Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THOMPSON WL UPPOSE WHITNEY FORP.S BOARD Head of Investigators Wants All the Old Regime Cleaned Out. MISS LOEB NOT SEEKING P, S.C. APPOINTMENT CEPPEN SH BY DUTH SES PTY SHOTS FRED Raiding Fleet, Returning From Britain, Passes in Vicinity of Amsterdam. TO FIGHT IN SENATE. General Manager Hedley Will Resume Stand to Tell of In- come From Patents. “ Senator George F. Thompson, Chairman of the legislative commit- tee that has exposed the unfitness of ‘the Public Service Commission, de- clared to-day that he will oppose the nomination of Travis H. Whitney as &® Public Service Commissioner. “If he is nominated,” said the Sena- tor, “I shall oppose the nomination tn Sommittes, on the floor of the Sen- ate and in every way I can. Travis H. Whitney is a delightful fellow, but he is an essential part of a bad system. The investigations of this} committes have shown that the Pub- Ne Service Commission as it has been organized for years is unfit. It has Not been in any way the representa- tive of the people. “We can't improve the Public Ser- vice Commission unless we change ite character, and we oan’t change its character unless we ohange its per- sonnel. I believe there should be one ‘Democrat on the commission, night I wired Senator Henry M. Sage fm Albany withdrawing all opposition to the confirmation of Henry Wilson “Hodge as a Public Service Commis- stoner. I am frank to say that I mado a careful search as to his wuall- — DRINK HOT WATER’ IF YOU DESIRE A | ROSY COMPLEXION. ®ays we can’t help but look better and feel better after an Inside bath, | To look one’s best and feel one’s best is to enjoy an inside bath each morn- to flush from the system the pre- fous day's waste, sour fermentations and poisonous toxitis, before it is ab- sorbed into the blood. Just as coal when it burns, leaves behind « {aim amount of incombustible mat in the form of ashes, so the food drink taken each day leave in the ali- mentary organs certain amount of indigestible material which, if not eliminated, forms toxins and poisons which are then sucked into the blood Ahrough the very ducts which are in- tended to suck in only nourishment to sustain the body. Hf you want to see the glow of healthy bloom in your cheeks, to see your skin get clearer and clearer, you ure told to drink every morning upon arising a glass of hot water with 4 teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it, which is a harmless means of wash- ing the waste material and toxins from the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels, thus cleansing, sweetening and urifying the entire alimentary tract, fore putting more food into the stom- ach, Men and women with sallow skins, | liver spots, pimples or pallid com- plexions, also those who wake up with @ coated tongue, bad taste, nasty breath, others who are bothered with headaches, bilious spells, acid stomach or constipati should begin this Poot: phated hot water drinking, and are assured of very pronounced results in ‘one or two weeks. ‘A quarter pound of limestone phos- “phate costs very little at the drug store, but is sufficient to demonstrate that just as soap and hot water cleanses, purifies and freshens the skin on the outside, so hot water and limestone phosphate act on the inside organs, We must always consider that iffternal sanitation is vastly more im- portant than outside cle aliness, be+ cause the skin pores do not absorb impurities into the blood, while the bowel pores di vt Grawp Rapips FURNITURE CREDIT TERMS Down on $50.00 « «6 675.00 r 3.00 5.00 7.50 << <** 100.00 10.00 “« “ 150.00 15.00 « + 200.00 300.00 25.00 \ FREE BRASS BED ith Bi Last} in, GROPED IN DENSE FOG. Report That the Raiders Reached Liverpool. ship was sighted to-day off the const a ese LOEB. Jands in the North Sea, says a de- spatch from Amsterdam to the Reu- ter’s Telogram Company. The dirig- ible balloon was flying low and prob: ably had lost her bearings owing to the fog. The coast guard bombarded the Zep- pelin, more than fifty shots being fired, and ft is believed that some hit the airship, which finally disap- peared to the northward, Early Tuesday morning the Zeppe- lin air fleet returning from its raid on thé English provinces vas heard in the vicinity of Amsterdam. OfM- cers of ships arriving at the Dutch port say that five Zeppelins travel- ing westwamt were sighted shortly before the raid took place on Monday. Tho Zeppelins, in their great raid on England Monday night, groped thelr way bitndly with no exact knowledge of their whereabouts and threw bombs aimlessly, the London newspapers asserted to-day, The Daily Chronicle says there ts no truth in the Berlin report that the big English industrial centres of Liverpool, Manchester, Sheffield, Bir- kenhead, Nottingham and Great Yar- mouth were attacked from the sky. “The recklessness of the Zeppelin operationa is sufficiently tlustrated by the German wircless, which shows that the raiding airships had scarcely any idea where thoy really were,’ says the Chronicle. calities mentioned by the Germans were mentioned in the English offi- clal report of the raid, for the simple reason that they were not ralded. ‘The German account is untrue in every particular.” “Each new raid discloses some weakness in our preparations,” says tho ™ “We suggest, in tho light of Monday night's experiences, that the Government might well revise methods of dealing with railway traffic in case 4f a Zeppelin alarm. A number of Lo bes heavily laden with pa ‘ 9 suddenly held np wherever they happened to be, At some stations crowds were allowed to rather, waiting for trains, A single bomb dropped in one of these build- ings would have caused a shocking massacre."” A Paris despatch to-day giving de- tails of the Zeppelin bombardment Saturday night, reported that thirty persons, imprisoned by falling debris during the bombardment, were not released until yesterday, after gangs of workmen had dug at the wreckag for sixty hours, Food and water was s) plied to them through apertures in the pile of debris. SALONICA, Feb. 2 (Via Paris).— Two Greek soldiers, five refugees and seven workmen were Killed and fifty Miss Loeb makes the following | statement with reference to Senator Thompson's recommendation that she be made @ Public Service Commis- sioner: “I appreciate Senator Thompson's kind words about my ability relative to the work I have done in connec~ tion with the Public Service investi- sation and his suggesting my name -o the Governor as Publio Service Commissioner, “want to say, however, that I haye never sought that office or any public office. I am content to re- main on the Child Welfare Board without pay. If I had been tendered the office I would have been pleased that another official recognition had been made of the fact that woman could fill such an important post as t is the fearless attitude of The Evening World that has mado this work of cleaning out the Public Sei vice Commission possible and I am glad to have Jent my energy to it” fications and found nothing against him, As to Deputy Comptroller George S. Hervey, who has been mentioned for appointment, I know nothing, “As a public body the Public Ser- vice Commission has been a failure. It needs a drastic remedy. If I were a Public Service Commisstoner the first thing I'd do would be to cut off the head of every department—Chiet Engineer Alfred Craven, Chief Coun- sel George Coleman and Secretary Travis H. Whitney.” “J never made but one suggestion as to the nomination of a Public Service Commissioner,” added Sena- tor Thompson, “and that was when I advised Gov. Whitman to nomina: Sophie Irene Loeb. She would make @ much better Public Service Com- missioner than any man who ever held that position.” an @ Woman serve?” was asked. Yes,” replied the Sena’ “there is nothing in the law to prevent, and 1 know Miss Loeb would be the most efficient and faithful sort of Public Service Commissioner.” General Manager F the subway and elevated lines will continue his testimony before the Thompson committee this afternoon, He promises to bring in as soon as/ possible the list of his income out-| side of the $50,000 saiary that goes with his job of general manager—the returns on the thirty or forty in- ventions upon which he expends his} energies while amusing bimself out] of office hours “What an amazing story tt aid Senator Thompson. “Hero Hedley developing !deas that como up as incidents of the transportatio} ervice he manages for $50,000 ‘ank Hedley of is, al year. He uses the shops and mechan- ies and materi: the company to| civilians were injured by the inflam- develop his id then, if they are|mable bow. dropped yesterday. BERLIN, Feb, 2 (Via London).— The Lokalanzeiger publishes a long editorial on the Zeppelin raid over Mngland, saying that every one will be convinced that the attack was fully justified on considering the places Visited and their military sig- any good, he patents them and they are his own property. He organizes | a company and capitalizes his friend- ship. “What else does the testimony of Pizzini amount to? Pizzini declares that he pald $25,000 to Hedley and APARTMENTS FURNISHED COMPLETE FROM $50 TO $500 | Open Monday & Saturday Evenings 106 ST. L STATION AT CORNER COLUMBUS AVE RET.103 & 104"S British Press Denies the Berlin) LONDON, Feb. 2—A Zeppelin air- | | of Ameland, an island of the Nether-| “None of the lo- | THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1916 Former New York Rector and | 205 6 FO6 099-006093090008808 * dO2O48-H¢ Woman With Whom He Eloped ADDED DEDOD DRED AIDE D-DORHDD DGD > > $ DODD OOGTPRDDDNE LDH TOOOOD ILLICIT LOVE PLAY, ‘GOD & COMPANY, ANYSTERY DRAMA Is Former New York Rector and Principal in Elope- ment Its Author? i | “God and Company,” a play by “H. Austin Adams," which has had two performances under the auspices of this and which Js likely to be given a regular: the Stage Soctoty weok, production by a commercial manager later on, is believed to be the work of Henry Austin Adams, central fig- uro in one of the most sensational dramas of illicit love that New York has ever known, The author of the play, which is a daring indictment of the good faith and the sexual morality of the clergy, is said to be the brilliant but erratic man once a minister of the Episcopal Church and later a convert to Catholl-| cism, who startled New York tn 1902 by abandoning his wife and four chil- dren and eloping with sixteen-year-old | Gertrude Bertha Desch, described by| him as his “mystic soul and Catholic} saint” after the girl had been an in-| mate of his household for some} months preceding thelr disappear- ance, | Years of wandering up and down the earth, of social ostracism, of pre- carious fortune, followed the disap- pearance of the brilliant man of forty-seven and the beautiful young) girl of sixteen. After leaving New York they were heard of In New! Zealand, then in British Columbia! and finally in Seattle where, in 1906, Adame's legal wife, despairing of his return to her, obtained a divorce As soon as it was legally possible Adams married Miss Desch, Pre- | viously he had gone through a cere- mony with her which his first wife denounced as bigamous and the fe mer clergyman’s mystic soul became the mother of a little boy described | materials this drama, which told the story of a young woman who deserted her hus- hand on the evening of their wedding day to go to another man, “an intel- lectual,” many arguments were pre- sented for easier divorce and greater freedom for women In relation to marriage. AUTHOR GAVE NAME OF NEW YORK PREACHER, The new play, “God and Company, produced under the direction of ¥ Graham Brown, who acted the pri cipal role, was placed in Mr. Brown's hands by the author at La Jolla, Cal, Jiast year, when the actor was appoar- ing with Miss Marie Tempest. Mr. | Brown says that all he knows of the author of the play ts that the name he gave was H. Austin Adams, and that he sald he had been formerly a gyman in New York City, od and Company” tells the story of the Rev. Wesley Boal, who Is about to leave a small chureh in Kanay a larger and bett vst in Cali- fornia. It is made apparent that the clergyman thinks only of the greater income and tho greater octal oppor- tunities which will come to him in his new charge. He is represented as a and @ hypocrite, His wife, whom he had won in a frenzy of religious conversion, understands and despises his duplicity, When a man whom she has loved before the marriage appears at their home she begs hor husband to “be natural and he will like you, Please don't talk to him about God and Company,” she says, and so names the play.’ But the ruling spirit ts too| Jules H, Ford, known Interna- | 7 O0U ON strong for the minister. Hoe brage as | tionally in criminal and police circles | Gouraud. : usual, and his wife's former sweet-|as “Doc Waterbury, general all- You are familiar with a marriage heart’ dislikes and distrusta him. | around erdok and confidence man, | Ceremony?” he asked. After preaching his farewell sermon he goes to the tower of the church, where he has a smoking room and where he is supposed to prepare his ermons and ponder problema of the- ology and morals, but where he has actually clandestine meetings with a very young girl of his congregation. He and the giri are discovered and denounced by his wife's old friend, the girl is sent home by her father, who threatens the pastor with ex- ure and ruin, There is nothing for the Rev. Wesley Boal but So, snapping off an electric ft death. light as a symbol of the ease and the finality of his departure, the clorgy- man seizes a pistol and climbs slowly up the winding stairs back to the tower. ——— ey OBJECTS TO ART LESSONS AGED HUSBAND GAVE Bernard, 78, Sued for Separation by Wife 61—Were Wed 24 Years. Mrs. Jeanette Bernard, sixty-one MUSIC TEACHER WHO CLAIMS SHE | IS LAWYER’S WIDOW NEW NOTE TO END ‘LUSITANIA DISPUTE SENT FROM BERLIN Instructions to Von Bernstorff Give “Hope for Positive Understanding.” BERLIN, Feb. 2 (by wireless to Sayville). been sent by the German Government to Ambassador von Bernatorft at Wash- | ington of such a nature as to give “pensonable hope for a positive under- the Lusitanta nstructions have standing” concerning affair. it was announced here to-day. | The announcemont, which ts of a| seml-official nature, Is said by the! Overseas News Agency to have been| made “in connection with alarming nglish reports about the nature of| } erman-American relations” The! text of the statement is given by the! News Agency 4s follows: | It ia true that on Saturday, Jan, 29, @ telegraphic report from the Ger- man Ambassador at Washington ar- rived at Berlin, showing that up to| that time it had been impossible to | djust tho Lusitania case in a man- | ner satisfactory to both sides by| friendly verbal exejanges of views. | On Tuesday instructions were trans- mitted by telegraph to the German} Ambassador which give reasonable hope for a positive understanding.” President Wilson will receive a full report from Col, BR, M, House, his 15S ELM. Ferre. MISS FERRER MARRIED. LORD IN APPROVED WAY, nl ai te MRS, GOURAUD ASSERTS ence with German officials, It was) learned to-day that Col, House was apprised by the officials of a new and recent change of sentiment tn Ger- | many regarding relations with Amer- ica, Germany, ho was told, is to-day a solid unit insofar as her foreign | relations are concerned. H ‘Omolis and other German leaders stifi tor Claiment $750,000 Estate That She Knows Ceremony. es to | On the strength of the assertion of | are most earnest in their desire for| Mrs, Aimee Crocker Gillig Gouraud| Amerlean friendship ‘They are pa- }that she knows a marriage ceremony tiently and anxiously watching de an is bee ‘ peer velopments, trusting that an agree. | Wen Me rece one, Mise Eugenie ment mutually satisfactory ts possi-|Ferrer, a music teacher, may estab- ble. lish her legal right to be known as Mrs, Theodore A, Lord and to in- |herit the $750,000 estate left by the} | Yonkers attornoy. | Tho case camo before Surrogute Sawyer at White Plains, Miss Ferrer said she was married to Mr. Lord in the City Hall at San Francisco on Nov, 24, 1888, and she produced Mra, Gouraud, who, she sald, was present at the ceremony, to prove it. Attorney Charles W. Sinnott questioned Mra, DOG" WATERBURY GOES TO PRISON AT LAST International Swindler Gets Sen- tence of Not Less Than Year and Three Months, “Yes,” replied Mra. “Describe this one.” “Oh, I couldn't say it all!” exclaimed Mrs. Gouraud, a little petulantly, “I know ho said ‘Do you take this wom- an to be your lawful wife? and he said he did, and then she was asked the same question fn regard to him, Goura was to-day sentenced to Sing Sing prison for not less than one year and three months and not more than two years and six months by Judge Mulaueen in the Court of General Sessions, Ford pleaded guilty to an indictment charging the theft of $200 which he @btained from Dr, M, Allen Starr, who pald the money to be- | Then we all signed our names to « come @ life me in. Ck 1 wa Come: s ee niece Mrs. Gouraud was dressed in black satin and around rope of pearls. Richard J, Forrer, brother of the claimant, said he knew Lord when he lived in’ San Francisco and that it was known three years before the marriage that Lord was engaged to | hia sister. | In 1888 Lord told him he had mare | ried Eugenia and showed him a mare riage certifie but asked him to; keep the wedding a secret because of @ family difference of religion, hor neck was a Accused by When Isane Doorfler, fifty-eight ye old, a baker of No, 163 Withers Street, Willlamsburg, failed to appear in the Bedford Avenue Court to-day for ex- amination on a charge of having at- to assault a fifteen-year-old ix apartinent last 1 wham The In the Garden | not guilty to-day to | Everybody is supposed to clean up aft | outstanding accounts. |AGKER, MERRALL & CONDIT SEVER HELD FR ALBANY SHOTS, CHARGE ASSAULT He Objects to “With Intent to Kill’—To Undergo Sanity Test. BANY, Feb. 2.—Harold Te Severy, the young man arrested in Schenectady in connection with the shooting of four persons, one fatally, this city Friday night, and who nieht confeswed that he had wounrled at least one of them, pleaded a chargo of as- sauit in the first degree, Ho objected to the words “with intent to kill” in the information and asked time to communicate with his father, who Is sald to be in Los An- geles, Cal, He was held without bail for a hearing next Friday, In the meantime a commission will stormine his mental condition —— FLUSHING FLUGH, Flushing ts having a pay-up week. in last Great Scott, suppose it should work? ———— Fst. COMPANY 1820 New Laid Eggs 37¢ Doz Maplehurst Brand Italian Olive Oil. Pure Cream Virgin Oil RANDRETH “i PILL An Effective Laxative Purely Vegetable Constipation, Indigestion, Biliousness, ete. QO or ES Our night until relleved Chocolate-Coated or Piain f | BELL-ANS Absolutely. Removes | Indigestion. One package proves it. 25cat all druggists, Doyle—ftor what? For the friendship| nificance. It_asserts that Liverpool, py hie father as “the child of my Sars old, of Winfield, L. 1, declared of Hedley, Ho bought control of Which the German Admiralty an-| iiecce jove,” fn an action for separation brought | e ° their Railway Improvement Company | nounced yesterday was bombarded, | vefore Justice Kapper in the Su- for that sum, and. the company | isto be considered primarily as @ port|THE RISE AND FALL OF THE : Tr ee, em nteas, Wt fo Paty | of entry for American ammunitioa,| — «PALENTED CLERGYMAN,” {Pine Court, Brooklyn, to-day that friendship of Hedley, which enables| “Whose destruction Is our sacred) 02 vetin Adams, who was born|!“! husband, Louls, seventy-cight) \ ft to sell its Hedley’ patent devices| duty.” . we years old, has long been infatuated i) The New saley —_——-— in Cuba, came to > York in 1886 F Y to the transportation lines Hedley . | with Miss Jennie Mf. Thompson of ‘ gets $50,000 a year for managing, In WHO GoT IT? as assistant to the Rev, Dr. Morgan! \\/\), TUs# Julie a chor, fifty-one Season’s other words Plazini bet $25,000 that! somebody ts drinking an awful tot) Dix at Trinity, Later he was called 08) s sipriade e y Hedley would let him regain his | years old, Mrs, Bernard asks $15 @ Smart $25,000 and a profit!” | of milk. The Department of Agricul-| to Buffalo, but returned here a few i aeccola aud Leunnal tans ! IT A | ture reports that each United States Years later as rector of the fashion- “Hornard ia an employes of tho| Wy ; (3) Forethoughts SAILORS CARRIED ARSENAL,| resident averaged 115 gations tast|®0!@ Church of the Redeemer, He) a icrican Lead Penell Company and | — | year, jwas known then as "Father Adams”). siockholder in the concern, Mra.| $ Fourteen Revolvers and Stxty Carte) 7" afd a wealthy woman parishioner set-|fyernard save that both sho and her| ridges Land Two of Them in Cell, | ’ tled an annuity of $4,000 upon him. )usnand had been interested in art | y |. Casiniro Aries, thirty-six, of No. 36) DOESN T KNOW WHY WIFE It was in 1393 that “Father Adams,"| 4j) went well until th coot!| # . e : appearance « . | Van Brunt Street, and Moscow Hen- | tae he’ was known then, became 4) y\).9 Thompson lve ATH KO. the inter | ty-nine, of N .; % . a al “ peed ue, esti . the Butler Street Court to-day for —_———-— |sent him through the country on a/jy art, She came to the Bernard M asts which violation of the Sulllcan law, Nephew of Creator of “Little Lord| lecture tour. home for lessons until 1912, when, | ‘ii hav come from ‘They are satlors of the Porto Rico 4 te ae ; ; | After five years, while lecturing in| \irs, d charges, her husband | gy France and Flor. Lane and were arrested at the Bort | Fauntleroy” Kept in Dark | paitimoi Adams met Gertrude went to Flushing to give Miss Thomy idacave siatarial Hamilton Ferry by Detective Manning | About Libel Action. | Deseh, his rayatio, soul, and began son her lessons. | 2 i vying with ¢ heavy grips in their possession, ‘ | writing poems sn: ays on thelr! phe wife states that in Flushing | € - r A At the Poplar Strest Station fourteen “1 don't know anything about It-!.oyi rove, Tho girl visited in the 4). relations of her husband and t mn 860 suits of cvolvers and sixty boxes of cartridges | 4 > ren ch a auit.| a0 pil } ' ae. axe 7 eet eotnd in tho grips. ‘The palice | £ Know of no reason for such @ sult:| Adams home and both assured the xcjiool ma'am became common #6 those exclusiy say the sailors buy cheap revolvers | Mrs. Burnett is the best friend my) mother of his four children that while that thoy were seen in the makers who make here and reap, food profit on their wite * said Archibald Fahno-| tnejp love for each other was strong arn in arm ad thit they k 4 in one at a time — teagan icegaal 1 oer TE CELI ER discrete eer public Designed and tailored expressly for the New his office to-day, asked why his) A year later they disappeared to M d says her husband lef stint ‘i y a ppear irs, Bernard says h 4 4 rst o t ) S Tobacco | wife 1s to sue Mrs. Frances Hodgson| gether and Mrs, Adams, Who Was|ipoir home on Jan. & They York woman who has fullest opportunity to know | Burnett, creator of “Little Lord very bitter in her denunciation of the) og in 1 and judge of styles. . |Pauntleroy,” At the office of Niles | © Se orn ep They abe eee | —_—»——— La) Skirts made very full and not too long, and short | in One Da | & Johnson, No, 11 Wall Strect, except | her without support, After a fow| |. Milled tn Rallrond Yard. peplumed coats; gabardines in blues and soft Spring | to confirm the report thut Mra.| years of Ill fortune hls very genuing | Prank Hendrickson, thirty years! (Colon. the newest. velour checks, in wide-skirted Fahnestock would suo Mrs, Burnott talent for w viting enabled him to earn old ans me shat me : ee Taland | shepherdess models—the whole array of interesting * ns by contributing — sho! roud, was crushed to dea s | , and charge libel, explanations were ; A eee . 5 i ronerl ried out Hii . tories to Smart Set, Ainslee's, Mc- between two cars tn th ards at V new suit ideas, properly ried out. ‘ | Though Mrs. Fahnestock lives In zines, So when he brought suit for lyn endric VR Un y, i, Be Banished in From One to | Washington, the summons and com- divorce in 1808 in. Seattle, claiming curs when the cr not knsaring No Charge for Alterations c | he was between them, nly backed Five Days at Home, plaint will be filed in New York that his wife had deserted him, Mrs. tie train and Hendrickson was pinned \ unty, probably late to-day. Mrs. Flora Adi appeared suddenly and py the trucks. His home was in Val Ne pS Burnett isthe aunt of Mr. Fahne- filed a. er sult, which sbe won ivy Stream, L. I \~ A New York jewark The Elders Sanitarium, torated at evr! Stock on his mother's side. Recently with substantial alimony | ff " Main at. St, Josoph, Mo., hua publisued | ho has been living with his aunt. Since taking up hin permanent rosl- |@ e| { Brooklyn Pittsburgh I a, tree book ahiowing ‘the deadly eftoot of | ‘My work Keeps me here during the denco tn the West, tho former rector ECIAL NOTICES, \ M ra the tobacco habit and how a be ban-| winter months, rs, FWahnestock of the Church of the Redeemer has eos SERINE SEEN RININ y adelphi 1. Louis ié Imhed tn from one to Ave davet Dome, .g| prefers Washington during this sea proclaimed Wmaclt an Agnostic and ASK TOR and GET Pollodelphla ed feacce for more son, I expect to join her in the sum- @ Socialist, Ho was stopped several tively successful, and ta mer,” Mr, Fahnestock explains yeurs ago In un effort to deliver a 5 Jine ‘ 3 ‘tree addition to banish fesire for to. ‘Tho Fahnestocks were tharriod ten xensational lecture which ho called Nineteen West 34th Street bacoo has Improved thetr health wouder> years ago. Mrs, Fahnestock belongs "The Truth About co OA ii H & ii fully, This method banishes the desire for to an old Washington family, Mor play by Adams, called "The Bird THE ORIGINAL Opposite Waldorf-Astoria eauinn a Velie te okiNs, maiden name was Anne Prall. She Cage," was produced in_ Providence ea eee eae dist ieoted’ trev, | Was known aa tho “photographer of R. 1, in 1014, and after the first por- MALTED MILK Cd we any one wanting @ copy should send their, society.” Mrs, Burnett lives at Plan-/ formance was very considerably de- . E ! ! peme and addspes at oncem—Advt, dome, Ls I, deted at the request of the police, In Cheap substitutes cost YOU same pr hort, time is fleeting; your life from day to day a Future plans may fade away. H | Rent 4 home that fills requirements And enjoy it while you can; Vorld Ads, show which way to turn, stg, So don't fail to World Ads. sean. 16,882 fO LET” ADS. LAST MONTH 8,151 lie Herald, Times, ‘and Press COMBIN WORLD Many New Vacancies Advertised Every Day!