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try or small towns. one has no money. But right here in New York there are thousands of men earning good wages who apparently never see the shoestring peddlers, the lead pencil venders and the various kinds of human failures who are attempting to eke out some sort of existence. The improvident person would do well to have a chat with one of these characters some time. Their experiences might be helpful. Many well-paid workers, enjoying li z i gf t i < < : 3 z é it practise real economy. “Our income is tit @ month, re- | fom [spare oe ares E ee | i * & | 3 f a oo, DRIVE THE THRIFT MACHINE WITH ALL SIX CYLINDERS AND PASS OLD AGE IN COMFORT Don’t Wait Till You’re Past Fifty and Your Engine Is Dead—Letters to Evening World Prove the Benefits That Come With a Saving Habit Formed Early. From the standpoint of thrift the chances that the average man and ‘woman takes are appalling. This is especially true in the large cites, where the fixed charges on living are far more exacting than in the coun- ‘There is nothing quite so pitiless as a big city when | must have saved very carefully from his income in order to be ready when the opportunity came to buy his first lots. The saving habit made it possible to keap u the subsequent payments and still further investment was possible, His experience with the “well rec- ommended” stock investment who can afford to take chances. HAVING A BUDGET ENCOURAGES SAVING HABIT. To lay out a definite budget and then live within it is an ex- cellent way to get ahead: ‘The Theift Eaiitor of The vening World. PP igri aslo Y ef x. “Finding a ‘lump bu " tem for keeping account Ces penditures waa not best means for practising economy, we are work- ing under a variation of tt, and we find that it automatically helps us ly. In view of this allowances are made to cover half @ month. We divide $62.50 {nto eleven portions as follows: In order to promote and maintain health special attention must be paid to the Stomach, Liver and Bowels. They must be kept strong and vigorous and should perform their duties with regularity. When weakness is manifested, remember, HOSTETTER’S STOMACH BITTERS is Nature's “First Aid” Try a bottle for POOR APPETITE HEARTBURN per month. we could live without ie designed primarily to help men earning $150 « month or less. The committee of awards the allowance. a little left in each compartment. “On rent we do not save anything. “For such items as fuel and cloth ing we put the amount allowed in its compartment twice a month, and what is left over at the end of the year we k. The balance from the other c usually from $10 to $12 every hair month. 1, B. i.” This family is sure of banking at least $5 twice each month, but by ing a few margins instead up each appropriation a substantia! sum is added to the bank deposit, The schedule look» to be thoroughly workable, as there is a pretty good fund for incidentals and allowance is made for vacation. WHEN DEATH MADE SAVING A PLAIN NECESSITY, ‘The sudden death of the father caused @ change of policy in this tamily To the Thrift Editor of The Eventng Worl “Jamaica, N. Y. “Left school long before I graduated because I didn’t like it and got a po- sition as an office boy. I felt quite swell, being able to keep my salary for myself, and I always managed to epend it. We were in comfortable circumstances at home and saving never entered my head, #o why should I whon father supplied me with everything? But one day father died very suddenly and left but a few hundred insurance, plus a emall bank account, Being used to everything, we were suddenly cut off without be- ing the least bit P pared “With what little mother and I had left from the estate we started a rooming house in a nice neighbor- hood. is change of affairs at home 1 went to night echool and studied hard soon aroused me to the situation, and at the end of a year and a haif I doubled my salary. since given up the rooming house, have a good position with a good aal- ary and am taking up law at night. Have a comfortable home, rent $23! Have a twenty-year en-| dowment insurance policy for $1,000 and nearly $500 in the bank, all which is some improvement over my old condition, when I never had as much as 50 cents on Monday morning, “PREPARED.” We have long Li of As frequently happens in such cases, this young man rose not only to meet the emergency of the hour, but he has gone siill fur- ther, putting himself in a secure position and developing an ambi- tion which otherwise eight never have come to him. THRIFTY ELOPERS PUT STUB- BORN PARENTS TO SHAME. Parental objection in this case had the effect of spurring two F ogre people on to doing things for themselves, with results that seem qutte satisfactory: Brid; Con Gveatna’ Wort To the Thrift Baitor of The Leas Oey ERE Ok, L pone jected to my marriage, we cloped Brooklyn and came’ to ‘Bridee being married in the City Hall, between us. I got a job as floor walker at $18 @ week, and my | abo" rin took a postition ag saleslady at @ week, giving us an income of |. We decided to save hag 4 penny ble, just to how my folks that them. We $4 for room rent and $40 for month; we allowed $¢ for per clothing, $4 for laundry and $10 for general expenses, including amuse- ments. “We started a bank account with our spare nickels in one year we saved $263. I got a@ raise to $21 per living ex- nses, including $16 monthly rent, Ing about half what we formerly “I have taken out @ twenty-year $1,000 endowment insurance policy and we pay $2.55 weekly into a Christ- mas fund, which amounts to $130 at holiday time. We also have a baby boy, whose arrival kept our savings from increasing, but we still have over $150 in the bank and are living com- fortably on my income alene. . The stern parent has probably admitted by this time that he waa not absolutely necessary to the fe and happiness of his son. A bank account, a baby, an insur ance policy and @ well established habit of saving money are assets which indicate happiness and a very fair degree of success. a - George A, Macbeth, Dead ai 70, PITTSBURGH, Feb, Macbeth, President of the Mack Glags Company and one of the plone home here yesterday of heart discase. He was seventy years old. | INDIGESTION CONSTIPATION BILIOUSNESS COLDS & GRIPPE | raising and rolling exercises. 1 als as Oc do the chin exercises and have mas-| Pape's Diapepsin promptly regulates waged my chin until it is sore. I do hs, bee t neu- not see any change, though I have /|tralizes the acids in the stomach and continued the treatment for two|digests your food just the same as if weeks, I fee, slightly weak after the | your stomach waan't there. exercises, and want to le down, but | ief in fi inutes from all st ch | Best for Colds, throat and am afraid to do 40 for tear I will fall etal ap ene proach asleep and thereby take away all of lungs. Builds you up. | tie soot streets of mo dict aia tee! | store. No Alcohol or dangerous drugs. ‘The result te, we have we bank semi-monthly, and as a rewult the $5 allowed for banking is 12.—George A, in the industry, died suddenly at his ‘THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1916. Diet and Exercise Course For Women to Improve: Figure and Gain Weight LESSON NO. 6 FIRST PesiTioN= HANES wy THE Stretching the Waist Muscles. a « foTHe mige AND Swe” SIOrs \ No THE Wert SOR. ee bt! Dir re pas) RAISE SHe CERT ARM TO-DAY'S EXERCISE, ILLUSTRATED. Back numbers of these lessons may be obtained by sending a #-cent stamp to Miss Furlong for each lesson desired, correspond with Miss Furtong, who will reply through the columns of The Evening World, She does not print correspondents’ full names. By Pauline Furtong. The illustration to-day shows 4 new exercise for many muscles of the entire body, and as it is an easy =o, one it may be practised by be- ginners without danger of strain. This movement we | RETURN Te ORIGeNAL Pesrrion Ike ner, you have been more than two weeks getting the double chin, and it will take months of persistent exercises and treatment to overcome it. After- noon naps will cause you to take on weight. CANNOT PERSPIRE FREELY— MAY Q. writes: “I am endeavoring to take your course, but find it impos- sible to perspire freely. Can you ad- stretches = th) vise mo how I can induce this? muscles at the| it is necessary that you should sides of the|Perspire freely to cleanso the pores waist, which 1-| Drink freely of wuter many tlines a duces increased | day. Pag but not pil meals, fake very hot baths and before retir- circulation of the | ing’ Be careful about the hot baths and is a valuablo| tise the exercises for at least ten dominal regions, one for the hip, leg, shoulder and arm muscles. ous ones if you are practised, and them with the hot baths to induce TO-DAY'’S EXERCISE. perspiration, Take your position flat on the floor, on your back, arms at sides and legs outstretched, LAft the right leg and bring {t across the left one, touch- ing the floor at the left side with the tips of the toes. Keep the knee rigid and the toes pointed downward. As you raise the right log bring the right arm up and back until the back of the hand lightly touches the floor the right shoulder. ‘The right arm and leg should form a slanting or oblique line across the floor from tho fingers of the right hand to the toes of the right foot. Breathe deeply each time you raise the leg ee er tha rentolen tae In an effort to find the hody of a S man who they belleve was robbed a ene ete tot $15,000 in cash and then murdered, laetectives of Bergen County, N = DAY NUS: ! gen County, N. J, fe Pak pag by phat with |87@ Supervising the cleaning out of cream, cocoa and graham bread. jan old well in Wallington. A year Anton Alsofsky, who amassed a ti vith erack- | “8° ve ‘Tsancheon—Oyster soup w |small sized fortune by begging and MRS. E. T. R. asks: “Can you tell cises and how much money shall I send to get them?” They appeared Feb. 5. Send centa and repeat your question. DIG OUT OLD WELL T Bergen County, N. J., Police Think That Beggar Who Had $15,000 Was Slain. ers. ‘ | who was known as the Bogey Man of Dinner—Roast beef, baked browned |New Jersey, suddenly” disappeared. potatoes, Waldort ealad, sliced! | Alsofsky owned a houso in Walling- , ‘on, which he rented to Joseph Bogo- Deaches and cream. vitch, About ten months ago, a deed HEALTH AND DEVELOPING | was filed in the Essex County Courts AIDS, transferring the property from Al- sofsky to the tenant. Suspicions were then ‘aroused. Yesterday Prosecutor Huckin ordered the well dug up Bogovitch is now I the county jail charged with arson and says he knows nothing of the sudden disap- pearance of Alsofsky. Persons who have poorly developed muscles and @ continual tired and de- pressed fecling should eat more foods containing proteids, because these foods create the necessary building material for the renewal of the worn tissues and the general upkeep of the | railroad accident several years ago and has since toured the country begging. His friends claim that he had $15,000 sewed to his shirt at the time of his disappearance. MILLION STOMACH SUFFERERS EAT BIG MEALS NOW No fear of indigestion, gas, sourness, heartburn or acidity. gluten products, peas, beans, cereals, milk, nuts, &c., are tissue buikiers and should be taken in some form each day by those who are desirous of gaining weight. Gentle exercises, which stimulate the circulation and increase the de- sire for food should be indulged in with regularity and intelligence if noticeable improvement is expected. Next to exercise and proper foods the daily bath is the all important factor in the road to health and im- proved appearance. If you are very warm and in a perspiration do not hesitate to take a cold bath or rub down with a cold, wet Turkish towel, and the reason many persons cannot enjoy a cold bath Is because they are Mot sufficiently warm before taking it. Of course, if you are very tired or fatigued it is a wiser plan to take @ warm bath, which will rest you won- derfully. The thin or nervous person should never take the very hot bath, and those who have any heart trouble should not take either the very hot or very cold one. Do not bathe within ‘two hours after eating. Al- ways follow any bath with a brisk alcohol rub, to stimulate the circula- tion and also prevent cold “Pape’s Diapepsin” is quick- est, surest stomach regulator known. Every year regularly million stomach sufferer States, Englan Pape’ Letters From Readers. WANTS BACK COPIES. — Miss Rose K, asks: “Please tell mo if it is possible for me to get the back copies of your obesity course, and | how much money must T send?’ Send 2 cents for each back number tal not only will di- gest anythi: sour, gassy, or out-of-order stomach five minutes afterward. If your meals don’t fit comfortably, you desire. Please repeat your ques-|or what you eat lies like a lump of tion. These articles appeared twenty- |lead in your stomach, or i four days. tion, LOST TWELVE POUNDS.—Mrs. J. A. writes: “Tam now on a fast for stomach trouble and have lost twelve pounds, As I foel so much better I intend to follow this fast with your obesity diet, and have saved all of the menus. The doctor does not al- | hp, low me to eat anything but oranges. |i I take the hot lemon water in the | morning and do the squatting, trunk PB case of Pape's Diapepsin and eat « fe There will be no sour ris- hing of undigested food no stomach gas or rtburn, no fullness or A as you can, nauseous odor, ‘Thes> large 50-cent cases more tl .u sufficient to thoroughly over- cises for reducing.” If the exercises tire you, you are overdoing them, take | Schwab Bids | Schwab of the Bethlehem Steel Corpora- tion and Wililam H, Donner, Chairman e of vennaylvania Steel, bid against) owned by the Pennsylvania Railroad and the Reading. ©. T. Stotesbury repre- ° . 1 S . seated the Reading In the Editorial Section ‘The Pennsylvania Raliroad owns 7 nt, of the shares, the Reading/ | “WILL NEW YORK STATE MAKE HEALTH cont., Mr, Donrer 38 per cent oy and the remaining & per cont. Is held) INSURANCE COMPULSORY? | offered 40 @ share for the common and | $100 a share for the preferred. | road and the Reading Company heads Readers are invited to) You must remember also that | and relieve the skin of impurities. |, FIGHT FOR PENNA. STEEL. A st Downer for Ratlronds’ Stock. , i PHILADELPHIA, Pa, Feb%12.—The! first contest for control of the Pentiayl: | mpany came in the office | of the Pennsylvania waen Charles M. Get the Best unday Reading! of Pre Railroad ' by the public. It is said Mr. Doni the first} bid. He offered $0 ‘ash for | Pennsylvania Steel common and $% a share for the preferred. Mr. Schwab Dr. J. B. Andrews and Prof. S. M. Lindsay Tell of Bene- fits That Will Accrue to Employers and to Working- men by the Passage of the Mills Bill Now Before the Legislature. But he wanted to pay In bonds, What action the Pennsylvania Rall- “WILL EASY DIVORCE CURE MARRIAGE EVILS?” Dr. Joseph French Johnson, Dean of the School ‘of Com- merce, Accounts and Finance of the New York Uni- yorelty: Gives a Frank Exposition of His Views on Our Ma rriage and Divorce Laws. “The Tattler’? Chats Interestingly About the Exodus of Society Folks to the South. took on the bids has not been learned. CROSS, FEVERISH CHILDISBILIOUS OR CONSTIPATED Look, Mother! See if tongue! is coated, breath hot or | stomach sour. | In the Illustrated Magazine “California Syrup of Figs’ | can’t harm tender stom- ach, liver, bowels. blood in the ab-|or you will take cold on them. Prac- | minutes, selecting the most strenu- | then you will perspire freely. Follow | DOUBLE CHIN EXERCISES—_ me the date of the double chin exer. | HUNT FOR MURDER CLUE} Alsofsky lost both of his legs in a], “a tll ‘ THE PUZZLE OF THE TEN VALENTINES. How Did She Contrive to Mail Them All in Three En- velopes} Each Envelope Containing an Odd Number of Valentines. FRONTISPIECE PRINTED IN COLORS. Every mother realizes after giving her children “California § I laxative, because they taste and it thoro tender litt and bowels without griping. When cross, irritable, feverish, breath is bac ch tongue, mot spoonful of this harmless tiv and in a few hours all the foul, constipated waste, sour bile and undi- gested food passes out of the bowels, and “Secrets of Strength Told by the World's Brawniest Men.” “The Amateur Hold-Up Men.”—No. 4 of the “Devil's Darning you have a well, playful child again el , When the little system is fll of cold, Needle” Stories, by Henry M. Neely, Author of “The U it sore, has stomach-ache, diarrhoea, * bed in gestion;colic Haus aabatr a goed ibe Fourth Finger,” etc. pide cleansing” ‘should always be the 1 “Vienna Is One Grand City"—No. 6 of “Off for America,” ent given ¢ © ’ 4 Millions of mothers keep “California the Story of a Yiddish Family Exodus, by Sholom Alei- the know a tea- Syrup of Figs” han chem, “The Yiddish Mark Twain.” spoonful to-day sa a sick child to- morrow. Ask your druggist for a 50- “ a . . cent bottle of “California Syrup of Strange Story, of a Forgotten Widow, Involving Ownership Figs.” which has babies, of Millionaire Mansions on Fifth Avenue. childre “The Society Play to ‘Make Over’ Society."—Mrs. Oliver be fooled. H. P. Belmont, Author of the Brilliant Satire. Miss Elsa Maxwell, Composer of the Music and Lyrics. “How New York Eclipsed London.”—Interesting Facts and Figures About the Contest for the Title of “Biggest City on Earth.” “Designed in America” Gowns for Spring—the Newest Creations by Samuel Zalud, Originator of “Improvements on Paris” Styles. “Twofold Life of Dick Dingle”-~a $30-a-Month Bellhop in a New York Hotel at i a $5,000-a-Year Chicken Farmer at Home in the Daytime. “Ts Science a Fiend or an Angel?"—Sir William Osler Strikes the Balance Sheet. “Playful Postcards from the War Zone’’--Showing that the European Belligerents in Their Lighter Moments Are Still Children at Heart. “D'Annunzio’s Tribute to Serbian Heroes.” California "To Stop Cold in the Head Get Ahead of the Cold ee. FOR SALE. TES PAY:+2 DOWN*I WEEKLY Ciouniug aor 4 PRUDENTIAL CO. 2 Park Place, Cc . Jermiy Clty Borough Hall Diamonds on Credit My Im, GAMBICAN WATCH & DIAMOND 60. Maiden Lane, ‘Tel, Cort, S687, Agent Calls HELP WANTED—MALE. DRAUGHTSMEN WANTED, MECHANICAL DESIGNERS AND DETAILERS, WITH | EXPRESS WAGON, DRIVERS.” helpers, also | | ee | | | on have | ginuin of these candy-like tablets just as soon | - to poison your breath with | contain | Be very careful and |come any case of dyspepsia, indigestion them easy tf you are # begin joe any other stomseh disesden-aave. | GENERAL EXPERIENCE, FOR LARGE MANUFACTUR- ING COMPANY IN NEW YORK STATE; GIVE EXPE- = AND SALARY EX- In the Metropolitan Section Fashion Week—-As Seen by the Always Comic Fruch. This Is a Picture Full of Laughs. Waffle Party of the Gridiron Club~Has One Male Guest, a Doctor from Hoboken. New Business in Town—It's a Village Store With a Country Post Office and Postmistress. Charley Chaplin Is in Town to Have Himself and His Mus- tache Incorporated. Here's a Funny Story. Great Rush of Ancient Deities at the Beaux Arts Architects” Ball of the Gods. 3S. G.,95 WORLD, freight handlers; 1 quired 7 Madison PUBLIC NOTICES, w New York Cou VURAL Of the. recel ‘Administrator o three time nar and t ., wourgh. Ie West 10th A COMIC SECTION BRIMFUL OF LAUGHS GRAVURE SECTION OF INTERESTING PICTURES. “FUN,” THE WEEKLY JOKE BOOK OF WIT AND HUMOR. 10 Separate Sections Altogether 10 IN THE BIG Sunday WORLD To-Morrow bad * St, 9.00 All lost or found articles ad- vertised in ‘The World will be Msted at The World's Informa~ tion Bureau, Pulitzer Building Arcade, Park Row; World's Uptown Office, northwest core 8th St. ways World's Office, 155 125th Sty and World Brooklyn Office, 203 Wash: ton St, Brooklyn, for 30 days following the printing of the | * advertisement.