The evening world. Newspaper, May 8, 1913, Page 4

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)

NiTCHEL ACEPTS SOUL ECTORS POS TESOL NE Statement From the White House Makes This Official Announcement. TAMMANY RAY OF HOPE. New Appointee Will Not Bar Any Efficient Dem- ocrat. John Purroy Mitchel, President of the Board of Aldermen, decided to-day to aeeept the office of Collector of the Port ‘with the proviso that he be allowed to remain in his present position unti! June 1. A despatch from Washington states that President Wilson has agreed to Mr. Mitehel's stipulation and fetrative circles Mr. Mitch is halled with joy as the happy solution of w problem that has been causing the President considerable embarrassment. Mr. Mitchel was non-committal when Re reached his office to-cay. He cald h@ had been told that President Wilson ‘Would have something to say about the Appointment and that out of courtery the President he would remain sii a ison gave out his Mant at 11 o'clock. It reads as follow: “Mr. John Purroy Mitchel has accepted ‘Eppointment as Collector of Customa at New York st the Presifent’s request. At no time has Mr. Mitchel been a can- @idate for the office. He feels himself te be under obiigation to conclude certain important matters now before the committees of the Board of Estimate &n@ Apportionment of the city of New Yerk, of which he js chairman, notably the organization of terminal facilities $6 the west side of Manhatten Island @nd the organisation and Marine terminal facilities in South Brooklyn, ané be ie reluctant to sur- fender his present office while these femain unfinished. The President, Pedic mations, je willing that Mr. apeumption of the office of takes place on June 1." MAYOR 16 SORRY THAT MITCHEL aha © LEAVING. with Mr. Mitchel in his office over city affairs that might be affected by the resignation ef the Aldermanic Pres- ident, ineued the following statement: “3 am most anxious to have Mr, ‘Mitchel remain -'th ua until the mat- ‘ter of the re-location of the New Yors Central tracks and of the Marginal Rati. way’ diong thé Brooklyn docks from Brooklyn Bridge to Sixty-fifth street are Worked together so reat matters that I 4o not see how I can get along in them without him. I am serry to lose him. He 19 © great worker and unselfish, wish he could avold accepting the Col- the importance of these | much, T) continually caresses his close-cropped Americans Easy Marks, Says Irving Bacheller, Just Home From Abroad sands of Them in Rome and It Was Like a Cara- van Fallen Into the Hands of a Band of Brigands.”” “Why Don’t Americans Go Sightseeing in Their Own intry?”’ He Aske and Adds: “‘Oure Ie the Real Wonderland, With Scenery and Buildings to Beat Anything in Europe.” y: Marguerite Mooers Marshall. Your own country, your own ' home, your own husband, your own wife! Irving Bacheller, author of “Keeping Up With Limgle” and other popular Novels, thus phrased for me his philos- ophy, § simple, homespun brand which | ho endeared Mr. Bacheller to » great }many thousands of his homespun coun- trymen, His latest fictional rendering o it, “The Return of Griggsby,” appeni to-day, and ho himself hax juet turned from Europe with an even more settled conviction that the best place for Americans is America, recommended by the management of the hotel where you are staying. You cannot trust him to go to the railway sation and buy tickets, He will cheat you on the price of them jf he can. “When I ving Rome I sent my guide to buy and meet me with them at the He arrenged it very cleverly, i a me to notice it until I was in the train. So he succeeded in doing me out of eight em, jow that couldn't happen in Amer- " Mr. Bacheller ended, with con- vietion. “Or If a guide recommended by @ hotel 414 do such a thing, the hotel would make good the deficit. Not so in Burope! The hotel manager there feems to assume that you gu about with your life in your hand, and that you take your own measures of self- kainat robbery, "But Americans don't have to 60 abroad,” I reminded Mr. Bacheller. NEVER GET THE WORTH OF THEIR MONEY. “They think they have to,” he re- turned. And t the Yankee shrowd- news of the creator of "Eben Holden’ asserted itself, “I wouldn't mind so -looking, but he is a good lover. He sees a pretty, Prosperous Amerjoan git! of the street, and follows het bbout fo?’ few days, Bho, of course, notices this knd is thrilled with the ‘romance.’ Then the Italian marches boldly up to her chape- Ton and insists on being presented. ‘Hig aire and graces and fine-sounding ame make such an impression that he frequently jeepe all before him, if necessary, he follows the girl across the Alps to France, In nd, they marry. Perhaps he loves her; perhaps he Jan't an utterly bad fellow. But un- leon she has an enormous amount of money she is snubbed by his relatives and hie friends, ‘Her father was a (radesman,’ they say, or, ‘Her grand- father was a blackamith. “It she Is exceedingly wealthy, what happens? She buys a place in the most unutterably corrupt soctety in the world. is almost doomed to unhappiness form or anoth dive eyes twinkled. describing him is te say that he looks frame is tall and loosely hung and Bie gray eyebro have: that curious Pent-house effect which one finds in @o many Revolutionary portraits, He mustache and smooth-shaven ohin in Jectoreship altogether. But if he will atay | t! by me until June 1 I shall have to be satisded,” ‘Mr. Mitchel was asked to-@ay if there “as any condition imposed upon him in his appointment by the Prentent, He wald: “No obligation was laid upon ma of aay kiné—none express or im: “Cen ‘Gemator O'Gorman claim the credit of your appointment? Is your appo'ntment satisfactory to Tammany Hagr’ mment to make, ‘The President has stated, ag I have stated, that this Intment was on hig per- ronal request to me, and that je the fot That request Was prefetred te mo the day before yesterday.” HIG APPOINTMENT CAME TO HIM AG A SURPRIOg, “Ie this the frst time President spoke to you about the Collectorship?” “This ig the frat time that the deng took up the matier with me, it Gomes to me es @ great eurpris: “Wil you prefer party men in your appointments?” “You look back to the appointments what I have made in the city govern- mest and I think the; will anewer that question. I sheuld eay that the fact that a man was a Democrat would be no disqualification for office, I am « Democrat” “Would it make amy (ifference if a man was a Tammany man?’ “S$ think you will find that where I have found efficient me, whose ef- felency was proved, wh’ ee reliability as proved, whose integrity and ap- Boyle te 8 Tammany man, —_—_—. Asay ung) PARTMINGS, ——— eG i LON ar Paupes of his rather meditative conversation—another New England trick, Finally, he is no more aubtle than his checkerberry-favored satire, but about the man and his work the: hangs the same atmosphere of min Kindliness and common sense, “I used to watch the parties of Ameri. cana in Rome," he resumed, after a slight pause “They'd gallop through the galleries, pausing for half » minute im front of one pidture or another, looking #0 tired and so unawakened. ‘They weren't really appreciating what they saw. They didn't take away any- thing. except a tund of misinformation. of stay- ing at home and saving your money. -_ IMPATIENT BABY SISTER TUMBLES TWO STORIES. If Little Agnes Shall Live She Will Never Be Able to Walk Again. ‘Tom Tracey and hia sisters, Marga: ret and Agnes—Tom only twelve and Mttle Agnes three years old—have been motherless for more than a year. Their aunt, Kate Donovan, has tried to mother them while their father, John, was at work, They lived in an apart- ment at No. 480 Degraw street, Bropk. lyn, ‘ Tom was late returning from soho} to lunch to-day, and little Agnes, ‘wan very hungry, him to hurry. Tom pretended to and the baby sinter grew angry, is far out of the window to shriek imperative calls to hurry. Agnes leaned too far and fell two. tories, almost at Tom's feet. After a stranger had carried the little one into: the house an ambulance came from the Holy Family Hosp! There te litt Will live, and if she doe: leave @ chair, ae: : YARMOUTH TO WED AGAIN. al Kpensiver’ I ‘Mr. Bacheller's faint, but cents died away. In one thing only I did not recognise a Yankce countryman—the extraordinarily low. pitched voice, “Every American abroad must find the hotels and trains uncomfortat’ Compared with what he is used to home. But he will disco Greater contrast in the money he has to Former Husband ef Allee Thaw Kn- on board je them to man to get them from the wharf to the tender, On the tender ig ati!) another official whom 1 must tip if I want to be sure that the trunks will be transferred to the ship, Bo it goes, MUST TIP ALL THE HOTEL ERVANTS. tel bill fe 1,000 france yeu can't get out by paying less than 40 franes to the servants, in addition to the gratuities you may have given during your stay. There is 4 regular Mne-up at the door on your And you can hardly biame th It {@ understood that threes thelr salary shall come from the guests, and of course Amer! to contribute the i “and you ci ‘hom you ha: If you go hopping you must make it @ rule never te pay the frat price asked. LONDOD Hertford, May &~—The Marquis of former husband of Alice Was annulled on hor petition in 1908, is about to marry again. The prospective bride of the Marquis, whe te better known as the Earl of Yarmouth, ia Mrs. Moss-Cookte, who ia much his senior !n age, Sho has w fortune of $3,250,000, lett to her by her former husband, —_ CURIOUS MASTER CUSTOM. (Prow the London Ohrgaicle,) A curious Kaster custom has deen s jobserved for mat he Weatern Alps, Or distributed over # level with sand, and the you women perform «a dance Mf @ couple are fortunate enough fniah the dance without breaking a: ‘eam it Is taken as a token of the con {patibility of thelr temperaments, and y one with ibis @ will never | Thaw of Pittsburgh, whose marriage | “ED SOX” SHIN FISTS WT 'NAS” “WATTLE ROYAL Two Men Spiked and Half Dozen Marked in Fray After Game. CLEVELAND, 0., May &—Aithough eeveral members of thé Naps and Red Sox bore slightly bruised and cut faces, to-day, not a player could be found who would directly admit that a free-for-all fight had taken piace at the close of yesterday's gamo here. Details of the batGe, however, leaked out from various spurces. Aeoording tw the generally accepted Version of the fray, a fight started In the underground passage leading to the when Infleléer Olsen, Catcher Nunameker fow ugly words quickly followed by diows. While some of the players attempted to separate the combatants, others joined in the fray and within @ few seconds, o free- for-all battle was in progress, It waged for at least ten minutes, Tris Speaker emerged with three spike marks on his head. Catcher Carrigan received a severe Jolt on the jaw that put him out. Helf &@ dozen membera of both clubs came from the dressing rooms with swollen facen, patches of skin off and other jame, which the Nape took, 4 to 1, Outflelder Graney was knocked uncotiscious when Catcher Car- Tigan blocked him at home. Shortetup Janvrin was knocked j.cad over heels off second when Garisch butted into him, and Pitoher Foster was spiked. Hard words passed between the two teams all during the game. Both Manager Birmingham and Act- ing Manager Wagner professed to know nothing of the Might to-day, 100 PUPLS STKE FOR SHORTER HOLS ~ NBISTN SCHOOL ‘Smash Windows, Parade and Post Pickets to Keep the Classrooms Empty. BOSTON, Mass, May 8&—The schoo! children’s strike in Greater Boston as sumed alarming proportions to-day when the ranks of the malcontents were ewelled by new strikers and more dam- age to school windows was reported. The police threatened drastic action to- day. It was estimated that over 1,00 children in Cambridge, Roxbury, South Boston and severa! other suburbs have and more are expected to “go out” unless their “demands” for shorter hours are granted, The youthful strikers’ demande are rather vague, but in genetal are for one session, from %90 to 1.90. Gome of the “radioals,” however, demand shorter houre, ‘The children formed in parades in each of the effected sections, Several hundred windows were emashed. At- tempts by the police effectually to break up the procession were futile, as the youngsters skipped through alleys to the next parallel street and continued thelr march. Our Rights” Serawis “We Want Adorned the sidewalks in nearly every section of the city and suburbs to-day, while crowds of children wore placards setting forth their grievances. The strike @pread to Milford, where the Drap: mil tle-up is on, and fifty children the atrikere declared @ strike of their own. A oquad of police, reinforced by par ents, teachers and big brothers, to-day Fouled about one hundred “pickets” in South Boston who had prevented any Pupils from entering the schools, Up to the time of the police interference the Dicketing was @ great success. Any Boy who did'not’ join the strikers was immediately rushed in a direction oppo- ‘ite from the school, in charge of sev. eral strikers, The concerted attack of the police, parents and teachers’ brig: however, sent th Into achool, Stee SY | STILWELL PLEA IS GRANTED, Te Appear Before Grand Jury To- Mervow im Al Soliciting Case. Stephen J. Stil ios in the tate by George F. solicited @ bribe in return for Helation in which the President of the New York Bank Note Company was interested, will appear before the Grand Jury to- morrow, This was decided to-day after Preme Court Justice Seabury, | Stilwell had asked permission to ap-| Pear and to answer questions, and had ‘suggested that he would waive all n to immunity, Miss Mthe! Allen and VicesPresident George A. Fieldw of the bank note cor Dany were before the Gi day. invextivation that Btilwell's telephor I they had overhear nversations with dali, Ustening on extension wires. tenograph- It is supposed that they repeated | the Grand Jury had consulted with du- | ARE BRS BROUGHT HERE FROM TROPS / FORLOCAL MUSEUM Natural History Expedition | Retums After Six Months in South America. Birde of ai! descriptions arrived to-day on the Santa Marts of the United Fruit ine, in from West Indian and South American porte—binis with beautiful plumage, with long and short talis: birds with little feet and little bil's, and birds with big feet and bills as biz Qs the plumber's. To be eure, they were all dead, dut they will look as natural as life when they are appropriately wrouped In the American Museum of Natural History. In a) there are in the neighborhood of $080 birds and 100 mammals. In the party which them in charge are five sclentiste of the Museum. They are George BK. Cherrie, famous hunter, ex plorer and main guide of the party; Louls Fuertes, great painter of birds and landecapes, who went with the party to get color for the setting of the birds in the Museum; Paul BE. Howes and Thomas Ring, naturaliete, and Geoffrey O'Connell, mammal man. ‘The men have been away from New York six months. They went up the Magdalena River in Colombia as far ag canoes would take them, then they took the mule trail for Bogota. Then upstream they went to the Lianas district on the @ust range of the Andes. There they shot and trapped birde and animals, Fuertas shot a rat, the like of which none of the party had ever neen. It was thirty inches long, with long @rayish hair and a scaly wl It had @ head Hike ® squirrel and had four toes on each foot, two one one aide and two on the other. This permitted him to waik along fragile limbe like @ tight-ropo per- former. They brought the rat home with them after etuffing it. One of the party saw, but failed to & Species of that famous and rare bird, known as the chigworle. The chiz- werle appears only at twilight, and hence is known as the gloom bird. It was Mr. Ring who saw it. Mr. Ring one night was thrumming a mandolin when he heard a weird cry. Then the song of a bird followed, such as he had never heard. The bind had come to the edge of the forest. Tt was about three feet high, and had long logs like a stork, but the feet were aplid as hoofs, The head was large, the eyes luminous and the tall phosphorescent. Ring arose and walked towerd the chigwerte, still playing his mandolin. But the-bind gave o screech and disep- Deared. __ COWGIRL LEAVES HOSPITAL TO WED AT SHOW TO-NIGHT. Miss Griffiths Was Thrown From Horse, but It Didn’t Injure Romance. ‘The fact that she wab thrown from her horse last night during a perform- lance of the Wild West Show at Madison Bq Garden and s0 badly hurt that had to be taken to Bellevue Hospt: tal is not going to keep Miss Goldie GriMths, one of the co ‘le, from mar- tying Harry Smite, cowboy, in the arena at to-night’s performance, a8 planned. Miss GriMthe and Smith have known each other four weeks, and, according to Smith, he fell in love at sight, Miss Grifithe ta @ very pretty, dark-eyed girl and very popular in the circus, Dr. Judson, who attended the girl, re- Dorted this morning that she could leave the hospital, A few minutes after this news was Square Garden there clattered down to the hospital in all their wild Western regalia L, &. Basscen and Mr. and Mrs. “Cy” Compton, who are to be witnesses @t the marriage, Compton and Sasseen 10 the patients who were grouped on the galleries, They dashed up and down the enclosure pick- ing up handkerchiefs from their horses’ backs and performing other feats of horsemanship. When Miss Griffiths ap- Peared she was given & send-off by the Patients, @he mounted her horse end with her witnesses started for City Hall to get the marriage license, — GIRLS WITH SLIT SKIRTS HAD TO LEAVE SCHOOL. Angeles Students Protest, Claiming Principal Showed Discrimination. LOB ANGELES, Cal, May 8.-—"slit ” cannot be worn in Los Angeles Los from Polytechnic High Gchool to-day of Misses Levne and told room with ankles twinkling through vents in thelr skirts, Principal W. A. Dunn's order was vigorously protested by fellow students of the Parker girls, who accused the | Principal of discrimination im that he allowed a young woman employed in |the school offices to wear such @ skirt. ———_—_ SECRET OF BAPPINBSS, (From the Keness Clty Star.) “It 19 only @ poor sert of happt | ‘hat could ever come by caring much about our ewn narrow | Uren" George Ellot save in “Ro | "We can only have the highest very pleas, Pi~ ness such as goes along with heing a -§reat man, by having wide thoughts and much feeling for the rest of the | world ae well as ourselves, and this sort of happiness often brings so much pain with it thet we can only tell it from pain by tts Laing it we would choose before anything else because our souls see it is good." That In the great secret of happiness. | That 1 & life that te full of eor- ro ring may be esventially o appy life, Real happiness ie not at the mercy of that series of accidents Rnown “good forwne” It is open 4 the Rumblect worker for the come received at the Madison | matron THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, MAY §, 1918. (CONEY ISLAND GIRL WHO ELOPED PAYS $300.00 FOR ROMANCE | Widow of Bath House Keeper | Added Codici! to Will | She Had Made. Tt cost Lucy A. Balmer, daughter of the late proprietor of Balmer’s Baths) at Coney Island, nearly a third of a iiilion dollars to elope a year ago with Edward Noonan of No. 975 Ocean ave- nue, Flatbueh, A eodict! to the will of her mother, Mrs. Catherine L. Balmer, | who died tast at her home, No. | 299 Garfield Place, hed & clause which had given this amount to her | Gaughter, and changed o trust fund, planned to extend only to Mrs. Noon- hirty-fifth year, @ trugt until her Geath. She will still have the income, but Mrs, Balmer stipulated that Noonan was never to have a cent of the money, and on his wife's death the principal will go to her children, or, if ste have none, will be @ivided between her brother and er. | pleawe let ot WIFE SEWS ON A BUTTON —>te plese fl YY vath AND THEN SUES HER HUBBY. | asain ana 1 te ——— By-by Alta.” Love Notes Dropped Out of Bo-) The second note aeuged Bi rt gert’s Coat Pocket and It | Why" Shen for ‘waving’ ta A . Was All Off. | wife for whom he had ceased toktte Frank M. Bogert of No. st5 Hancock | 7 Mrs, Bogert asked Justice Asavall capreme Court, Brookly a Week ailmony’ und $1 and fi showing she and her son. try! Bogert. had traced the Alta of he net to No, 6 Hamburg avenve, whet Kk) Mra, Alta Goheen ves with her dauat rand where, the wife charges 1 was a visitor eet, Brooklyn, asked his wife to sew | the button on his coat a few days ago. @nd now he faces a suit for separation. For out of the coat whieh she held acroas her lap dropped two notes which Mrs, Bogert picked up, One read “Dear Frank, Doh't forget io ‘of your honeyduncin (90 Ibe). 1 a longing for you, sweet Louise. Now, 2 LITTLE'S avpress: 47°49 West 14th Street North Side, Near Sixth Avenue Removal Sale Continued The removal eale wae interrupted April 14th, eo we continue the removal prices for a short time at the New Building, 47 and 49 Weat 14th Street, neér 6th Avenue. The variety ie atili complete BUT dor’t delay—the prices will sell the Furniture—and eell \t t# extremely improbable that euc will was filed in Sur rogate Ketcham's office in Brooklyn to- @ay. Tt gives Mrs. Noonan and her Glster, Josephine, $3,000 and $1,000 respec- tively outright, and makes a trust fund of $10,000 for a gon, Frederick J., to oe paid to him when he becomes twenty- five, The remainder of the estate, esti- mated at about three-quarters of a milion dollars, is divided into equal trunt funda for the three children, each of whom, with the excoption of Mrs. Noonan, wil! receive the principal when they are thirty-fwe. A granddaughter, who wan adopted by Mrs. Balmer, gets $35,000 in trust. cai hat TRIED TO HOLD UP WOMAN WHO GAVE $1,000 BOND. Accused Man Fails to Appear After She Refuses to Give $500 in Cash. Evidence tn an alleged extortion case was taken by Assistant District-At- torney Sullivan to-day following the forfeiture of a ball bond for $1,000 in Part I. of Special Sessions, When the case of Daniel Lynoh of No. 10 Cath- arine slip, charged with running a disorderly house, was called the de- fendant failed to appear, Louis Spiegel, his counsel, stepped to the bar and said: “If Your Honor please, the woman who went on this bond was approached last night by a man who claimed to be & mbssenger from Lynch. She says that he told her that unless she im- mediately sent #0) In cash to Lynch that be would net appear in court to- day. 6 refused to pay over the money and the defendant has not shown up, although he was in court yesterday, Ido not know where he may be found nor do I know that he sent the messenger to the bondswoman, but I should like to have an opportunity of placing this matter in the hands of the District Attorney for investigation.” Presiding Just.ce Zeller forfeited the bond and together with issuing a bench rant for Lynch recommended tue | to Assi District-Attorney | Sullivan for inv ion, Mrs, Jennie Benning of No, lames alip was the woman whom Lawyer @piegel says was She gave as security for in court a ouilding valued at $18,000 at No, 347 \ hen Brown, and Franklin 8, Richardson were married at 4.90 yester- day afternoon at the town home of the bride's parents, No. 16 East Seventieth street. Mrs, George Carpenter was the a the bridesmaids ind Angelica Brown, cousins of the bride, GHILDREN HATE. CASTOR OlL, UGH Delicious “Syrup of Figs” best for their little stom- achs, liver and waste- clogged bowels, Look beck at your childhood Remember the physic that mother insist- on—castor mel, cathartics. inst taking them, “With ut hikes it's different. The adres child 1s fretful, peevish, half our , *pomech sour, breath feverish and its litte eyatem full of cold; has diarthoes, sore throat, stomach ache, doesn’t eat or rest well—remember— look at the tongue; if coated, give a teaspoonful of Syrup of Figs, then don't worry, beesuse you surely will havea well, Cer id in a few hours. f aati simply cannot be bermful. eweetens the stomach, makes the active and thoroughly cleanses the little one’s wasteclogged bowels. In a few hours all sour tke, undigested ferment- ing food and consti waste matter gently moves on and out of the system without Piping OF pauses, Directions for children of all ages, jor grown-ups, plainly printed on Furniture will ever be offered at these prices agal $34.00 Golden Oak Buffet, Hay Brass Bed $] Height 54 In, Price epee French plat]. This well-known Brass Bedstead hi mirror, so 2-inch continuous posts, one-inch fit ers; finished in bright or satin finis,) made in full and three- quarter sizes, One of in best quar- tered oak; sil- ver drawer; 2 drawers for ue many designs we are linen, two, Seélling ss roomy ¢1 0 -| at about ipa i. 5 ey, si French] ha A ———— | teas ind hand-| price ANIM las RTT | Am carved claw| during fA {' ipl! L Note feet; new de- ote VO (5 i ale. < $24.00 Couc b, ‘$1 4.50 (( Selected quartered Oak. Carved frames, upholstered with tempered steel springs, flexible edge, seat soft and comfortable, covered with No. 4 Chase Leather. jolid oan, fints 8 of Fumed Oak i ts ds th » but FAIR TERMS—pittle’s hes never, boon an, inetelrvane at this sale are not only lower than “instalment” and “‘club” prices but fer below the lowest cash prices ever qu by anybody, and we will setl very fesorable termes. . . JH. LITTLE & CO. su't¥nc 47 & 49 West 14th St, ncrsind S25 Near Sixth Avenue 1 cannot ise any one kind of Sh, at Se a of water, Put ¢ Neve ate many fe tee eo. daily tn’ Nts ton oe yaazed to note how the tonic will brighten nd Deautity sour eres and wid south teat Ateta: rght tm being “finicky” | Gi, save yee rther weakness. wlan ee a ea eter | doubtless save you all fu cure dandruff Hattie L: You are rather young to worry make your . etly” locks full of | ebout losing ‘your pond lovks, bat ‘sous vitality and fow—much more attractive wiee. howerer. “im taking” etery peeoa than artifictal Maks thie shampoo ak | sgaloet 18 Tove of our Combletion, sa home by disso teaspoonful of eanturos premature w ea, in a cup of bot water, It ts the most pleas fem oe seamcereis deen GR Ing and offecuve siiaaipoo £ have ever tried, iy ac Ut ordinary face powders merely | hou: amuiiclal end fail to giv lasting recommend rover it - {the smn, Disoive 4 otros of spurmax. in baits plat of bot water, add dentnat an 2 teaspovntuls of gheerme, let stand “untli sold, then cork tightly, flue will wot only give you o firm, iealtiiy shin, but It te ox Hrewely beauuiying aud eotuey Lermions, ‘Moat of Stes Oke i itebing: Mera pre’ oun oS forty” meets with my beariy ap-| eral. “ rut jelly have often edvised agains, the e also get some canthrox for shambooing, inanere which alle vo many women 10 I pacers the figure while yet youd, and it is sy un. jan fi = Reconsary, dust get 4 ounces of parnotis, | 4 Mia a bea rr grit | Aioolve it ta 1M. pinta of hot water, etrain| th”sou need to 1 you oot tonie to brace it, ond take a ful thes times daily, Here is ap -fantilo remely: whi Be Sr onales Sp tae ie | SA ot Se, ete WAP, saan oe scat “cade i pi ht i eles woe PL a a ‘ee ure proper Glgestlon, an active ver, by ou Why, “Bill's” the office boy, and the secrets of his speckled career are revealed by Paul West in the 24-Page Magazin First story of the series dealing with “Bill” next Sunday. Sprightly, Don't Forget ‘‘Bill” SUNDA > ’ appears siipiorve and Human. . ext Y'S WORLD

Other pages from this issue: