The evening world. Newspaper, January 8, 1917, Page 6

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+ Men Who Make | RALPA DoRT RECOMMENDS TE “DoT” CAPs. iRER> OWING THE O00 POINTS OF THE “NATIONALS A AW OG 44 ® Bagia. Speeeoooooococoococooooeese SHows ofr THe see, leaning familiarly against a most shiny car, a thoughtful looking man. He 1s no superbly calm It seems al- most impossible that—well, It's true Just the same. But, first of all, it's John N. Willys, And, second, he's a regular cowboy. No? Just ask any body in Toledo, . cowboy, red shirt, bandanna, chaps, six-shooter and all, even to the “Whoo-pe The Texas and Montana salesmen of the Overland car know all about It You see, it was this way. Willys had a convention of his agents in Toledo last month and more than 10,000 of them came to see “the boss.” He knew that a lot of them were coming from Montana and Texas, and Just to make the boys feel at home Willys determined to meet them all rigged up tn clothes they'd appreci- Risccesensectooee MEN AND NOT GARS ARE REAL FEATURE OF BiG AUTO SHOW If You Don’t Believe It Just Look Over the Aggrega- . ate. So he got a complete cow- tion of Stars. puncher’s outfit’ and when the Montana crowd arrived at his If, when you go to the Automobile | office in the new administration Bhow at the Grand Central Palace, you approach the Overland section building he was ready for It. But they paid him back, They had heard all about his plans and they were in punchers’ clothes, too, and when the grectings were at their height one of the visitors pulled a gun and fired a shot at the floor, pretty darn near Willys's feet if there had been a bullet in the revolver, THEY SAID DANCE AND WILLYS DANCED, TOO. “Dance, you tenderfoot!" was the command that came with the shot, GIRLS! TRY IT! HAVETHICK, WAVY, BEAUTIFUL HALR Every particle of dandruff dis- appears and hair stops coming out. their holsters and set up @ deafening Plece of footwork. were tired and their guns empty boas" was allowed to get hia breath. Then they gave him @ pet coyote (Gee, did you ever try to pet a coy- ote?) for sweet remembrance sake Draw a moist cloth through hair and double its beauty at once. Your hair becomes light, wavy, fluffy, abundant and appears av soft, lustrous and beautiful as a young girl's after a “Danderne hair cleanse.” Just try this -nolsten a cloth with a little Danderine and care fully draw it through your hair, tak ing one small strand at a time. Thio will cleanse the hair of dust, dirt and excessive ofl and in just a few mo- ments you have doubled the beauty of lys sald “thanks and creature to the Toledo x00. But the Texas delegation, number- ing more than 1,200, “shot up" the town soon as they detrained a fow blocks from the factory. The good people of the town thought It was a Mc.tcan raid and went into thetr Nars, so it is waid. But Willys, all rigged up in his cowboy clothes, was there with the return fire, which sur- prised the Texans as much as did his rattlesnake vest. (There aren't any waistcoats in Texas.) And as a token of this busy day the Texans gave | Willys a chair made of steers’ horns |(Thore's a velvet covered dilemma to ait on, all right) embellished with a gold plate and all that. Ob it was a great day for the studious looking Mr, Willys Passing around to the right, sttll with wary eye, you will be attracted to the Apollo Belvidere of the show, B. C. Morse, of the Chalmers organ- gave the ‘our hair, jesides beautifying the hair at once, Danderine dissolves every par ticle of dandruff; cleans purines and invigorates the scalp, forever stopping fiching and falling hair. ut what will please you most will be after a few weeks’ use when y will actually see new hair—fine and downy at first-yes—-but veally new hair growing all over the scalp. If you care for pretty, soft hair and loty of it surely get a 25-cent botile of Knowlton’s Danderine from any drug- gist or toilet counter, and just try it, Save your hair! utify it! You will say this was the beat 25 cents you ever spent.—Advt, Is the “pace”’ telling? NE of the best moves to con- serve energy and keep nerves steady is to quit coffee and start INSTANT POSTUM This delicious cereal drink is wholesome and satisfying. “There’s a Reason” ABOUT THE YRING B” doo 5 5 « Ziwith a cautious and wary eye, you'll rattle but also for John Willys to litt | his hands and do a most dextrous|interpreter, after which When the agents preter nnly “the court, “He say no.” Th and went off to the convention, Wil- |trvinning to think Wheels Go Round in Auto Industry Caught in Action at the Grand Central Palace Show OO9E4 O94 4509 DOE4EEAAFIAAEAADIAGDOSEDD 94449 49944O04444940640440004 MANAGER OF THE, PREMIER Lee ANDERSON 660004 GP4G2044-46 J RALANOS Po.sTuaes- GEN'L GALES REPRESENTS THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, JANUARY 8, 191 7. 404000 ry \U: NAMERS cess FORs, “CHALM ers” 4 4 4 FAVORS THE *PATAFINOER:: ization, Want to knuw how he ke that figure? Well, it's by a 8y of calisthenics he practices every morning at his open window at the Biltmore Hotel, What? Oh, yes, the room's very Ligh up, quite secluded He got the system in London, be says. Part of it ia raising te asus and legs, and perhaps another part ls dropping t H's, He says tt giv him control, health, courage and pa- tlence, and adds that these four words are his creed, HE NEEDED ALL THE CREED, TOO, ON THAT CENTURY. He will tell you, tov, that he haw need of all of them once & long Gin age when he started out on @ cenvury run on a bicycle with K, BP, brys- aio, the adverusing manager of the Cadillac coupany. They rode trom Indianapolis. to Crawfordsville and Morse suys he never bulleved they'd get back. ‘They died from tae waist down forty miles from home, But they got the creed working for their feet and made tt Speaking of Mr. Drysdale, if you and {t was not only the signal for a! want to hear @ story ask him to tell dozen other revolvers to come from! you one. He'll tell one, or die fa the attempt. It will be about a China- man who Was a witness in a murder trial who chattered ten minutes to an the Inter- most solemnly said to the reason he'll tell this story is because he's lookmg for a new ear into which to pour it He's already wold tt to every auto- mobile man on the North American continen least so they say, and ey know it by heart w they're rhaps he'll Il it backward because, upen the oath of one of them, Drysdale has been experimenting with running his talking maphine records backward tc see What sort of language tt maki (is Professor Garner in the house?) If you don’t care for the story or the backward language, perhaps you'll like to know that Drysdale 1s an in- defatigable church-goer, One well known utomobile man ald that very Sunday he goes to a different chureh to hear a new preacher, And such time as he has getting his colleagues to go with him, You see they're afraid he'll suddenly swi and decide to tell the Chinaman story. WAS A “SOB SISTER” BEFORE HE GOT AUTO HABIT. There are a number of men high in the automobile world who came from the newspaper office, One of them is Lee Anderson, sales manage of the Hupmobil ution, He's ail full of figure dry-as-dust statistics, the pri wide of the automobiie business, and yet, just think, once upon a time he was chief “sob sister” on the Detroit News. He wrote all the harrowing things about the poor man who had lost both legs and one arm and wanted enough sympathy to enable him to buy a wheeling chair so he could sell pen cils He says himself that one of his hobbies was a Sunday story proving incontestably that lick of care of the teeth was playing the very devil with the birth rate, And how he could sob over a divorce suit! He had al the poor working girls in De hanging on his words when a br of @ man strangled a beautlful seam stress with her very own sewing ma chine in order to get the papers under the hearthstone which proved her to be the daughter of the Earl of Mich igan or something. He used to do sports in between times, just to break | the monotony. And, do you kne you'd never believe, from the rea rough language he used then, that he was the same nice fellow who had described just the day before how the little girl with the bare feet stood in the snow at the stage door and walted for father, who was inside crowding worth of American Beauties on the blonde one, th one from the end. And Homer McKee, advertising manager of pier car, He's another one of them. He used to be a cartoonist on the Indianapolis Star, one of these regular fellowa who made the gullty squirm or shed @ halo about the goodly just as easy as that Among several distinctions in the field of motordom Mr. McKee Is rec- ognized as the father of the tortoise man Gils aa mG ae WEATHER The Abraham & Straus Private Subway Entrance ass fad among the brother- cei d hood, “He first @ ted with the seo eee res at Hoyt Street is quickly reached by Brooklyn Express, as follows, from round cheaters at the Chicago show | fair to-day ani . " ji six years ago. They thought at first) Foch St. Brome} 38 ints | P20" sft: SB Si: | Paha Cemre.: 15 mis: | Beortilze decide’ oh was joshing them with a new lamp| is with a four-in-t ravat at-| tached, and jt took him almost @ year to prove that they were real eye glasses and a guard ribbon, Ander- son wears the big f: caught It from Mc | Perhaps the best dressed man at-| tending the show this year 1s “Genial J Oliler, Vice President of the Studebaker Company. He bas every-| thing in Detroit lashed to the mast} asking “Wher " In cravats and| walstcon so fond limousine, which he low gloves and a un! feur. And does he ever move any where without his stick? He It's like Joe lows himself, He am | And he never gets tired riding in his green car, Across Piquette Avenue from the Studebaker factory 1s the lunch department patroni by the| officials of the company, Does he walk over there at ime? He does not. He culls the car, puts on | the gloves, gets In and rides the fifty feet In state. Well, It keeps the sun from fading the cravat, Abner Doble, head of the Doble company which makes the steam car, says he can start his car st one cor- ner, run {t at seventy-two miles an hour and stop It, all In a single block. And there are two men who believ: him. One of them is Lee Anderson, because he was there. The other man says he doesn’t feel all there yet Doble took them out on the Grand Boulevard In Detrott one day to dem onstrate what his steam car could do. Anderson got in the with him | Tho nameless man was in the rear |Seat. According to Anderson, the start was made, and just as they were wetting to seventy miles an hour a trafme policeman held up his hand ped her, He almost 8 Out over the dash . and Anderson lost his hat and his dignity in one upward leap, And all that Doble satd, as the air got thin enough for them to breathe, was. “There, isn't It wonderful? Bee how I stopped her?” Anderson sald he didn't see anything for four or five minutes, He still thinks Doble might have helped him find his hat. DON'T BLAME STUBBS BEING PREOCCUPIED. P. D. Stubbs of the Premier car TI FOR TIRED AND SORE. PEER FOR Use ‘‘Tiz” for puffed-up, burn- ing, aching, calloused feet and corns, Why go limping around with ach ing, puffed-up feet-—feet so tired, Jchafed, sore and swollen you ear hardly get your shoes on or off? Why | don't you get a 25-cent box of “Piz! | from the drug store now and gladden your tortured feet? “Liz” makes your feet glow with comfort; takes “down swellings and jdraws the soreness and misery right out of feet that chafe, smart and burn, ” instantly stops pain ir corns, callouses and bunions, “Ti” is glorious for tired, aching, sore feet No more shoe tightness~ no more | may seem to onlookers to have a far-|he gave « big dance in his Louis XVI. barn. He invited all the farmers from the neighborhood and then his city} friends came out all clad in their full dress evening suite and almost put the party on the frite—that ts, almost made it a formal function in. stead of a get-together something-o1 other, However, a pleasant time was had by all even if some of the coun- try folk did go off hobnobbing with i the walters by mistake. | Uns aADUAADTUEDD OT UNDNUO UNA DUATENTE NEA STNFEOETOTOTOOD 4 ks W. E. Stalnaker, | vice “Preatdent net + Pathfinder The WATERS ml Player- Dees to his car—he'll say his oo Piano is a perfect instrument. John, ag a ue Ana coming tant The id We have made it our ish) bi Seas Cut-ot the house in tndtanapolie seventy years to present to. on hie way to ‘ne factory, Buddonly public the best values to be tad in pianos. We believe there is no other player-piano that combines the superb tone quality, the cure ae the superior mechanical arrangement of the WATERS AUTOLA player-piano. on the doorstep appeared the Gov- ernor General— Mra, Stalnaker—| who informed him in as pleasant represent a wise and economical investment tones as the event required, that he | had fated to lea’ a@ little legal ten her for the moment’s| John, playing out front. | heard the demand and, according to St. Clair Couzens, Mr. Stainaker’s Very low prices and most liberal terms of pays ment without interest are now offered and your old piano will be taken in exchange at a fair valuation. Call and let us demonstrate all that we claim for the Waters Piano and the Waters Autola player- piano or send postal for catalogue. assistant, immediately exclaimed, “Well, what th But just here Horace Waters & Co. 134 Fifth Avenue, near 18th Street Mr. Stalnaker invariably interrupts arrative, No, not on your Ife," he says. OPEN 127 W. 42d St., near Broadway 254 W. 125th St., near 8th Ave. EVENINGS 371 E. 149th St., near 3rd Ave. away look in his eye, He's thinking of his new baby, they eay, and won- dering how soon the show will end and let him get home to tt. It's only ® month old and he's as proud of it as @ny one can be. He comes of an English family well known on the other side, and already he's lost a brother in the war. He was wounded somewhere in France and taken home, where he died. The only true New Yorker who's at the head of a Detroit motor company is Artemas Ward Jr. President of the King corporation. You remember Artemas when he was Assemblyman from the Twenty-fifth District. He was a lawyer and deep in politics until one day his father acquired the King organization and gent him “out West" to take charge of it. Me says he thought people used to be eternally after bim when he was in politics, but {t was nothing to the way they get after him now. But tt's because he's death on details and wants to know everything that's go- ing on in the business. Ho rather prefers they should be after him, be- cause it makes him step out. Mr. Ward has an artistic eye, and if you don’t believe, just take a look at the new King radiator. You'll see the King shield outlined in silver as the frame. for the radiator, That's Ward's own touch; he admits it, He jsays It shows you when a King’s jcoming. If you live in Detroit you'll know ft, and if you ever go there you'll need the information that when you hear the horn on the car of Walter KE, Flanders, head of the Maxwell estab- lishment, It means something coming which would make @ scared rabbit look as if it was fastened to the road, |'This {9 @ cross-my-heart statement by one of bis friends who bas seen Mr. Flanders tn action. fast between his ate near be unty, which ts erfect My boy only exclaimed: ‘Well, what do you know about that? The Vice President of the company leaving us without @ cent! And in retaliation, Staalnaker says that when Couzens first worked for the company a man seeking to buy a car asked Couzens if the machine wns fitted with a thermostat. “Couzens, who'd never even heard the word before,” he said, “looked under the rear’ seat and replied: ‘Well, we had one here but I think ft was used up the last time the car was dusted. Wait a moment and I'll see that you get @ new one in a nice leather case.” One of the best things George W. Garland jr, of the Velle company does is wear Deputy Sheriff's badge of Kings County. He lists a bit to port when he has ft on, but he bears up pretty well. It enables him to make pretty good time, too, on the reads out of Brooklyn. Oh, yes, he's a champion swimmer, too. Some- ody sald he used to paddle over the Sound and back every morning be- fore breakfast last year. UU EDA UUACND UD eaeE EUAN ETN TALL EDUCA He goes 80 new big Oakland our Westchester sed the limou- sine door at his step before the chau feur is putting on brakes so he won't run over the factory. When Mr. Flanders completed his estate, which haa pig apartments and chicken suites that made the country-| folk open their e and their mouths, RAU “ f x 1 uth Announcing The Complete Assemblage of Women’s and Misses’ Exclusive Apparel for Southern Winter Resorts Embracing Bathing Costumes Sports and Pastime Frocks Gowns Sports Coats Sports Hats Suits Shoes Separate Skirts Blouses Accessories Introducing the new Eastern movement in decorative motifs and apparel lines. Displays in the Second Floor Women’s Wear Sections And Throughout the Store foot troubles.—Advt. + a) ig \, ‘ de mn

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