The evening world. Newspaper, September 2, 1916, Page 3

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\ _ PARALYSIS CASES DROP, BUT DOCTOR FEARS NEW PERIL Federal Uxpert Expects Inf of Children Will Revive Ny SCHOOLS OPEN SEPT Head of Health Board Con viteed Danger Will All Be Passed Then A decrease of on fr . fa the new eof an ' Gls Was reported today by Health Department. ‘There was av of two in the deatha Reports ware received by Benior Gurgeon Charies Ko Banks are of the Federal aurgeons who are Agbting the epide at hundreds bildren who have Leen in upstate and Now Kngiand resorts during the Gummer are being brought back to the city by their of @ general railr jeral surgeons ith Departaent expressed alarm over this is They said it meant the furn 2 of new material ip the epidemic, and of the Fed- @ral surgeon predicted that a big Jump in cases would take place with im the next ten days. Following are the tables of deaths and new cases for to-day, compared With those of yesterday: DEATHS, To-day. in fear J strike Monday and officials tm, ux Yosterday. 5 ' 1 1 3 17 Yosterday. 20 a“ 7 Total doaths to date.... Total cases to date... During tho week ending to-day there were 157 deaths from infantile 61 Paralysis and 477 new caso the epidemic is Away is shown by the average daily number of cases during the last five weeks. The average daily number by ‘weeks is as follows: Dally Dally Average = Average Week Ending Deaths. Cases. . 39 167 a 178 ae 130 30 106 7 sioner Emerson said the epidemic was subsiding as antic- ipated and that at present there ts no reason to believe the public schools will not be opened Sept. 25. Andrew Carnegie, who ts cruising on his yacht off the coast of New- foundiand, to-day sent $1,000 to the Health Department's fund for brace’ to be used in the after care of in- fantile paralysis sufferers, Mr, Car- negie's daughiter, Margaret, now nine- teen years old, suffered from ortho- pedic trouble in childhood, Includ- i the Carnegie contribution the Health Departments fund now amounts to $26,511. “FEEL LIKE A NEW BEING” “PRUIT-A-TIVES"” Brought the Joy of Health After Two Years’ Suffering [Ts MADAM LarLaAN te 85 St. Rose St., Montreal, April 4th. 3 1 was sick ond {fered from constant Headaches, and had Patpitation of the Heart so bailly that I feared L would die. There seemed to be a lump in my stomach and the Constipation was dreadful. Tsuffered fron Pain in the Back and Kidney Disease. “7 was treated Ly a physician for a year | and a half and he did me no good at all, I tried “Fruit. as a last resort. After using thre 4, 1 was greatly | improved and™velve boxes made me well. Now J can work all day and there are no Headaches, no Palpitation, no Heart Trouble, no Constipation, no Pain or Kidney Trouble and I feel tike @ new being—and it was ‘Fruitenctives’ that gave me back my health.” Madam ARTHUR LAPLANTE, 60c a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 2 At all dealers or sent postpaid by Fru potives Limited, Ogdousburg, New Yor k tives’ How) gradually passing | ‘THE BVEMING WORLD, SATURDAY, sertsmese Dame Fashion ’s Steam Roller of 1916 Has Flattened Out Fe POPPE eee E EEE TEE EEE Cero reer erreerecrrrr te. 1909 1909 AAG DAME | AOD OOOO 4-48 Will Be Too Thin to Cast a Shadow—Evolution of the Female Form, as Garbed by the Modistes of Two Decades, and Re- vealed in Silhouette, Shows Many Startling Changes. By Nixola Greeley-Smith. Ye who have hips to shed, prepare to shed them now. Fashion has got out the steam-roller again and we must prostrate | ourselves before it quite as if we were delegaics to a Republican National Convention. The straight silhouette has been decreed, which means that we must be, or at least look, too thin to cast a shadow in our own fall frocks, Hereafter we shall have length but neither breadth nor thickness, and we must follow the straight and narrow path from our head to our heels. The advance agents of Paris, returning buyers and merchants have come with the message upon their lips. The short, full skirt of the past year, furbelowed, though not far below the knees, will soon be a thing of the ragbag and the attic, if we are to believe these gentlemen. Personally, I don't believe ‘em. Pars bas ad: very. Nttle: to: 989 Peererner rere about fashions sinee the war began.|does not refer to our figures rather Her hand has put together a few/than to our hearts, It must be 0. | gowns for America, but her head and] Nearly all the women Ti RGOR BAUS her heart have been in the trenchos| fell Walatlines with the freee and are still there. Consequently we tions with the greatest reluctance, have bad free-for-all, §0-a8-you-1 iN THE DAYS OF THE TAILOR- pleaso garments ever since the first German crossed the Belgian frontier. MADE AND THE PADDED HIP. There has been no authoritative voice] yj "unly Years ako, my dears—in of the mode. With a few variations! hag huge leg-of mutton sleeves with We have worn the same clothes since/a@ blazer coat and the skirt was Ught August, 1914. fitting und was worn over padded INFLUENCE OF RUSSIAN BLOUSE | Mps. i remember a pig-tailed person to STILL PREVAILS. whom 4 worty wine od ay tise Think about {t a moment. The sed as follows about that time: straight silhouette of 1916 ts obtained] “It's not too early to begin toethink in the street costume by the Russian Beoue eating an TY. Geet blouse, the belt worn a little lower) King heart and @ good income. I have than it was last season perhaps. But) bought you a ‘rat’ and you must be- we have worn the Russian blouse for three seasons now. Two yoars ago it had fur around the bottom; last year dour, You will not be able to do it up for a few years and your skirts must be ankle length for some J it did not; this year the fur trimming| jut I have bought you a Seer may appear again, The truth is that|too. Cc 1 will show you how to the Russian blouse, tke the Russian | Pup, (hen one person permitted h : an no yo permitted he army, keeps right on coming backs, |nair to be trusted. over un atrocious from the strict tailor made introduced ‘ y to the hip pad. Then she took a look at herself in the and tore them off, ats are dirty and to by Redfern in 1896, In 1902 it was over long and very clumsy and made Women look like the Russian moujiks, from whom they borrowed it, ‘They didn't like it and went back to the pad ts vul- f she announced to the astounded chaperone, “I'll never put either of tem on again. tly tailored coat, In 1909 it ap-|©™, n ary ‘Ainproved and modified.| _ “Then you'll never got a husband, Simultaneously the Moyen Age gown | You if e an old maid,” threatened peeame the rage—that is, the gown) the old ing mp her dis with straight sides and’ the walst| carted » And the girl, wha Nag worn a little above the knees—| had Victorian traditions, wept at the say sia inches above the hem of our ect but remained firm, Russian blouse} F ely the padded pompadour e ts Tho present skirts pasely, A And the Moyen Age gown seem in-| And hips went out, In i Both are back in 1916. 1897 tho silhouette borrowed the collar mete these dates—1902, 1909, 1916—| Of Catherine de Medici and the ruff just sev apart. One’ of the, of Mary Stuart, The greatest change superstitio ashion 1s that the|!n the two years which followed was fume silhouette comes back every| the introduction of the shirt watst {feven years, Thera seems to be| Sulit. The year 1900 added a fur muff joes there not? |to the feminine outline, a muff |something tn It, \ gee #0 | tiny thet it would warm but one hand TWENTY YEARS OF FASHION | at a time. ‘The sloping shoulder and RETROSPECTION, drooping sleeve of 1830 came back in If your memory goes back twenty| 101 and 1902 and brought the Russtan years —and you might as well admit| blouse. . that It docs, since we are alone, and| All this timo skirts had been mod- ‘romine. not to tell anybody-—fuat| rately full. Ta 1902 they became sheath-like about the hips and trailed even in the street. ‘This year brought the dip watstliag, and women wore a mechanteal waist extender to which the belt was attached. Then camo 1904, of execrab'e memory, because It think about the silhouettes we have) on during that pertod of shifting| ts starting from the 1 the Empire revival of arting from the same he more recent era of st Kown Which so scan-| brought with it the kangaroo walk. yet cous In-1914], akirta| Long bishop sleeves emphasized the Se eae the sidewalks; skirts like| resemblance of the fashion silhouctte tat eens summer, which. would| to the Australian quadruped, ‘The Inake a ballet girl blush; big sleeves, | lovely Ines of a revived ire mode sea ecvon at ali; Kowns with 600 but-| Made 1805 a season of beauty, The muspender dress first saw tho light in 1906, Full sleeves came hack and skirts, like opinions, were still mod- erate. The kimono sleeve proclaimed tons or with one precarious hook and eye. But let's be neat and orderly and bogin at the beginning in our’ brie ‘ 0 survey of the silhouette. With what) {n 1907 fashion’s recognition of the patience we have poured ourselves} new Japan This mode, of course, into these strange shapes; how meck-| abolished temporarily the shoulder jly have we striven with rebellious | line. flesh that we might be moulded like so much gelatine in the latest mode. Thinking about it one wonders it THE DARING CLOTHES. that famous aria from “Rigoletto,” The sheath gown with a short “Donne @ Mobile’ — womep are waist marked 1908 as the yet (changeable as feathers in the wind— point a daring clothes. 1m 1908 | |The Modish Woman, This Year and Part of Next,| iv» 2 was tient to tho kneon and gin to wear your hair in a pompa-| THE SHEATH, THE SLIT AND) EEE EEEE OED eee secesesseeseescs -o-OD0-5-6.5-5-6 6-4 SESS SE SESH SHEETS PE See) the girl of the period tried to look as much as possible like a furjed silk umbrella, Two years after the sheath| gown came the hobble, a boon to comic artists, since it cave them a| chance to portray the difficulties of | boarding street cars and getting in and out of cabs, Only those women who had lost 4 leg in a railroad ac: cident wore the hobble skirt with comfort. Between the sheath and the hob- ble came the revived Russian blouse, the Moyen age gown, and the gar-| ment with 600 buttons, also a bbon| to humorists, wince it suggested the trials of @ husband helping his. wife to dress. Sometimes | think comic artists design the fashions anyhow. The hobble skirt brought with it what was called the camel hump walk, which was denounced from the pulpit and became exceedingly } popular, Then, in 1912, came the ereat movement to emancipate woman, feet first. We had Suffrage parades and harem skirts for the first time, and the public was permitted to realize that women had two legs and could walk on them. Some people found this very alarming and pro- claimed the doom of the home, Oth- ers were thrilled, The debutante slouch brought a radical change of silhouette in 1913. The girl who had worn the camel hump suddenly assumed the lan- guishing, die-away attitudes of a Botticelli damsel. “Viewed from the back she suggested the Palisades, and in front looked as if she had eaten |@ Breen apple, Some one made up a |little rhyme about her. “If you | Would be swagger you must be a sag- | ger." Awful, but not so awful as |the girl, The sag brought the slit skirt with it. The skirts had to be slit, They had to be, even though the wearer lived on one lettuce leaf 6 safety first decolleto appeared \in 1914. In the harem skirt woman, had robbed man of his trousers, so there was nothing left to do but take his razor away grom him. Wome | who followed thls fashion wore skirt and an equatorial belt of tull satin or velvet. Nobody thought of calling it a walst. There was not enough of it. Then, you know, skirts | were double, an upper very full tunic, & very Ught lower skirt, true heir of | the hobble. Last year all we did was |to take this lower skirt off and sew up the flying ends of the tunic. The |short, full skirt, the pointed bodiee, jthe comb in the high coiffure, pro duced the Spanish silhouette. ‘Spain ruled us in 1915. And now they say the girl of the period is to be an ex- clamation point! Wa cana BRINGS VICE WITNESSES. Avrives Fr Detective From Bos With Three Women—Hunt for ash Fund,’ Detective MoGlynn of Lieut. Dan |Costizan's squad returned from Boston |this afternoon with Jennie Price, Sadie Rothenberg and Dora White, three women wanted as witnesses in the vice investigation. Dora White ts the wife of Joseph Schick of Brooklyn, arrested jin Boston yesterday at the direction of Assistant District Attorney Smith, who has been tn charge of the Investigation, Mr. Smith ts In Providence trying to get trace of a “slush fund" alleged to have been raised by disorderly houso proprietors throughout the country. for the f members of thelr calling who have b in this city. ———_———— Twenty-E, Up State, ALBANY, N. Y¥,, 2, olght new cases of infantile pa and one death from the disens ralysia reported — to ot Health from of the State, not including New tity, to- } ty, jay. This made an 4, cased and of the epidemic, gareKAL 8 deaths since the outbr Bury ‘eak | tyonix New Canes of Paralysis in| Jersey. TRENTON, N. J, Sept, %&—Korty- K | Mabet HERMANNSTADT IS --° HELO BY ROUMANIA —INGALICIA DRIVE GERMAN ATTACK.» Kerlin Reports Former Capital of Transylvania Io Hands of Enemy HELAN, Rept 2 Hermannet t capital of Transylventa, the to Hepetesent and Gyerersy, have Leen acuated by the Austrt " 1 to @ tate wae officially anne 1 reorived from Vienna today eo Houmkn une were ya tew lee eWay and are supposed to be in the elty to-day mt adds that the Tran. towne of Negy-Meaben (Hermonnstadt) and Sepsl-Beent- Gyorgy, north of Kro it, already been evacuat«! by the Austro- ne on Wednesday , & «tty of 95,090 twelve miles from the Moumantan frontier. tl well built and has @ number of fine public bulldings and eduei tonal Institutions, Was @ strong fortress the Turkish wars, in tn formerly the seat of an extensive city and wae trade with the East ‘The evacuation stadt, together with the ev tion of Kronstadt a few days ago, gives the Koumaniana possession of two of the principal cities of Transylvania It indicates tur- ther that the Roumaniana have penetrated the famous Red Tower Pass in their invasion of Traneyl- vania. The town of Hepel-Szent- Glorgy lies sixteen miles north- east of Kronstadt.) Austro-Hungurian troops on the Roumantan front again repulsed the Roumanians near Orsova‘and Her- cules Fuerdoe on Aug. 31, says the official statement issued by the Au: tro-Hungarian Army Headquarters of Hoermann- ry | under date of Sept. 1. PETROGRAD, Sept. 2. — Russian troops have captured a series of heights in the direction of the Hun- Carpathian. it was officially an nounced to-day. ZURICH, Sept. 2.—A great battle is developing in the region of Oraovo, near the junction of the Transyl- vanian, Serbiau and Rumanian fron- tlers, according to despatches from Austrian towns to-day. The Rou- manians bave taken the offensive in strong force at this point. THE HAGUE, Sept. 2.--Fifty thou- sand German troops have arrived at the Transvivanian city of Klausen- burg to check the Roumanian inva- ston. Tho Austrians have evacuated the city of Maros Vasarhely, on the main railway feeding their armies in North- eastern Transylvania and are prepar- ing to retire from the surrounding country, eccarding to advices from Berlin, BUCHAREST, Sept. 2.-Roumanian troops have occupied the Transyl- vanian towns of Kronstadt, Tehanul, Crloznesog, Tzicserada, Mouta and Pedegimva, it was officially an- nounced to-day, Roumantan artillery is now dominating the Orsovo-Tames- var railway, the principal eupply route for the Austrians near the Serb- jan frontier, The Roumanians have taken prisoners, including fifteen offic and have captured 10 cars of war material at the depot at Gesimesh, ee RUSSIANS PUSHING ON TOWARD LEMBERG, IS PETROGRAD REPORT 800 PETROGRAD, Sept (via. Lon- don).-The Russian offensive in Ga- licta has resulted in further advance in the direction of Lembefg and, furthor south, near the Hungarian frontier, tho War Office announced to-day. Violent fighting is under way. ‘The Austrians are resivting desper- ately, but thelr counter-attacks, the statement says, have beca repulsed everywhert anil OUTING TO AID CHILDREN. “Battery Dan” Celebration To-M: row to Be Bigger Tha: Sinco Republican adidate Chi H, Hughes mentioned Daniel BE. Finn, Tammany leader of the First District of Manhattan, in his campaign speeches the 2 WaWUnKL tie Firsy visu et hae Gane portance and the 1916 ou! of the Huron Club, to be h at Wetzel's Pavilion, College Point, be- comes an affair of more than local ti- port Proceeds of the outing will be used to take care of victims of infantile pa lysis in the dtatrict. ‘The boat | Pier A, Battery, at 10 o'clock in thi morning, I. Hiteh Harrison ts Presl= dent. of the organzation, ‘The usual gumes will follow tho arrival of the club Members and their guests at College Point. _>-—- BOY SAVES GIRL FROM LAKE. Clark of Long Island Otty Rencued by New York Youth, six now casos of infantile paralysis were reported to the State Depart: | ment of Health to-day sixty-two yesterday, cases the ‘total began 19 3,787 48 against | With to-day's| since the outbreak | Mayflower at Di € wal of Mextcan yacht Mayflower, placed at the disposal of the Mexican and American repre- sentative: to confer wit! wien to passed tn a The boy went to h CRANBERRY LAKH, N, J, Bopt. 2 —Miss Mabel Clark, twenty years old, lof Long Island City, was saved from drowning to-day by Raymond Men- ant, ears old, of New York Hy rk was one of a party from } sadeiny, out for a day at th under care of Prof, Wile sult son “hands step from one rowboat and fell into the water. xy nt id a08 bray ht er oul in @n exhaust 001 i he Bui she was revi ves xtee Mise ew tor luke 49 Clark had on her bathin With her other clothing in her bhe tried t to another warian town of Koromego in a re-| sumption of heavy fighting in the! 8, 1036, RUSSIANS mininity’s Hips — EVACUATED:ISNOW ONRAILWAY CITY And Left Us an Exclamation Point! os Vake Position Before Halicz Vienna Admits—Make Other Advances WENLAN, Gept, B—Advancing on #0 elghteen mile front ageinet the important rellway city of Mallea, the ' coupled the villege ten miles northwest & resumption of thelr Oeheta naive The object of the new Russian 1vive apparently le to prevent the ai. version Austro- German troops to the Koumanian fronts | An official statement from the Aus. trian War Office tod admitting wileht Withdrawals, anid thet the Rus wane Attacked in strong force on the Nalica front in the angie formed by the Dniester and Zlota Lipa Rive Near 2b n the Kiver Stripe front, the Kt ‘nome looal succesmes, but their of. | fonstve was stopped by @ counter at. tack. row All other Russian attacks were | beaten off except at a few trolated | The Austro-Germans cap. two officers and 407 men, SERBS SMASH BACK BULGARS’ RIGHT WIN Athens Reports Bulgarian « Loss Heavy as Gordicevo Is Re- captured, ATHENS, Sept. 3.—Serbian troops have driven back the Bulgarian right wing, recapturing the town of Gordi- | cevo, The Bulgarians fought in dense formation and suffered heavy losses, The Serbian artillery was greatly superior to the Bulgarian guns, ARIS, Sept. 2.—The Bulgarians returned to the attack last night on the western end of the Macedontan front. The War Office announced to-day that an mult delivered by them in the Vetrenix sector re- pulsed by the Serb BRITISH ROUT GERMANS FROM CAPTURED GROUND LONDON, Sept. 2.—"Last night, as the result of a minor operation,” says the British oficial statement report- ing the military operations on the Somme front in France, “we drove the enemy from a portion of @ small area intersected with trenches north- west of Delliville Wood, which he had recaptured on Thursday.” pbea APY LLedantond GAY SHOES LED 10 ARREST IN GEM THEF Green Accused of $2,565 Robbery Wher He Went to Reclaim Loot That Was Pawned. Betrayed by his fondness for a pair of russet shoes with big glass but- tons, which he had pawned, William Green, colored, of No. 17 Borden Ave- nue, Long Island City, was arrested to-day at Forty-recond Street and Fighth Avenue on suspicion of being implicated in several robberies, Green was employed on Aug. 81 by Dewitt Walsh, a Stock Exohange man, Uving at No. 19 Bast Fifty- seventh Street, He answered an ad- vertisement, Five hours later the apartment was robbed of Jewelry valued at $2,665, but the thief over- looked other gems worth $30,000, which were locked in @ sbcret drawer. About the same hour the suite of Emlin Drayton, another broker, liv- ing at that address, was entered and rifled of valuables worth $2,000. Among the loot, which was pawned, was the pair of shoes that Green re- turned to-day to reclaim. Green was arrested in Brooklyn July 30, with Kemer in his possession worth $16,000, The police held him for twenty days, but could find no compelled to let him xo, although re- taining the jewelry, He once ran an elevator at No, 152. Fast Twenty- second Street, at the time of a theft of $6,000 worth of jewels there. claimant for the jewelry and were, CONTAGIOUS TROOPS C7AR SENT. ToT ie : TOFRINCE REPEL FSH OCEAN ROE o Thee img to Ga lhe m Time he ree toe _——— Paris Tells of Russian Victory in Champagne—Admits Loss of Maurepas Trench ponte malay cone 4 PANIS, Mept In the Champagne “*'C"8 o° the offetal « uncement of to day dopusiia reaches . Hussian troops put to ight « eser & here CORD a operthwret of before I — Auberive after a epirite ot, | Some The statement follow ' y Age mg - . “ afainet the danger of overs 0 te " “re esertion” This morntog be wee @ee condderable activity on the p . leaving t f the enemy and of our artiliery, |Mroadeay and realte notably in the sector of Maurer 1 wee to snare 50 & horough fare urning and tmmediutely south of the brests be tiuke Isle o river, ‘The Cermane made vi and repeated attacks on a he portiny arin of the trenches taken by us on bie Beart $ } ‘itn't He paneed Aug TH, south of Retrees They f the attendant and mucereded In ccoupying some parte threshold of these positions, at com of (he chines of OM appreciable losses In the Champagne German | reconnettring parties west of Auberive and south of Tabure RASHES, CHAFING ALWAYS USE wore dispersed by means of hand grenades, A Russian patrol put to flight @ party of the enemy northwest of Auberive after lively fighting On the right bank of the Meuse (Verdun front) the night was turbed owing to the nervourn of the enemy, who violently bom- barded our positions in the neigh- borhood of Thiaumont work and for no reason whatever set up cur- tains of fire, A German attack against ,the village of Fleury was pped by our fire. Sykes m E HEALS & SOOTHES CHILDRENS SKIN ONE BOX PROVES IT 25 NOW FOR SUGGESTIONS! The coming General Convention the Protestant Episcopal of Church t# to revise the ten com- mondmente, DYER TO HEAD N.Y. TROOPS ON TRIP FROM BORDER General Will Remain in Command of Returning Regiments on Ar- rival at Camp Whitman. (apecial to The Brening Work.) MALLEN, Tex., Sept. 2.—Brig. Gen. Dyer wilt accompany.the three Now York regiments which have been ordered to entrain for Camp Whit. man. He will be in command of the new brigade at the latter place until further notice. Dyer's command will comprise the Third, Fourteenth and Seventy-first infantry regiments, His staff will accompany him. All troops before leaving this camp will undergo a rigorous physical ex- amination, to assertain if any of the men are affected with or have any symptoms of paratyphold. All al filcted men will be sent to the San Antonio Hospital. LITTLE SON'S HEAD FULL OF BLISTERS Formed in Hard Crusts, Suffered Great Pain. Could Not Sleep. Kept Itching All the Time, HEALED BY CUTICURA SOAP AND OINTMENT epee, ‘My little son got a bad burn on the top of his head, and it was 90 severe that his hair and skin came off. The crown of his head was full of blisters and was highly inflamed and the blisters formed in hard crusts. He suffered gi pain and could not sleep. It kept itching and he wanted to scratch all the time. “Then I tried Cuticura Soap and Ointment. I only | weed two boxes of Cuti Ointment | and one cake of Cuticura Soap when he In the Editorial Section THE PRIME MINISTER OF VARIA gives his first interview to World—Remarkable German presene tation from one of the Kalser’s intimate ; In The World Magazine BILLY AND THE BIG STICK is ame other ‘Richard Harding Davie story, with an exctting plot and a love mance to boot, It is told complete im this tasue, ROUGH RIDER CHAMPION NEVER SAW A RANCH. Can hte Heve It? Bact, nevertheless, picture of her and a lively story, toe PAGE OF SKETCHES FR WAR, drawn by C. F. Patera orl J> men work Is well known to New Yi ers. He shows the types of | was healed. ned) Mra, J. Rosen-|are doing the fighting. | auelg, 316-318 14th St., New York| HERB ROTH AS A ROOKIB AT | Citys January 6, 1916, —This World artist comes across the deep sea stuff—a lot of colorful tures sketched on the Battleship tucky. HORACE THE HALLBOY—More | Sample Each Free by Mail| | With 32-p. Skin Book on request. Ad- ress post-card: ‘‘Cutlcura, in the doings of the young frien@ Soetod* Sold throughout the world, | Herton Besley, hits tne he gives al In the New Gravure Section DUEL OF GIANT SHELLS—Four ree markable pictures showing the bui of German shells on the front whe: Rritish Seaforth Regiment ts entre and the British reply, Real action em DISEASES! Department of Health, City of 'S\\iraGNING FROM HUGQI New York, hasadvisedphysicians HEADQUARTERS, | Pull page of tures of campaign managers and activities. SUMMER JOYS IN SING SING shown In another page of spirited tures—most realistic — inside-a- sertes ever shown, In the | Metropolitan Sectton GRANDFATHER CHARLEY MITCH= ELL, now a British landlord with 7, acres on the southdowns, is in tows, Some folks may remember et 4 youne ‘un who twice fought J ually" ‘an, ESTIMATES WOMEN BY THE TON —Who? Why, none other than the fame ous Swedish’ artist, Albert Engstrom, who calls. th w Yok woman @ fatty, He has drawn her picture t FASHIONS FORK THE SLIM Catiahan gets the comic at big illustration, whieh leads to use Chlorinated Lime as a dis- infectant in all cases of Infantile Paralysis. The United States Government recommends the use of Chlorinated Lime as a most effective and economical germ killer and deodorant. Disinfectants must be fresh to be effective. Thousands of gro- cers and druggists have just re- ceived a fresh supply of Acme Chlorinated Lime. Do not accept substitutes which may be stale and worthless. iy nis your home—sprinkle Acme Lime ta your toilet bowl, Dage can, kitchen eink, cellar, ae

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