The evening world. Newspaper, February 21, 1913, Page 12

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

_ Coughs a. HS DOUBLE LFE BETUKE-EWEY' COURT SARL Real Gay Dog Is This Canine Lothario, With Two Home: | The General) ryects a | Pair of Lior\ and Two Names. CHANGES TASTES, As Mrs. Halloway’s Pet, | Meat, Won't Touch It in | Hynes Residence. roo. A strong suspicion that a heretofore Fespected Parkville dog has been lead ing a double life and masquerading der two names Benerated to-day dy @ proceeding in Fla Cour COBBLERS CANNOT FINANCE SUBWAYS, was fore Magistrate McGuire # title of the case was “Mrs. zabeth Hynes No. #% Fort Hamilton nue, va. Mra) Helen Halloway, No. Fort Mamii-) ton avenue” and the point a ue Was the possession or ownership of the perce aforesaid dog, which is a ce by | dreeding and descent, and was referred) “\We Don’t Buy Shoes of to by Mra, Hynes as “Duke and by} i: ao. Se Bankers or Money of Shoe- The facts as wet forth by the plains id tiff are that “Duke” to he: six years ago when he was a pup. was Kl makers,” Mayor Adds, RAVE WOMEN ALL, Olive Shultz accepts a TAs 15 th Manx cat Put on their meéerriest, News Oddities Ashland, O., hen takes @ big lead in the egg contest to-day, Regular lottery | and every patron has a nce’ to win a prize, Frank Rech had a hard boiled x for breakfast. Inside the shell but running through both yolk and white | he found a safety pin Towa House has passed along to the Senate a bill closing all salvons in the State from 7D. M. to7 A. Wiliam Huggins, aged 101, has enrolled as a student in a farming class at Grand Forks, N. D. He wants to keep up with the times. A will destroyed twenty-five years ago and existing now only in the memory of the witnesses is to be probated at Aurora, IL, by decree of the highest State Court. Richard Terry wrote the will and disinherited his son, then under indict- ment for wife murder, Is wife destroyed the will so the son might get the Early in life he manifested a disposi tion, not uncommon in Parkville, to roam from his home and fireside at tr- regular pertods, Sometimes he be gone only over night he would remain away Mayor Gaynor drove a few subway educational spikes to-day in a letter to Henry J. Home of the Bronx, who re- cently wrote to Chairman Mdward &, would At other times two or three] MeCall offering to build the subways days. Dy popular subscription. The finances FOUND “DUKE” WAS “DEWEY"| of the situation appealed to the Mayor's correspondent and IN OTHER HOME. “Duke meandered from the Hynes pees chines pak home Inst Saturday, after a hearty |expected to furn’ lunch of dog biscuit, soup bone and | t mst saver krout and liver. Yesterday Owen| The Ma 3 We do not buy MeCormick, a Flatbush dullder and @| S!0es of bankers or money of shoe- frlemd of the Hynes family, happened | Makers” te visit the home of Mra, Holloway, Nie ‘There, he solemnly averred in court to- | DENIES day, he found “Duke” dosing before the kitchen fire beside the remnants of a hearty lunch of ple, cake, oatmeal! oo for money. and milk, they aled to the Mayor, likewise ap= who says among bblers? cannot he needed millions ter follows: “GOES TO MOR- city GAN” FOR MONEY. “You object to the city or the rail- fonds going to the firm of Morgan & The city does not go to Morgan & Co, for money. When “When did you get Mrs. Hyne's do the city sells its bonds they are ad- asked McCormick. Vertined and go to the highest bidder. “1 don't know any Mrs, Hynes, end| The bidders and purchasers are many. that is my dog," replied Mrs. Holloway.| YOU can bid for and purchase even “He is @ collie, and hie mame is Dewey," | On? bond if you winh. Am to rail- roads, I am sure I do not know where Mr. McCormick hastened to the home| they will get money to build and carry of Mrr Hynes, and Mrs, Hynes has-| on their onterprines except of bankers. tened to the home of Mrs, Hallowa: halts tlle way, The dog was equally| qc Waere, eu 70m have thom ge friendly to Mrs, Hynes and Mrs. Hallo- way and each argued ownership, Mrs. Halloway calling him Dewey and Mrs. Mynes calling him Duke, and ho an- awering to both names impartially. Mra, Hynes demanded the dog and Mrs. Halloway refused to give him up. ‘The upshot was the appearance of Mra. Halloway and Mrs. Hynes in the court. Rach side had half a dozen witnesses. The case for the defense is that Mra. Helloway received the dog two years| , ago from a neighbor who moved away, Dewey wandered from home at irregu- that Morgan & Oo, take any of ‘them, “Of course, you may not understand sign the contract with the elty to put! tn and pay over to the olty the vast Jar intervals, sometimes betng gone tWo| gums which they are called upon to| or three days, expend without first having made a! DOG HAS TWO SETS OF APPE-)| contract for the money with bankers, | TITES, TOO, or people who deal in or lend money. | Mrs. Halloway said “Dewey” 1s par-| They are not In a position to contract) tial to candy, cake, ple, oatmeal, milk, | With the city until they firat have a @oughnuts and chicken. “Dewey,” sho| Comtract securing to them the money eaid, wouldn't eat dog biscuits, gnaw | necessary. They cannot pick the money tones or eat potatoes and other vege-|¥P off tho strect as they go along. tables. ire. Hynes “Duke” |96 18 FAIR RATE FOR PLACE- ‘woulin’t touch anything but meat and Vegetables and dog biscuit and turned MENT OF BONDS: up his nose at cake, candy and mik.| .“! understand the bonds are being | “Could it be possible,” asked Magis.|PlAced at 96. T should think that was! trate McGuire, “that both these dose a fairly oo plasement ft Shem, ree fare the same dog and that he migrates| Cty !# In no way Mable for these! back and forth between theso two peace-|VOnts The city does not guarantes| fel homes for exercise, a change of| tem 3t has nothing to. do with gene ond @ change of dict?” placing them. It is none of the city's Neither Mrs. Hynes nor Mra, Hal-| Concern where the companies borrow foway would agree that such a possi-| thelr money. ‘Tho city takes note in| bility was anything but remote. Each | the contract of only the actual amount| diaplayed a license for her dog, but ad-|°" ™ which the companies pat in, mitted that she had never bought | ‘the #mount actually paid over to the dog collar. city, and no more Is funded. ‘The tne win the absence of the dog,” decreca | terest on it Im pald out of the profits Magistrate McGuire, “1 am forced to|% the railroads. Also @ sinking fund @tomias this case. I would suggest that | *UMectent to pay the bonds off inside of Mrs, Hynes bring a civil suit against | forty Years I¥ Put aside out of such 3, Halloway and in that way eithor | P0O"'* Se cier the 7 ys lite of ine eantn The city puts In one-half of the con- inthario in dispute or otherwine eettie | *t7UcHon Money, and the companies put tr use’ te nol ‘Dewe In the other halt But they have to pay Mrs, Hynes started in quest of a oWwit| Qiovose you know, the city builds, the goure and ure Halloway, went home t+] Faliroads by contracts publicly let.” The ares Soe dae we Pee? | companies do not build them, keeping up since Mr, Mand, of eourss, you knew the city owne the railroads from the start. ‘The companies put in all the money for the vquipment of these ratiroads. The city contrib- utes no part of that, I have al- ready stated to you that the in- terest and sinking fund donde of the company are paid ont Of the earnings, The interest and sinking fund om the city's money are paid in the same way. there be any overplus it 1s divided equaly between the compantes and the city, That is the contract. “The operating lease ts for a term of thirty-nir tains a provision that at any time after the expiration of ten years the city may | end the lease and take over the property Col. C. H, Jones. ‘The funeral of Col. Charles H. Jones, formerly editor of the New York World, the St, Louis Republic and the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, will take place Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock. Services will be held at Campbeil's Mortuary Chapel, No. ML Went Twenty-third «treet. The pall- vesrers will be Oscar 8. Straus, Henry Wojiman, Leslie R. Palmer, Gordon Jonn M. French, M. J. Cody Crosby. SORRY HOWES THINKS OFFI. CIALS ARE GRAFTERS, “1 thought T would write you all this because you seem to be an Intel- ligent man and I hope you are desirous of knowing the facts, You ask whether the companies can go to any other bankers besides Morgan & Co. for money. Yes, they can go to any bank- er they see fit. Hundreds of bankers throughout this country are furkishing *es Colds that these operating companies cannot, Without “notice’ 8. But the contract con- | | and operate the railroads itself, or turn | | them over to @ new operator, as it may money to defend himself, She confessed this on her death bed, and the heirs under the destroyed will brought sult, Mrs, Pila Harrtson White, wife of an Atlanta business man, has been ar- rested charged with swind!ing some twenty-five men there out of suns ranging from 0 to $2,000 by posing as an helress to “an estate in Kentucky worth sev- eral millions.” ‘The directors of the Savings Bank of Barnegat, N. J., have voted to give every baby born there In 1913 a bank book with a dollar deposit. ‘Twins and triplets not barred, A workman excavating a bungalow site at Wiiton, Conn, struck gold ore running $0 to $90 @ ton ‘The Short Hille, (N. J.) high achool girls will play basketball with the boys of Millburn on March 1, ‘The boys as a handicap are to wear babies’ long clothes, Tast year the boys in hobble skirts defeated the girls in bloomers. Margaret Hyland DeVaux, a Chicago painter, who married Henri DeVau: aixty-year-old admirer, abroad two years ago, and left him the same day, been left $10,000 under his will, day the pil THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY THREE MORE DAYS IN THE “HIKE” TO WASHINGTON [A MAP of the HIKE” t, LIVE STOCK DAYCay7) NONE BRAVER MATES. UT THIS AwAy AND LOOK AT IT WHEN THEY WIN. rim” vags” laddest rag 1918, aa Still More To Come. The Way Is Long.| Bay 9) ‘Warl,harl, the gargs all here a? Tea iw Ae = y// Wayside , Sentiment (Sto Fousom SWVES FATHER BODY FROM POTTER'S FIELD AFTER LONG SEARCH Chance Leads George Edens to Morgue, Where He Finds Aged Parent’s Clothing. ‘The last chapter in a remarkable story of an aged man’s disappearance and the subsequent discovery of his nameless grave in Potter's Field was closed to-day when the body of George Edens was lowered into the ground at Mount Olivet Cemetery. Edens was a retired grocer of Mas- peth, who Lived in comfortable ease with his two sons, George and ‘Thomas, on Grand avenue in that village. He was seventy-one years old. He had few versions; one of them was coming in to New York and sitting on the recreation plers on hot summer nights to hear the band play. He left his home on July 15 and never eame back. Though the sons searched all the hospitals and mongues in the «reater city, they found no trace of the ‘old man, and his disappearance remained & sealed mystery. George Edens, happening to be in Man- hattan Wednesday, thought he would Willis P, Hazzard, aged eighty-eleht, the ‘“Iermit of Secane,” was found dead in the cellar of his homestead in the Philadelphia suburb yesterday. The place is furnished tn priceless mahogany, but the hermit slept on the pallet of straw where he died and played with ruts which he had tamed. Boctety women of Washington have begun a war on rats. Not the hair kind, tut those that infest the city markets, They threaten to prosecute dealers who refuse to ald in the work of extermination. Called on to explain in court why he hadn't paid alimony to his wife, Sam- uel Witt said: “There are two reasons, I have no money, and I wouldn't pay if 1 had.” He will join the Ludlow street alimony club. Cusa words over the telephone are not a basis for dam: decision of the Iowa Supreme Court. The plaintiff alleged humillation,”” and sued, but lost the case, *, according to a hock, fright and A bill making it a misdemeanor directly" a tip has been Introduced in the Pennsylvania Legislature, His joking friends locked Walter A. Lutwych of Ellicott City, Md., in his room on the night set for his wedding and he failed to appear, After two weeks last night to the Jokers, Herman Schaumbaum went to the Gotham Theatre to win a prize by riding a trick mule, The mule was sick and the offer was withdrawn. Herman “kicked” and was put out. Yesterday he was awarded $100 damages by a jury. NOTES OF THE THEATRES. George Scarborough's first play, “At Ray," was produced by the Shuberts at Plainfleld, J, last night. Andrew Mack and Chrystal Herne were the stars, to the programme for the Junior League of the Children’s Educational Theatre benefit at the Century March 2, More than one hundred delegates of the Chi Pai Fraternity convention went in a body to the Winter Garden last night, Joseph M. Sparks will play the part of a colored butler In “A Man's Friends.” Five of the players in “Under Many Flags” have birthdays to-morrow, 60 there ta to be a Washington Birthday dinner at the Hippodrome between per- formance ican Maid,” will come to the Broadway a week from Monday. Louise Gunning will be the Maid. Col. William F, (“Buffalo Bil") Cody 8 begn elected president of the Show- en's League of America in convention at Chicago. George M. Cohan is to be met at the @tation by the mayor and a band and wlll be escorted through the town when he goes to Providence, R. L, his birth- place, March 17, Kathleen Clifford, the Amertoan V: Tilley, 1s Henry W. Savage's new Little Boy Blue. Mrs. A. H. Woods eatled for Europe on the Kaiserin Auguste Victoria yes- terday, She was late and the liner was held up ten minutes for her. ——— MRS. LE COMPTE INSANE? She Is Removed to King’s C Hospital for Test. Mre, Madelon Le Compte, whose troubles with her husband, Edward Le Compte, of No. 109 Woolsey street, As- toria, have kept the courts of Queens County busy for a month or more, was taken to Kings County Hospital to-day for inquiry into her sanity. The order Augustus Thomas ts writing a play for Charles Frohman im which Jonn| } Mason will appear next season, ‘anny's First Play” reached its two hundredth performance at the Comedy last night. John Daly Murphy ts to play Rusty Snow, a character part, in support of H. B. Warner in “The Ghost Breaker." Max Relnhardt, the German stage pro- ducer, who sold the American rights for movies of his “Miracle” to A. H. Words for $26,000, has begun suit to prevent the New York Film Company selling ‘Mir- ace” flims, Marjorie Lane, of “The Honeymoon Express,” will tell the Twilight Club to- night about the chorus girl as she really is, Mra. Philip Lydig presides. William A, Brady will give Frederic Arnold Kumme: “The Painted Wo- man” at the Playhouse March 4, with Florence Reed as a Spanish girl at the head of the cast. H. B. Warner, Edith Wynne Mathison, Francis Wileon and the Bernard Sini eimer Orchestra ty follow @ blind chance and he visited the morgue on East Twenty-sixth atreot. The attendants had no records of unl- ‘entified persons that Edens could reco nize; but they asked him to inspect the closets where the clothing of the name- less dead is kept, after the city plot on Riker’s Island receives them, Edens did so and he was startled to find hanging there in that motley array of dead men's clothes a sult he recog- nized an having been his father's, Thomas Edens came in from Maspeth and he confirmed his brother's til eation of the garm The number on the suit establisned by the records to give, solicit or recelve directly or tn-| that an aged man, who had been found | in the East River on July 18, had worn those clothes. The body had been in- terred 1: Potter's Field, Yesterday the brothers went to the city’s burial ground and disinterred their father's body. To-day, after bur- fal services at a new grave, the body was reinterred in Mount Olivet. ee WOMAN WAS “GRAIN CO.” Kaew It Till Mrs. Hans An- inced Engagemen ST, LOUTS, Feb. 21.—The A. F. Haas Grain Company is going to be married. This the announcement that sta tled traders yesterday, and it more surprising because most of them had never known that the A. E. Haas Grain Company was a black-haired young woman of twenty-five yea: The formal announcem Mise Alma KE. Haas of No 01 t stated that 0, 58 Berlin rice Vanderhack of Streator, Ill, ployed successively aa stenographer, the F. P. Brockman Grain Company. Brockman died in Novem! Miss Haas bought the bust kept her identity « secre! are barred on the “foo! A WILSON IN PHILADELPHIA. Visite Dentist ‘This Afi a Comes tist here before inauguration, The Gov- polttics to him. never in @ position to answ noon for New York where he will at. committing her was signed by Judge ‘Humphrey, of the Queens County Court. Out of funds to ratlroads and other enter- prises. An Intelligent man should not be bamboozled Into believing that they | have to go to Morgan & Co, I have Already told you that one of these companies goes to Schift & Co, "You say that the city has only graft-| | ing, Incompetent, or stupid public of! | fletals to look after the pubile interests, }1 am worry you think so. In fact, I do not belleve you think so, You only try |to make yourself think wo, My asso- | clates tn the clty government are men [of the highest honesty and intelligence, | Of course 1 have to let you think any- thing you see fit of me, we “LT might suggest that I ain well known here, and have a record in the, Give service of the public. By that 1am will-/ @peration, open the Tihs what i i All moth are the symptoms of sickness. the child Castoria. It will pores of tng to be Judged, however hard you may| matter, and drive away the threat try to feel against me, It may bo you | jook for that millennium when officials and bankers and all useless people ehall be done away with. Very truly your: W. J, GAYNOR, Mayor. tend the theatre with @ personal friend, ‘He had no engagements of a political character scheduled for the da: Sorts IS, something {s wrong with baby, but we can’t tell ers recognize the term by the ‘itude, weakness, loss of appetite, inclination to sleep, heavy breathing, and lack of interest shown by baby. These It may be fever, congestion, orms, croup, diphtheria, or ecarlatina, Do not lose a minute. l start the digestive into the skin, carry off the feetid itened sickness, Genuine Costerta alwoys bears the signatere of Ms lavenue would be married to Dr. Mau- For five years Miss Haas was em- bookkeeper and cashier in the office of 190, and She As petticoats Here PHILADELPHIA, Feb. 21.—Presiden:- elect Wilson to-day made what he hoped would be his last trip to his den- ernor was asked if the dentist talke “Yes,” smiled the Governor, ‘but I'm Mr, Wilaon was in the dentist's chair three hours, leaving during the after. FIVE-YEAR-OLD NURSE. !IMPERSONATES ‘MATIY’ ~ SEES BABY BROTHERS | AND FOILS THIEF WITH -—CLMBOUT WOW) SODA GLASS ISHOOTS “lazy” Silverman Has Perfect Control and Speed in Battle With Alleged Burglar. Boy of Three Falls in Shaft and Ten-Months-Old Child Is Caught on Ledge. But for fifteen-year-old Izzy Sliver- man's yearning to be a second Christy Mathewson, Michael Burke, a sponger of No, 2% Waverley place, might not have been arraigned tn Essex Market Court to-day on a charge of burglary. Izzy is son of Harry Silverman, who has an all-night cigar store with con- fectionery and soda water annex at No, % East Fourth’ street. ‘The father sleeps in a chair near the front of the store when business falls off during the night, while Izzy occupies a bed in the rear room, Early to-day the elder Silverman awoke from @ dream of burglars, As he scrambled to his feet from the chair he got @ glimpse of @ man behind the counter helping himself to the contents of the cash drawer. Silverman made a rush for the thief and received a blow on the mouth that aent him to the floor, He slammed the front door shut with one hand and ed the intruder around the legs with the other, Despite the intruder’s violent kicking, the old man contrived to hold on, shouting all the while for ald. Isidore, which is Izz: \right name, ran into the store and grasped the meaning of the tableau in an natant. There was not a weapon of any description handy, but Izzy 1s a crack | pitcher on a boys’ baseball tearm, | proud of his skill In “putting ‘em over. The burdensome family cared for by | Mrs, Lena Kramer of No. 4 Rutrers | Street has been reduced by one, for her three-year-old son, Sammy, is dying in Beth Israel Hospital from injurtes sus- tained in @ fail from the top floor of the tenement to the asphalt paved court- yard. Another Kramer child, Philip, ten monthe old, was rescued ust as he was about to follow lis brother. Mrs. Kramer, whose husband deserted her four months ago, was left with the care of six little ones, Tillle, fourteen years old, went to work. The mother got a place as a scrubwoman. Louis, nine, and Nathan, elght years old, go to school, and forage for their noon lunch- con, It has been the custom of the mother to leave her five-year-old daugh- ter Rachel at home to care for Sammy and Philip. The custom was followed to-day. When Mrs. Kramer left the house after Tile had gone to work and Louis and Nathan had gone to school, Rachel, Sammy and Philip were bed alongside @ window 1 airshaft. In some way the window open and Sammy fell out. | Rachel ran into the hall crying. <A neighbor questioned her and reached the Kramer flat just in time to grab ttle Philip as he was half way out the|fre seached to @ tray of heavy soda- window. . i i ‘ i water glasses and got an armful. The jammy was alive when he was taken | robber dodged the firet, but the second to tho hospital, but there is sald to be ‘nit him on the arm and made him yeii no hope for him. Rachel does not know | in pain, Where hor mother and Tilly work.|~ ygzy kept letting them fy until after Louls and Nathan do not reach their|an unusually careful and elaborate home until evening. Neighbors took |swing up he bounced a heavy glass care of Rachel and Philip to-day, Joft the top of the burglar's head. The plaucdeiee ees | FOR A TARIFF COMMISSION. |man gave one desperate kick, and with blood streanving into his eyes threw open the door and darted to the strest, BI Reported, bat Not Likely to a8 Thin Seanton, | ‘The noise in the store had been heard ‘by Policemen Hackman and O'Rourke lot the Fifth street station, and they WASHINGTON, Feb, 21.—A Dill to} started from opposite directions througa create a permanent non-partisan tariff) Fourth street. The robber saw them coin- commission of five members has been jing and began to shed nickels and pon- favorably reported by the Senate Com-|nies at each jump. There was @ verit- mittee on Finance, In so doing the|able shower of small change until, committee followed the announced de-|ing that he was hemmed in, he stopp. sire of the Republican conference re- cently held, the measure being a part |* of the legislative programme adopted. | 7 Il introduced by Senator Lodge April 6, 1911, was accepted by the Fi- nance Committee without amendment beyond changing the body created from a tariff board to a tariff commission. | Although efforts will be made to pai the dill before adjournment, it !s not considered possible to accomplish that result, Many Democrats are opposed to the plan. children got the MILLIONS BENEFIT by & cup of tea at four o'clock. Try it yourself iLIPTON’S ter o’ Money. | (From the Philadelphia Record. | Many a marriage le & failure deca: the wife doesn't understand why tl husband should need any spending money. TEA Sold in airtight tins only The RED-MAN PERPETUATED NEW YORK RBOR HARBO! TO-MORROW. EARL & WILSON, Coming! Next Sunday | iw Sunday World NEW FUNNY SERIES By | GUS. MAGER Creator of SHERLOCKO | <n And allowed the policemen to over ints him. At the station he said he was Michae’ Burke, nineteen, of No. 22% Waverley place, and that he was no burglar, dle said the old man awoke from @ ftw mare, apparently, just as he entered tl door to buy someting, and attackel him, Then the boy appeared and began lopbing over inshoots, drops, fast ou and other slab specialties at his head with drinking glasses, The police say he still had $2.97 in pennies in his poc' jets Silverman sald between % and 6 pennies and nickels had been taken ‘om the drawer, After the wound made on Burke's heat with the glass had been dressed by Dr , Pinkston of Bellevue, he was locked u DRINK HABIT | RELIABLE HOME TREATMENT } Thousands of wives, mothers and sis- ters are enthusiastic in their praise of | ORRINE, because it has cured their |loved ones of the “Drink Habit” and lthereby brought happiness to their homes. Can he given secretly, OR- | RINE costs only $1.00 per box. — For | Sale by Riker-Hegeman Drug Stores. Ask them for free booklet. | Sweetbreads Do Not Go With Gout Nor Does John D. Own the Earth You Can Arrive at Fair Con- clusions on These and Other Important Points by Read- ing Next Sunday's World. Some ed tall es some other persons who can talk a great deal and very brilliantly, but_when they get through you find they have forgotten an_ essential point. ‘They have left something out of consideration. * Consideration has only thirteen letters in it, but there are 100,000,000 things left out of consideration by 100,000, 000 persons in these United States every hour of the dav. A whole system called Logic was started—maybe by Aris- totle—and built up and added to by a legion Rairaerreees in the last 1,000 years just to. prevent le leaving things out of consideration, but they keep on doing it just the same. And yet it can’t be got rid of. more things that are left out of con- sideration, the stronger and bolder it stands; because in any question to reach an exact conclusion everything must be taken into consideration, Itis, for instance, not proper to infer that John D. Rocke- feller owns the earth simply be- cause somebody in every part of the earth burns kerosene oil. You may form a pretty fair cone clusion, however, of Mr. Rock- efeller's wealth by readi | | { | The day World Magazine and Story Section next week. In fact you could not reach roper conclusion here by leaving the Sunday World out of consideration. You have formed a conclusion in your mind, no doubt, that sweet! to eat for every one. You have left out of consideration, however, the fact that this edible is the pancreas of the calf, the organ from which test, amount of uric acid is formed, hence persons suffering from gout or diabetes 1 not eat sweetbreads. You will be able to reach an exact con- clusion on this and other pointsof. diet by reading “How to Eat for a Long Life” in The Sunday World, will be careful t! to consider everything possible in relation to what you eat. Undoubtedly you would say offhand that the way to be a sprinter is to run, but you do not take into consideration the beneficial effect of mas- sage on the muscles, although you certainly will after read- ing Lawson Roberteon’s splen- did article on “Muscle Power that Makes Champion Run- ners.” It is uncanny to have say one you don't know things about yoursell,atd you ings yourself, might beled to deny the hy pitty of such things if ten-year- old girl of Warren, R. toot whose wonderful powers The Sunday Magasinetel Is. Ant as for the fairer sex, if they do not read that Fashion page will certainly regret not knowing that the real way to wear your hat is to show your hair, Don't forget that. The above are just a few of the things that you must leave out of consideration to your own great loss if you do not read The Sunday World Magazine and Sto! tion. There are lots of ‘other thin, therein that it would be ae yantageous for you to know. But you undoubtedly already have formed the proper con- clusion that you must, as in almost every in your World Magazine itceanaat orld Magax to consideration, Get Your Order in a

Other pages from this issue: