harmoniges with skunk, hile otter goes with auburn tresses, Fur hes aleo largely replaced felt in the, favored combination being i nk for the outside and chinchilla the under aide of the toque, Voice (nw Bet tee Threat Sere? Peet Os pat bens ser Programmes at the four civie!, | committed itself to the affirmative of | | analysi@, and no amount of padding, no ‘fool makes the best wife. Copyright, 1912, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York World). Women With Bony Souls Are Responsible “There Will Be No Qu tion of Matrimony .at Allif We Have Petticoat Government, as Seerns Inevitable,” Writes “A Mere Man,” Who Adds, “Women Are Taking All the Jobs from the Men, Even Foundry Work.” “Do Fathers Teach Their your Boys Chivalry Toward Women? Do Mothers Nowadays Teach Their Daughters the Art of Making Others Hap- ms Asks “‘Mre. Anna BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. “Oo FaTwERS TEACH THE Bowe Cwvaray 2° ase “Her soul was bony and at the base of her was a vanity gaunt and greedy.” So H. G. Wells pillories a type NIXOLA GREELEY—SMITH courtship and who inurmurs sweetly ¢! MANY MEN DON’T CARE ABOUT YOMEN'S SOULS. Of course there are a great many men to whom’ soul-quality doesn't mat- ter. Within five years the question of whether or not women possess souls was seriously debated in the Persian t, and it was not until the Middle Ages that European opinion this ticklish problem, ™ those happy, luxurions, modern encounter the oldest brand of ideas and the newest model of the talking machine it does not matter if the wife's soul ig bony, provided she has @ chest which shi monds to advagt: to the bony-souled woman who is married to the man who is also an artist, and woe be to the bony- sonled man whose wife has found him out! In the marriage of true minds it is soul-quality that counts in the final number of frills and bows and sachets will serve to disguise that angularity of spirit for which Mr, Wells bas found so apt and true a phrase. ‘As between the Goddesses of Wis- dom and Beauty and Power, if a man has to make a choice he does well to echo the judgment of Parts, The wom- an of importance, the woman of Intel- tual achievement, 1s so apt to have sacrificed or to have been born with- out that glowing womaniiness which men properly seek and exalt, But she {el often bony—of woul—yet the werli’s great women geniuses were supremely womanly—from Bappho to George Sand and Mary Wolstonecraft. Men in their matrimonial judgments are prone to be superfic It does not oc- cur to the young man seekir wife that a purring, blu , Dlond kitten may have a soul of solld concrete; that a siim, * ight-haired Uttle school teacher may possess the opulent spirit of Aphrodite herself, ‘They live by catch words, and the favorite catch word about women in that the amiable And then some day the man wito has chosen ac- cording to this formula realizes that his {deal has resolved itself into the arid femininity described in that merciless phrase, “Her soul was bon; and at the base of her was # vanity gaunt and greedy.” And if later he meets a woman who is hot # fool and whose lo ie aot angular and stark, the world has had one more marriage for worse instead of for better, Love and sympathetic understanding are the supreme qualities of wifi hood, but they are not generally to be found where men most seek them. Readers of The Evening World have contributed the following interesting| opinions: WHEN WOMEN POTE THEY'LL) SETTLE THE QUESTION. i Dear Madam: There will be no question of matrimony at all if the present estate of affairs ends logi- cally, as it inevitably will (unless checked in time) in petticoat gov- ernment. The women are gradually taking away all the Jobs from tlie men—even foundry work is not dis- ained—and since women are in the majority always, and offer their nervices cheaper, it is only @ ques- tion of time when there will be nothing left for man to do, There is nothing that some man can't do better than all women, and, con- versely, there is nothing that a man can do that some woman can't de in 8 atipanou way, ond she wil of the modern woman in “The New Machiavelll"—a type responsible for many unhappy marriages. I have always felt a certain sympathy for the man who prefers a womanly foo) to an intellectual prig—a bony souled wearer of the mortarboard, a delver into ¢old-storage facts and embalmed ide Men have come to use the word strong-minded when they wish to describe the woman whose soul is bony, unrounded by human sympa: thies and fine feminine perceptions. The worst of it is that a great many bony souls lurk underneath the most softly padded rosy flesh; a great many limpid eyed Venuses bave soul skeletons of steel. The fond, fair, yielding little thing who gazes admiringly into your eyes during hat “It must be simply wonderful to jbe a big, strong man like you” may in the intimacies of marriage reveal e does not delay. | herself as the possessor of an osaified soul. be hired because ate 1s compelled to work cheaper, through the force of competition in her own sex. When all the work is in the hands of the women the next step will be to seize the reins of government, @nd make all those fine laws that will bring on the Millennium—to hear the women. tell it, As the men will then have no means of earning a living, and women will want husbands, they will have to support them, Whether euch hus- bands are worth purchasing mains to be seen, There is no remedy against this devastating ftood of wien usurping the work , except to go back to the me, pointed out by Nature logic: the man as the home- the woman as the and provider and home-maker, and neither to be al- lowed to encroach upon the work of the other. As there is never more work than the men alone can at- tend to, it would be possible for a to support such children as he thought fit to bring Into the world, since he would be freed from the incubus of female competition, necessarily lowering wages. The clent Germans did not invent we Salle Inw, for it was imposed by Nature before man existed. I know of only one exception—the King- dom of the Bees—which anticipated the advanced woman of to-day in covery that the males are y Miologica factors, after- ward to be got rid of by the simple expedient of stinging them to death! When woman rules, per- man wiil be dragged into at the point of the Sword, or, more sppropriately, at the point of the more deadly hat- and then, later, quietly con- 1 to the lethal chamber, e# of her use to the state. It is even ponsible that he may be re- served for a more terrible fate: he may be talked to death! A MERE MAN IT IS A QUESTION OF TRAINING CHILDREN. Dear Madam: I think one of th greatest obstacles. to mair bliss is to be found tn the bringing up of the present generation. To be sure, our boys and girls receive a good education as far as general knowledge 1s concerned, which they acquire in sehoolrooms; but about thelr home life? Do mothers nowa- days have time and patience to teach thelr daughters the art of making orhers happy? Do fathers teach their boys chiv- alry toward women? Do parents combine in instilling within their children the princtples of eelf-respect and honor, of love and devotion, of politeness and courtesy toward thelr parents and elders as well ay among themselves? Are they taught that persona! happiness ts founded upon self-control and self. denial, that happiness is only the r sult from our own good deeds—i. e., that we make others happy? We cannot ex to reap apple nese for ourselves unless we sow the seeds of gladness tor others. The great trouble lies with the big I. Itis I, 1, Tall the time, As long as I have and get all I want, what does it matter If she mate that T am tled to gets his or her rights” Many man who marries does so in order to have a cheap housekeeper, as he does not earn enough to pay helo; he marries so that he may enjoy the comforts of home at small expense, And the girl? “Oh! I am so tired of my Job, I wish I could get married so I wouldn't have to work any more!”, > <Therd to great selfishness on both \ sm g ¢ s2e “WARN WOMEN RULE MeN WiLL FORCED mITO MATRIMONY AT TH FIT OF A MATIN” aire od, sides, And this selfishness will kill in ume that bit of brought them together. When we enter into the state of marriage it is for “better or worse.” Therefore, unless your love ts @ enough to overcome your own pature, to conquer your own bad temper and substitute self-denial and Patience, you never will be happy. You can never control others unless you can control yourself, MRS. ANNA 8. LED BY ABRASS BAND, SUFFRAGETTES PLAN 10 ENTER ALBANY T0-NiGHT Delegation From Capital Will Meet Hiking “Army” and Conduct It Into City. NIVERVILLE, N. ¥., Dec, 2,—The suffragist pligrims are on their lant leg on the hike to Albany, Not on thelr last legs, mind you, for they left here this morning in high spirits and declared they would sleep in the shadow of the Capitol to-night. A decided drop in the tempe had no deterrent effect. It made Gen, Rosalie Jones and her little band the more determined to push for- ward, to the end of the march, It means an elghteen-mile tri through the deep snow, but the women went to it with the Joy of goldiers fac- ing home afier a long and arduous cam- paign. were astir early in. the n ning and were excited over the pros- * of the finish before night. Word has been received that Albany ls ready for thelr coming and will meet them with open arms and the freedom of the city will eins. The pilgrims are pleased beyond measure at the thought of having a complished their mission, for they say there is no long a ch ce of failure. They arp proud as debutantes the day after the ball, To-night will witness their hour of triumph. They will get a fortaste of their victory before Albany is reached. They expect to take luncheon at East Greenbush and t they will be met by fifty or more ‘enthuslasts from the Capftal City, who | will escort them the rest of the way A vand will head: the marchers from there to Albany and cro will be in | waiting to greet then as they enter the PRINCE. OF WALES love which | Ordered to Resign From Club | | |dewn to Buckingham Palace and reached | 1912, Ninth Article of a Series a For.a Great Many Unhappy Marriages AS IN A COLLEGE “RAG,” DISCIPLINED BY KING, at Oxford Which Indulged in a Too Gay Affair. ~ LONDON, Dec. %.—The Prince of Wales hi been compelled to resign from the Bullingdon, the most ewagger club at Oxford. Details of the affair became known to-day. His Royal High- ness, on @ recent night, engaged in what the students called a which is @ mild sort of frolic, but discouraged by the university authorittes. At the height of the gayety, @ pryin proctor came along and took down t james of all the participants, which he later reported. It is not considered @ disgrace for students thus to be “progged” as euch reporting is termed, but when news of the affair traveled! the royal ears, King George commanded the future King of England to resign| from the club, ae DROPS DEAD IN OFFICE OF GENERAL ELECTRIC Co. John J. Lowthatre, forty years old, a salesman connected with the. Foreign Department of the General Electric Compan 30 Church street, dropped dead to-day in his office on the nine- teenth floor of the building, Lowthaire was married and lived with his wife apd one child In Richmond Hii, | Long Island. According to his brother, | Robert Lowth: also employed by the | General Eh mpany, he teft home| at his usual time this ing and ap-| peared to be cheerful id not com- plain unt! he reached ‘is office, when he sald he did not feei well. He tugged at his collar several times. As he turned to speak to anot! man he feil for- ward in his chair, There was a panic among the young women employees when Mr, Lawthaire dropped dead and all were allowed to return to their homes, The office m ager refused formation, despite the rumors th man's death was due to sulc police deciare that the man dj himself. | WORLD ALMANAC FOR 1913 ON SALE MONDAY MORNING. | The World Almanac for 1913 will b obtainable newsstands and ready for delivery by mall on Monday morn ing. It Is, as every year, a compilation on all subjects of pubile interest This) year many new facts for ref have heen added to those already in- cluded under the old broad standard. at ' clty. Information regarding the new Par-| It is sald @ number of enthusiasts are ceéls Post, the new pensions law, the| jout of town for the holidays, the pil-| new Panama Canal Act, the Hay- \grims not having been expected until! Pauncefote treaty, the trusts of the Monday or Tuesday, but this will in no) United States s now constituted, | minish th: hulsasm of. the | marine disasters, polar explorations, ex- | to the herole ttle band. Mrs. | positions. geograpates! research | and avitt and Miss Elizabeth Smith, the latter president of the Albany Equal Franchise League, will head the wel- coming host at Greenbush and will take (the pilgrims In charge. Before all th's are in the snow places » to cary, to diseou jand not fightin thelr knees. grind, ¢ lent determined cause, These forward with actual pleasure to the greater march in cold February to Washington. pclae Adal eb waa It is a, In haedy ZU-MO-TA stops pal Doctor indome; surree wet, 806, OF happens, a long dreary | gtaets is ahead of the five pilgrims, | penalt slosning through | e! ulated |} electrical date Among the older feature n amplified and thi methods of inflicting th sporting records, progress 18 presented up to which have » crimes figs ne and n account of new primary laws and jaws regarding negro disfranchisement, | the benefactions of the year, w list of multimiliionatres, the death roll of the year, & list of the chaplains of the |} army and navy, with accounts of the progress of Mterature, music, the drama nd art for 1912 and, of course, the Sgcord of general news events, F DANCER WOE CHEFLY A SMILE Fr. MacErlain of Jersey City Hears About “Little Egypt's” Appearance at Smoker. | GRAND JURY TO ACT. Officers of Club That Gave Show Say They’re Sure Tights Were Worn. Following the receipt of a: @nony- lain, pastor of the Church of the sacred Heart at Bidwell and Jackson avenues, Jersey City, telling him that Eeypt” had appeared at @ recent smoker, it was announced tast night uid to determine just how little the dancing woman wore, ‘The letter to Father MacEriain told that the emoker given on the night of Dec. 4 at the New York Bay House in avenue by the Original Stegman Club had been attended by seventy men, some of whom were parishioners of the priest. ‘ qT ter described the evening's tertainment in minute detail. The writer amerted that when “Littié Egypt" cavorted out on the stage dhe wore @ smile, The priest got into communication at once with Police Captain Thomas Nu- Gent of the Ocean avenue station. Tho two went to John Beese, proprietor of the New York Bay House, Beese said that Jf “Little Egypt” had appeared in the undrensed state described in the let- ter it was news to him. HEARD A LOT OF CHEERING IN HALL. “I was out of the hall a great part of| burning out of @ tug’s emokeatack. he sald, “and supposed my ‘The fisherman, however, the time, vaudeville performante was being I heard an unusual let of cheering and! ryeteict that laughter and after @ time I went to in- vestigate. The dancing woman was not on the stage then. They told me ‘a worn tights. $3 Richard W. Whaten, President of the club, Was positive that “Little Egypt” aid not dance on the stage with a amile as her chief adornment. He was of the opinion that she wore tights. But Police captain and priest were not satisfied. The police blotter showed that Patrolman Robertson had been sent to see that there was no disorder of any kind. Some one had told Capt. Nugent that there: was to be box! and Rob- erteon was on hand to prevent any “YY PRIEST IS ASKING SHIP ALL AFLAME 1,170 IN BELLEVUE VANSHES WN SA SEARH I SHAKEN BY BON ABLOGKAMAY Revenue Cutters Fail to Get| Explosion Wrecks Grocery Any Trace of Vessel Burned Off Block Island. NEWPORT, R. I, Dec. %.—No trace Of the schooner reported to be burning | 4 First avenue rattled wi at sea was found by the revenue cut-| Bellevue and startled the 1,110 tera Acushnet and Seneca, which apent| in that institution about the night cruising about the waters of | Ome was hurt by Block Island and flashing thetr search. | V8 no panic tn the hospital, Ngbte over the seas. The cutters re- tumed to port at 4A. M. to-day, returned to their t seen nothing of any vessel in distress. Throughout the night @ heavy north- panied by a biting cold, which made the work of the searchers dificult. With and the soa subsided, Island last night. bout twelve miles off shore. Life aav- era, unable to cause of heavy ploded is a tenement mous letter by the Rev. J. C. Mackr- | wost gale blew along the coast, accom. | thirty-two families—two grou meat “Little | he rising of the sun the wind moderated | are his living rooms, whicl with his wife and four The fire was first reported trom Biook | the hall ie the The burning qaft| di Bartolo and appeared to be @ three or four mastes, | tolo's living to her assistance be- | against the wall of Crotto: me a and the distance| which is partially wrecked. Crottona’s Store and Causes Panic Among 200 in Tenement. A bom that wrecked the front of Ne. indows im patients midnight. Ho the bomb and there Night Su- Pertntendent McHale sending doctors hut Rurses through every ward im: ‘Mediately with the assurance the explo- there was alarm. ‘The building where the bomb was 3 H #3 tn all. On the nort! ind floor Stefano market and back rl Hilt barber inthe a & - ‘The -' from shore, notified the revenue cutters, | feet were cut when he dashed out after The Seneca was at New London, and| the explosion in the hope of catchit, a Teached the scene within a few hours, | glimpse of the man who placed the ex- and about midnight the Acushnet ar- rived from Woods Hole. plosive there, Seafaring| The explosion shattered the fromt men believed that the crew of the| windows of the building and was of schooner must have been riven from | force suMictent to break « neavy stone their vessel by the flames, and conse-|step. The halls were filled with dust quently the cutters gave their attention | from fal pilaster, which made the to a search for small boats, The sea | tenants upstairs think the explosion had wee #0 rough that it was believ Goubtful if suoh light craft could stay afloat long. 10 A, M. and returned to her station, fi The Seneca abandoned the search at | Sit! @ meat mi ‘eg | deen followed by fire. Many of them took to the roof, Others came dewn re-escapes. The police had dtMoulty ing them back into thelr homes, few months ago had it in the block above that but the Acushnet continued her efforts | in which he is now located. He sold his to clear up the mystery. Sev: 1 tow | business and went to Italy with bie boat captains here advanced the theory |family for a visit. On his return thet the tlumination seen by a Block | opened bis new market, starting busi- Teland fiwherman was made by the told Supt. H. of the Third Life Saving he is positive he saw a M. Knowles vessel on fire. Oo ANGRY DADDY CASE PA FNS THEM ED, GES OM HONEYMOON porte idn't even know there hea teen a| Reached Pier After Hot Race, woman dancer, Robertson toll the captain, “Fo! time I was out of the hall and it | ble that in my on the absence ‘Little Egypt’ wi T WILL PUSH INQUIRY BE- FORE GRAND JURY. Father MacEriain yesterday ques- PRI tioned young men of his parivh whol and wealthy citizen of had been at the smoker. They all told him that “Little Egypt" was a feature Just in Time to Accom- pany Newlyweds. When Henry 8. Gibson, a prominent ‘olumbus, 0., Id daughter, ned his seventen-yes of the evening. but as far as they knew] Meta, the apple of his eye, had eloped was in tights, id is not yet,” the priest said letter to me and don’t care, but this matter Is going to be taken be- fore the Grand Jyry, if I can there. “The social conditions of New York J are bad enough, but Jersey City, if it] mits he rather going as it is, will soon rival any! put he place. In the present administration the] ty py keep Ocean avenue section of my parish has been converted into @ veritable slum, And efforts are being made by certai don't know who wrote this! Honald been attentive to her. et it] Went in purauit. he was wrathy. gone to ¢ He heard she had ‘eveland with Francia I. Me- aged twenty-three, who had So Papa Gibson Not that Papa Gibson had any ob- ons to McDonald. In fact he ed- liked the young man, waa too young In Cleveland he found a marriage license had heen issudi, and after the use of many taxicabs he influences in the Excise Board, placed | located an Episcopal minister who said there by the present Mayor, to convert| he had married the co the opposite aide of my parish, on Jack- son avenue, into a similar slum, “Respectable oltix me in protesting against the granting of certan excise licenses to saloons, but our protests have been in vain, Con- ditions a in my parish, and those responsible for it must be brought to justice. ———— PRINCESS SENDS CHALICE. church from Cardinal 1 | Princess Louise Havaris } a golden chalice, with the arms of the i hureh ardinal Princess set in diamonds, The for the new Spanish Catholic here and was 4 ivered to the by Miss Mary Boone of Baltinore, who | arrived from Munich on Tuesday, Customs» officials declined to allow} Miss Boone to -tal © cialies from the ship until the Cardinal himseit had | declared It to be ® Kift to the coureh, Tt was then admitted duty free, Mies Boone is a personal friend of the Bayap. fan Princer | Cardinal Farley expects to use the mitt tn eclovrating a mass at the new church soon. _ Cleanses the Stomach Evacuates the Bowels Purifie | | ithat come from clogged bow 8 have joined with | gon, now Intolerable and this last | Young Gxhibition must be the last of Its kind| America only from New York, and| Frost bit The Chocolate Laxative Protects the whole family against the evils of impure blood At All Druggists, 106 gad 25c, “They said they we the minister told Mr. Gib- . Gibson, atill wrathy, was wise im hte He figured the couple #0 to South would itherward he hurried as rapidly os possible, Again he taxicabbed to-ay— this time to the Lampert & Holt plor, He reached there just fifteen minutes before the new’ ship, Vestris, was ue to sail on her m | Ayres, Cries of Papa Gibson of the new HMner and confronted Me- Donald and his bride. McDonald pre- pared for @ fight or a Might and Mra, Me Id almost collapsed. “AW "Are married?” demanded Gib- son We are,” replied MeDonald, dought- ity Honeymoon to South Amertea, 1 believe?” ‘You're right,” answered the @onsine 1 “AM right, UM go along. T think the honeymoon will do me goad, too," said Gibson, Then he extended his parental bless- the shin sa s the Blood ote ay! Speaker of repl! firmly establion: bre not married to any Mrs. Clark.” den trip to Buenos | Cura ness there about three weeks ago, ‘The police believe Crottona’s story end are working on that theory. ——— A TIP FOR HENRY. 1 gon eal’ Sar Htenpesk, na he laid paper aside, “that Champ Clark os he intends to keep on delng the House.” “Well, let him if his wife Is willing,” | ied Mra. Henpeck, “but Just get it your mind that yeu Winter Rashes Demand se 0f i— Cuticura Soap d Ointmen pes clef mo eczemas, itchings dental to winter sports are’ telieved by warm baths ety. f followed Sunday World Want Directory Contains more advertisements than any other Sunday newspaper, These advertisements are con- veniently collected, classified and in- dexed, Helpful alike to employer and the one seeking employment, the real estate buyer and seller, the land- lord and the tenant, the business man and the broker, The busy man’s indispensable guide and reference book \s the Sunday World Want Directory

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