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” \ Ve t ’ \ % ‘ONE-FOURTH UNDER ~ NEWPENSION PLAN Henry Bruere Outlines New Measure Agreed On by Conferees. —— | Henry Bruere, former City Cham- derlain, addressing the High School | Teachers’ Association at the High Bechool of Commerce to-day, outlined few plans for teachers’ pensions an Which he and representatives of the feathers have been working since the | @efeat of the last pension measure tn ‘the'Legisiature iast year. If approved by a teachers’ vote, the © plans will be submitted to the Legis- ~ lature as soon as ** passed will go into effect Aug. 1, 1917, possible, and if * The new plan proposes that the ity provide one-quarter of the pen- sion after thirty-five years of ser vice and that the teachers provide | @ similar amount. Last year's pen- sion measure advocated that the * teachers and the city each give ono- | half to the fund. Under the new| Dilan teachers would not be obliged to contribute more than 3 per cent. | of their salaries, But such a low payment would mean a smaller pen. | «ion, The defeated pension measure re- “quired the teachers to pay § per cent. ‘of their salaries into the pension fund. Under the new plan teachers may retire at sixty-five, or after complet- | ing thirty-five years of service with-| out regard to age. It also provides| Yhat teachers may retire for disability | after ten years of service, if physical or mental disability is shown. The return of contributions ts also Provided for in the new measure in event of resignation or dismissal, Under the bill the city would relieve| the present mothers’ pension situation | “by taking over the obligations of the} “present pensioners. It 1s provided| that the fund shail be conducted un- wr the supervision of the State In-| surance Department. It is proposed in the measure that the city make up the amount neces- #ary, in adition to the quarter from the teachers and the one quarter from the city, by contributing to the fund im future one quarter of the average ; for the past ten years plus one thirty-fifth of one quarter of the average salary for each year previous to September: 1917. There was some opposition to the VILLA IS DEFEATED INJIMINEZ BATTLE; LOSES 1,000 MEN Gen. Murguia Drives Bandits South, Border Hears— Fight Still On. - | | BL PASO, Tex, Jan. 6,— Gen. Francisco Murgula, commander of | the campaign against Villa, attacked with all his forces yesterday and the day before near Jiminez and has forced the bandit leader, who was {n personal command, to withdraw) wouth and west. Fighting 1s to-day im progress south of Santa Rosalia, | according to advices received here by | Wé@vardo Bravo, the Carranza Consul here, It was reported that Murgula had cleared a path south of Chihuahua \ City as far as Jiminez, which Mur- yeula now holds, and that Villa's menace has been removed from Chi- | uahua City. | ‘Banta Rosalia, however, is between ihuahua City and Jiminez, which | Wuld indicate, from reports of fight: | ity im that vicinity to-day, that the forces had cut Murgula’s forces im two, Santa Rosalia ts about seWnty-five miles south of Chihua- | hua‘City, and Jiminez 1s about Afty mile, south of Santa Rosalta. Deails of the battle were sent to the dexican Consulate here to-day by Gin, Murguta. | Thre hundred Villistas were killed 600 wounded and 60) captured ar executrd, according to the Consulato's interpritation of Murguia's repor Passengers arriving at Laredo to- day fiom the Mexico brought reports that Gen, BP.) Naferrate killed Gen, Samuel De Los | Santos curing a session of the Con- stitutional Congress at Queretaro, Jan, 2. No official confirmation could be obtaired here. ~ REMEMBER Today when ordering your food supplies to_ intertor BP. "ASK YOUR GROCER FOR Austin, Nichols € Co, Inc q New York PURE FOODS TheWorld’s Best ing for your table under ie im" label, TEACHERS TOPAY Z2HE EVENING WORLD, 5A Clinging Vine Girl Mistake of Na But Most Men Prefer to Marry Her Kind ran ting Ginls_deficie Lin. bri Man prefers are Reauently geod ko marr A Destructive Parasite, She Chokes National Life by Reproducing Her Own “‘Tender-Minded” Sort, Says Dr. Frederick H. Robinson, Eugenist— Worse Than a Crime, She’s a Blunder! By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. The “clinging vine” woman is worse than a crime; she's a blunder. She is a mistake in the scheme of Nature, and the tighter she clings the more likely she 1s to choke and stifle national life and national progress. Just as her vegetable prototype ultimately destroys the living growth on which it supports itself, so she is @ parasite that bodes ill for posterity. The doctor's scalpel has been pruning the “cling- ing vine” of her mentality and her fitness for wifehood and motherhood. At a meeting of the Academy of °? . Medicine the other night to discuss the problem of! %, “Efficiency and Inefficienc; Dr. Charles L, Dana | KS Pointed out that if the one or two ineffictent members | ¥ ° of @ large family were women they usually were pro- e/a vided for by early marriage. He commented sharply on the fact that “men love to marry the soft, childish, clinging type’—whu are probably “tender-minded,” i. e. none too bright. “And if the man {s not very bright himself,” the physician added, “it {s a reaction of defence. ‘Thus two simple minds mate and breed their kind.” When I took this coldly scientific condemnation of one of our com- monest feminine types, and, incidentally, of masculine discrimination—to that well known physician and eugenist, Dr. Frederick H. Robinson, I found him ready to indorse every word and even to @o further, Dr, Robinson is editor of the Medical Review of Reviews and President of the Sociological Research Fund. HE'S IN FAVOR OF A WALLOP® FOR THE “CLINGING VINE.” suffer from the ineptitudes of the “Somebody ought to hit the | Mothers?” I asked. 4 i ” “The children seem more likely ‘clinging vine’ and hit her hard.” | enan not to inherit the mother’s men- eaid Dr. “She is not tal deficiency,” he said. “The exact merely a dead-weight, a piece of | probability of such inheritance has not been figured out. But the mother 106 MORE BRONX. RENT STRIKERS CET ETON HOTIE Landlords in Fight to Finish, They Say, No Matter How Many Tenants Move. Holding out for a war to the finish no matter how many tenants move, the Bronx landlords to-day served ono Robinson. negative inefficiency, but she has hundred and six more eviction no- ® positively harmful influence on | gio majorly of cases aves (0 hand) tices on striking apartment house 0 the children—boys as wel the race, There are not so many Jas girly hor type of mind dwellers, and one of their representa- folinging vines’ as there used to Often the children of a strong, in- [v8 #a!¢ more would follow. The be, but plenty still exist. And— |telligent mother turn out well, even| (nants served to-day were those who resorted to strategy In meeting the situs © n ve held the land- agents off with promises since worse luck—they are the sort that most men prefer to marry. Therefore, they apparently will continue to reproduce themselv: —in either And then {f the father is so worthless that she, has separated trom him. But the children of the inetfictent mother are | !0Fd's frequently handicappe nd “It 19 so much easier,” I observed, | “We “for a girl who is mentally pficlent . to get away with It than for a boy wen to do likewise. Much less ts requir found all these promises to bluffs,” a representa- tive of Grounstein and Mayer sald, Robinson told me pay Dr. something that should make even the weighted down with weariness. He]jectual demand. And after school “2? Pretended they were going to probably doesn’t mind marrying althe girl so often escapes that final remain and pay the dollar increase fool; in many Instances, he does, in-|{est of abiiity the matter of making In rent had contributed to the strik- e m 3 good economically, pert 01 ls d yore: deed, seem to prefer her. But I never|Saer othor warhkecgy 12 Competition | er ‘tans and wy attending thelr knew a man who wanted a son fitted ngs, So out they go. ACTRESS OR STENOGRAPHER |p. tenants who resorted ti FOR A WIFE? YES, | , 0 resorted to prom- isos: tli have wu « Tuesda a “That is all true,” agreed Dr, Rob. | '8°* ve:untll next: Tusaday to to cling and nothing else, who really desired a mentally ineffictent heir, Yet he deliberately invites that fate inson, uch an’ environment and! ect demand sor Penh and if % ig 2 such education often turn into hey will have when he marries the girl with haley (ising vines’ girls who might de- 1e Second Munteipal the color of scrambled egs8 and) volo; into better things if they were One Hundred and Sixty scrambled brains underneath. not given all they wanted without S000! ill Bod ‘ and nee Avenue Zh ch being obliged t k for It. wey will not be compelled to move Haye you ever noticed,” Dr, Rob- | alog ie PPEAS eat Se = Juntil next Friday, The notices were inson pointed out, “that the son of the! gijiance whan a man of wealth this morning by Sydney V strong, intelligent, highly successful id position mari ‘a chorus representing City | Marshal business man often is a nincompoop?| girl or a stenographer, As a mat- * ‘ = . ter of fact, the woman who has nian yesterday heard the Think of the dissipated, addle-pated wpman ate hae pd heotarngs Seger young men who have inherited great Or intanceMes meen eviction and ordered them to a better potential mother wealth in this country, and who show gply le ne " st rues » y th boil ri A a}, than the debutante plaything who of the strikers are looking for an utter lack of backbone, Of moral) Ml tte ee ealiy and: phoclealig rtments, but. many mor fibre, even of ordinary common sense.) Unemployed, mined to put the landlords ‘Tho reason for them, in most cases, !s| “The deficient clingers often are |'o ! of moving thetr house that thelr fathers have married ‘cling. | very pretty Indeed, T have seen pie. | hold Property into the street befor . 5 “| tures of girls who were actually hulf-|they 0. Plang for caring for those ing vines,’ pretty, affectionate, com-) Witea but who were Mabruane who cannot find accommodations ar fortable little women who are mentally| tion’ And a “nan looks no further | being made TURDAY, JANUARY 6, 1917. ture; CHV FRHTS RULNG WHICH LOSES BS TONONESENTS | Health Commissioner Says En- | forcement of Old Ordinance Would Cripple Hospitals. | Supported by Health Cotinntiatoner'| Haven Pmerson, President Henry Moskowitz of the Municipal Service Commission, Dr, John W. Brannan, | Prowident of the trustees of Bellevue and Allted Hospitals, and other off. | clas, Corporation Counsel Lamar Hardy will appeal from the Appellate | Division decision which upholds a} elty omiinance compelling every city | employee to be a citizen and a bona fide resident of the State It 1s contended by Health Commin- | sioner Enfergon that a rigid enforce- | ment of the ordinance would have the effect of crippling the nursing forces of the big hospitals. He goes further and says the city would be practically helpless under the ordi- nance’s provisions if the city should be revisited next spring and summer by the infantile paralysis epidemic, The decision to be fought to the Court of Appeals by the Mitchel ad-! ministration was rendered in sustain- ing Supreme Court Justice Kelly. who had granted a judgment on the plead- ings in favor of Robert Hellyer in @ taxpayer's suit to restrain Comp- troller Prendergas: from paying tho salary of Miss Eugenia 8. Prengol, « supervising nurse in the Health De- partment. Miss Prengel was appointed from the Civil Service competitive list in | 1909, While she was in charge of a milk station in Brooklyn at a salary of $1,100 a year, Helfyer began his! suit, citing the ordinance adopted by @ Fusion Board of Aldermen Oct. 1, 1913. “When the ordinance was passed late tn 1913," said Dr, Moskowitz, “many city employees who were liv- ing in Jersey and elsewhere flocked back to town, As @ result tho num- ber of employeer—outside the nurses who are not living here or who are not cltizena, Is negligible. “There is a qualifying clause in the ordinance which gives the Mayor the right to sanction the appointment of certain employees irrespective of their citizenship or residence, This pro- vision has referonce to special tech- nical qualifications, Very few in- stances of where this has been taken advantage of are on record, however While the oCrporation Counsel's of- fico ts making the fight In the courts, an effort will be made to have a fying clause inserted In the ord! which would remove legal obstacles to the employment of Canadian and other alien nurses. GIRL’S ILLNESS HALTS TRIAL CHRISTIN SCENE. PRAGTIIONER HEL FOR GIRL’ DEATH Healer Called After Physician Had Pronounced Case Incur- i able Is Accused. Miss Mary M. Starr, a Christian Sclencs practitioner of No. 1286 Pa- cific Street, Brooklyn, has been held in $1,000 bail for the Grand Jury by Coroner Ernest C, Wagner of that borough on a charge of culpable negligence in failure to report the case of tuberculosis of Ella May Pil- Kington, seventeen years old, who died Dec, 21 1s yn f 3 Norman Avenue, trookiyn, tHe} OF DENTIST SHE ACCUSES Jury also found that Miss Starr re- colved feesas a practitionor and that she 1s not Hcensed, Dr, Charles Shookhoff of No. 589 Lorimer Street and Dr, Greenwood of | Noble Street were censured for not re- | porting the case to the Board of Miss Hunt of White Plains Suffers Nervous Breakdown—Dr. Askins Innocent, Says Counsel (Simetal to ‘The 4 World.) ee WHITE PLAINS, N. ¥., Jan, 6 Tho Inquest {nto Miss Pilkington's takeing sees, any Walter death was held last night. It was : ‘ Hunt, who has made a charge of ab duction against Dr, Fred B. Asking, a Now York dentist, is tll at her home here with a nervous breakdown, the trial of Dr. Askins was adjourned by City Judge Mortimer C, O'Brien until next Wednesday, Humphrey J. Lynch, who appeared for the dentist, urged th ring continue to-day, but Maur for the prosecution, sal “It 18 impossible to produce the girl shown that Miss Starr was called in to treat her eleven weeks before her death and subsequent to treatment by | Pr. Shookhofft, who had declared the | girl to be incurable, Two days before jher death Dr, Greenwood was sum- | mony showed that although | Miss Pilkington had been confined to her bed, she got up and went to a id | movi le jinoving picture show after Misslin court to-day. She is in a serious | Starr's ministrations. Meyer Stein-| nervous condition at her home as the brink, counsel for Miss Starr, pro-|result of the experience she wont duced testimony that bia citent had] {@foush at the handy of this defend told the girl's mother to send for a physiclon If she was not satisfied with |what was being done The healer's | eo was $1 @ week for three visits, | Lyneh then dee noent of any nded that a fp Mis Hunt, ‘The court quest. Miss Hunt has been secreta Corporation Counsel Squires f¢ joing and de examin the re led While (.6 jury had the case under sonsideration, Mr, Stetub: ink objected Bey to the transinission of f ir messages | eral years. Sha says aho met Dr, As to the jury roo % king at a Now Year's Eve dance, He |*o the Jury room by Coroner Wagner | hay previously treated her teeth, ‘The 4s the messages were placed on|couple visited a local restaurant, he record, This was not done, how-| where they hud frappes, and then she | over. says the dentist Induced her to go to ‘The foreman of the fury was Charies | NOW *Ork 18.8 taxicab: | : i below the normal, who may have the/ than the surface, Nevertheless, Ne Is Rn. IS 4 personal friend of Coroner THEATRICAL MAN WRITES mind of a six-year-old child. | euaeentie A ere fag era 1 WANTED---WHITE WINGS {wa both being members of the “Dr. Dana deplores the marriages! cannot think and work for hers Ve politica! Sub 348. waa':0n; the “GOODBY ALL”: ENDS LIFE of mentally inefficient men to women! who ts — ‘tender-minded.’ T) | AS WELL AS SOLDIERS nd candy factory fire jury. ’ , of similar calibre,” I pointed out. ae ie heed BICAry OF splendid girls Mr. Steinbrink sald ERLE + e ty “| with brains—and there wiu nore pried : =e | i “You don’t think such unions are im-| Meet cy vinig when men demand then | | “This whole proceeding has been «| Andrew Baumuller in Good Health Ned to men whose minds are sub-| it ig men. after all, who moat need |Father Knickerbocker Vies With | rer, an outrageoun affair and « de-1 and Had No Business Trouble normal? education.” | Uncle Bar in CIM: Hall liberate set to hold Miss Starr guilty hat Wife Knew “Agsuredly not,” said Dr, Robinson —_———— | cle Sam in City Hall Tok anicetslin dendeoeis anll navar aoa That Wife Knew. MEN NEED A STIMULATOR, NOT MISS TALIAFERRO ON STAGE Park Appeals jthe doors of the Grand Jury room.| Andrew Raumuller, thirty-sev A PARASITE. | ‘ Father Knickerbocker to-day began | !t’S # 600d thing the coroner system | years old, of No. 15 Elmhurst Avenuc “Many really intelligent busi- | HIDES BLOW OF DEATH) omen competition with tele Sam for| 8 te be abolished Imhurat, I. I, reached home 4 ness men. plok their wives and | | able-bodied men, Clty Hall Park, the} Miss Starr was paroled in the cua-| A. M. to-day, and sat down at a tat their shows on the é@ame prin- | I F . . Mecca of the jobless, was selected as |tody of her counse and wrote ciple. They want what will amuse | Mother Dead Not Far From Play-|tno battleground. Time immemorial] FATTA ‘Goodby to all. Andrew them, not what will stimulate | llouse as Actress Speaks Merry | ihe plaza in front of City Hall has ACCUSED OFA CK ON CHILD han Ds atuos tho muazle of a re hana think eran ee ss " aaa anece (es Unliod. Btaron -——— volver Into his mouth and pulled the them and make think, They Lines in “Captain Kidd, Jr. | ned with 4 i Bta Her Into Hallway, Says|trixger, When his wife, aroused by want to come heme, when they Fe h Roruiting ‘station. # anda w er Fought, |the shot, reached him, he was dead are tired, to a soft, pretty, stupid | Ad dad oe Larus at Cohan ide an easel bearing an artistic] ‘phomas Mcintyre, who said he was|She sald ho had been in good neatt little thing who will not make ities ce cairn st nist at the | ithograph of tho life of @ soldier & machinist, twenty-one, living at No, | id hud no business or other trouble demands on their exhausted | Performance of “Cup Kidd Jn"! at tho Park Ro © to the |2265 East Thirteenth Btreet, Brooklyn, |#? far as abe Kiow. braine, who will not ask them |) Li et jail ry lines of] naga this morning a weather-beaten ked up in the Gre Acca the ANIC aot. at. the Hiape questions they cannot answer, Taliaferro, the actres heart was little man In the more or less immac- | Police Station last night ¢ ‘ome. Her husband was her ma “They say that imitation is flat-| burdened with the knowledge that her | ul iniform of the local atreet | **stulting Maurice Kats iger and worked ¢ tr y th Acad atreot | Washington Wh \ 1 but I think contra sven|Mother was dead only a half-mik ee aed a Se ae ashington § en they reached home last nig tery, but T thin contrast ta Sven | Teay cram the. playhoun ni uy 1 began s (oy the prisoner and| they and the family whioh also lived more effective, Among the blind the|""Miss ‘Taliaferro played her part, | Heiting trade is @ literary | Kata fightin former having been|in the house had a light nei one-eyed is king, The semi-fool mar-| successfully keeping her heartache ta white wing, Com. | badly brulned. | Mats told tne po scerenig| other and at that time Huumuller ried to the perfect little goose can| from those who suw } i n ix short of men! quugnter, Sophie, into a hallway at No. | Was In good spirits Pine Nimans Wh GAsle Hak Nan er mother, Mrs, Anna Tallaferr to recruit his forces 166" Washingion’ Street, and attacked | ae Abell, died yesterday St. Vir a her bd | Former Canadian of an intellectual giant, And the man ital after a short illness, She is Dr, Kimball, who waa catled from | Militia In with brains, united to a beautiful, d by her husband und her two Hudson & 9 pital, aetd the fit MONTREAL, Jan. 6.—Word was re ineffectual moron, sees bimseif noth- ore, Edith and Mabel, 1 t, ‘ allegation Was trie. “The sur om Canning, N ng short of a god.” \fupeeel will Bo hele th the © b a tention goon also td Melntyre's injuries, | ie adaring Moraes “and you bold that the children Broadway to-morrow afternoud, | gud , drive Ke inore serious charge. probauly will be i of AMllila in the hate Broadway to-morrow afternoon, ud swoopers $2.50 a day, ‘fade against him to-day, Liberal Abinistras ee EEUU aU Eenel his client was | ay 8 i FASHIONS FOR MEN odd “The Dowager Gent Will No Lonzer Be Forced to — Compete With the Debutante.” “There'll Ba Very Little Change in Trousers Pockets.” “I? ' a Relief That Men Are Again to Wear Men's Clothing.”’ ‘‘Who’d Stand for Being Bawled Out by a Traffic Cop With Pink Heels?” “Cole lar Buttons Will Be Worn Under the Bureau. By Arthur “‘Bugs’’ Baer. Copyright, 1917, by The Presse Publishing Co. (The Ni It really doesn't take nine tatlors to make a man. They need the othé? eight to collect the bill. This and a lot of other evidence was collected at the convention of the National Assoctation of Clothing Designers helédn Cineinnatt, The convention ts being held in Cincinnati in order to get thas foreign atmosphere so much coveted by our best designers. About the most important clue unearthed at the convention was thr: there would be vory little change in men’s clothing this season, There wil! be no change in vests and coats an(! very little change in the trouser’ pockets. Only a few dimes and fits neys, And there will not be tha‘ after a nocturnal burglary by the wife. No matter whct change the tailors make, the wife always seem» to find it. They should make some kind of change that doesn’t jingle. Other data harpooned at the dé signer’s soiree was that freak styler in gentlemen's frocka would get the gate. The dowager gent will me longer be forced to compete with tha kaleidoscopic and bizarre gowns, worn by debutante youths. Stald and matronly bachelors can limi forth and purchase a costume wit out being forced to buy a vivid trousseau intended for a coy tad who shaves himself with a rough turkish towel. It Is a big relief to hear that men are again going to wear men’s clothing. Formerly # nonogenartan would dart Into a clothing foundry and escape with a wardrobe that made him look like a juventle delinquent. Civilization is a wonderful institution. Tho epidemic was checked just in time. In about another season, we would have been wearing pink ribbond In our whiskers and rouging our ears Imagine a motorman powdering his nose. And who would stand for being bawled out by a traffic cop with red heels? You sald it. At tho rate styles were being re- vised downward by tho designers, tt would have soon been !mpossible to | tell which was the weaker sex. Last season's gowns for men consisted mostly of trick lapels and flocks of buttons rampant upon a plece of agure, The very mildest de- in gents’ frocks would have rope seem like a safe and urth in comparison. They say clothes make the man, which is jcorrect. They make him foolish. Vino feathers may make fine birds, but they don't make the soup taste any better. Put a chameleon on one of last season's quietest pleces of cloth and he would soon be squawking for an elght-hour day, Now, if the Style De signers keep thelr word, a man will have a chance to buy a sult that won't make the oty for the Prevention of Superfluous Noises camp on his 1. ‘The tatlors also promise to make clothes looser, which ts quite « forkful of good news, A sult 1s supposed to be a sult and not a bandage: Utilizing the mummy of Rameses the Two as a clothing model was hardly conducive to cheers on the part of our stout young Democrats. A tatlor Isn't supposed to have a whole lot of sense or he wouldn't te « tallor Tut now that they are making clothes more for comfort than fo} speed It looks as If the style designers are using their heads for somethfig else besides a parking place for their hats, It seems unfortunate that the fashion creators can't enlarge their fleld beyond styles for clothing. Ag it ts, it appears as ff the same old styles In men's expressions will linger a while. longer, Foreheads will recede, chins will be worn loose and ears will flap: idly In the cool northern zephyrs. From advance rumors, !t looks as@——————————__— if vests will be worn hollow this end worn on a hook in the closet. York Evening World.> WITH REO HEELS - Don't worry about what you wear when you are out with your best grt! Nobody looks at you anyway. Buttons will be mostly worn off. hions in men’s hats will be problematical, You won't know what} jeform in men's clothing will.be a kind you are going to wear until] relief to fathers. What chance h wifey brings {t home. 4 man to bawl out his daughter for - wearing queer clothes when he looks Overcoats will be worn as long a8}iike a prima donna himeelf? possible, pine aoa Patches are up to the discretion of the individual. Something neat but not gaudy ix preferable for trousers. SEWED UP. A. Needle, a Fourth Street tab or, will be married to-morrow on Fort Tryon Street. Collar buttons will be generally worn under the bureau Warm buttonholes are the best for cold weather. Good Health Makes a Happy Home ‘ One way pockets are acquiring quite a vorue among the more frugal citizens, Lined with fishhooks, they create nobby appearance at thi club, buffet, or when the wife asks for some grocery money. For the married man, next year’s styles in clothing will be mostly last | year's Gray and brown will be the pre- Aominating colors for men this sea- Mornings will be the first color brown will be very stylish for the way your mouth tastes, os ne | Bankrolls | Good health makes housework easy. Bad health takes all happiness outof tt Hosts of good women and good mothers drag along in daily misery, i back aching, worried, “blue,” tired a1 worn, because they don't know whi | ails them or what to do for it. 4 | These same troubles come with weaké Clothes will be will be tight loose. the local option As usual in dis- tricts, hip pockets will be figured out in pints and quarts. | kidneys, and, if the kidney action is ai | distressing or disordered there shoul) Christmas cravats look better when be no doubt that the kidneys ni Get a box of Doan's Kidney They are safe and reliable, The ne veeee helped thousands of discourag@at women. 3 A NEW YORK CASE: Mrs. D. Hennessey, 280 W. 117th St., says: “Whenever L over-work oF a cold’settles on my kidneys, T have #, dull, tired ache in the smail of my It Works! Try It Tells how to loosen a sore, tender corn so It lifts | i hack A few doses of Doan's Kidney out without pain. Pills at these times always rid me of | t the attack, For the past few yearss? | trereneenereremanenentrene oromamane have had no serious trouble and give | Good news spreads rapidly and drug- | Doan's Kidney Pills the credit. T hawer | gists here are kept busy dispensing | never found anything so good for kid freezone, the ether discovery of a Cin- | ney trouble and lame back 4s Doag’s cinnati man, which is said to loosen | Kidney Pills.” p any corn so it lifts out with the fingers. (any pharmacy for a quarter ounce of freezone, whieh will cost very little, but is said to be sufficient | to rid one’s feet of every hard or soft 50¢ at all Drug Stores i corn or callus Foster-Milburn Co, Props. Buffalo NX & ) You apply just a few drops on the aching corn | tender, and instantly the — —— : soreness is relieved, and soon the corn Jout pain It is a ati ky substance It’s On the Main Floor § }which dries when applied and never | ishamnes of oven levitate tha adjoin-| at the Grand Central Palace ing tissue « This discovery will prevent wu-| Th S chs soe will prevent "Phe Grant Six jaw and Bafection heretofore result Read Grant Ads To- lng tromPhe suicidal habit of cutting | oe trac salsa "s | TIMES~ AMERICAN—WORLD