The evening world. Newspaper, September 29, 1913, Page 3

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a4 walked ten paces, then iv Nose awa, os THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, MARRYAT'S SHADE! ‘The Fewer Clothes the Women Can Wear With Modesty the Better,’’ Says Jane Addams THIS WAS A DUEL EVEN FOR FRANCE Novelist’s Immortal Three-Cor- nered Fight Quite Outdone by American’s Wit. BLACK POWDER USED.! When Frenchman Fled at Op-| ponent’s Fall Latter Got $30 From “Movies.” ‘The French liner La Tourcine, arriv- {ng to-day trom Havre, brought among her passengers John B, Miller, who for- merty lived in Brooklyn, but who for a year has been living at Glay, France, | with his wife. Mr. Miller fought @ duel | with an trate Frenchman and that no dlood was shed was due to his sense of} humor. Living tn the same town was @ Frenchman for whom he conceived @ @reat dislike, and his feelings apparently were reciprocated. Mr. Miller didn't like the cut of the gentleman’s coat nor the top hat he invariably wore. But, quite by accident he contends, he stepped on the Frenchma foot. It was in a cafe and hie friend, the enemy, had one foot " aid the Frenchman, “What's that?” queried Miller, doubt. ing the evidence of his senses, “Swine!” cried the other, with disdain. Miller swung on the gentleman's jaw and tho latter yelled “Assassin.” Gendarmes rushed in and Miller was ed. UNPARDONABLE TO STRIKE A MAN WITH YOUR HANDS, “And believe me,” said Mr. Miller, “1 found that tt was quite a different mat- er wWalloping man in France than anding him one on this side. It was lucky that T had friends over there or | might have gone to jail for something ik@ Ife. My friends told me that tne * proper thing over there was to cane 4 Man; that it was not only unpardon- tbe to strike a man with your handa, sat i wos criminal. Well, I got out stick witha lot of knots in it, and witat I handed to that gentleman was pienty, “Instead of an arrest this time I got a challenge to @ duel. My wife’ Was the second who brought me the hallenge. I told him that I didn’e want to fight a: duel, and he sald that | ‘here was no way out of It. Wel, he Was a good fellow, and I told him that 1 would get a second and that they could ‘Job’ the bloodthirsty gentleman. | He agreed to have the pistols loaded | + with black powder, “There was @ ‘movie’ man In town, and I went to him and told hm about the duel and asked him what it wi worth to give him the exclusive privi- lege of taking pictures, He said 1%) francs and I told him to go to it. Wa! went out in the gray of the morning, and never a word was exchanged be- tween us. My man and I backed up nat each other and at tho word turned and HONOR SATISFIED, HE FLED) INCONTINENTLY. “The yell I let out of me could hat been heard all over town, I think. dvopped to ‘That Frenchman's sense of honor was thoroughly satisfied. hig aecond with him, going yet, for I never saw him When he was gone I got up and went to where the ‘movie’ Tt the ground and squirmed, grinding away with their camera, and got my fee. The ma of the con- performance MILITANTS CONFESS $175,000 LUMBER FIRE; RUIN GOLF LINK GREENS "flo Votes, No Safety, No rt,” They Write After Telling How They Set Blaze, FARMOUTH, England, Sept. qont suffragette “arson squads’ stein dusy last night when they de- eftoyed the greens of the Municipal Golf Links here with acid. ‘The women left a confossion of thelr | erime on the ground and a note saying “he timber yard waa set fire to by us!” This had reference to a fire which on Saturday had destroyed $175,000 worth of timber at a lumber yard in this, el The confession add @ planks and left o ‘We poured oll | candle burn- ing. Other cards were found on the links bearing the message: N Sport! No Peace! No mation. ALBANY, Sept. %.—Acting Gov. Glynn has PI ed for issuance to-day his @rat proclamation. It designates Thureday, Oct. % as “Fire Prevention Day,” directs the State Fire Marebal to supervise ite proper observance, and reavenhe Mar all nisleen to DereDetnre, with or the pro! jon of abe s fellows were) times; the fewer clothes we can wear ing @ fashion, come into the world au naturel trousses' wedding finery. on Eve took to fig leaves was the same nip of Autumn In the alr that prompts a woman to-day to look over her furs, and a man to ask his wife to shake the mothballs out of his Winjer overcoat. In other words the best excuse for clothes ts climate. |GREEK GIRLS HAD ADVANTAGE OF WEATHER. | And therein we find the reason why Greck girls two thousand years ago} | could wear skirts slit to the hips and | be paragons of propriety and why the {maidens of New York or Chicago can- not attempt to imitate them. Ther are girls to-day who look well tn slit skirts quite as well as any Daphne or Cloe or Amaryliis of old, But auch xirls are scarce. They were scarce in Greece. ‘Then, as , there were quanti- | ttes of tubby old women, equat | young women with too solid ankles, Gitls who shambled with knock- | xmees oF ambled with bow logs. Aad | qnese young women did not wear slit skirts if they knew what was good for them and wore anzious to catch the matrimonial eye the golden youth of Athens, ‘The slit skirt is a challenge to criticlam which few women are biullt well enough to withstand, for almost any women has two good ne for seeking the flattery of draperies. If she has not, then the matter of wearing the alit skirt is between her and her consctence—or the keeper of |INCUBATOR BABY PUZZLE FOR HIGHEST COURT Foster-Parents Dispute Claim of Woman Who Says She Is Mother of World's Fair Mite. | WASHINGTON, Sept. 2.—One of the ‘unique cases to come before the Su- |preme Court during the session which begins in a few days, is one in which the court was called upon to determine the parentage of the “Incubator baby" viewed by thousands at the Loulsiena Purchase Exposition at St. Louls, Mra, Lottle Bleakley of Topeka, Kan, | claima* to be the mother of Uttle two pound mite, which was placed in/ me world's fair Incubator, fought in the courts of Illinois and Kansas for possession of the girl, now [nine years old, and appears now be- fore the court as @ prosecuting wit- ness against @ detective who ts charged with having kidnapped the girl from her home. Mr, and Mrs. James G. Barclay of fF; é . New York Girls Can’t Wear Skirts Slit to the Hip as Greek Maidens Did Because of the Exigencies of the Weather—Paul Poiret’s Only Question » “Is a Dress Beautiful?’”’ Another Query Should Be ‘Is It Silly?” By Nixola Greeley-Smith. “I do not believe that women are being degraded by the fashions of the Miss Jane Addams, who has been called the first citizen of Chicago, Copyright, 1913, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York World). with modesty the better.” paused long enough in her work of making the world better, the other day, to express the opinion I have Quoted. Another dweller in Chicago, the Bohemian sculptor Mario Korbel, de- clared that the slit in the fashionable skirt is its most attractive feature. He called attention to the fact that Greek maidens two thousand years &go wore skirts slit to the hip, yet were paragons of propriety. There are many persons who share the view expressed by the French dressmaker M. Poiret the other day MISS JANE ADDAMS SIX-FOOT SNAKE SKIN ATTESTS DEADLY AIM OF YOUTHFUL HUNTER With Trusty Air Rifle Say- ville Lad Riddles Incau- tious Reptile. Right at the start {t may de stated that that the only question proper to ask! George Washington Hawkins, our hero, about a gown should be, “Is it beautl-jnas the skin of the snake to prove the fulf There are others—and I aM igtory, And the skin shows the snake }live your own life” is all very She has) 1 one of them—who would supplement | was six feet long. this inquiry by asking, befo! accept: | sartorial conactence, her husband. And, by the way, now that Miss Addams has turned her attentlon to! the fashions, we all trust that she will make a plea for every woman's right to dress to please herself, The right “to well, but) the privilege of choosing and wearing) your own clothes is quite as important and much less generally conceded to women. reform them, to criticise and alter them from hat to heel. Nearly all the witation about modern clothes haa come from men—and from the sort of man who keeps his morals in his wife's name and wreaks his vicarious virtue on every poor, that comes from the workshops. ‘Mon are having far too much to * gay about what is right and proper for women to weer, to think and to lo, 3 we must be censored let jo it ourselves, Let us choose @ board of uational censors of fash- fom, say three women of widely varying opinions and taste. Jane Addams could never choose my Clothes for me, but Z should be to have her on the board to Give it tome and ballast. Fur the other commissioners 3% should choose (84) any Led ae gent, pretty woman, ty 8 Fears cid ey over, and (sa) Gaby Deslys, Wo, 1 is chosen of course to tome dows Wo 3—and Mo, 3 to tome up Mo. 1, ARRESTED FOR STEALING, NEITHER ATE NOR SLEPT Young Woman in State of Nervous Prostration When Arraigned To-Day. A good-looking, well-dressed young woman was arraigned in Yorkville Po- lice Court to-day under the name of Jane Doe on @ charge of stealing @ shirtwaist end @ collar trom @ Broad- way department store on Saturday afternoon, She was in @ pitiable state of nervous exhaustion, having neither eaten nor slept since sie was locked up in the court prison on Saturday night. ‘ . Paul of No, 40 West One ty-aixth street, who Iquor business at No. 1888 Fifth avenue, was in court to fur- nish $500 bail for the prisoner, Magie- trate Corrigan said he would not ac cept a bond for “Jane Doe.” Finally the prisoner sald she ® # Annie Smith of No. 81 Bast One Hundred and Four- teenth street. The defartment store de- Douglas County, 111, claim the child as an adopted daughter. Barclay, who was an employee at the fair grounds, watched the baby grow in {ts little glass cage. The Barclays declare investiga- tion shows Mrs, Bleakley is mistaken e@bout belng the mother of the child. rea cena “ek Mie and pre cog ig Rl cll ants. It ts believed the Irish cand! ater th wap dorm tective who made the arrest sald she ‘velleved the name was fictitious i Augustinians Meet, ROME, Sept, 29.—All the superiors of the Augustinian order met here to-day to Plect @ general and several avsisi- |Hawkins, who Is fourteen years old |!ves at Sayville, ‘rom a sartorial standpoint) most men appear to marry women to|ing a whale. Jonly game he et foolish little fashion Pore eee HOE Ceerel Ul ime be rte MEU Cores grguBied 90.96 Shp care Now we come to the massacre of the Is it stupid or silly?” And the slit skirt as {t appears) snake by our hero, George Washington oftenest is neither beautiful nor discreet, wise nor alluring. Tf the humas body were as demoralising ae Anthony Comstock and ome other persons pretend to believe, Adam and Eve would act have Bach would have been provided with a | ft is pretty certain that there would have been mo elit id L, I. In recognition of worthy and meritorious conduct, George Washington Hawkins was pre- sented on Saturday with an air rifle| guaranteed to propel a bullet with sum. jent velocity to puncture a cheese aand- wich at ten yards. George could hardly walt until he had attended church and Sunday school yesterday to go out into the jungle surrounding Sayville and try |his new weapon. What George was really after wan a bear or a rhinoceros, He even thought of going down to the beach and #hvot- But for a long time the untered consisted of tree trunks, advertising signs on fences, an occasional pumpkin or an abandoned empty tin can, All at once George was electrified. he hadn't had his trusty air rifle with him he would have been pet Con- fronting him and disputing his pathw was a great biacksnake. Everybody knows that @ dlacksnaxe in an exceedingly virile reptile, #0 George may readily be believed when he says this particular snake stood right up and waved its head and forked out ts tongue and started for hii. it Without an Instant’s hesitation our her) raised his alr rifle and fired, Subsequent investigation 4isclosed that the bullet entered the snakes mouth, tore its throat and passed out through ite back, This was the fatal dullet, but George fired @ few more into the carcas And then, being of methodical habits, he skinned the snake. exhibition at Sayville janding e dence that the parents who named o: hero George Washington were wiser than most parents, eects NO FOUL PLAY HERE, Last Thureday Max Scher of No, #6 East One Hundred and Fifty-first atreet, the Bronx, was sent by his employer, Solomon Shapiro, at No. 4 Sixth av. to draw $20 from the bank. He falled to return with the money and his parenta told the police they were sure 0 had been murdered by thieves. Last night, however, the worst fears of the messenger's parents were found groundlens, Detective Riley of the Charlea street station picked up young Scher at Sixth avenue and Twenty- enth atreet. When he was searched at the West Seventeenth atreet tation $6 of the stolen money was found in hia shoe. He confessed he had spent the rest in @ good time, Magistrate Murphy, in the Jefferson Market Court, held Scher in $1,000 bail to-day, mpaign tour of the entire State was started to-day by Charles 8, Bird, Pro- gressive candidate for Governor, Four Qutomodiles carried Mr. Bird and his party when they left this city, with the intention of visiting every one of the 363 cities and towns in Massachusete in the course of five weeks, A fife and Sald skin ts on) “GRECIAN GIRS WORE THEIR D SUT To THe WP AND were | Paes MOTORCYCLE POLICEMAN RISKS LIFE TO ARREST YOUNG SPEED MANIAC Mesle Drives Machine Into Fu- gitive, Who Attempts to Dotible on Pursuer. Benny Moger!, } 197 Chrystie flued $60 Brooklyn, ® youth living at No. Manhattan, was in Flatbush Police Court, for speeding his motorcycle nm Parkway Inst night. Not hav-| Ing # Benny went to jail to serve five days, Motorcycle Pollceman John F. Mente! told the Magistrate that Mogert and Tanother youth, each mounted on @ mo- {torevele, passed him at Eighteenth ave- nue at 1 o'clock lint night, racing at| & speed of over twenty-five miles an hour. He gave chase and caught the pair at the Park circle. Meale had not contemplated are reat, He was questioning Mogert's com- panion with the object of serving sum- monses when Moxer! jumped onto his machine and started up Prospect avenue at top apeed. The policeman climbed on his own machine and trailed along, ‘There Is a steep grade on Prospect javenue, and Mogerl got @ good start, but the policeman gained ground, As Mogert approached the top of the hill he saw that he would be overtaken as #00n as he seached level ground, Shute ting off him power he lacked up and | turned around, intending to reverse his course «nd shoot down the hill. Mesle comprehended the move. He was unable to turn his machine, 90 he kept right on and ran into Mogei motorcycle. Both vehicles were over- jturned, and their riders were thrown to the ground. When Mesle got up he {had a grip on Moger!. Neither the po- leeman nor his prisoner was badly hurt, ‘The records show that Moger! was ar- rested once before for speeding on Ocean aven His companion got away, but Mesle has his name and hopes to get him later. oe MANUEL AND BRIDE PART? Princess Au street, on ICH, Sept. 29.—Reports that Prin- conn Augusta Victoria of Hohenaollern, ‘bride of former King Manuel of Portu- gal, will refuse to ive with her husband were given added credit to-day when it was announced that the Princess would return to the home of her father, Prince William, as soon as ahe ts able to travel, An oMcial atatement was iaaued by the hospital physicians making this announcement, The Princess will remain in the hos- pital from two weeks to a month, tt was stated. She is slowly improving. The hospital authorities formally denied that the P ontranged, nounced that Sigmaringen 10 Richmond Park, Man r London, Fire tha saloon at No, 168 Columbia avenu sey City, early to-day and smouldered there for a considerable time before be- ing discovered + used the death by guf- focation of Jemn Fisher, thirty-eight years old, who, with his family, oocu- pied the floor above the saloon, His |Blood Poisoning Sets In Fol- | two-year-old taby jan | |ington avenue excavation betwe, 1918. DOCTOR S DYING (MAN ACCUSED IN a WAS SO COLD AFTER OPERATION | TO SAVE ual lowing Heroic Treatment at Hospital. Dr. Robert W. Morrison of No. 34 Tompkins avenue, Witliamebure, te dy- ing at the Willlameburg Hospital of blood poisoning cauned by his work over in the hospital Saturday. The baby, Edward Montaise, was taken to the hospital by the parents Saturday morning from their home at No. 12 Grand atreet, Willlameburg. Dr. Morrison diagnosed the case as one of rupture of the appendix and operated at once. ‘The child's inflammation was found to be gangrenous. Pr. Morrison took the ordinary precautions against septic poisoning. He did not know of any cut or sore on his fingers. After his arrival at his country home at Bayshore, the surgeon found that the index finger of hia right hand was be- coming painful. He treated tt for “dry infection,” stil! unconscious of any lesion which could admit the infection from the diseased organs of the baby directly to hie blood. ‘The pain in the finger and the swell- ing which followed increased to such an ent that Dr. Morrison returned to the hospital yesterday morning. Ten minutes after, he had explained his case to his fellow surgeons the right arm from the shoulder to the fingers awelled and became blue. He was put to bed and especialista were summoned. Dr. William C. TAtthold operated on Dr. Morrison to-day in an effort to cut off the polsoning from his vital organs. LEWD MURDER) *! THREATENS SLEUTH Leehan Confronts Betrayer in Court After His Trial Is Postponed. (Srertal from a Mtaff Correspondent.) TOMS RIVER, N. J. Sept. 21 The trial of William J. Leehan, otherwise known as Joseph Mortarity, charged with clubbing Mr. Carrie C. Turner to death in the woods near Lakewood, N, J. April 26, 1911, was to-day postponed until the December term of the Su- Prome Court of Ocean County. The delay wae a vital disappointment to most of the people of Monmouth and Ocean counties, and, indeed, of the whole State, who have been taking sides, politically and socially, over the Question of Leehan's guilt for twe yeara and @ half. Mre. Jasper Lynch, tn whose employ Taechan was at the time of the murder, was in court in an elaborate totlet and was surrounded by those who, like her, believed Bhat his innocence would be Proved ‘b@® the lawyers and detectives whe has hired to ald him. LACK OF TALEGMEN CAUSES POSTPONEMENT. When Justice Clifford Voorhess took the bench Attorney Wainwright up on behalf of “Joseph Moriarit; name under which the prisoner wae ar- raigned on the alk jon that it was the name he had given when arrested. During the short proceeding in court it became a matter of record that Lee- han's proper name ts Moriarty. Mr. Wainwright eaid that the Shertf® been instructed to produce forty- t taleamen for jury duty, Only ‘ty-five hud appeared and Mr. Wein- After t operation Dr. Litthold said that he had not the slightest bope that he had been successful. GIVE HONEYMOONERS ROAD FOR SPEEDING, SAYS MAYOR KLINE Laments He Wasn’t on Hand to Aid Newlyweds Held Up by Policeman. Honeymooners and Newlyweds, listen’ ‘The Mayor's your friend! If you're whirling along after the eremony on high myeed pay no atten- tion to those offictous motorcycle men. They don't Prople who underatand, fe right sald that he was informed that the other three prospective talesmen bad not been notified because they were out of the State. On verifying this atatement, Justice Voorhees postponed the trial. ae newas was taken out of the court by two deputy sheriffs he found that" he must pass George Jamison, the pink-faced, good-natured iittle private detective, who, posing as his friend, fur- nished to the State the testimony which Leehan wi arresed. Leshan balked, PRISONER THREATENS DETEC- TIVE BETRAVER. “Got that man out of ther he growied to his custodians. “I won't a1 awer for what will happen to him if he in my reac “Come on, now, come on,” urged the deputy sheriffs, “don't start anything now. Come on." Leshan obeyed, but he passed Jamison, turned his head end buried epithet at the detective. The keepers yanked him away, There was auch # disturbance In court that, Justice Voorheen was obliged to rap for plunge Into matrimony ought to have all the safeguanis, prot and priv- en in the land, parti are trying to shake off a naders, What happened to Mr. Irvin W. Day and hts bride, who was a daughter of Dock Commissioner R, A. C. Smith, brought forth to-day the Mayor's senti- ments on this aubject. It waa sumgented that the Mayor being a guest at the wedding should have been able to aid 419 Kast Tenth street, in Magistra the nowlywede over the embarrass: | ur pny'y chamberk in the Jefferson ment which arose when Policeman) sarket rt today, gave evidence Cochran arrested the couple as they) gion which larceny from whirled Into Larchment on @ furlou¥! ine person wan drawn Inet Frank | fash to je over the Connectlut| Vitalo of No. Stl Kast Tweifth street. State line, “T belleve T saw whirl by and also the other ntly pursuing them,” aald the Mayor It waa unfortunate that about the first thing that happened to them was an arrest, 7 “But som helped them ed “Help them," echoed His Honor “Why, If I had been there on time I'd have used such persuasion and influence and authority had, to tide them over. The Mayor sald that he believed that the city’s roads ought to be clear on such occasions and & quick and unham- ou might have between Vasasie @ bis taking the stand. The Magis- Open I trate reproved the boy and held Vitalo To keep open Its health home at Santa Clara in the Adirondackg during Octo- ber, the Working Girls’ Vacation So- clety of No. 10 Kast Twenty-second street will try in the two days remain- ing before Oct. 1 to raise by voluntary contribution $00. The object ts that working girls suffering from incipient tuberculosis, who otherwise would be charges on the community, may be put upon the self-supporting Hist this winter Contributions may » society and will be acknow In previous years Santa Clara has been closed Oct. 1, or at the latest Oct. 15, So many girls were put on the waiting list the last summer that the ty wants the home kept open to accom modate them, According to Dr. A. M. Flood, ph: clan in obi at Santa Clara, it t rare case that does not gain weight and blood quality there. timberman employed and who lived at No. 176 Avenue A, waw crushed to death thie morning at the bottom of the Lex- One Hundred and Twenty-fifth etreet and One Hundred and Twenty-slath street Define was adout sixty foet below the surface of the atreet when a boulde: estimated to weigh about two tons, fel! wite and children were taken out ef from @ point about forty feet above ang SOMEBODY WHISPERED AND BOY WASN'T SURE’ Had Told Magistrate He Surely Saw Man Pick a Pocket, but Later Only Thought So. David Landan, thirteen years off, of Landan was standing in front of @ moving pleture show at Fourteenth street and Broad on Saturday, he |, when he saw Vitalo lift a watch and fob from a man's pocket, He fol- et down Broadway a of the Mercer street station, who @ rented him, © watch was found wrapped in @ newspaper in Vitalo's| hand Although the boy had told the Magis- thad seen Vitaio take nm he got on the stand iqured” that Vitalo had taken it because he saw Vitalo stand- ing in front of the victim and two other men behind him and Vitalo had the wat! when arrested | When the Magistrate questioned him sharply the boy admitted that some- body—he couldn't say who—had talked to him about’ the ca: the tnterim | dra nk of the complaint tn $2.00 ba! FEWER BABIES DYING. ‘The last two weeks of the present Bep- tember ahow @ big decrease of infant mortality conypared with the cor- responding fortnight last ye. Board of Health figures show seventeen fewer deaths of babies leas than one year old, ‘The record for all ages shows %8 fewer deaths than during the equivalent time last year, The workers of the Bablee Welfare | Association feel that summer are practically over, but warndngs | Inst pneumonia are being sent out, For Constipation EX-LAX The Delictows Laxative BX. ee E CHANGED MIND, DIDN'T WANT 10 DE Feared She'd Paint Faint, Though, and Yelled for Help Instead of Wading Out. oe ‘The water was eo cold that Fernandes Retet, a nineteen-year-old girl of No. 1819 Boston road, began to scream for jelp befroe she really needed it when she attempted suicide early to-day in the lake near Seventy-seventh street and the West Drive, Central Park, Frank Rohn of No. 1698 Second ave- nue was taking « short cut through the Dark when he heard cries for help. He saw @ girl in the water up to her shoul- ders, and by walking out on @ jutting rock was able to drag her to shore. She wag taken to the Arsenal station, where Dr. Quagila of Flower Hospital Attended her. She told Lieut. MeCoy she “had a little trouble” and had de- ciéed to die, but after wading out into the water felt #0 cold she lost her nerve, She was very glad Rohn came along ang hauled her out, she sald, as she was ready to faint. Beyond saying she lived with her sister, and up to two weeke ago was employed by Mra. Kly at No, 2080 Broadway, she would tell nothing Of herself. She will be arraigned to-day on a charg of attempted suicide ————————_- WEW CLUE TO WCTIM OF HASTINGS MYSTERY Now Believe Skeleton Visited by Woman in Black That of John F. Moran. °The murdered man whose skeletot was found through the visits of a mys terious woman in black in @ lonely ae: tion of Hastings about three weeks ag¢ le belloved to have been John I". Moran, employed as a porter at the Bazar di Voyage, a bag and trunk establishmen! at No. Fifth avenue. ‘The dead man had a deformed right arm and suffered from curvature of t ¢ spine. Moran is gaia to have been sim: ilarly affiicted. He has been missing for several months, according to Mon: which he was formerly employed. Coroner Dunn of Hastings is attempt Ing to-day to get about the missing Moran. ESE seannESalienresieemmensarieemmmeenememmes Ordinary Personal Cleanliness t WELL sroomed folks give the same thoughtful attention to the care of the breath and teeth as they do to peffrery Goan | the face and hands. Tibevees any eabeed ad sitive persons are the victims of ‘and neglected teeth. ‘This is « real misfortune and inexcusable, “ODOL” of brapican Barpl breath sweet ‘Taller hep prevent decay _ luncheon or after- noon Bridge, ask at | the nearest effe store | or sales agency for ofpse Old Fashioned Chocos late Creams or Newe port Style Creams. Sold by Dragaiete 28 <Gplo Stores te Greater New York Every Day More People Ar — a Fine Relist Eddys' QA English At Grocers and Delicatessen Stores, 10 Made by E. Pritchard, 331 Spring St,,.N. 1 ae Hearts are made glad, By the timely use Of a World Want Ad, * more information . + be %

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