Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
LORD NORTHCLIFFE DESCRIBES we ees They Came Back From the Re - Trenches Singing “The Star Spangled Banner.” ——— HAVE INDIVIDUAL DASH. Teach Tommies to Like Pork and Beans and How to ; Take a “Chaw.” © TFortowina te the firet of tio femarkadle storics of the Ameri. ean soldiers fighting in Purope, worttten by Lord Northcliffe for the United Presse. Little has deen told to date of the Americans on the world’s greatest fighting line, These articles bring an tiluminat~ tng story by one of the leading men of England.) By Lord Northcliffe. Rovere itt 1 Grae iritala). ADIAN ARMY LN FRANCE, Jan, 25, —Hmbedded in the heart of the great @anadian army in Franco is a body @ American citizens in khaki who have already succoeded in effecting another of several revolutions pro- @uced in warfare by the United Mates. Whe firet and most important was the aeroplane, invented by the Wrights; the second is the machine @vn, originally designed by Hudson Maxim, with the newer Lewis light machine gun, easily carried, or for ‘use in aeroplanes. ‘The thind revolu- tion ts one I would hardly believe had I not had ocular demonstration, It is the conversion of the British Tommy 0 faith in pork and beans instead of Beef, on which he bas fought since the time of the Norman conquest of England. ‘These Americans in the British army with whom I have just spent a @ay are a part of the topsy-turvydom fm which wo are living, and when I saw them marching back from tho trenches to such tunes as “My Coun- try ‘Tis of Thee” and “The Star- @pangied Banner,” with less classical ‘and more modern ragtime music, I ‘wondered what the small American boys who havo #0 often tested mo on _ the Fourth of July celebration in your country, would have thought of the factor in the war that 1s not sufll- etently known !n the United States, NOT LURED TO FIGHT FOR $1.25 A DAY. I purpose telling you what the French armies are doing, where they come from, how they live and why the Germans are particularly bitter | toward them and say that these splen- did Americans were hired by tho Allies. From tho German point of view the pay of Americans who are fighting ainst Prussianism 1s doubtless princely, It amounts to ex- actly a dollar and a quarter a day, I leave people in the United States to judge whether that would be the sort of remuneration calculated to draw American university graduates, some with considerable private fortunes; Dusiness men, real estate men, clorks, Ywmbermen, engineers, across the At- lantio, The falsehood ts one of the bits of German boomerang propaganda with which neutrals are becoming a quainted. The Americans tn the British and! French armies enlisted in divers ‘ways, In the first fow months of the wer, many came to England direct and entered the British army, Those who were resident in Europe at the outbreak of the war formed a unton with British residents In France and Joined the French, Others came over Jater and entered the flying service, where they have done splendid work, United Pre, Osor- | HEADQUARTERS OF THE CAN-| \ ab American soldiers in tho British ana | habit * HEROES FROMU.S. WHOFIGHT jeeees ny ~—INALLIED ARIES IN FRANCE number of our despatch riders and ‘was much surprised to find the par- tleular company with which I was spending the night were almost en- tirely from the United States, It 19 almost impossible to estimate the number of Americans In these two armies, but Including those engaged in the noble work of the American Ambulance Corps in Paris and its numerous automobiles and convoys, it has been estimated at quite a suff. clent number to have made the Amer- fean language, American music and Boston baked beans familiar, A great feature of the war on the western front at the moment ts the day and night raids. desperate form of individual fighting | 1s encouraged by the British leader, | Sir Douglas Haig, and it ts in this that the Canadians and the British who have considerable forces of Americans with them are adepts, Each one of these raids {g@ minia. ture battle, and !t was in studying this form of warfare that I had the pleasure of seeing Americans who are serving with a Canadian regiment re- viewed by a General on thelr return from the firing line for rest and a! festal dinner, EASY TO TELL WHERE THESE MEN CAME FROM, By a curious coincidence the setting of the ecene was that of a thousand) such in American and Canadian lum ber camps—even down to the log house, Woe were just out of shell range of the German guns, though the British artillery was talking all the time, As the men came down the hill. side through tall pine trees It did not take long for one who has visited most of the States of the Union to| detect, despite the mud and fatigue, | from which of the world’s continenta| they came. ‘They were in high spirits, | i T iM BooFuL PwesH! This dash and These and Many Other| “Fatal Blights” Should | Be Taboo for Ideal Mate | of 1917 Ideal Model Girl’”’—He Should Never | Mention Another | Woman Either in Praise or Blame; He Should Never Misuse nor Mis- | pronounce ®/ords; He Should Shave Daily, the arts that enable a young man to Readers of The uses perfume, eats them in priv: Released from the cramped tension of shelled and water logged| »®, they came tumbling over | each other ike schoolboys. All are bit tse street, ere By Nixola Greeley-Smith. The Model Girl of 1917 was described with detail and daring yesterday in this column by George Jean Nathan, writer, editor and ‘bachelor of all HUIDER: MODEL MAN He should use was Tk and Cos te Jove Clot hes Shoutd never be unpressed — remain unmarried {n New York City. Evening World who saw that inter- view with the brillfant editor of the Smart Set learned that “the girl eleven men out of ten admire” never but may be permitted sachet with a faint Japanesy smell; that if she likes sausages she ate; that she smiles but never laughs; never wears transparent sleeves, never mentions a visit to the doctor, never says she {s gaining or losing flesh, never wears any other than black stockings on the always wears high, always looks a bit sleepy, never smokes more than one- laced, dark tan boots; in pleasant and happy relation with third of a cigarette In a man’s presence, never refuses a cocktail at tea and their Canadian and British officers—| Dever drinks it. Also, that she never praises one man In the presence of which makes for good fighting and| another, and that she now and then mispronounces a word. Her hair does not derogate from strict dis- | always looks as if it had just been washed, And she always says yes. cipline, They were paraded for a moment or two for inspection, and as company after company formed into line I could not but admire the quickness—en- cumbered as they were with all sorts of equipment and an extra sult of caked mud—with which they came to attention and “eyes right.” If Thad any doubt as to the home of those stalwart fighters for freedom, it would have been settled by the steady movement of thelr Jaws, betokening which {9 rapidly spreading ng the h and French, and h is said by the doctors to be a useful relaxation when under qu the fire of trench mortars and mine- | | werfers, /AMERICANS WANT NEWSPAPERS FROM HOME. Before each company w: 1 was allowed to make the 4 disminsed 2 & short speech and to mix and mingle with them as freely as I chose. I had brought with me ne per clippings from a G in which tt ans the na that plained of their treatm was said Agr ricans com. nt. I had only | ‘St group Lo bivo | ng | to read it to the it hotly dented. “Wo are having @ perfectly cork time, despite the mud,” votced a Call- fornian with a tall figure and # voice as resonant Roosevelt's, “You'll | not find a grouch in the whole outfit, except that we had not expected to have to learn mud swimming and that|and rightly. proud, of the deeds of we don't see enough home news- papers “As for that,” replied anothor, “I! don't want to seo mine, The folks | sent it along at first, but I stopped it, for It gave only ritzy’s side of the| case,” I find lack of home newspapers to @ general complaint, and an: American who sympathizes with | these fine boys fighting out he might do worse than mail @ newspe- per every week-—preferably one not giving the German side, Such news- papers should be addressed “Ameri- can Soldiers, care Commanding Off- | cer, Royal Canadian Regiment, . FOUND WHOLE COMPANY COM- POSED OF AMERICANS. Barly in the war, during tho battle pt the Marne, I wos billoted with a ish’ Expeditionary Force, in France I should say that chewing gum, magazines, woollen comforts, tobacco, cigarettes ‘and any portable and pre servable little luxuries would be wel, el i rr a sp ia Ha id a& vi ii salle: om ae eerie Ifso, buy the one genuine, Every package and every tablet of genuine Aspirin beara “The Bayer Cross" your protection against counterfeits and harmful substitutes, “*The Bayer Cross —Your Guarantee of Purity’’ ‘The trade-mark “Aspirin” (Reg, U. S. Pat, Office) is a guarantee that the mon lcactd in th Bayer manufacture, TT ayer:Tablets fireman et tablets is of 1} cldester of reliable, | of imperfection—for that | | comod—though | whoso ‘FATAL BLIGHTS' TO BE AVOIDED BY THE IDEAL MAN. 4 Now I do not see why this pattern surely 18 what ts— any charming woman | should continue to live languishingly without a mate, So I have constructed the 1917 Model Man for her, I have built him from the ideals and expertences, the Preferences and prejudices of other women and from my own, I shall not fo Into his heleht or coloring, since these things matter less to women than most men suppose. Of course we all share a taste for strength and physical balance, but wo hate, with an unuttered but intense hatred, the professional male, A man may be short and etill bo loved, He may have sloping shoulders and not de- spair of inspiring tenderness, at Te In describing whut the model man of 1917 should and should not be I shall mention only the fatal blights, Hoe should never under any ciroum- stances say * there ts no lack of anything, excopt, as I have sald, of home papers. Those American boys are proud, their own American men and officers. jIn the midst of this vast army—the British army tn France has now been publicly stated to exceed 2,000,000 men—they occupy an anomalous, if a proud position. Among the heroic dead there is no greater story than that of a gallant officer for twelve ears in the American cavalry who joined in the great Canadian attack |on the Regina trench—named after the Canadian town of Regina, Though not engaged in that particular opera- | tion, be could not resist the tempta- tion to dash over the parapet with the cry of “Come on, boys.” Terribly wounded, he endeavored to struggle forward against the carried back and then killed by shell tire, He was one of many Americans daredoviltry nas endeared them to thelr Canadian and British st | in large women of the maternal type. | May I kiss you?” If he Germans, but was doesn’t know the answer to that ques- tion there is no use asking it, And a man should always take all verbal re- sponsibility for such misdeeds any- way, In the presence of one woman he} never mentions another either in| praise or blame, If he can’t pretend for her HOUR that e#he Is the only woman in the world he should give up lovemaking and lecture on ceramics or Azteo architecture, Tho ideal man (1917 model) never wears spats and he abhors suspen- ders, He does not look bored If In one of those moments of forgetfulness [which come to the most tactful woman tho conversation skids mo- mentarily from himself to herself, He never under any ciroumstances uses those obsolete words peach, pip- pin or squab, For ‘the knows that last year's slang is deader than last year's loves, He never makes puns, He does not use the word “infer” when he means “imply.” He realizes that many a woman on tho edge of @ grand passion has shrunk back Into self-possession be- cause of tho misuse or the mispro- nunciation of a word, He never quotes a proverb or an old saw, remembering that Lord Chesterfleld adjured his son to avold such evidences that he had fre- | quented only the society of footmen and chambermaids, Hoe prefers clams to oysters, know- ing that he will not have to open his mouth so wide for aclam, Since the | introduction of the colossus of Cape Cod the oyster has been fatal to ro- mance, If he eats spaghetti he makes a trip Into the African jungle or elimbs Mount McKinley to be sure that he is alone, Ho shaves datly or hourly as the lexigenctes of his particular face re- assoctatos. quire, And it 1s always a full por- While most newspaper despatches | tion shave, from Washington which reach the French and English newspapers are full of the word “peace,” these husky young American citizens will not hear of it. “To hell with peace talk,” said a bright-eyed boy from Kansas City, “while these siantheads across th line there are enslaving French and Belgian women and children, ‘There would be none of this peace business at home ff the people there knew the fact On New Year's Day Boche soldters put out boards saying, “Why not have a peace talk?” The reply of the whole Allied line was an artil- lery bombardment which clUnched the question, A blue-eyed American from Wis- consin, with I should think, Swedish blood in his veins, said, “Our people at home do not seem to realize that talking peace terms with the Ger- mans still in France means a rian victory. The home folks do not know what We know, In the matter of a fight the Prussians, brave as they are, are down and out." “Phe German Government ts cry- tng for peace,” added a hatchet-eyed Yankee who had gone out West a |boy and made good, later throwing up all for the war, “because the Ger- man army and German people know we have got them where we want them.” (A eecond Northoliffe article will be piinted to-morrow) He does not glick his hair down jon his forehead, | Tle does not wear rings, He would rather be arrested for ar- son than caught with elther per- fume or sachet on his person, MORE OF THE UNFORGIVABLE CRIMES. He knows that there are some crimes so dreadful that most decent people have never heard of them And that among these crimes the use of the alleged words brainy, tasty and snappy 1s far the worst. He knows that he must tell a woman of inteliect that he loves her for the way her halr curls and a eolid ivory Venus that she inspires and directs his noblest work, “ Ho never talks about his physteal allmenta or the hard night he has had, He forgot that he was a moral desporado when he convalesced from | his sophomore He does not wear a fraternity pin in his necktle or twirl a Phi Bota Kappa key on hig watch chain, For he does not consider being @ graduate | of Harvard or Princeton a career by | itself, He must not be ashamed to gay “I Re shoula not be unshaved a) never tuirl his Thy Beta Kappa key Shouta wot ear love you,” whether he means it or not. It's the rule of the game. He must talk baby talk to a suffragist and find a good, comfortable, guileless sort of chorus girl if he wants to dis- cuss his soul, He remembers always that Dr. Samuel Johnson defined patriotism as the last refuge of a scoundrel, He does not consider it a declara- tlon of Americanism to go to sleep at the opera nor a sign of redblooded- ness to call @ violinist @ fiddler, or to refuse to go to @ flower show or an ant exhibit, He may be lean or fat, redheaded or bald, and any age from thirty-five to_seventy, He may have cast his first ballot for Bryan or have been born in Ohio —what worth while man has not something to live down? Rut he NEVDR, NEVER, NEVER voted for Hughes, ssiiniasccidltsiaian> som NINETY-NINE INDICTED IN OHIO ELECTION FRAUDS Prominent Citizens and City Offi- cials Among Those Named In Cincinnati Inquiry, CINCINNATI, 0., Jan, 25—Six renled Indictments, naming ninety- ning individuals as defendants, were returned here to-day by the Federal Grand Jury which has been inveatl- gating the alleged election frauds. Tho names were given to the United States Marshal, and he will bring them into court under capias as soon ag they are apprehended. This 13 the Government's first detinite move in its Investigation of charges of election frauds in the Middle West. It was believed in po- litical circles several prominent men and at least two city officials are among those indicted, The inquiry was conducted under the supervision of Frank C, Datley of Indianapolis, appointed special as- sistant United States attorney shortly before the recent Presidential elec- tion, It was under Batley, as United States District Attorney for Indiana, that the big political clean-up at Terre Haute was effected, which re- sulted in conviction of Mayor Donn M. Roberts and other Democratio city officiuls, snpemnalamiion STATE BREAKS OWN LAWS. Capital Employeca Not Properly Pr ted, Inspection Shows, ALBANY, Jan, ~That there is a Jack of proper protection of the health and safety of State employees in the Capitol and other State buildings in Albany 1s the opinion of those who havo been following the inspection of working conditions made by the Indus- trial Commission under the direction of senate. "Se nate called for the 1! ection sr to ascertain if the State ob- 3 the samo laws as to ventilation, . in or sanitation and the guarding of ma- Chinery that @re applied to factory owners. EX-PREACHER DENIED BAIL. nm Newbar, N. ¥., Jan Crawford, allas Arthur Oak Worthington, unfrocked Presbyterian uel y lawyer and soldier, cha swindled the Rev. Vred- of New Windsor, N pleaded not guilty Judge Seager He wae bail to minister, with having erick J, Stancly Y., out of $1,400, when arraigned before in County Court here to-day, without remanded ta jail await trial, Crawford appeared ve recently au tacks, He February. rt ls expected to be tried in > | State Senator Spring of New York Baltimore. Md, Jan, State Spring of Prank- BALTIMORE, Senator George F. Inville, N. ¥., the Johns Hopking Hospital was due to a compiton Hie had beon in the hospital neveral His condition became erit montha, cal a few days ago and he sank ptoadiley Death Alaeases, —<$<$<— HE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, JANUARY 25, 1917." He Never Asks “May I Kiss You?” Foolish Question. Never Wears Spats and Abhors Suspenders. Prefers Clams to Oysters, and Eats cot Alone. He should not be « a profess tonal male TRUCKMAN'S LEFT HOOK STOPS ALLEGED EMBEZZLER Cleveland Youth, Captured Here by Former Employer, Escapes From Policeman, John H. Oldfield, young and dapper, suddenly left Cleveland on Jan, 8 and A. Krolik & Co. his employers, got a warrant for him, charging embezzle- ment. David Scheyer of the firm bumped Into Oldficld while crossing Fitth Avenue at Twenty-third Street to-day. He gave Oldfield the right hand of fellowship, but refused to let fo until he had called Trac Police- man Ahearn from the crossing. Ahearn took the dapper youth into the cigar store in the Flatiron Bulld- ing to watt for the wagon, Oldfield dashed out the door and ran wost In Twenty-second Street, large crowd following and roaring “Stop thief!" Near Sixth Avenue a husky truck- man met Oldtield with a net left hook to the chin, Olditeld dived limp under a truck and was fished out, caked with mud, by Ahearn, “L came to New York to carn enough to make good,” said Oldfield at Police den A Eos WANTS T0 REAFFIRM THE MONROE DOCTRINE Senator Borah, Republican of Idaho, Offers a Resolution Declaring Against “Entangling Alliances. WASHINGTON, Jan, 25,—Genator Borah, Republican, of Idaho, to-day Presented a resolution to have the ‘Senate reaffirm the “words of wisdom of Presidents Washington and Jeffer. son" in advising the United States againat entangling foreign alliances and providing that 1t conform ‘ts act with the “time honored” doctri announced by those Chief Executives, Tho resolution also declared that departure fro mthe doctrine of Wash ington and Jefferson with rey to entangling alliances or from the Monrow Doctrine would be franght with danger to the nation. Senator Borah asked thi lution Ie o nthe t it up for dscussion i $43,000,000 ‘ROP IN FOOD EXPORTS FROM U.S, IN 1916 Jor murderin died this afternoon in| Only Meat, Dairy Products and Corn Show Increase, According « to Government Statistics, WASHINGTON, Jan, 25.—Food ex- ports generally from the United States fell off $43,000,000 Inst year, Depart- ment of Commerce atatistics an- nounced to-day show thelr value to have been $745,000,000, compared with $78,000,000 in 1915, Meat and dairy products showed increases, but bread- stuffs fell off sharply. ‘orn was tho only grain showing an increase, while wheat fell of 61,000,- 000 bushels and flour 1,800,000 barrels, Heot showed decrease in cannod, fresh and pickied, but bacon, hams and shoulders exports tncreased 831,000,000 pounds and pork 22,000,000 pounds, Oils and gasoline exports increased considerably dur’ ming the year. N.Y. CENTRAL Si SUED BY U.S, Penalttes of 00 Asked for Al- 1 et of Anima Thirty-eight violations of the Provent Cruelty to Antinals transit on railroads “are all Natal sult filed to-day by A Plates District Attorney John ©. the Government against. the New 1 Railroad Company. il Krewating $19,000 are asked e railroad company ts alleged ve failed to comply with the re ent to unload and Kive rest, food to animals in transit within ret hours —>—- SPANNELL GOES ON STAND, Special Ventre for Second Trial Al- ready on Hand, SAN ANGELO, Tex., Jan. quire ond twenty —~Harry J. Spannell took the stand tn his own | defense to-day in his trial for the mur- der of his wife. special ventra trom which @ Jury ed to try him on the charge Major M. C. Butler, third h will party in trakedy of last July, re ported. to-day but was fizcused until next Thursday, Ry that tine, It taex- pected, th ent trial will bo finished | = “Star Spangled Banner” Mast Not Be Finyed tn Medleys, CHICAGO, Jan, 26.—No longer will cabaret bands syncopate the “Star Span- gled Banner" for dancers, An ordinance approved by the City Counct! last night forbids playing the national alr as part of @ medley, ’1in Washington? WASN'T "MAD" WHEN SHE NAMED JAS. W., SAYS RAE TANZER Final Denials ials by Gis Girl and Her Sister Close Testimony in Perjury Trial, SOON IN JURY’S HANDS. Mrs. Spielberg’s Story of Talks With Tanzer Girls Is Refuted. The Safford perjury case will go to the jury on Saturday morning, Judge Learned Hand announced to- day. The summing up will be done to-morrow, the defense in the morn- ing with a time allotment of three hours, and the Government in the afternoon for a like period, The taking of testimony was con- cluded in less than an hour this ‘HERE'S morning, with Rae Tanzer, her sister Rose and Val O'Farrell, a private de- tective, In the witness chair. Rose Tanzer was the first to be questioned by Benjamin Slade, attor- ney for Safford, the Plainfleld hotel clerk charged with perjury in swear- ing that James W. Osborne was the man who visited his hotel with Rae ‘Tanzer in October, 1914, DIDN'T IDENTIFY JAMES W. BE- CAUSE SHE WAS “MAD.” Q. It has been testified here that after tho first Safford trial you said that you had {dentified James W. Os- borne as the man because Roger B. Wood, Assistant United States Attor- ney, got you mad, Did you say that to Mr. and Mrs, Sptelberg? A. No, I 414 not, Q. What conversation aid you have with Harold Spielberg in reference to his supplanting Slade & Slade as at- torney for you? A. He said to me: “rl ndlo this) matter and put things right.” ‘Then ho gave me a paper to sign and I signed tt, 1 didn't know what I was signing. I was lucky; I might have signed my life away. Q. What conversation did you have with him about reporters? A. He told mo to tell them my story, aa we needed publicity. Q. What did you tell Mr. Spletberg after you came back from testifying before the Congressional Committee A. I told him I had told them everything and had told the whole truth. Ho asked me tf I had told them about him and I ans swored that I'd told everything. Q. Did you tell the Splelbergs you never had had a chance to see James W. Osborne at No, 116 Broadway? A. didn't say that. I told them that Max Steuer told mo to go to Mr, On- borne'’s office and that I went over and saw him come out of Ms office and that I recognized him. RAE'S SISTER ALSO DENIES MRS. SPIELBERG'S STORY. Rone Tanzor, Roo's sister, the next witness, was questioned about a vistt of Mrs, Sptelbarg to the Tanzer home In the Bronx, Q. Did you any to her that day that James W. Osborne waa not the man? A. No; [never eald that, Q. Did you ever make a statement in the District Attorney's office that he was not the man? A, No, They wanted mo to make a statement there and I refused, They told mo tt was my last chance to make a statement and I refused, I told them I would not say James W. Osborne was not the man when I was sure he was. 1 O'Farrell, @ private detective, formerly of the New York police forée, testified regarding a visit to Detective Sergeant Haskins tn 1915 in reference to the Tanzer letters taken to Rae Tanzer wi they vis- Ited her place of business in Febru- ary, 1915, O'Farrell stated that Haskins had taken him into the basement of Po-/| lee Headquarters and given him data | about the letters, “Ong of them was marked with crosses near the firm name,” O'Far- rel! concluded. ed OSBORNE WITNESS JAILED FOR CONTEMPT WASHINGT tion was made to-day to the Bupreme Court for a writ of habeas corpua for Joseph Marshall, a witness committed to jail by Federal Judge Hand for alleged contempt of court in the per- jury trial of Frankiia D, Safford in New York, No action was taken, A decision on Monday {8 probable. Marshall was committed by Judge Har tions regarding conversations Charles H, Wax, wh Deen “Oliver Osborne” Rae Tanzer with who wooed THE NH wonu's pest” BEST’ Austin, Nichols & C's DNaead COFFEE Order from your Grocer INSIST on “SUNBEAM” AREAL LINE ON WHO'S WHO HERE Swann-Breckinridge Row Discloses That the Native New York Of+ ficial Is Extinct. A certain New York County offictal, in : som heated proceeding, ironically ‘1 to @ certain ex-county offical os nM. Breckinridge of Kentucky.” ‘The certain ex-county official, reply- ing In kind might have referred to “District Attorney Swann of New Jersey.” Applying the same atyle of refer« ence to other conspicuous figures tm the said proceeding he might have sald that the charges against the Dis- trict Attorney were made by “Judge Delehanty of Vermont"; that “Mr, Breckinridge of Kentucky” was rep- resented in a hearing before “Chief Magistrate @MicAdoo of New Jersey” by “Mr. Littleton of Tennessee"; that “District Attorney Swann of New Jorsey” had as counsel “Mr. Battle of North Carolina”; that the charges Preferred against “District Attorney Swann of New Jersey” were pre- ferred by “City Club President Price of Connecticut,” and that the charges will be heard by “Gov, Whitman of Newport.” Once in a while New York gota a Hine on who 4s really who in the big city, een SHELLS, TOOF News from Cuban watere te that the United States navy ts running out of targets. — Workman Killed Batidin, Samuel Grano, thirty-two, of No. 68 Taaffe Place, Brooklyn, was looking down the elevator shaft in a buflding in course of construction at No. 41 Hall Street at & o'clock this morning when the descending mortar elevator struck him on the head. He died a half hour after he was taken to the borland Street Hospital [orn HoT WATER| | IF YOU DESIRE A ROSY COMPLEXION wed t @aye we can't help but Took || better and feel better \| after an Inside bath, 1] To look one’s best and feel one's best is to enjoy an inside bath each morning to flush from the system the previous day's waste, sour fermenta- fons and Bolsonous toxins, before it is absorbed into the blood. Just as phate costs very which Haskins and Mr, Hawley had | SEEK: HIGHER COURT -Applica- | for refusing to answer ques-| » claims to have! coal, when it burns, leaves behind a certain amount of incombustible ma- terial in the form of ashes, so the food and drink taken each day leave in the alimentary organs a certain amount of indigestible material, which if not eliminated, forms toxins and poisons which are then sucked into the blood through the very ducts which are in- tended to suck in only nourishment to sustain the body. If you want to see the glow of healthy bloom in your checks, to see your skin get clearer and clearer, you ¢ told to drink every morning upon arising @ glass of | i eith teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it, which is a harmless means of wash- ing the waste material and toxins from the stomach, liver, kidneys bowels, thus cleansing, sweetening and puritying the entire alime ntary Cee pefore putting more food into the stomach, Men and women with sallow skins, liver spots, pimples or pallid com plexton, also those who wake up with 4 coated tongue, bad taste, nasty breath, others who ure bothered with headaches, bilious spells, acid stomach or constipation, should begin this phosphated hot water drinking, and are assured of very pronounced re- sults in one or two weeks, A quarter pound of limestone phos- little at the drug store, but is cient to demonstrate that just as soap and hot water cleanses, purifies and freshens the skin on the outside, so hot water and limestone phosphate act on the inside organs. We must always consider that laternal sanitation is vastly more tm- portant than outside cleanliness, be- cause the skin pores do not absorb Inpurities into the blood, while the bowel pores do. dvt. Ready toUse IT's GOOD Wrer STEAKS AND CHOPS BELL-ANS Absolutely Removes Indigestion. One package provesit. 25cat all druggists, {AN Yost or found articles 'Wertised im’ The "World wit "ee Usted at The World's Informas Gon Bureau, Pulitzer Bullding Arcade, Park Row; World's Uptown Office, northwest core Ber 38th St. and Broadway word Harlem Office, 1 t 125th St, and World's Brockizs Office,” 208 | Wastinge Liend so following th. ef the, Pdvertsemens, es ’ ey 4