The evening world. Newspaper, October 16, 1914, Page 16

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a “16 ANKEE WIDOW. OF WAR HERO HERE ONMAURETANIA Soldier Husband of Mrs. Hazel Shopp Fell Three Months After Wedding. ‘The central figure of the 990 pas- ra of the Mauretania, arriving Liverpool to-day, with many table men and women among them, the girl-widow of a British soldier filed in the battle of Mons when ing an enterprise of almost cer- in death. She was Mrs, Hazel m Shopp, formerly of Yonkers. Among those who devoted them- ves to comforting her and whose thought on the ship's arrival here to see her safely in the arma of mother at the pier with as little bance as possible, were Mrs. jp Lydig, Mr. and Mrs, Hamilton Fish, Miss Eisie Janis, Major G. W. F FOR DANDRUFF, FALLING HAIR OR Martin, U. B. A, and John MoCor- mick, the Metropolitan Opera tenor. Mrs. Shopp met Capt. Shopp of the Royal Berkshire ..¢::ment at tho manoeuvres at Aldershot in 1918, He paid court and they became engage They were married June 16 last the home of tho bride's relatives t1 London, Capt. Shopp had a brilliant record from African and Indian campaigns and had won the Distinguished = «- vice Order for rescuin. a private of his company at Spion Kop tn the Boer war, although himself wounded. HELD BRIDGE THA. ARMY MIGHT RETREAT. The Royal Berkshires were among the first regiments sent acrows the channel to the battle ground, From the time when he handed his bride tha D. 8, O, which ahe was wearing about her neck to-day, she heard nothing from him until she received & message from Sergt. Jacobs, who had served with ¢ Shopp in South! Africa, say! t he was missing! and waa by ed to have been lost in the retreat from Mon He had volunteered to hold @ smal! bridge with twenty of his men until the main body of the retiring English} army was safe. Half an hour later a terrific explosion told of the blowing up of the bridge which he had been} holding. Nothing waa heard after-| ward of him or his detachment, but careful inquiries failed to disclose his ; boat. j by the iae BveBNiwe wUkLY, name in the lists of German rome Cae He had told his wife that 1 saw him again he would be weasiha the Victoria Cross. Hamilton Fish said the war had in- terrupted a delightful motor trip which he and Mrs, Fish were making through Southern France. They started for Paris as soon as they heard of the mobilization, but made slow progress because of frequent halts for examination of their papers and the crowds on the highways. They got as far as Dieppe on their way to Havre and England when the Mayor announced their automobile was confiscated for government ure. ‘Three days of cable negotiations with Ambassador Vage at London freed the car. “When we reached London, & month ago," said Mr. Fish, “the elty was apathetic, Indifferent, unmoved In three w wa saw a great change. When we left the city was boiling with enthusiasm and deter. mination.” Mra. Lydig, who left her Paris! home unwillingly at the insistence of ; Ambassador Herrick and her French friend, said the arousing of Lond.a was unmistakable and was inspiring. Mra. Lydig said that she was ter- ribly jammed and huatied about in getting from Paria to London, having no seat on the train to Ifavre and scarcely sitting room on the Channel No ono had a cause for com-| Plaint, however, she sald, and for! one she was profoundly impressed| kindness and courtesy of nt!) whose affairs weto thrown Into chaos by the war disaster. M'CORMICK TRAINS CHORUS IN IPPERARY.” tho! ¥ benefit of former members of the crew of the Mauretania who are at the front. Gustay Bergman, a Swedish tenor of the Century Opera Company, came near to missing his engagement to reach this country on the Mauretania He was at Rotterdam when he re- celved a telegram from Milton Aborn reading: “Must open ‘Jewels’ Oct. 20. Confirm.” when a huge Dutch policeman broke into his room, put him under arrest and ordered him to produce those “Jewels” at once. Only after an ju terpreter had been brought to the police office was he able to explain | that Aborn referred to the “Jewols of the Madonna,” in which Bergman was to appear. ee FAKE DENTIST SENTENCED. Eayptian Goes to the tstand for Three Months, D. R. Deniriian, an Eeyptian. for «everal years past has conducted est ‘Third avenue, | penttentlary fined $200 in hattan, to-day dental was « for three Spe f tistry without a | This ta the ens third time Deniesian e pald a fine t the first t nonths in t Russell in imposing n told Denirjian, that another, convic. tion would mean the maximum term of,one year in prison and a fine of | Hoe had hardly read the mossare| who) 405 | night the | nigh 7 | heautifies complexions, prevents rough- ‘ne : GS ae RIVAL, VU ‘cODRG Another Body tn River. ‘The body of @ man about forty yoars old, with dark hair and mustache, was found to-day floating in the East River off Plier 16. The man was § feet 7 inches and weighed 160 pounds, The| body wns attired in @ black cont and vest, gray trousers and b SEE OVERNIGHT HOW READILY POSLAM HEALS Often when Poslam is applied to an eruptional spot that is the last you will swe of the disorder, and the skin is clear | next morning Jam is efficiency itself in the treat- ment of any skin trouble, Its merits are easily demonstrated by trial over- ‘Complexions are beautifully d, Blackheads and adolescent Pimples removed. Nothing equals Postam for Eerzema, Itching stops at once. All eruptional troubles are con- trolled and driven away, | Your druggist sells Poslam, For free jaample write to Emergency Laborator- ies, 32 West 25th Street, New York Poslam Soap, medicated with Poslam 25 cents and 15 cents.—Advt. 10, lvis. : ‘ ENTHUSIASTIC SUPPORTERS OF VAR- NE-SIS HEALTH WEEK TO MEET PUBLIC Mrs. Stanwood, Whose Recovery Has Attracted Much Attention, to Meet Public Monday. a DISCARDED Gy ane Bier] tod 5 aad ©! TTGHY SCALP—25 CENT DANDERINE |Newest Styles in Fall Shoes Artistically Designed Major Martin extended a visit AT | abroad originally Intended to be short PINBBE CW ! ts Y t] and itching of th Ip; the h note | DI sotlng & as a yoluntecr'alde to Am- | Be re! Seve your baie ec, eee cal a then wis Blt ateno Sertd'at enn‘ Kage Fainstakingly Made| Style <> zs ait be utiful. ae Ms & shies been neglected and| John Mec prioaae ott of ca Faultlessly inished | 8061; On account of the many VEKT _ for further particulars about eae isual at- requests and the wu! tention attracted by the re- covery of Mrs. Stanwood and the fact that many find it impossible to call” at her idence, she has consented to meet the public in person at the Var-ne-sis Boston office, 140 Boyleston Street. The following. description is given for the benefit of those not familiar with the case. From wheel chair to ¢rutches, from crutches to canes, then to know the joy of walking about the house without any ance, was the experience of Mrs. Stanwood of 37 Columbia st. Malden, Mass, She sai I suffered from rheu for years, first which was evening & Jin te | sing | perary. ter evening on the voyage | ng his fellow passengers to| t's 1 Long, Long Way to Tip- He had « mighty chorus in| nt practice by last night. | Chief Steward F. V. Jones of the} | Mauretania raffled off a spiked metal | ot| helmet of a captain of the Twenty- 1 / 8ixth Corps of the German army and a pate of epaulettes of an officer of r Corps found on the Mons by Private s Guards, FOUND UNNECES) SARY l arriy isl Onl; thi i¢ in ah he "taded, dry, or too oily et & 25 cent bottle Ie oft chetli i 's rine at any drug store or counter; apply a little as directed Hea ten minutes after you will the best investment We sincerely believe, regardle: everything else advertised, that if y desire soft, lustrous, beautiful hair lots of it—no dandruff—no scalp and no more falling hair—you | | must use Knowlton's Danderi If ‘Adv’ "The confidence which W. A, Varney has in the re is proven by the fact that he tecured photographs. of Mrs. Stanw and on crutches some months ago, well knowing the ultimate outcome, Vaer-ne-sis Health Week N New Economically Priced From selecting the leathers to finishing the shoes—every touch is correct. These new Blyn shoes for Fall have the shapeliness and comfort of choicest leathers - and canbble, conscientious construction. Popular prices and small profits are the rule in Blyn stores, The Blyn business is operated in the interest of the public, for the far-sighted, selfish reason that your fullest sat- isfaction is our only guarantee of future business. cxBlyn Shoe you care re for heavy hair, that with beauty and ife; has an incompa of is fluffy and lustrous, try Danderine. pplication doubles the beauty ides it immediately dis- every particle of dandruff; you can not have nice, heavy, healthy hair you have dandruff. This destructive scurl robs the hair of its lustre, its strength and its very life, and if not vercome it produces a feverishness| eventually—why not no one who suffers from phy s told done all in their po case was beyond trea cured. In spite of this couragement, I felt that there was— there must be—some remedy that would reach my case if I could only find it. Reading so much about the remark- Jable recoveries through the use of h means. dis-|realize that these same people have tried the same remedies thet you have; bod have been told that theve Nigh no for them, and like you, atte faith in Varnes until afer they had tried A Fascinating Style Indies’ Patent Colt Button Bo with Fawn Buck tops, overgai Var-ne-sis, I decided that this was the Mrs. seahoud will meet the public effect, Narrow, plain toes and[ijextent, the cords 1 had | been looki from ve in Newa ie Spanish Louis, wll Teather heels. Af {drawn tight like steel wire tothe Gg. more and arn ageg Aiteet Beetnccrtart l style that wins instant ap-—}|cian pronounced my case arthr continued to treat me, and the disease ntinued to spread until every joint in my body was afflicted except my hands. My became involved and it was fapoartle for me to move without the ain. Finally my con- that I had to use a y nd my husband would lift me from the bed to the chair every day. I had to have assistance all the time, as my shoulders and arms were useless, I could not bear to move them, they seemed to be locked in their One day I fell from the wheel c! and on account of my condition my|is a wonderful wma and be a daughter could not get me back alone,| wonderful blessing that sufferers can In consequence I lay on the floor from | secure it so casi I would be pleased two o'clock until five, when assistance ;to have any sufferer call or write to | secured the remedy immediately. ‘he very first bottle did more for me than all the other treatments, and before I had taken three bottles 1 was able to leave my wheel chair and go about on crutches, Last I abandoned my crutches for canes, and to-day can about doing my housework without t! use either. I can now go outsi the house, the first time for two years, but use a cane to make sure of myself —a new woman, free from the terrible thought of being free from the te in Newarifs Shopping Centre 689 Broad Street Opposite Military Park - Reds. NeedsNo Breaking In The flexible sole of Red Cross 140 Boyleston street, Boston. aed The evidence is the most ever brought to the attention of the ublic, and as the people are all from Boston and vicinity, it is an easy matter i look them up. d to W. A. Varney, Lynn, Mass., for the newspsper devoted to rheumatics. ie A registered physician may con- sulted free charge at the Boston office, 140 Boyleston Start to-day. Join this great Health Week—Tell your neighbors oe so that every sufferer from this disease will know what good health means, Get Var-ne-sis at Riker-Hegeman’s and other reli it Romping Is a real pleasure in Blyn Plan Shoes. Indoors or out—run and romp— they hold the children’s feet easily, but not loosely—firmly, but not ti; htly. Neither ‘lip, Hogi bind nor bulge Here’s a New Joy— Shoes follows every movement of the foot as a kid glove follows every movement of the hand, In Red Cross Shoes stery step is We are sole agents in Greater New York and Newark La ’ Patent Colt Red Cross Shoes with Cravenette cloth tops; narrow, plain toe, flexible welted ind the new spool heels. A w Fall style that yields extreme comfort through free—every step is graceful. Dance| Gun Metal Calf ing, standing or walking is apleas-| Sixes ure in this shoe of extreme style], tv 8.......1.75 y and absolute comfort. Bi toll 2.00 i gto @.....2, mars the comfort of the genuine Blyn-Plan Nature Shoe. Patent Colt and Tan Russia Sizes 5 toll, 2,00 11}4to.2. 2.50 100 extra by mati United Ste *4 mahogany Rus- A New Fall Style Men's flat last tra broad shank extreme netal calf, an Business is Booming! wg e long also in gun ¥ Peppy-Peppermint! Ten Big Best Stores. | Easy to Reach. Fall Shoes in All Grades KES ; A new WRIGLEY chewing gum with DOUBLE die wae lea ae Hh The amount of orders being given at the Electrical Re strength Peppermint flavor— " Exposition exceeds anything in the history of the 4 DOUBLE wrapped and sealed to keep it good. It is delightful and the delight is long lasting— : It's like a Peppermint Lozenge } chew and CHEW! } It has lots of “Pep’’— you can’t lose the flavor. And with each 5c package you get a that you can ROYAL FURNITURE “4 HARLEM STORE sees PIECE SET Write for $3 >on $50 5 « % Show, now in its eighth year In addition, orders representing hundreds of thou- sands of dollars will be booked after the Show closes By tomorrow night, over 200,000 people will have attended this Exposition, the greatest of. its kind ever held United s2sino( ,Oupon h every Business is good — and it’s going to be better! chase of at ’ good toward many valuable presents. | sroem 84098 THIS 7 least $35.00 Try this new joy today! sidaad be Terms The Electrical Exposition and Motor Show. Grand Central Palace Lexington Ave and 46th St Made by the United Profit- Catalog 7.50 100 Today and Tomorrow ll am toll pm manufacturers » Sharing Coupons SPEARMINT LEAF JUIC + py

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