The evening world. Newspaper, May 9, 1916, Page 13

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\ THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, MAY 9, 1016. ‘| ENGLISH pour#itr OR BELGIAN GRAVEBURE, WHICH IS THE SINGER? BEARD 1 LOUIS, BUT VOICE MAY BE | | VOICE OF WILFRID scent Jacob-Esau Puzzle Finds Par- allel Here in Graveure- Douthitt Case. GRAVEURE INDIGNANT. Belgian Baritone Sure of Own Identity, but Won’t Tell of His Past. | Everybody ‘along amuse musica) Broadway seems to know with absolute cer. tainty the name of Eleanor Paint new husband except Miss Painter. ‘The dainty actress admitted to-day before leaving for a honeymoon trip te the Maine woods that of course everybody would know that little de- tall of her marriage except herself, | }and ahe was quite sure dhe @idn’t care about it. Her manner, however, was quite the last word in dis@ein and earcasm. “I would Ifke to meet those peopte who are saying my husband ts Wi- frida Douthitt,” Miss Painter eald, “and I would just find out what tt te all about. I knew Mr. Douthitt very ‘well before he went off to the war. I knew my husband, Mr. Graveure, Jong before I met Mr. Douthitt. I met tm in Berlin in 1911. I can’t see any fesemblance in the two men.” Many friends of Mr. Douthitt, how- ever, say they cannot see any dif- ference except a beard between Wil- frid Douthitt, the English baritone) who went off to join the French army last fall, and Louis Graveure, who descries himeelf es @ Belgian bari- tone, and who came here about six peared: Bince waving for France Se Douthaet itt has not been heard from. uAenee Douthitt studied we me effects. for four years and Mved in walt Sie. that. time,” (eG wey enintenr et iene during Taat's y milllens ef boxes| Clara Novello pawsan, ae yon comurist, who {s most erphate fone @ day for four years and I know Mary T. Goldman’s Gray Hair Restorer Ee Louls Graveure ie really Wil- frid. I went to his concert, studied every move and gesture, and [ eantedlens exh] to gray and faded hair and willleavethe pele know he recognized me. I cannot, and none of Douthitt’s friends can, fluffy, natural, Onhandatalldea Ler (idee d oO understand why he has adopted this course of action and why the report laboratory, prepaid, on receipt of $1.00. a Tal wot Dottie Mention original color, (05) of his enlistment in the ob army was circulated.” |" see eae on Mary T.Geldmen, Goldman Bidg., St. Pest, ian, WAVE COLOR IN YOUR CHEEKS Be Better Looking—Take Olive Tablets ted petite taste mout lasy, 70 should tae ‘Olive Tad: Olive Tablete—e eubstiture Ter DouUTMITT. declaring that M. Graveure is really Douthitt. “He was my son's companion dui those yeura. He ‘waa went to me by Dr. Licyd, Caru- teh | @0'e physician in London. I have let- ters here from his father, J. R. Dou- thitt, a er all of No. 63 Treganter Road, Sout Keneington, Lond: bese! jon, a ve Wilfrid Douthitt three les- Mies Sybil Vane, who studied with ee) Douthitt, wae equally emphatic in Geclaring that M. Graveure wus Douthtt with a beard. Both women were indignant that Graveure was Fecelved with military and a by the British soldiers at World Wants Work Wonders. Krumbles The New Whole Wheat Food with the De/cious Favor originated by the Kellog¢ Toasted Com Flake OST everybody has known for years that Wheat is the most perfectly bal- anced grain food in the world—but nobody knew how to make it delicious to eat until the discovery of KRUMBLES. Krumbles is the first wheat food that gives you all the delicious flavor of the wheat—a sweetness that grows richer and richer the more you chew it. Krumbles is all-wheat—the whole of the wheat, with all the starch, all the protein, all the min- eral salts and phosphates, and all the bran that people need so much. In the WA. ‘E package —10c, Look for this signature. Hit Helly boxes in telephone booths. In the for hallway of the apartment how encountered William Shoy, megee elevator man. are detectives,” said Iinan, 6 & warrant for the arcest of tment.” Tahoy made a dive for the telephone awitchboard, but Reilly grabbed him. | Then Shoy refused to run the vator, ily put him in the oar sat on him, while Finan manipulated roper floor, rang the bell! it to the of Guipe' arrested him, Shoy w ed, charged with nterfert fe Barlo fined Shoy $5 In Bide Police Court. Guipo| was held for tg! and al an is remark. The ference. ‘Their careers, euch ae is He Refuses to ‘to Take T Them Up to which seem to be altke, to the apartment house at No. 100 programme shows that Wilfrid Dou of belng a member of a gang which when he went there as a span IT COST ELEVATOR BOY ba and pointed beard of | the monocle he wears known seem: to be very much ‘he ‘and there wre many! Make Arrest in Apartment and Lands in Court. Miss Painter’e brother, Earle V. Painter, of No, Linden Avenue, Cathedral Parkway at 7 o'clock this 1910, paye himself he was in aariaburg, | morning with @ warrant for the ar- thitt there in the sume year. “I'am feally M. Graveure and none} Mas made a business of robbing coin o physical resemblance of, $5 TO DEFY DETECTIVES in| the only noticeable point of dif- | peculiarities their handwriting Detectives Finan and Roilly went Flatbush, said he first met Graveure | the time, ‘eat of Russell Guipe, who is acoused Miss Painter's husband said and to lend emphasis to his stat ment he wrote {t out so that it could be compared with Douthitt’s handwrit- ing. “I was born in Brussels and studied in Paris and Berlin, I met Miss; 1 n Berlin in 19. | 1 will not anything about) . | arances abroad. | . into this country! r =< | without @ reputation. 1 do not know, ; who this man Douthitt 1s, but I wish | he could get back from the war and clear up this trouble for me. At the time I may discuss my_p: but not at this time, 1 as long as T know Miss Pain ‘ ee contidence in me.” hi \ — : | In an effort to explain the mystery, Mme. Davies etated that Wilfrid Dou- thitt was given to the study of occultiam and the theory of reincarnation, and | had often spoken of changing his per- | sonality and of having his body tel anted by the spirit of a great si! | the past. Graveure said he jeosophist, but sald that he had be- Nets tending in that direction. He would not explain his theory, however, and laughingly denied that his views! had led him into an attempt to com- pletely change his personality, ee PANAMA CANAL DEFENSE WEAK, SAYS REX BEACH Foreign Fleet Could Easily Bom- bard Forts, Declares Novelist, Back From Visit to Canal Zone. Uncle Sam's notion that he had doubled the strength of his navy when he built the Panama Canal ts @ mere delusion, in the opinion of Rex Beach, novelist. Mr, Beach re- turned here this morning on the Metapan, after three months in and around the Canal Zone, He said he believed a hostile fleet could Me be- yond the range of the canal defense forte and bombard them with ease ‘The most interesting portion of the novelist’s trip was his visit to the San Blas Indians, the isolated, al- most amphibious, tribe which inhabits the islands and shore in the Gulf of Ban Biles on the north coast of Panama. These powerful aborigines have successfully defied incursion by either white men or neighboring nativés. They aro suspicious and warlike, but Beach and his party fin- ally won their permission to pene- trate (@ short distance into\ their A Gentleman’s Drink with a Gentleman’s Game isa light, thirst-satisfying “skyball” made with . De acl! WINE you couple delight with the satisfaction of knowing that you are drinking ething good for you. Just swe rough. GARRETT & CO. Champagne Quality St. Paul Garrett Special A Vintage of Unu T. Kelly Co. 263 6th Ave., wea tur West 17th St. Over Half a Century of Dignified Credit]! You are taking no chances when you buy your furniture at this old reliable store, where remarkable values and confidential credit go hand in hand. Come in and select the furniture you want. Ask us to charge it country. “They are a fine, clean, strong, moral people,” said the writer, “and they are wonderful swimmers and boatmen. The women hold such a peat position in the tribe that when marries, he goes to live with his wi wife's family, instead of taking her to @ home of his own. It is the paradise of the mother-in-law. She has complete supervision of the home” 5,000 PAINTERS BACK AT WORK FOR $5 A DAY Increase in Wages Is 1234 Per Cent.—Some Employers Still Refuse Advance, Of the 12,000 painters who have been on atrike, 5,000 went to work to-day at the rate of $5 a day, @ 12 1-2 per cent, increase. The unton officials Predicted 3,000 more would be at work by the end of the week. The em- ployers of the rest have refused to consider the advance. The District Council of the Inter- Rational Carpenters’ Union, meeting in Fifty-ninth Street, near Third Avenue to-day, confirmed the action of the local union in repudiating the compromise effected by National President Hutchison Saturday and standing out for 70 cents an hour for @ nine hour day. The employers’ as- sociation threatens to ask the national organization to expel the local unions. In the garment industry, fifteen small employers signed the scale to- day, giving renewed employment to about 200 workers. President Ben Schlesinger of the In- ternational Ladies Garment Makers received @ telegram to-day from the convention of the Amalgamated Cloth- ing Workers of America, which ts not a member of the American Federation of Labor, pledging its moral and financtal ‘support to the strike, A| first edition of twenty thousand pamphlets has been printed appealing for sympathy for the strikers from members of all boards of trade, civic organizations and the Chamber of Commerce. M. J. Reagan, industrial | mediator of the State Department of | announced to-day he would ffort to bring the rs into @ mediation con OLD MAN HIT BY AUTO LEFT ONG ROM Detective: Told Phat | | Sped Away F | China Cabinet China Cabinete—Jacobean or Butler! Guffete—Jacobean or Rutler finish, finish, at prices from | at prices ranging from $25.00 to $125.00 $27.50 to $150.00 Buffet “It’s Easy to Pay the Kelly Way’’ Out-of-Town Deliveries Made by Our Motor Trucks, T. Kelly Co., 263 Sixth Ave., 104-106 West 17th St. Opon Saturday Evenings Until 7 o’Clock. made in afew Labor, minutes Car Which} tim Held | Brook- tured skull, was day by his nephew | sixty years old, a| e present address his | know, He is ¢ letective watel John's Hosp! becomes con jwo Jiyn, with a fra identified « found rd tha ontatning four or five oh passengers struck him and speeded away. Hts nephew, who lives at No. 69 West One Hun- dred and Third Street, was found through & ellp of paper’ in Gleeson’s ook oll Guipe, Take we uy to hie|! ||money—a substantial income that can be pyramided Opportunity to Earn a Man’s Income ND it is pleasant work, too, requires little A effort, after school hours, or during your spare moments in the evening. Sounds easy, and IS easy — to earn REAL to positively BIG by your AMBITIO It’s a BIG boy’s chance—not necessarily a big '|boy physically, but ANY boy with BIG ambitions. ARE YOU THE BOY? are, here is your opportunity! We want a limited number of boys LIKE YOU AT ONCE! We want you to represent Deutsch-Amerika— chat is, act as our agent, supplying copies of our popular illustrated German weekly and obtaining yearly subscriptions iaee — measured, in fact, only If you feel that you It’s easy, pleasant work, for invariably eve ||German in this broad land is enthusiastically please to become a subscriber, once he has seen a copy of \|the publication. Deutsch- Amerika sells for 5c per copy. One year’s subscription costs $2.50, It’s easy to sell one copy every week to every German in your vicinity, and just as easy to get these readers to become reg- ular subscribers, For every subscriber you get at $2.50 per year, you earn FIFTY CENTS. scribers within one month, we pay you a SALARY || of $2.50, in addition to the fifty cents you earn on each and every subscription. Thus, for this slight effort, you receive $7.50. Don’t you think you can get more than ten sub- scriptions per month? Of course you do! And, of course, if you ‘ucceed in doing s0, you succeed in having us pay you a Cont ASrENy LARGER SALARY. For instance, if you send us 15 tahecriptions | within one month, your salary i* increased to $4.00 jand, adding the fifty cents you get on cach sub: || scription, you have earned, altogether $11.50. | If you are a REAL little business man, you'l | want to earn even more than $11.50 in one month, jand you can, MOST CERTAINLY! | It all depends on YOURSELF! If you can get |15 subscriptions, you can easily double and quad- |ruple this number, and, as we said, your salary is | INCREASED proportionately, up to $50.00 for 100 subscriptions, which, adding the fifty cents you get for cach subscription, makes your total earnings for these 100 subscriptions, $100. There ARE boys who can earn this sum of | money, we feel sure. Maybe YOU are the boy! Write us and we will send you full particulars, | ADDRESS, SUBSCRIPTION DEPT., DEUTSCH-AMERIKA, 182 WILLIAM ST., NEW YORK CITY. 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