Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
SHOLOM ALECHAN, + MODSH HUMORST AND WRITER, OES. Author Whose Wri Writings Won| Fame, Was Known as “Mark Twain” of His Race. BODY TO LIE IN STATE. Many Visit Family Home in the Bronx to Pay Homage to | His Memory. Sholom Aleicham, known as the | “Yiddish Mark Twain,” died shortly | after 7 o'clock this morning at his residence, No, 968 Kelly Street, the Bronx. He had been suffering for some months from nephritis and dia- betes and for two weeks had been in bed, attended by Drs. Ginsberg and Hilkowitz. News of the writer's death spread rapidly throughout the Jewish colony and before 10 o'clock flocks of friends and admirers were wending the! way toward his house. His widow is prostrated with grief and his son ot | fifteen is inconsolable, He also | leas four daughters, the eldest of whom is thirty-one and married. Arrangements for the funeral of the noted writer will not be completed until this evening. They will prob- ably be in the hands of Dr. J. L. Magnes, President of the Jewish Col- ony, and it 1s thought the remains will lie in state at the rooms of the United Hebrew Charities, No. 356] Seventh Avenue. Among tho ortho- THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, MAY 18, 1916. Blonde Not a Gold Brick, but Gold Mine; No Giggler Is She, Nor Yet Canary Bird, Declares a True Daughter of the Sun |It’s the Brunette Who Is the Foolish One, Says Auriferous Virginia Hammond, and It’s the Capable of Great Emo- tion Love. Fairer Sister Who Is s, Sacrifices and Actress Resents as Libel the Charge That the Blonde Is a Human Pan- cake—Her Accusers Are Heartless, Shallow and Witless. By Nixola Greeley-Smith. Ever published since The Evening World an indictment of the blonde, which originated in the pages of Vanity Fair, a defense of the bionde by Mrs. Lewis B. Wood- ruff, whose won- derful hair could be cashed at the Sub-Treasury any time, and a second dreadful attack, with chemicals, gas and every se |other weapon of frightfulness, by an dox of the faith it is the custom for, 4onymous brunette, there have been interment to follow death twenty-four hours, but the rule, within | mutterings and rumblings from the it Is; @athering, golden hordes. My mail said, may be dispensed with by Dr.) has been filled with denunciations by Magnes, owing to the dems thousands of the dead man’s devotees for public obsequies. Bhoiom Aleicham is the of the deceased author. He assumed the nom de plume at the age of twenty-five and w fifty-six at his death. His real name was Solomon Rabinowitz and be was born in Pe- reyestav, Russia, Ife has @ brother in Newark, N. J. The dead man was one of the projific Jewish writers in this try, His pen had been busy for} thirty-three years. He portrayed his people, their characteristics, successes and shortcomin writer has. He w: humorous and pa pen name most coun- rhaps no 8 their Mark netic, the of Yiddish numan interest story tell- | ers. He wrote for magazines in this country and abroad, for the news- papers, for anything and everything} ewhich Would reaound to the credit] and advancement of his people a published in | and his death Hia works have bec twenty full volumes interrupted his autobiography. One of his stories has been iunning for some time in The World Sunday} Magazine. His best stories are said to be: “Toviah, the Milkman,” “Mena- hen Mendel,” and “Mor on of the Cantor. e last is said to be his greatest. His nom de plume, Sholom Aleicham, is # Yiddish greeting meaning ace be with you, ——— BURDENS OF WEALTH. The weight of $560 in dimes |! and nickels she bore down aged womun carried finally im Phila- delphia street and landed her in hospitat. THE BATTLE tGED FOR Inet YEARS "MA, JAS. J. ROVALL “Boston,” Boston, Mass., Central Wharf, April 26th, 1914. Ss. tient my bowels would refuse to Last October I went to Montreal Sand there heard of ‘Fruit-a-tives.’ 1 used one box and the results were so pronounced thet 1 bought two dozen boxes. 1 continued using ‘Fruit-a-tives’ and noticed a decided improvement in my condition, The dizzy spells longer troubled me and my bowels began to perform their ‘tunction | # tr ve no regularly boxes of ‘Fruit-a-tives’ and my physical condition was perfect.” s. J. Royall b0c. @ box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 25e, At all dealers’ or sent by Fruit-a-tives | the pero; ad of| indignant daughters of the sun and xide bottle, with warm ap- Probation from brunettes who had seen their sweethearts torn away from thi finally w And now mond, em by gilded sirens, andj} ith wails from men, comes Virginia Ham- most auriferous of all the daughters. of the sun, to break a lance agi ‘ainst the base detractors of j the golden girl. Miss Hammond plays the part of Huguette, ouled, she-thing in man’s attire, who “swageers through” vival of the free-hearted, fire- the Sothern re “If I Were King.” She has been absent from the stage for a few years, but returned to it to fill the role Sothern the play Not con fense ¢ she originated the first with EH, at Production of tent with despatehing a flery of the blonde to Vanity Fair and challenging her detractors to de- bate alled up) on blondness to the on subject, Miss Hammond me to send her defense of the far corners of New York—and as much further as it will reach, | “Of all t vile, baseless slanders | that have ever been uttered about the blonde, the tradition of her heartless- ness and shallowness is the most wits oss," Miss Hammond told me yester- y in her apartment at the Hotel Woodware i, “From what men sy and weite about the blonde one can'y help isa © peo} a gold bri is looking for blondes are that. fhe Breat em undying rp muc | dark-eyed foolish as brunettes. themselve have ay wing the conclusion that they think sort of gold brick. Do you? me thing I'd like to ask all ple, Who ever finds out that °k IS a gold brick unless he a crooked bargain, And not bargaina! 1 admit blonde is not a gold brick, but a gold mine. Blondes are capable of jotions, mighty sacritices and love, ‘Temperamentally, they h more brunette than’ their 1 sisters. But they are not so ‘They don't throw A blonde has to living for, worth 8 away an worth ing for.” “Worth dye-ing for?” I interrupted foolishly “Oh, come now,” the golden-haired as { do around W light hair | that the wn und thought as the that the knows ho “Why, the tense likely to megalomania thing he time, but as soon as I discontinued the | be tragic you ar to your rea) nature, lerdon blonde's destre that if | Miss Hammond answered, “do let's be serious about this, that the ith the ed she blonde You know as well average man goes idea that if a girl is nust be light headed; has the mentality of pancake, that her areas sudden and detached ekling of hot popcorn, and only thing which she really Ww to do Well is to giggle 4 doctor told me once to giggle tis unfulfil parano. and every could think of. that is so in- 1 she sthesia, other horrid I had been Bet 14) studying very hard and L went to this “For three years | was troubled with| creature to get him to prescribe for @ Constipation, AL times the attacks | Shocking headache, “Are you playing J a tragic or a comic part, Miss Ham- would be very severe, accompanied by| mond? he asked me. ‘Oh, tragic, T Dizziness and Violent Headaches, V)answered: ‘I prefer tragedy.” *Phen,! ar co whole | He Said. ‘Lean do nothing for you, In took medicine and laxatives the whole | | your effort to feel and to look ana te doing such violence the blond nature, which is to be gay and light-hearted and to effervesce in giggles all the time, that the only remedy for your headache part and comedy that away he “put, sles, vintages: I took the entire two dozen} as giggle wate ‘Ts it peated in ing me prejudice Vhen Limited, Ogdensburg, New York—~Adve | a uette—and you if 1 didn't Miss ‘you know there | relationship with that mere s is to throw up that solemn look for the lightest of light ‘oles.’ He told me practically start giggling right do nothing for m Hammond,” I objected, must be some subtle between blondness and Why else is the blondest of referred to in sporting circles could really?” Miss Hammond her full contralto voice, fix- her great eyes, “Then ly proves the diffusion of the against the blonde, T first played this part of now bow much re- $00 ow eee $ WSS ae $ and 2) +446 d0boCooseood fire and passion it calls for—an ac- tress who had watched my perform- ance during rehearsal came over and said to me: ‘What color WAS your | hair?” ‘What do you mean?’ I gasped. ‘What color was it originally? site re- peated. Then she added hastily, ‘I don't mean to be chatty. Only I KNOW a, natural blonde could not | possibly play that part as you do. I @ brunette role.’ And the worst of it, Miss Hammond candidly added, “is | | that I'm not a blonde by choice but by ineceasity. Nature made me one. | “I believe, though, that very often a} smouldering Southern soul 1s lodged in a blond mansion, and that many a} dusky daughter of the South has a polar heart. It's the color of the soul that counts, and who can tell what that is from a glance at hair or eyes or skin? A man told you that blondes are the canary birds of life; that they were created to be put in gilded cages and to twitter sweetly; but I think blondes are Birds of Paradise, the rarest and most sought after of all the {feathered tribe. “Blondness ts just the outward and visible sign of a flaming heart. Vire itself 1s blond, and the hotter the fire the whiter it gets. A blonde is a woman in whom the flame of life burns whitest. So a blonde is not a canary 0 bird, nor a gigler, nor a pancake, nor hy the white corpuscie of the human race, as you said, created to rescue men from the brunettes. She'is the white 13 QB Camp at Woodland Beac 1. There | will be about forty numbers on the programme, and stars of musical comedy, Vaudeville, the concert stage, and the moving pictures for three hours will entertain tho audience, Among the artists who will appear are Mitzi Hajos, Kitty Gordon and Jack Wilson, Charlotte, the ice queen, and her ballet; Nat Wills and other , Hippodrome stars; Primrose's min- strels, tie Vaterland Band of 21) pieces, Elsie White, Captain Barnett wi Herford, Georgo McKay, Golden, Ryan and Tierney, Oklaho- | ma Bob Albright, Pongella Sisters, | Ada Meade, Norma Mendoza, May |W Thompson and Walter Manthy from | of “Katinka BROADWAY FILM; RIALTO PICTUR. Sessue Hayakawa, the noted Jap- will also be a Charley Chaplin comedy, “The Floorwalker.” The Strand Theatre will present Mazel Dawn In the screen play culled he Feud Girl," produced by the | Famous Players’ Film Company, As the ttle indicates, this photo play | concerns Itself with a mountain feud Miss Dawn as the heroine is the daughter of one of the rival clansmen whose marriage to a son of the oppo site faction brings an end to the feud The principals who acted in. this photo play were taken to the moun- he and musical numbera, 5 tha ad authorities in ca According in the en, that =|T4 WOMEN WOOED BY “BLUEBEARD," HIS LETTERS sO Bela Kiss Was Was : resced tOjof Hongkong. Mr, White te a mid- Wed All and Murdered Eight Say BERLIN —That Lue dy an ed by rmer left Vil each ound The fou women's dre Only ot $100, Helen Rook and Bernard | 460. The nese actor, Will be seen at the Broad- | of way Theatre in the Jesse L. Lasky- have reas Paramount production of “Alien | more wery Souls,” a thrilling photodraima written for him by Hector Turnbull, ‘The roundsman int tain regions of Northern (Georgia, captain in | where their number was augmented He was by many picturesqn types living in Mr. ¢ the community, The pre ne wilh feet tal also Include the Strand Te al state view, Strand Fashion Picto: . | retiremen cartoon comedy, a short farce comedy Peput about, Buc (via Amsterdam), Bela Kiss was engaged to, lette them fully body of Kathrin ho alway: She carr Granville, Miss Juliette of “The! | Corpl Madja Cohan Review of 1916," Lucy Lee Call, | Kiss die in a soprano; Ruth Helen Davis, diseuse; | Serbia. May Warfel, harpist; Rita Dano, Another with: Wheeler und’ Dolan and Bert Wille heard from Ws iams. In addition to the celebrities | Months after he on the stage other actresses will sell |!n Serbia, . souvenir programmes. | Kiss was tall pibac Le was thirty-nine said women fell sight. pied somet bnee on them. police have evidence p t least els is. pre ing anif ye He serve York \ York Moun i wbip by but deciined. least had promised seventy-four housekeeper, to se of his to Budapest despatches ase that pest Police. to marry, women taken with be gi sed, trussed up rope, a tough cord around each neck and a handkerchief in every mouth, contained se One dress has been! having belonged twenty-six Years old, a cook, who disappeared ten years ago, and son, Babe and Nelson, Beatrice Another dress was Identified by and Ottie, Stefaulot Ardine, Truly Shattuck and Martha | daughter. of a on (Special Cable Despatch to The Evening World.) May the Hungarian or at no leas was from whom dis- his he to the} euth. flame of life. Her blondness is in it- the police already have the names salt and by itself the evidence of her of gighteen women he courted, not ire. . ‘encicisicsiliaionereniiaass ‘one of whom has been found, and some are oO" to have bee “ HIPPODROME BENEFIT het ie e mane alae Kina out . It is alleged tha 6 con- FOR NEWSBOYS? CAMP. \ tinea tis aiiention to servante or ba agaacecpeony al ped t om E KAVve - ‘Tho greatest spc ial performance | Wasint woinen who had saved @ Ut ever arranged at the Hippodrome Will r cyied Thursday seven mys- | be given tormorrow nlght for the) ois ave foot, tin covered sealed | |benefit of the Newsboy summer 4 were found in Kiss's storeroom of Cinkota, them have been opened, Four of hree con- long tained the corpses of as many wom- the bod: with thin n o rad lost has been identified, estified that he hospital “8 ha yea in swore lant dia rs old, love that November was reported blond and it with him on servant, little savings disappeared four years saw in Valjevo, he dead beard, is umed that he exer lik believe 4 in inte lieve hypnotic they to th women, th influ- already murder and they many VETERAN POLIGE CHIEF H. B, Warner will be seen at the | play, “The Market of Vain Desire,” | a sociological study of the UDP br —_—___ crust,” by C. Gardner Sullivan, Mr.|Moses \V. Cortright Had Served Warner has the role of a young : rie ag clergyman who “goes right” in spite; Fort vo Years When He Re- of the efforts of the social wet to re. | fired Seven Years Ago, duce him to a ballroom ornament. ! 8 There will be other pictures and a} Moses W. Cortright, former Chief musical programm Inspector of the Police Department eaeaineenne HAZEL DAWN STAR ie : One H do and orty-ninth OF STRAND FILM PLAY. inuixestion, | He was ee after midnisat his own reauest rved forty=ty veare to the highest po 1 foree, nthe ers in ted Infantry, eutenan cnd inspector Inspect more ast kept fered ws ioner He was t was born im Waldoeue bitty the transferred sixth Civil to the rising t In 1887 becoming a «sergeant in 1876; in 1896 Pin 1007, than ix rect Baser 130 PRETTY in Hongkong, Has Stirred Up an Awful Muss, ALL THE MEN ARE SORE But They Boast the Girls Are Pretty and the Latter Admit It. Looks like Plainfield, N. J, and Hongkong, China, are about ‘to sever diplomatic relations, Don't be surprised any day if you hear that Mayor Cawkins, first citizen of the “come-let-us-build-you-a-little- bungalow” community on the Jersey Central, one dollar and five cents from civilization, has given Chu Shirt, Plainfleld’s leading lnen atrangler, his passports and directed Plainfleld’s ambassador to cease Hongkonging and return home forthwith. Yes, the situation is just as serious as that. Plainflelders say that a break is im- minent any moment, and men and women who spend the better part of their lives making breaks for trains should be able to discern one at a considerable distance. Off-hand, you are probably won- dering what brought about the strained relations between cities that were formerly on such friendly terms. you are surmising that jealousy thelr respective populations is |the cause, you have another gue: jcoming. Nothing lke it, They are in different commuting zon As ! usual, a woman, 180 women, to be exact, are at the bottom of the jee It is only just to the latter * however, that their lack of civic pride can be traced to the fine far rican hand of one 8. V. White of Pampanga, the latter being ineither a new dance nor @ tropical | complaint, as you have supposed, but jone of Uncle Sam's fighting ships, | now splashing around in the vicinity shipman on the Pampanga. ? | POSTCARD TO “PRETTIEST GIRL” STARTS TROUBLE. Up to the careless moment a few weeks since when, probably be- © it was casier to spell than Hobokus or Singac, he sat himself ‘down and, after adjusting the crease in his trousers, indited a postcard “To the Prettiest Girl in Plainfield,” rel ‘tions between Plainfield and Hon) ‘kong were all that could be desire lTt would not be going too far to say they were ideal, Each place went about its business without consider- ing the dtney in the nature of a rival, With the coming of that highly illus- trated postcard to Plainfield the situation changed. A Plainfield newspaper obtained the postcard and built a story around the incident with the result that day | vefore yesterday Postmaster Alvin Hoagland received & communica- tion from Midshipman White statins that one hundred and thirty of |}istneiel’s ‘woinen had written to jim assuring him with becoming modesty that they measured up to | the ecifications described on his | postcard, | “In an effort to discover if there were one hundred and thirty pretty women lin Plainfield the writer qualified as an explorer by making a voyage to the town yesterday afternoon. The | generosity of the Jersey Central with its cinders on this par lar trip leav- ing him in no condition to do justice to such an important investigation, he was compelled to seek the assistance of some of the inmates. The first man asked as to Whether Plainfleld women were easy to look at was the ticket rent. i pretty 1# no name for it.” he de- clared, “I've been dealing out trans- portation here for two years and their beauty is still staggering me. And, mind you, all T can see through thir little window is their faces. Gee.” be sighed, “sometimes [ get so axttated 1 give them thelr right change.” From the railroad station the line of march led to "Big Jin unders, the policeman who regulates traffic at Front Street and Park Avenue, the » of Plainfield” 88 section and likewise the hub ar volves the Kay night life of the place funders, & smiling study in ebony. said he had been told there were a lot of fine looking women in town FOUR CHLOREN Burns Forget Kiddies and Helpless Invalid. A woman 105 years old and four (children were rescued by policemen ‘Guring a spectacular, three-alarm tire in the New York Veal and Mut- jton Company's two-story plant at No. 93 North Sixth Street, Willlams- | burg. at 1 A, M, to-day, Policemen John Waters, Kdward ;Rhatigan, John ‘Tarthemuller and Martin Sommers of the Berford Ave- jRue station tried to atop a panto among the 300 foreigners who oc- cupy the tenements on each side and in the rear of the burning building. The main object of most of the ten- ants was to get their clothing and | furniture to the street, and many | forgot their children, | The cries of children took Police- | man Waters to the top floor of No.| 91 and, half atified by smoke, he| found Anna Timnol, aged five, and Mary Garagoss, six. They had been forgotten, After Waters had taken | them to the street and was going through a rear yard, some one threw | a trunk from an upper window and | missed him only a few inches, | Policeman Tarthemuller heard ehil- dren crying in No. 95, but couldn't get in at the front becaure of smoke. He went to No, 97 and crawled along a ledge to No, 95. In a second floor rear apartment he found Mary and Jenny Dulipska, eight and nine years old, They were in bed, nearly suffocated. He took them to a front window and dropped them Into po- licemen's and firemen's arms, After Tarthemuller had got out by a rear fire escape he was so near collapse from smoke he had to be treated by an ambulance surgeon, A woman's cry for help came from the rear of No, 95, and when Police- man Sommers reached the top flooor he found Mrs, Mary Renak, 105 years old, long bedridden from paralysis. Shoe had been overlooked when the others abandoned the apartment. The policeman carried her to the street. After Jenny Dulipska had been re. cued, some family in the neighbor- hood took charge of her and her parents have been unable to find her. | The police are confident she will be taken home this morning. | Fireman Michael Lucas of Engine} No, 212 was so badly burned trying | to get into the blazing buliding that) he had to be treated by an ambulance | surgeon and go home, —— ACQUITTED OF CHARGE OF ENTERING MAID'S ROOM. Ser Walter Schumann, cherged with arrested April 9, entering the room of einbach, a mald tn the em ploy of William Ziegler jr, at No. 5 Park Avenue, has been atquitted after @ trial before Judge Delehanty and «| fury in Part I, of General Sessions on aj charge of burglary in the third deg The defendant was acquited aft telling tne jury he had entered the room, which he said was unlocked. while looking for work. tried May 4. Newspi struggle between the muid and the de- ndant which ended in his being dragged down eight: flights of stairs were shown to be without truth The Ziegler apartment is on th eighth floor of the building, but the maid's room, where Schumann was dis- covered, {4 on the ground floor > "FRISCO MAYOR RECALL. the Schumann was ey reports of Clrealated for acating of ph, SAN FRANCISCO, May 13.~-Datitians for the recall of James Rolph Mayor of San Franceisceo, were being etrou- e tul He was an candidate Mayor at the iast elect GIRLS WOMAN, AGED 105, DON'TORINK WINE | INPLAINFIELD, WJ 1 AND {WAY 16,000 OF tM SAVED FROM FIRE, SAYS SCHLATTER $|But Midshipman White, Off Parents’ in nary as Tenement Healer Shows BR eee de How tomers: Inted to-day by followers of Kugene | E. Schmits, former Mayor, who was re moved from office when Indicted at thr time of the so-called graft prosecution: {fl OR EAT SPROUTS, He Frees Mankind of All Human Ills. Monday afternoon be home week in Jefferson Market Police Court fe the Sehlatter alumni, if rancia Schlatter, retall and whole- sale dealer in healing, fulfilix his promise to have at that tel the men and women in the metropol itan district who believe they have n rubbed back to healthy by his hands—at wo much per rub, The nerable old fellow—he Is now sev- enty-cight—whose healing methods have brought him tn frequent con- tact with the authorities In various parts of the world during the Inet half century, is all wrought up over iis arrest last night at his most re- cently established healery, No, 939 West Thirty-fourth Street As on the other occasions when he has been brought the Is} charged with practicing medicine without @ license, His arrest. time was brought about by Adole D. Priess, a detective attached Dan squad Tries let one in on the fact that nest wi old tril to bar he to Mr Lieut Costigan's the inspired one of ner war for Schlatter on the first “IT look pretty healthy, don’ questioned the Rev, Algard thing but a gloomy manner. porter agreed with him, “Well, T ‘The re he the picture and announced that B® anys Went on, "I owe my present condie” tion to Dr. Schlatter's healing powers? A few years ago | was up in Vaneows ” ver, 1. C., sufferir® from gallopiag consumption. 1 was practically on my last lap when | hurried to Oakland, Cal, and put myself under Dr, Schlate ter's care. In no time I was on thé mend. now the doctor's slave.” While these testimonials were bett aired Schlatter was in the oper: room. Presently he came thi the curtains and permitted his gage r about the room, It mi ) only imagination on the ter's part, that his sorrowful e brightene@ considerably when be counted up the house. Hie was attired in a purple ind black robe, drawn in at the” Waist with silken cord. Do you mind hea’ iwked the ‘ Instead of replying he parted thé curtains and, signalling the reporter to enter, beckoned to an exceedingly, robust looking man to follow, customer pleaded guilty to an attack nervous prostration, Schlatter bent his head in prayer for a few mo. ments, the while planting his righ® hand ‘on various parts of the pa- tient’s anatomy, In Nehlatter directed the man to duce his handkerchief, It looked like a tablecloth, but the “doctor” only charged him 50 cents for blessing it. “From now on,” wae the advice given in Schiatter’s most impressive manne eliminate ice cream, pork brussels sprouts and wine from your diet Business cards and other printed matter found in tte. establishment shows that Schlatter has taken in a partner in the person of Dr, Auguat letting me see you ader, the f being known as chrader & Schlatter, Healers and General Sout Repairers, Estimates Cheerfully Furnished.” knees was not behaving as a good knee should. At Schlatter's sugges- tion she produced a handkerchief and fifty cents. She says he took money, blessed the handkerehie returned it to her—the handk: hee, He told her to apply the ha Ha chief to her knee several times a day A few days later she returned and announced that the handkerchief had failed to keep its part of the contract Her knew pained worse than | Schlatter fifty fore. at bring blessing her stocking This didn’t About the desired relief elther, but before he could bless any more of her wearing apparel she called in De tective Johnson and they escorted the indignant healer to the Men's Night Court where Mugistrate Nolan paroled him until Monday afternoon The fact that Hehlatter’s arrest was given wide publicity in this morn- ing’s papers didn't deter a large num- ber of men and women from visiting his plant for their week end healing. he house in which he is quartered is one of the old style, brownstone front type, not far from the Manhat- tan Op House, He front room and alcove, the former being used us a reception room, th latter equipped with a brass bed and a few chairs. Green ¢ rate the rooms. World man found cents each occupies a tains se An Evening yut a dozen cus- men and women of nd ages, ranged about the reception room awaiting their turn to feel the pressure of his hands. In one corner of the rec an extremely an, with snapping bI manner, was thumping a r. She said shi Hewitt of No Brooikly nd ters Seer “A deep se me to take plained. "Ie T was so de two all sizes ption room young wom- ck eyes attractive was Miss M, Moffatt Str she was Schlat A that Me of gratitude Inspired the po ex ides living in Brooklyn f I couldn't hear a single thing. 1 came here last month and Dr, Schlatter cured me, 1 think he's | simply wonderful At this juncture a chap described Rev Dd ion. she husky looking | who Gus Algard, D., broke into The recall petitions enu ate Ay rem |sons for Rolph's reeall about « dozen fications, including the cha that | Mayor hold «office MMe be tion fra | “rn * them when they come alone.” he explained, “because I'm too busy keeping the truck drivers } chauffeurs who are taking a] ELEPHANT RUTT lant from running each ¢ther down. | Work was completed. here to-day me day I'm going to take a. couple] the Elephant Butte Dam, a. United of days off and see for myself.’ dp ggg eer PE her \ BEAUTY EXPERTS IN A NUT-|wiich, by danming tne t Grande | SUNDAE PLUNGE. Hover, forming the npc A nut-sundae plunge nearby looked | ervalr An the world, Construction be ke wood place 10 acquire expert Fig U an Nerigation system. that. will teatiniony Max Beik and Sidney | water 185,000) acer of land in N Dobbins, Plainfield’s leading sodalNexico, Texas and Mexico battery, were only too willing to t | wt Sane | cellor Heats ‘Got to go some to beat the gals] 4 down this way," ay 1 Sidney, put- | 1 y wireleas ‘~ the finishing toueh on be emen Delbrueck looked like a load of concrete of the Interior and Vice knocked around a bit and’ ry igned. ‘The O ‘ whe was asked hens maya br Det Cranford somerville Brook and lots of other es. gals down here has the others got about 16,000 girls dow stopped.” ages of course, and trying Postmaster Hoagland not only cor. |to pick the pretty ones is lige picking roborated these seatiments but put It | marble dust out of sugar, Why,” h considerably stronger. He was get-!continued, wheat barber pe: ting his hair cut on the second floor mitted him to ighten cpl that is, the barber shop is on the haven't a beauty pa int wn, second floor, but the hair referred | That's f enough Ht It to is on his top f when the re-| “Has there been h of an in porter found him, everal other crease in the mail t kong? customers were a ‘pI chairs The foreign math beer on either side of } train of late.” was his diplomatic idea being ne t nt t The last person interrox from jump on eng he man in cha f atto whistle for newsstond matlor Bure, there f sw One hundred and thirty p a ; ‘ i sear iris not ving,” said enthusiastic: field doesn't see rats hey “That's about—let me see—Just sho Keren Oe et. Taee 6 0 girla out of the way. Yes, get the chance.’ A | st th It ind an type. | himself as the} as a result of careless diet or neglect of the stomach, Liver and Bowels, make a change immediately. Do not deprive your body of the proper nourishment and : RASH OF PIMPLES: ve. ON FACE, NECK | And Arms, Itched land Burned. Could Not Sleep. Face Was So Dis- figured Could Not Go Out. HEALED BY CUTICURA SOAP AND OINTMENT ee 'y trouble began with an itching, my neck, and arme being affected, and “M: face, ‘The skin was sore and in- {tched and burned which caused me to scratch and irritate the sore places and T could not sleep. My face was disfigured so that | could. ‘not go out and I was not able to work for three weeks, “I read of Cuticure Soap ‘and Ointment and sent for a sample. On finding relief 1 bought a ber of Cuticure , | Soap and one box of Cuticure Ointment, and it took only two weeks before I wae Poaggel (Signed) John Ruppel, 904 Bergen jowark, N. J., July 28, 1915, |Somple Each Free by Mail Cutleura, Dept. T, Beee fon." _ fold throughout the world. increases strength of delica many Inatancs forfeit tt 4 per full soon to appea paper. Ask tor or drugete FORFEIT it, It cai wood drugs amina needed to maintain health and strength. Help e digestion, aid Nature in keeping the liver and bowels regular withthe assistanceof HOSTETTER’S STOMACH BITTERS is excellent for POOR APPETITE NDIGESTION NAUSEA, CRAMPS CONSTIPATION AND MALARIA but the fact remaing” this case, tooy” flamed and tho breaking out . they later broke out in a rash of pimples, © ce anion”