The evening world. Newspaper, February 26, 1916, Page 4

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mamma in, ea Fra drafter another committee, composed — ee eee TAX! REGULATION IS NOW UPHELD BY ‘ONCE BITER FOES Mason-Seaman Company’s, Stand at Wallstein Hear- | ing a Surprise | WANTS NO “PRIVIL EGES.” | Committee Named to Draft} Amendment Compelling Li- | cense of All Taxis \ By Sophie Irene Loeb. | Many Interesting facts were brought out at the hearing before Leonard M Walistein, Commissioner of Accounts, yesterday on the proposed taxioab | amendment. | Commiastoner Wallstoin had drawn an amendment intended to compel every cab that uses the streets for | hire to be licensed, and to charge only legal rates; and exempting only funeral coaches and a fow strictly high-grade limousine cars for ex-) ¢lusive use. This amendment was to. affect all vehicles operating from Fallroad stations and hotels, which | are now unlicensed and charge higher than legal rates. Tt was plainly shown that his amendment would, instead of this, Ukely bring back the conditions of private monopoly the present ordl- nance has eliminated. Mr. Wallstetn, therefore, appointed & committee to draw another amend- ment that will meet the require- ments. This amendment is mainly to define @ public cab #0 as to exclude wuch distinct type of vehicles as mentioned above, The committee ap- pointed consists of William B, Crowell, counsel to the Mayor Robert 8. Binkerd, Secretary of the City Club; George Nicholson, As- @istant Corporation Counsel; Mr. Yonker of the Citizens’ Union; George Bell, Commissioner of Licen- ees; John Drennen, Chief of the Taxicab Bureau; Raymond Fosdick, former Commissioner of Accounts; Adciphus Ragan and Sophie Irene Loeb. After the amendment has been ef operators and owners of private vehicles and taxicabs, will meet with the Wailstein committee and go over the amendment before it is taken be- fore the Board of Aldermen. ALL UPHOLD ORDINANCE SE- CURED BY EVENING WORLD. One of the most important fea- tures of the meeting was the great confidence expressed by all classes of operators in the validity and efficacy of the present or- dinance, which The Evening World campaign brought into ex- istence. Men who formerly fought the ordinance demanded that it be “left alone.” Most significant in this connec- tion was the attitude of President Barnard of the Mason-Seaman Taxi Company, operating ‘the largest number of vehicles in the city, the company that vigorously opposed the present ordinance and fought it through the courts. James F. Farrel), attorney tor the | Haverty Company,’ sald they were op- | erating two kinds of cabs, “public’ | aid “private.” He admitted, however, that the private cabs were “exactly the same” as the public ones, and it seems the only difference between the two ts the higher rate charged for the “private” cab. Moses Allen Warren, attorney, stated that the 1. 0. T. A., Which he represented, was bitterly opposed to the proposed amendment, which Would again make a “private” cab possible. He said immediately this was done hotels would be placardea | ‘with signs to the effect that the hotel Would not be responsible any vehicles excepting such “private” and the men operating public vehicles would have Little or no chance to get the business. This was the condition before the prosent or- | FACE ONE MASS OF HORRIBLE PIMPLES And Blackheads, Skin Dry and Would Itch, Scratched Until It dinance became law, Th charges but a single rate of fare and has fought to maintain the preseat ordinance. Mr, Warren said thoy wanted only an rtunity to get Dusiness at all public places, includ- ing hotels and railroad stations, and ‘hat there should be no special priv- tleges. MR. BARNARD NOW SEES EVIL IN OLD SYSTEM. To the great surprise of many, Mr. Tarnard said he was not interested ‘n the amendr as proposed by Mr. which would create “pri- is the Mason-Seaman gone on record measure th vate” taxic he now believes in ordinance and wants Walistein, firet time the p to fully comply with the law, though he made his usual objection as to the rates. He went on to tell hie conclu- sions in unmistakable terms. He admitted that he is still payiny ons to the amount of Y er year to get business, and although not paying so much to the sylvania Com- pany ae formerly, he is paying that railroad $1,200 per month. It was pointed out to Mr. Barnard that if all his commissions were abol- ished his plea for higher rates woud be unnecessary, He said he would be glad of any law that would pro- hibit the payment of commissions as well as the charge account system. He also said that only eighty out of 600 cabs owned by his company remained unlicensed, Following is some of his testimony: “The only cabs we have still with- out meters are those we are not ablo yet to get through the License Bu- reau. I have heard much reference to the Pennsylvania road in partiou- lar, but 90 per cent. of the cars com- ing out of that station now have meters, and have had for a week or two weeks, and ia an 10 per cent. will have them jugt as foon as I can got them through fhe License Bureau, “Any of our @ars that have run without a meter have been quite within the law, and #0 far sustained, There has been fo violation that I know of. We have been disciplined ourselves. ADVISES THAT TAXIMETER GO WITH LICENSE. “1 want to have it distinctly under- stood we have been strictly in accord 1 times, and as far as you make more laws I will obey th em. “1 don't know that every one know: the taximeter subject, but Ido. It ts a great source of trouble to every- y. There is much charged against tho taximeter of which it is probably not guilty, but at all events I do not find it satisfactory, and I recommend to the consideration of any commit- tee the Mayor might appoint the pur- chasing, on their own account, of all taximeters used in the License Bu- reau, and that the License Bureau have full charge of them and rent them for all taxicabs.” By MR. DRENNEN: In other words, © man’s Ircense fee would en- title him to a taximeter, Raise the license fee and give the man a taxi- or? MISS LOWB: Do I understand from ‘hat you say that you are trying to license all your taxicabs as quickly aw possible? MR. BARNARD: They are nearly all licensed. MISS LOEB: You do not intend to run any taxicabs without a icense? MR. BARNARD: Certainly not. ———__— DEPOSES MME. SCHWIMMER. Ford Will Have Somé Amertean Run Peace Party. Henry Ford, with his financial man, Gaston Plantiff, left New York for Washington this mofning. The Peace Apostle will attend the Gridiron Club dinner to-night and see himself as others eee him. Some sound American will succeed Mme, Rozsika Schwimmer as the head of the ve Federation abroad, accord- ing to Mr. Ford, who has been getting detailed reports from hia returned pil- grims. All the pilgrims thought the cru- made would get along better without Mme, Schwimmer. Ford, though per- sisting that he hasn't begun to abandon his effort to stop the war, haa cabled Peace Secretary) Louis ner to come home from Stockholin ee SCHOOL TEACHER MISSING, Police Are Asked to Seek of Staatsburg, N. ¥ ‘The authorities of Staataburg, N. have asked the Police Bureau for Missing Persons to look for Miss Har- riet A. Root, twenty-eight years old, a school teacher, She came to New York for a viste, Feb, 11, and two days later wrote home she was suf- ering with the grip, but would be back in a fow days. has been found by Staatsburg friends who have searched for her here. | Mixs Root is small, slender and fair, |with brown hair and brown eyes. There is a slight scar from her nose to her upper lip. & mouse-colored corduroy coat, tan silk waist, blue cloth skirt and wore ju black velvet hat trimmed with tur and water lille trace of her Secretary McAdoo, Grandpa Again, The arrival of a baby boy at the home of Francis Huger McAdoo, No. 399 Park Avenue, makes Secretary of the Treas- Jury Willam G, McAdoo a grandfather for the second time, Mrs, Francis Huger McAdoo Wis d they were it ia t stork’s frat visit to Pained, Could Hardly Sleep. HEALED BY CUTICURA SOAP AND OINTMENT “T looked a frightful sight a few months 8g0. My face was just ono mass of horrible | mes | Pimples and blackheads, and new were always sure to appear as Koon as the old ones were gone. The pimples were large and bard and would bleed most of the ume, My skin became dry and would ttch which forced mo to scratch jt and by 80 doing 1 would {rritate it until tt pained. T could hardly sleep. “This trouble lasted for six monthe and 1 used everything that recommended to me, but I wasn't relieved. ‘Then my Doctor recommended Cuticure Soap and Ointment, and I began to vse them, The pimples began to dry up tn two weeks and in about four weeks I was healed.” (Bigned) Mrs, Helen Bliverman, 1701, duh ow York City, July 19, 1016. Sample Each Free by Mall @Wits S2-p, Biktn Book on re Ad. dress poctnrd “Catleura, Dept. T, Boss @ea"” Sold Uhrougbout the world, woe She was dressed in| Diet and Exercise Course “For Women Figure and Gain Weight FRM DETECTIVES WAD THe KHMER To THE NG RET THEY “TOUCH THe PpLloor TO-DAY" LESSON NO, 18—Stimulating the Digestive Organs. LESSON, to Improve | | | ILLUS TRATED, | THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1916. TEARFUL FAIRY TALE OF PRISONER LURES $2 Martin Sheridan “Falls” for Yarn of Suffering Told by Alleged Thief. Although Detective Martin Sheri dan and his partner, Deteotive Dalton, fool aggrieved at Paul Stein, they give him credit for betng about the best all-around liar they evor met. The sleuths arrested Stein Inst night, at Fourteenth Street and Third Avenue for stealing two rolls of sili from Abraham Frank, an importer at No, 469 Broadway, and selling them. Mr, Frank gave Btein a job two Back numbers of these lessona may be obtained by sending a 2-cent stamp weoks ago, at the request of the Ger- to Miss Furlong for cach lesson desire d, but readers are advised to order The Evening World regularly of their newadealers (or by eubsortption), as the supply of back numbers is not incwhaustible, Readers are invited to correspond with Misa Furlong, who will reply restoa by Sheridan and Dalton Stein through the columns of The Evening World, She wilt not print correspom proke down and wept. man Consul, he says. Stein had called on the Consul and told a heartrending tale of how he had escaped from a detention camp In Canada, When ar- He admitted dents’ full names. Letters must not cxceed 250 words in length, State ques- stealing the silk, but pleaded neces-| aity. tions briefly as possible. By Pauline Furlong. Digestion requires a consider able outlay of energy and is really strenuous work, and if the body is physically tired food cannot be properly di- gested. If food is taken when the body is fa- tigued it putrifies within the all- mentary canal, involving all of the discomforts and dangers of self-poisoning or auto-intoxication, Mental as well as physical fatigue retards digestion, and the body's se- cretions are readily affected by our mental state, Worry, grief and ex- citement cause a stoppage of the flow of the gastric juices, and of course tho result is indigestion. Many persons are victims of indi- gestion without even knowing it, as the symptoms are so many and varied. Headache, coated tongue, in- somnia, sore throat, canker sores, bad taste, sour breath, dizziness, con- stipation, ringing in the ears and many other common disorders too numerous to mention are the result of indigestion existing. If the food ts not digested the blood and tissues cannot be fed or renewed, if she is a victim of indigestion, I have told you that you must assimilate the food you eat before it can nourish starved tissues and slender body. Exercises, foods, ba’ and breathing are the hy«ienic methods of overcoming and preventing indigestion. with the exercises, T9-DAY'S EXERCISE. Lie flat on the back, legs extended, flat on the floor. the right and then to the left side, Re- five times. should remain similar body twieting exercise. stimulates the ciroulatton, tion. TO-DAY’S MENUS. Glass hot water before breakfast. Dreakfast—Baked apple and cream, cocoa or milk, graham bread butter. Luncheon Dinner, Daye, boiled potatoes, salad on lettuce. | HEALTH AND DEVELOPING AIDS. Vegetable soup, fruit and real, Of course, the suffers more uniy worker food into healthy tissue. | Letters From Readers. ODORS.—J. F. asks MBEDDED tn shoe proved to be u $350 diamond, | PAINLESS DELIRIUM TREM delphia physician's experiment | it even peaceful. VEN for girl | PARTY WAS work by Bayonne firm, which served WITH $1,125 PAID for one Be: Brunswick, N. J partly Justified. the high price o' HUBBY SHOULD BARN $1,600 a year nesota college girls in reply to at@le made ing to allow hin LADYLIKE ROXING at | Litting or rough atuff allowed, Rochestor girl's and he ty demand that he bo a good dancer one night @ week for poker NS result of Phila to mak« Pe) hoper strikers returned to 1 refresimonts free. rkshire hog in New f pork tenderloin is olde ent newspapel Min- | and a ¢ One ts wil and no thin woman can ever hope to attain health and a beautiful figure in previous articles the bulld up the proper 'To-day's exercise for the digestive organs is another new one, which may be oasily mastered even by beginners on a eoft rug and place the clasped hands at the back of the neck. Draw the knees up half way to the chest, until the soles of the feet are resting | Now let the knees drop or “flop” down t» the floor, first to peat the movement to each side about ‘This exercise should come from the waist line and abdominal re- gion and the upper part of the body firmly on the floor. When performing this exercise you can feel the important organs of the trunk tumed about more than tn any arouses the sluggish liver to action and over- comes constipation as well as indiges- and Corned beef and kale or cab- Waldorf Overeating causes more common dis- | orders than almost anything known to the medical profession and is ail but sedentary from this than those who perform much physical la- #0 remember that physical activ- | ity ‘itself creates not only the demand | for food, but the power to convert the DESTROY PERSPIRATION “Will you please publish how to destroy and prevent the odor of perspiration? Have been ® reader of your interesting health articles and find them most beneficial as well as entertaining, Also will |anything prevent falling hair? Mine jhas come out in great combsful for | the past two years,” | | To prevent the disagreeable odor of |Perspiration absolute cleanliness is the very firet essential, Use castile soap and warm water at least twice day and then apply a little of the fol |lowing mixture: Alcohol one pint, salcylic acid, two drachms, Falling hair im be caused by many different conditions, and dandruff and lowered vitality are the most frequent ones. If you are in poor health your hair will be one of the first things to show it. Nervousness causes falling hair, and nervous baldness or alopecia, | which causes large bald spots on the head, can only be treated internally— | that 4s, by rest and @ general building up of the entire syatem, Use clean combs and brushes and pure castile| soap on the lair asa @hampoo, Mas-| ge the scalp each night to keep it \loose from the head and prevent and remove dandruff, | RAW FRUITS.—ITELEN M. asks: “Is it true that raw and uncooked foods are the most healthful, and why?" Uncooked foods contain abundant material for the maintenance and re- building of the body, and are rich in the mineral salts which the body needs. For this reason I suggest milk, fruits, salads, &c., in some form in the menus for both the thin women and the obese in each day's lesson, | CANKER SORES—MRS. EDITH L, writes: “I wish I could find words to tell you how much I and all of my jfamily enjoy your wonderful health articles in the paper each day. We all do the exercises regularly, and many of my womer friends call each | other up every day on phone and| discuss the menus. I think your “health and reduction and develop- ment aids” are the most interesting and cleverest things I have ever read; go sensible, practical and un- derstandable, It seems we all know| now know just why we do certain things and eat certain things, which of course adds to the interest of the series. I am sure you have already, or will, touch on every subject to interest each and every woman who reads your articles, and my entire family enjoys them to the utmost. I have saved every one of the series and would not part with them for any amount of money. I am troubled |with canker sores, Please tell me what causes them and how I can prevent them.” I certainly do appreciate your kind letter and it_gives me great encour- agement, Owing to the wide and varied questions I receive each day in my mail, from readers, I have been able to cover almost every sub- Ject in physical culture. The canker sores are the result of internal irri tation. Only a strict and Nght diet, or even a short absolute fast, with copious water drinking, free action of the bowels, datly exercises, baths and deep breathing will overcome them, Lowered vitality and indiges- tion also cause them, Rest from .| worry and proper diet are the real methods of overcoming and prevent- ing canker sores in the mouth, chest Nod TWO MEN BADLY BURNED. Firemen Rescue Them From Coop- erage Shop Blase. Rescued from a burning cooperage shop at No, 184 West Broadway, James Murphy, twenty-elght years old, and John McCabe, thirty-elght years old, are in Hudson Street Hospital in a serious condition from urns on the face and upper part of the body, The resoues were made by Firemen Autzler, Rothyer and Simmons of Hook and Ladder Company | No. 8, ‘The building ts a five-story tenement, the ground floor of which is occupied by Thomas McGuire. Murray and Me- Cabe had permission to seep tn the lar, and were there early this morning when the fire started, ‘The damage done by the fire was alteht. cll GEORGE W. KENDRICK DEAD. “I was a merchant in Vancouver, British Columbia, when the war broke out,” he sobbed. “The Ca- nadian authorities seized my store, sold my stock, sent my wife out of the country and put me in a deten- tlon camp. When I escaped and reached New York, I found my wife was starving. IT bad to have money and I etol | Stein then went into elaborate de- tails of the horrible sufferings he! sald he had undergone in the British detention camp. Tears were in Sheridan's eyes as he slipped a $2 Dill) into Stein's hand, upon leaving him in a coll at Police Headquarters late last night. Detective Noonan of Bayonne, N. | J., happened to be at Headquarters during the morning line-up to-day. When Stein was brought in, Noonan recognized him at once and Stein recognized Noonan. Three years ago Noonan arrested Stein for burglary | and had him sent to prison in Tren-| ton, Stein was not released until | Jan. 31 of this year. He admitted he) came to New York with a fabricated | story of escaping from a detention | camp in Canada and imposed on the German Consul. | Stein still has Sheridan's two dollars. * —— SLASHED AS HE SOUGHT | WOMAN WHO ROBBED HIM, pirdinca Re os: | Welsman’s Alleged Assailant Is Caught After a Chase in Which Hiding behind a pile of coal in the a chase down Seventh Avenue, in which several shots were fired, a man describing himself as William MoCann, twenty-six, of No. 250 West ‘Thirty-sixth Street, was arrested early to-day, charged with felonious assault, Charles Weisman, twenty- nino year old, a walter, of No, 142 East Forty-fifth Street, “ho alleged victim, is in New York Hospital with wounds on his face, Weisman had complained to the Second Branch Detective Bureau that @ woman had robbed him, and he and Detective Randolph were looking for the woman. They became separated in a saloon at No, 472 Seventh Ave- | nue, and Weisman and McCann got |into an argument which was trans- ferrd to the street. It was then that for McCann began. pushes bi Soy Hodson Day Line and Evening Line Merged. ‘The Hudson River Day Line and the Catski!! Evening Line, two of the oldest steamship compantes operating on the Hudson, havo been consolidat- ed, it was announced to-day. The Uckets of the two lines will be made interchangeable. The day line oper- ates the steamers Washington Irving, Hendrick Hudson, Robert Fulton and Alban The Catskill line operates the Clermont, Onteora and the freight steamer Storm King. elected officers of the are Charles M, Englis, Py win H. Snyde: Olcott, Gener! Vice President; ’ Manager and Paul A, |to serve as a Swedish delegate to the | Ford Permanent Peace Tribunal, ac- leording to cable despatches from the |Ford publicity burea HOW SHE ENDED TEN YEARS OF | Widely Know Was Also Prominent Phi Financier. PHILADELPHIA, Feb, 26.—Geonge W. Kendrick Jr, widely known tn fnan- clal and business circles of this ety and one of the best-known members of the Masonic order in the United States, died suddenly here to-day from heart diseaso, He was Past Grand Master of the | Grand Lodge of Masons of Pennsylvania | and occupied at various times many im- | Portant offices in the order, Mr, Ken- |drick was seventy-five yeans old, we Glencoe Athletic Club Ball. ‘The annual ball and reception ot’ thi Glencoe Athletic Club will be held Manhattan Casino to-night. A feature will be @ @ix-mile roller bicycle race between Otto Brandes, champion of Greater New York and J, Teacaca, the Htallan champion. | The winner will be with @ ‘sliver cup. presented ‘The grant inarch will be led by He: Fein and Mise Geraldine fs ort | SKIN-TORTURE If you have an itching, burning, un- | sightly skin-trouble, 18 can imagine the feelings of Mr C. Roberts when she wrote—“I had eczema on my face for ten years. Little red pimples formed in a small spot on my chin and then spread all over my face, They itched and burned me awfully, It was certainly embarrassing to me, and | would not go amongst people, I tried | almost every remedy and treatment that could be used for this trouble, but nothing did me any good. J used Res- inol Ointment and Resinol Boap, and was relieved in a day or two, In one | month I was cured, This was six months ago and the trouble has nover returned.” Weatherford, Okla,, Oct, 28. Every druggist sells Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap and doctors have pre- scribed the Rosinol trentment for over jtrenty yoare,-~Advt, Shots Are Fired. | engine room of the York Hotel after | Weisman was slashed and the chase, raffic Mani fits purse or pocket—con- ; Senient to ‘carry, These — roches may, en as Swedish M | fequized. Contain nothing By a vote of six to four, the fac- rmful, Other sizes 25c, |ulty of the Swedish University of Lund, ; WES Rs Sten Garren leontrolled by the state, has granted I oA | Prof Hans Larason a leavo of absence Gm acres, BATES SENIOR COLONEL OF STATE GUARD NOW | Head of Seventy-First to Get Cheer-! [N ing Recruiting Reports at ' Dinner To-Night. . | With the retirement of Col. Daniel Appleton of the Seventh Regiment Col, Willlam G. Bates of the Seventy- first Regiment becomes the senior colonel of the Division National Guard. In honor of this the officers of the regiment will give a dinner to him at the Hotel Vanderbilt this evening. At the dinner reports will be read regarding the campaign begun sev- eral weeks ago to make the Seventy- first the biggest regiment in the State Guard. The campaign was be- gun under tho leadership of Capt. W. R. Fern, adjutant, and Capt. James Eben, commander of Company 5. Capts. Fern and Bben have visited several of the big mercantile and corporation houses, the heads of which have interested themselves in the movement. The recruiting com- mittee also visited the high schools in the city and students over elgh- teen years invited to join responded in large numbers. By Decoration Day, when Col, Bates's regiment will lead tho parade, it is expected the Seventy-firet will have 1,600 mem- bers, ——___— Ont His Leg to Avoid Draft. Saying he had resolved not to be sent back to England to fight, a man describ- ing himself as Philip Binns, thirty-nine years old, @ teacher of languages living at No. 20° West Sixteenth Street, walked into St. Vincent's Hospital early this morning and asked to be treated for a eelf-inflicted wound in his left leg. He is being held at the hospital CHILD GETS SICK CROSS, FEVERISH IF CONSTIPATED Look at tongue! Then give fruit laxative for stom- ach, liver, bowels. “California Syrup of Figs” can’t harm children and | they love it. Mother! Your child isn’t naturally | cross and peevish. See if tongue is ‘coated; this is a sure sign the little | stomach, liver and bowels need a cleans- |ing at once, | "Aven listless, pale, feverish, full of cold, breath bad, throat sore, doesn't | eat, sleep or act naturally, has stomach- jache, diarrhoea, remember, a gentle ver and bowel cleansing should always be the first treatment given. othing equals “Californ Figs” for children’s ills; gi spoonful, and in a few hours all the foul waste, sour bile and fermenting food which is clogged in the bowels passes out of the system, and you have a well and playful child again. All children; love this harmless, delicious “fruit laxa- | tiv ind it never fails to effect a side’ cleansing. Directions for babies, children of all ages and grown-ups are plainly on the bottle. ur home. A little Keep it handy in given today saves a sick child tomorrow, but get the genuine. Ask your druggist | for a 50-cent bottle of “California Syrup 3,” then see that it is made by the fornia ‘Fig Syrup Company.”— ROWN Bronchial | For Sore Throat | | Rellevo frritation reences, ease cougl strengthen the voice, 10c ik’ BOX nd ing. JOBN L BROWN & SON, Boston, Mass. POULTRY! Don’t miss the great an- nual display of “Poultry” advertising in The Big Sunday World To-Morrow! All you want to know about where to buy fancy chickens, eggs for hatching, incubators, It tle chicks, chicken foods, &e, Worth Reading and Keeping! CO LALIAILL LUT TULA AAL ALAA LUU ULL LOL UU DAL EULLLLLLLL LLL L LUDO ULLAL ~ Santee aioaad 21S eR et Se NETTIE True Stories That Outstrip Fiction! Embellished by Pictures, News, Wit, Humor, Verse, Song, Etc., That Go to Make Up the Greatest Sunday Newspaper Printed in the United States. ‘WATITIITTIEIEIIIIIZII, In the Editorial Section: Charity Covers a Multitude of Strange Practices in the Care @f New York’s Dependent Children. An Interview with Dr. R. R. Reeder. New York’s Children Victims of Law Designed to Pro- tect Their Estates From Legal Waste. An Interview With Henry Wynans Jessup. “THE TATTLER” Describes Some Novel Entertain- ments Planned by Society Women for the Dull Days of Lent. The “Most Beautiful Woman” Arnold Genthe, Distinguished Camera Expert, Ever Photographed. Love Poems That Are Not for Publication. Leap Year Confessions of Proposers and Proposees, How “Mile-a-Minute” Murphy Earned His Name. Marvellous Stunts of Uncle Sam's Secret Aviator. How Woful War Stops Wilful Waste. Postage Stamps That Caught the Imprint of War. How Princess Beauties Found Suitable Husbands. Two Pages About Shakespeare. Illustrated in Colors, Inventor Who Saved the Post Office Millions of Dollars. “Antwerp.” By Sholom Aleichem, the Yiddish Mark Twain. Educating ‘Sea Gulls to “Keep Off the Reserveir,” ULLAL LULL WORDS AND MUSIC OF “IN A HURRY.” As Sung by T. Roy Barnes in ‘‘Katinka,’’ Now Playing at the 44th St. Theatre. CII In the Care-Free Metropolitan Section: Frueh, the Comic Artist, Pictures What We Might Do with the Extra Day—Feb. 29th. It is Full of Laughs, Kid Broad in the Movies. All He Had to Do Was to be Thrown Through a Brick Wall. Al Jolson, the Comedian, Monologues on His Trip Through the Mormon Country. Rushing a Special Train of Raw Silk to New York—$4,000,- 000 Worth—to Meet the Demand of the Easter Trade. Barber Shop Where They Furnish Puzzles for the Customer to Work on While They Are in the Chair. MOST IMPORTANT WAR PICTURE THAT HAS REACHED THIS COUNTRY! Exact diagram of the wonderful network of Cham- pagne trenches on both the allies and the German side, showing an official French Aeroplane photo- graph, the first of its kind to get past the censor. Exclusively in The Sunday World’s Gravure Section To-Morrow! Hans and Fritz, Hawkshaw the Detective, 'S’Matter Pop, Mr. Hubby, The Newly- - weds, in the Greatest Comic Section Printed in New York. “FUN,” THE JOKE SHEET THAT MAKES PEOPLE LAUGH, 10 SEPARATE SECTIONS ALTOGETHER 1Q \IN THE BIG Sunday World To-Morrow Ma YW Yb

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