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> p 4 Crash! for New York When Limit of Endurance, Not Far Off, Is Reached » "Too Congested,” Says Prof. | Nearing of Toledo, O., After a Visit Here. DANGER IN ITS GROWTH New Subways Only Add to} Peril—After 10,000,000 Population, What? { (Bpectal to The Rvening Work.) WOLEDO, 0., Jan. 6.—Prof. scott Searing of the Toledo University re- eently #tartied Toledoans upon his re- turn here by declaring that New York | City ts the worst city of the world| and that it will meet with a crash! because of its too congested condi- tton. “What do you mean?” the represen- | tative @ The Evening World asked Prof. Nearin, “Bach time I go to New York I am Pore than ever impressed by the fact that New York t les the futile American philosophy, 1d Prof. Nearing. “Now York ts great because she is TUT __Prof SCOTT NEARING That limit is reached when the net result of the density is measured in human suffering instead of human Joy. “Every day in New York, hundreds of thousands of people are herded and eee ia packed into the suffocating subway large,” continued he. “So say thé| trains, whore, from forty, fifty or citizens. But ts she? New York has{sixty minutes, morning and night, the largest population of any city in| they #way back and forth in a crush the United States; eho spends more|°f humanity, Does it pay? The money; hae more schoel children; |*U>Way Fide eats up more vital en- feeds more paupers; supports mors pene cee wie en, Aaa theatres: tolerates more proatitutes| Omen than the entire day's work and criminals, and has a large export} tow much eryabedee i oenrieied trade. She is richer but ahe ts niso) Wie thes ride for three hours a day? poorer than any other city in the{FoF four? For five? When that limit erly of human endurance is reached the “Bxamine two or three of thome | Hit of city Krowth has been reached, sitions more clonely, New vor, | “New Yorkers fear that Hmit, be. eta tiie cig een Tartes {cause it means an Immense crash in States. It is for that reason that she | PCCulative values, fs mow spending $400,000,000 on aub.| “R&P!d growth is no goal. areeis callive, eonacaticns “Cancerous tissue often grow "To relieve congestion? Not to in. | TaPidly. | New Yorkers are now crease congestion! | ing in vitality a price far in exc zy from more “ j th et . jt speaking of ‘What has the present y | the net Kalns, Tam no system accomplished for the rayny| the Feal estate men, but of the aub- clef| way riders—the great masses who of congestion? = “Formerly five or six-story tene- | ments extended as far as the carry- make up New York's population, “There we touch a delicate nerve. Real estate? Why al the real- rmit. No sooner were ( ya] canes eS , pe ir were the subways | per cent, on New York real estate, built than the territory tapped by} them was covered with high houses that daily poured their swarms of Well, why? “New York is the richest city in 2 ti ates, T e famates into the growing stream that‘? United States. There should y Sows each workday to and from the CROUsn there for all and a great dea to spare. The land value alone in centre of New York “Bach new subway, by tapping a new area, will increase the conges- tion at New York's centre. Subways are tho arterial system on which congestion grows. But the people are not made happier. They simply ride further to and from thar work, and there are more of them. Greater New York is about four bill- “Is it not remarkable that so rich a city should be unable to afford the education of the children? Yet that is literally true, Year after year the wealth of the city grows, Year after year the school accommodations be- e more inadequate until at latest MAY REACH 10,000,000 POPULA- accounts tens of thousand of children TION; THEN WHAT? were on part time and the public le edit ce ‘oye ture work was being curtailed be ‘Ab,’ retorts the enthusiast, ‘but Conse of shortage of funds—and this New York is a growing city.’ Well, happened in the richest city in the what, of it? Thero iy a limit to land; a city so rich that it cannot a 4 t even afford educational facilities of srowth—a point of diminishing aocial fre siidren who are its future cltt- returns in population increase, “New York's population may go to ten millions, but will it go to fifteen, twenty or twenty-five? Remember rens PUBLIC WORKS BUILT ON STAR- VATION WAGES, “A month ago an article appeared tn the Survey written by an expert in charity work, He told the story of the men who are doing the work In the new four-hundred-million-dollar y that will add hundreds of is, if not billions, to the value of real te in and around Greater New York, The Bureau of Standard of the Board of Bstimate and Appor- tionment estimated that $840 was the minimum cost of physical health for a family of a man, wife and three young children tn New York, The muckers on the subway were getting $480 1f they worked full time—that is a little more than half a living wage. there is a limit to fopulation density, CUT OUT MEATS IF KIDNEYS ARE TROUBLING YOU THE ‘CONSCRIPTION LAW FOR U.S, WARNING GIVEN BY GARRISON Tells Congress People Must Face That or Adopt Volun- tary Military Training. OUTLINES HIS PLANS. — Continental Army of 500,000 | Subject to Instant Call jeans must adopt voluntary military training or face conscription. This was Secretary of War Garrison's army national defense hearings be- fore the House Military Committee. He declared a large standing army undesirable and “utterly unwar- ranted” as an “unstable foundation.” His continental army plan, Garrison said, was ‘the only feasible alterna- tive if compulsory military training nscription for service is to be avoided, | “If you adopt a system based on continental then voluntary action (the army plans), and that fails, policies based on universal se or some form of compulsory servic ;will be enacted as the only remain- ing remedy,” said Garrison, The War Secretary read a long | statement to the committee in open ; Ing his examination, outliaing the ad- | mintstration army preparedness pro- gramme, including increase of the | Standing army to 140,000 men, the | continental army of 490,000 volunteers and increase of munition supplies and | strengthening of coast fortifications. “The people are now insisting that such proper measures for national defense shall be taken,” said Garri son. “The integrity of the Nation and its very existence may depend upon what Is done at this time. The ‘people have passed beyond a point |of requiring further debate or rea- | sons for necessity for such action. “We may not solve our problem by either a regular standing army or attempting use of the militia.” Regarding invoking the Swiss or Australian universal training systems Garrison said: | this time, The National Government has no jurisdiction over the States’ | public school systems. A constitu- tional amendment would be required to give it such jurisdiction, Further- more, it is not believed the people Pave reached the conclusion that compulsory military service is a ne- continued Garrison, “The chaos which « crisis always produces makes it certain that several months would intervene after outbreak of war be- fore any considerable number of vol- unteers would be ready. “There is a disposition among som that we are now facing a cri Th is not the proper view. There iscom- mon agreement that we should have 500,000 men subject to instant call.’ Garrison sald {t was tmpossible and it would be enormously expensive to maintain a standing army of that number, declaring present accomino- ldations would only care for 50,000 additional, The cost of a half mill- fon men would be a half billion dol- lars annually, he said, | “I. 4s also impossible under present {conditions to enlist more than 90,000 The largest of American municipal) 4 year,” Garrison explained. enterprises nstructed on! “In @ democracy the nation's de- ar " wages in th in the land:| tense should rest upon the citizens Uric Acid in meat exciteg} the wares paid by many of ther ina not upon a professional paid - > other New York industries are ari P Kidneys and Lrritates | fesquely. small—so. small that the force. + ciuara ” ra are forced leave their ba- Federalizing of the National Guare the Bladder. mothers are fore : s and go to help support the! Garriso: c as impossible be- family; that the bables dle for Inch ae th ‘Government. lacks, author care and proper pourish- Noted Authority says we Hi ine monest of Amorican wus |ity over State militia, He dls- '€] mt o es ve Feder pay bill must flush Kidneys with | nicipalitics ; approved the Federal militia pay ‘ ew York, the richest city, with) gat the militia be given the right Salts if Back hurts, We are a nation of meat eaters and our blood is filled with uric acid, says a well-known authority, who wants us to! be constantly on guard against kidney trouble, her myriads of families existing from day to day In the frightful shadow verty, presents a unique specta- i: ithy? Yes, but the people of New York who do the work do not have the wealth. The landlords of New York, who have the wealth, do not have to wor’ an ie a lo their utmost to. free —————- u ood of this irritating acid, but| become weak froin. the ating acid, but) WALLACE HOSPITAL HEAD. blood to poison the entire system, When your kidneys ache and feel like lumps of lead, and you have stinging ‘ins in the back or the urine is clou a Inland Post by Kingsbary, Charities Commissioner Kingsbury to- |day offered the on of Superin’ lull of sediment, or the bladder is irri. |4¢Mt of New York City's Children's Hos- table, obliging you to seck relief during | Pit#!_ and Schools on Randall's Island to the night; when you have severe head: |)! Georse Wallace, Superintendent of aches, nervous and dizzy spells, sle the State Inetitu for the Peeble leasness, acid stomach or rheumatism in| Minded at Wrenthem, Mase Phis ti bad weather, get from your pharmacist {the Powition held by Mrs. Mary C. Dun- about four o' of Jad Salts; take a who was removed after cha tablespoonful in a glass of water before been made against her by fecatlast each morning, and in a few |*oner Kingsbury, Tt pies $4,500 mination A and Dr sioner Kingshy grade. Expert minded came he country to comp: Dr. Wallace wa: Walter Fernald, head of Waverly Insti- days your kidneys will act fine, ‘This from the acid of famous salts is ma: eer and lemon juice, combined with ithia, and has been used for generations to flush and eulate clogged kidney ived the the care of from all parts of educated under Dr. to neutralize the a in urine so it is urine ution in Massachusetts Pe Jonesy ® s00ter Of irritations thug | eon th Biamencniisette, ; . eee ending urinary and bladder disorders. " Jed Salts is inexpensive and cannot] yi sere een injure; makes « delightful effervescent “ADELPHIA, Jun. Oy—Harrison Steadman of Cleveland, @ member of a theatrical company playing tn this cit uddenly in a hutel to-day, Death o heart disease, Ho was forty. five yess old, water drink, and nobody can make & mistake by taking a little occasionally to keep the kidneys clean and active-— Aart. to enter the congnental army “grade for grade” he recommended “Thus free discretion and choice would be afforded elther to stay in the National Guard, which will} conserved and built up on an even more liberal scale than enter the continental army any loss of rank,” Garrison stated He denied the militia would be jured by the continental ganisation, Recrulting of the continental army from private military schools and high schoojs can be expected, Gar- rison predicted, and he said all United States military exports are united In Indorsing the plan “Phere is absolutely not t present, or without in army's or- new In this suggestion,’ sald Garriso It is merely a system of Federal volun- teers, rat ganized, equipped and trained in times The occasion ls for a wise, sen- sible. adequate military policy on per- manent lines and for definite ends. “If compulsory service is now de- sired for the country, then a short provision in the act will accom. plish it “A small, highly trained, bighly effective regular urmy, expansible in character, federal volunteers, raixed, officered and trained in time of pe and the national guard for uses is the best solution,” —————>___ To Prevent The 0 Bi Lining 1 : im 7, RUNS "EW Grore's siguatase 00 bea, 23e,—-ddrk Needed for Defense. WASHINGTON, Jan, 6.—Amer- | warning to-day when he opened the | Neither is belleved practicable at) coxsity “Our present military force ts to-| ally inadequate to our responsibili- “The boys of America and particularly the boys of New York City are being feminized because of the predomi- nance of women among their teachers,’ said Hugh Cabot. Schools Would Be Better _ For Boys if Feminized, Under a Never-Changing, Century-Old System, the Women Specialize for Parenthood and Men for Work, Says Henrietta Rodman—To Get Per- fect Results Training Should Be Alter- nated Between the Sexes. OG 66 1a AEDES & 444 04 4604 O8006 1. ¢ * |4@ . | —} | | | y HENRIETTA pooman : Of wRemeryv * > C04046030609 By Nixola Greeley-Smith. Are American schools feminized? * said Henrietta Rodman, “They are not! But they ought to be.” J had asked the moet widely known woman teacher in New York to reply to the statement made by Hugh Cabot of Boston that the boys of America and particularly the boys of New York City are belag feminized because of the pre- dominance of women among thelr teachers, In discuss omas W. Churchill, President of the Board of Education of this elty, admitted yesterday that New York 7,000 women teachers to 4,000 men. explained Miss Rodman, “the purpose of education should be the production and development of ing this charge Declares Woman Teacher | Hundred and Sixteenth Street } | Italy. ‘MURDER TRIAL UNFOLDS POLITICAL TRAGEDY ——OF*LITLEMTALY” Lamonte, Victim of Shooting, Was Candidate for Slain Leader's Power. Another chapter in a drama of Little Italy was unfolded to-day be- fore Justice Weeks in the Supreme Court, when the trial of Antonio Im- poluzzo for the murder of Thomas Lamonte, on Oct. 15, 1914, at One and First Avenue, was resumed, with | Marla Pappiro on the stand | She tostified that she was washing clothes on the second floor of No. 382 Kast One Hundred and Fifteenth Street on the day Lamonte was shot Her door was suddenly opened and a man rushed in, saying the police were after him for crap shooting | He begged her to give him a sult of) lothes, promising, if she did so, to! return that night and give her $100. | She gave him tho olothes and he nt into a bedroom, but there he un- dressed and got into bed, About an hour later detectives, put on the trail \by persons who had seen the man run away after shooting Lamonte, entered | [the Pappiro apartment and arrested | Impotuzzo. The shooting of Lamonte is alleged to be @ phase of thy political tur- bulance which has long agitated Lite Lamonte was a candidate for |Demoeratic lea de vaeant by the murder during the summer of Michael Any At the time was shot was talking with Rosa Lamonte, cousin, and one of the fire went through wounded her in the chest tostity Detect wave evidence days before the shooting th jans, one of them identi polus#o, rented a ruvm opposite w Li rte th. wih ol to his bullets y and She will three hin be later, to that ten Ttal- as im- the tw liv on at One Hundred and Sixteenth and cut a a Avenue, window shade. those who ent or WIFE SAYS FORD AGENT ACTED LIKE ‘TIGHT-WAD John Hunt Replies That She Saw | Too Much of A. | merhorn, | Replying charges wad insulting language et and First through the ntly to wate left the saloor hole pa of wh bor . Scher- of brutality le by Mra. Bros., for examination on next Tu Mr. plained that truck and in front of Bene's machine OVER tile Herbie Saxe Ran in Front Automobile in Brooklyn Roadway. stern Parkway, Brooklyn, at section of it adjacent to No. of In deep mo tead, the vere live the § flyo-yon I Herbert Saxe, | day, for Herbie an automobile, He was death yesterday afternoon 6 machine of John R 6, member of the firm of manufacturing chemists, at No, 209 Underhill ants viet unc He 68 Brooklyn, Awa result of the death Bene 1d to-day in $1,000 ball on a char manslaughter in the s day. Hene ox no witnessed the ac by rated ident, He ¢ clared in the Gates Avenue Court to- day, where he was arraigned on a technical charge of homicide, was slaughter charge, was unavoldabie, later changed to the And his story rne out by #9: the boy_ ran around ———- DELEHANTY GIVEN GAVEL. gavel rimme omning to tw ented this n rir crushed Bene, thirty who Avenue, A degree those » witnesses, who @x- was Judge Dele KILLING OF BOY) OF OHIO RIVER STEAMER Kanawha Survivors Have Wild Scramble for Life Along Stretch of Four Miles, PARKERSBURG, W. Va, Jan, @— Capt. Brady M. Berry, and eixty-twe of the passengers and crew of the steamer Kanawha which sank In the Ohio River at Dam No. 19 last night arrived here early to-day on @ epectal | train sent dut by the Baltimore asd Ohio Railroad Company to pick up the survivors scattered along the tour miles of river front on the West Vir- ginta side, Berry eaid that while he saw se one in the water and did not know that any had been lost he felt there had been fatalities. The steamer carried thirty-six pas sengers and a crew of forty-five. Eight persona are said to bave been drowned. Among them are Steward Lloyd Gee, Purser Bert Wolf, Mrs. Reebe Beegis, her daughter, Mrs, Mamie Simpson and Mrs, Simpson's six-months'-old baby and a wateb- man on the steamer. Two women passengers whose names are not known are also reported to have been Jost. Wolf ts sald to have given his life trying to save others. ———_ Court Rules Women Teachers in w Kton Schools May Wed. WASHINGTON, Jan. 6—Washii ton women school teachers were Jubilant to-day over a decision of the Supreme Court of the District of Ce. Jumbia, holding th y atil retain thelr p elation Was in th Aline Strong Rented a writ of mandamus pelling the Hoard of Education Instate hes as a teacher, which poi tlon was forced rule 45 to vacate following her marriage June 15, 1915. This rule aute tleally dit charged a woman teacher when of ACKER, MERRALL & CONDIT COMPANY Fresh Killed Roasting Chickens 25c» Extra choice—soft, tender meat. Quality that means protection —_——————= BRIGHTER CHILDREN Children are brighter to-day than im Ex. 1820 ter ne is « which man- that the accident is a Jessie Stevenson Hunt in a suit forlhanty, who im filling out the vacaney| @ generation ago—but are they separation, John Elltott Hunt, man-|in the Court of General Bexsions caused stronger? ‘That's a grave question. . y the election of Judie ‘o the| @ . ager of the Ford automobile ageney | By, the election of budke Bwam '*! So many pinched faces, dulled eyes in Brooklyn, to-day acoused bis wife, in the Supreme Court, of having spent |too much ttme in the company of Ar thur F, Schermerhorn, member of @ famous faintly and Secretary of the The gavel was t ployees of the District Attorney's office. the gift Ari jured Boy on Way to i of the em- and languid feelings make us wonder if they will ever grow into robust, healthy men and women, If your children catch colds, are tired when rising, lack healthy color, é al ckeakure: ‘the sine Ainerican Surety Company, He lives Jon. 6 . ; that still mythical creature, the human being. The ee ee nie sha Btreat or find studies difficult, give them schools should not undertake to turn out highly speclal- xcept on one oceasion at the Wal- Scott's Emulsion to enrich their 7 dorf-Asto Ifunt says, she was ined sasmschiAOy ROPE AS ORG, ae ney Se ecnee ee ee tanita ook blood and restore the body-forces “The woman tea make | ha U been fined $1,800 for mpenl am Hae horn. And at the Waldorf, she says, | start in aloigh with lin) to healthy action, the boys girlish, teven) Mind, you woula sull pick ner from Al her inother and sister were along, |for a h tthe boy died in his Snattls sion i | make iiegarsis irlish rust she | CPOWd as the stall of which martyrs Sk ares. that Waet Mmuimnarethe aching the institution Scott's Emulsion is used in . peal had n dol N and crusaders are fashioned tin ven wives are 8 to — oo private schools. It is not a “patent 1s compelled to teach under a system) OF course, Nietusche says, ZOMe- | have plenty of money—her husband Hurned to Death;! medicine’, simply a concentrated food- of education which hay come to us) Rhere, that martyrdom docs not prove | gaye her only $80 during the meason. tonic, free from alcohol to improve from the thirteenth century ana) et vou ve Fea Settee When she complained, she aller he New MART! Jan.|the ‘blood, benefit the tu + /DUt sexless, emotionless litte pedente.| might (be Kainst you. since lag if she didn't like it she could sue re ten die Tain ert | has it—always refuse substitutes, “etawever: degeruetien 4n tenacity ¢ in attribute of | fe divorce. Justice whurger eae eerie | Scott & Bowne, Bloomfield, N. J.—adet, 16a to-day is not the product of the|tie nord. Mut Nietwehe wa Jaworded her $15 a week alimony, K to reach the others | woman teacher but of the man School| women to-day who have the Joan of! rete —_ A 4 physicians feare nt. Very recently the/Are look in their faces becuuse these -Americans at Washtngfin's font of Pub s sis in| Women have had a vision, a vision of | Tomb, Se e : | an entire sex t led out of bondage SHINGTON, Jan. 6 This was that If he cout have his way He] the voloes of dead, formusien women, raciicanty avery deiecace to the Pan-lINOt @ Bite of Absolutely Removes would send all the gir o the| Who urge tiem to do battle for justice | J 2 : é 4 eodom, Nothing more un-| American Selentifle Congress kitchen and all the boys to the work. | {it Air fren, YOUN Mere Une i invitation. to. visit. the Breakfast Unti Indigestion. One package 0) ined the < uth : lomh of Washington, the A t t . ae Lit he | ogined than Henrietta in her cloistral | ore. honor more siattios have oroves it. 25c at all druggists, “He would do much m a 1Ehe | robe, her close-cropped hair, Perhaps Sere ee istices patna: toad A A pend sat the bo the kitehen | You don’t believe that anything can | erected bn ba Y D k W t would send all the boys t r na | dignify the ¢ ture, Mut Hen. | {hy Ver See’ ou Urin ater tod the git to the workshop” Tine | Sanity the Cantle colfure. Hut The Wonderfal Bxperlences |terrupted, “because whe ACH MOX | ary ry le and yet most human be ae La a a ae ment |8! ESSENTIALS FOR HUMAN |{\" ational detectives.” the qualities of the oth HAPPIN he i inuralyg t protester, {eave a glass of hot water ana! ot Little Miss Prim! tn the qua f ' ft " nh whil nn some respects Phosphate prevents ilinces ALTERNATE THE TRAINING, | ;, nued thi eile | Rodman and keeps us fit. . SAYS MISS RODMAN necessary human happiness scusting this point “But you would get the Juman development, ‘Poy ure work,| With my pupils t draw for them a Hay, friendship, citizenship, mating) thermometer of the emotions. T start f m burns, leaves veloped human being o pial rae anh ne abib, mating a coron-ault-love-everybody has] pitt 4 « a ling 1th ue i is aye ed boys and xitl ' ith er fay siiee in ce 0 com mitted boys and : wate | repare us for all thers things pri | that pn my thermometer rises im | iustible material in the form of ushes, there occupations,” Mi loan tas | pare men and women equally for all| this fashion. so the food and drink taken day after jawered. “Hducation t roduces /of thei, not deve Binee SOF we K|THE RISING SCALE OF HUMAN | i.) jeuves in the alimentary canal a the woman who is a spt tin mo- | the worst evils of civilization tocday | EDUCATION. certain amount of indigestible mm |ternity, the man who ts a specialist in |i. the woman whe is simply a highly| Henrietta Rodman took @ penct. | terial, which if not completely eliminated learning « living, So a s deprived | specialized female, What’ shall wejand drew m i rmometer which from the system each day, becomes lof the joys of parenthood 1 woman | de went about like ¢ . _ | food for the millions of bacterin which | Praag 1 odie... ‘ 1 respor . TNs RAL A TIONAL infest the bowels, Vrom this mass! of the juy mr secre hu don't need t ‘of left-over waste, toxins and plomain would be bettor if SORE | ve t After all oh | like poisons are formed aud sucked into | nized," Miss Hodiman eon dell fos ae Pe PaTMoTisM the blood | jcause the present on lization |)" ¥ and i job cE 4S mala livin, Men and women who can't get | hus not succceded, ‘The ferninine polat |e. 4. aie A O8' EYE ing right must begin to tuke inside jof view is the only new = under ‘Gur system of education,” Miss! “CIUMAENSHIP. baths, Before eating breakfast each the sun. Man is talked out, thought Iman continued, “came to us from] = morning drink a glass of real hot a . - basen thirteenth century, nd we kuow! = | water with a tablespoonful of lime- (No, 4) out, educated out, I mb education t Was practically Jstone phosphate in it to wash out of 7 fought out, Woman, for entries Ins | monopolized by celibate men ani | FRIENDSIOP, the thirty fcet of bowels the previous tle Miss Prim articulate, has suddenly found her- | women." a not wy Jday's accumulation of poisons and Came to the city; eelf. Bho alone is new. And if her], Cellbate in word, not dood," I sul, ed tosins and to keep the entire alimen That is the reason \frosh view of were to | pressed ‘Their ideals were the ideals of DUMBSTIC AFFECTION tury canal 4 an pure and {re ah \ For writing this ditty. Jupon the nest gener id bel eolibutes whatever their practices ‘Phos wh are subject to sick teas a groat thing for the race, Gut It is] They despived the and y ache, colds, billousness, constipation World Ads, showed her rooms a & outy |tusht that it show de 1 KOMANSIC LOVE, others who wake up with bad taste To fit all sized purses, not be tup 1) The beautiful civilization of Gree foul breath, backache, rheuniatic stiff | © fit all sled pi ' way to Ueseribe our ’ bay | made the body a cult, And the real! less, or have a sour, gussy ote i And that is the end to paraphrase thone line 1 | educators of to-day are restoring t after meals, are ur; fo get ag Ot these two little verses. et a | exquisite, G Hew, | Women EEhO—)-ORLY-LOVE, pound of limestone phosphate from nor Waa wdora Dur eth Duncan, | — —— v B Ret wresstrine ee | Alys Bentle ve “piven the emotional defective | the drug st ae and Regia Beasties H 263,276 While Henrietta: Rodman spoke 2] School, are slory that | knows, Helf-love and romantic lov internal sanitation, | Uhis will cos 263,2 ud been noting and approving the] was G ® n our own! domesticity and friendship,’ she ex- | very ~ 4 silica per yng 2 “ ey 5 eee tees eae Oe ee times hoy. OF iitl| plated “fhit only. the’ developed | any’ one an enthusiast on the subject, | WORLD "TO LET" ADS. LAST YBARwe | SiAot OF obs bobbed Brows | rust ally, physical-|}yuman being sees life as a whole and! Remember, inside bathing is more hair—a new coiffure. Wit high | fy and. err nilys There! has beon| noe merely aifocting himself, is fam-limportant than outside bathing, | 100,380 laced boots, her Ines} a great deal of discussion recently lily or his particular group. The edu-leause the skin pores do not absorb! yore ry ti ty" wht Aaateowl iM ih ‘ ore Thy he Herald, Times, Gan, Tribune cut square but not low, 1 gure | About hananity's Tent Co lennox cated humun being touches the bigher |impurities into thi blood, causing pour re al Press ADDED TOOMPIIRRE nents of saints In stained wine] Ming. Pedy Physical detective.” | gogrees of citisenship and patriotisnn, |woaith, while the bowel ps z | Mi v ny . but noth he highest ‘ voulo in| i. ap and hot wut sweet my blue eyes viagu mg has. n ad the emotion hed when w love and; 8% Soap and bo r clowns colons) me, i tons, she looked more ; sieesthy tess: ew [ove ams idl frestiens tli shin, so hot water) Can You Possibly Be ata Loss te Kaew Ithan ever, If you had rd revent The Grip. | nternationaliam. ‘To attain that {and limestone pice hat Ligh he Where to for the House, Reem, that she led the fight fort nerd’ | Colda caw Unie clarative B Quinine vould t e cnd and purpose of true stomachyliver, kidneys an wels,— >| mothers, if you did uot know that abe Sing,’ W.Giore’s manatwe oe bad, Blesoudark, . education, ae | AOE ¥ Apartment, or Office You Seip