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TAIRES SQUAD HAS MORE VIM AS DIET TEST ENDS Police Rookies Put Snap Into Exercises on 25-Cent-a- Day Rations, | The thirteen probationary police- men and one newspaper reporter who ee Td’ GLADDENS SORE, TIRED FEET No puffed-up, burning, ten- | ler, aching feet—no corns or callouses “Tie” makes sore, burning, tired feet fairly dance with delight. Awa | they lived nen AY, JANUARY 29 CAR RUMEN Ee THE EVENING WORLD, MOND have been subsisting on the 25-cent- |a-day diet for three weeks were | unanimous to-day In asserting that | they regretted the experiment was not to be made a permanent institu. tion. Every one said that he felt better than he did three weeks ago. ‘The physical instructors at the! School for Policemen report that the | men are in better shape than when | {they joined the diet squad. ‘Though | at first the “rookies” complained they were painfully hungry and thought they were being weakened, all such talk coased betpre the end of the first week. Just how much thetr tmprovemont in due to the simple, plain food of an almost vegetarian menu, and how much to the fact that all of the diet- ers who had been used to a few glasses of beer and to much smoking “swore off” for the period of the ex- periment, Dr, B. L. Fisk, tm charge of the squad, was not ready to say to- day. One Improvement noted by the physical instructors was that the men clearer eyed, more alert and put more snap Into their exercises. Questioned aa to the likelihood that the men who have enjoyed the 25 cent rations would continue the diet fn thelr own homes, most of them said home with their parents and doubted their ability to convince their mothers and other members ¢ their families of the palatibility of the cheap meals; they also doubted we: | whether their mothers could find tim |to learn to cook as skilfylly as Han- nibal Parsons, an expert In making cheap, plain food taste good. The men will be weighed after din- {ner to-night. Miss Marian F, Walker, jehow a gain, At the last welghing, leticlan, is confident every man will Friday evening, all but three showed gains varging from a few ounces to four and five pounds, David Sentner, the reporter, showed the aches and pains, the corns, cal- the largest gain, possibly because he ses, blisters, bunions and chilblains. “Tis” draws out the acids and Fete sons that puff up your feet. No tmat- ter how hard you work, how long you dance, how far you walk or w lon, you remain on your fee! brings restful foot comfort. “Ti” is ma feal, grand, wonderful for tired, ach- ing, swollen, smarting feet. Ah! how comfortable, how happy you fe Your feet just tingle for joy; shoes never hurt or seem tight. Get a 25 cent box of “Tiz” now from any druggist or department store. End foot torture forever— | wear smaller shoes, keep your feet fresh, sweet and happy. Just think! a whole year's foot 25 cents.—Advt “Storm Hero” tems Umbrella y ANew Frame it the Wind Breaks It |) $1.50-2%%4 | Better Quality Than Ever Before Greenhut de in Trade “ol ther ‘ao and throughout the country ~|much herself from the three w fort for only , did not have to meet the daily exer- tion of the police sch so that his calortes were not burned, but merely Increased flesh. Miss Walker sald she had learned *] experience in marketing In the tene- ment district near the laboratory, She found the quality of food bought fron street peddlers and grocery stores in tenement neighborhoods just as good as that to be had in the markets and the uptown stores, while prices were from 25 to 8% per cent. lower. To test out this conclusion more thoroughly Miss Walker intends to ask the eight wives of members of the Street Cleaning Department who are to be the guests of the Life Ex- tension people to-morrow to go each into her own neighborhood and pur chase the items on the lun. heon menu and bring a report as to costs to her from different neighborhoods. Here is the menu for to-day: Breakfast—Hominy and milk, toast and butter, coffee; 870 calories; cost 7 cents per man, Lunch — Split pea soup, toasted | lerackers, whole wheat bread, baked bananas, salted peanuts, tea; 1,075 | calories; cost 8 cents per man. Supper —Codfish cakes, — tomato | sauce, graham bread, butter, fruit, | | shortcake, tea; 1,055 calories: cost 10 jcente per man HITTING THE BLUE SKY, Two dollars a bushel was pala for white potatoes in carload lote in Chicago. ———— Ss —— GB. Altman & Cn. ne SMART TAILOR-MADE SUITS in a number of new Spring models developed. in the fashionable mat ials and correctly tailored, are shown at $68.00 & $78.00 Department for Import WOMEN’ WASHABLE MORNING ial Costumes (FOR HOUSE WEAR in a number of styles, developed in vinghan voiles and tissues, a sale at the remark $2.90, $3.2 This attractive but kably tc 5 & $4.50 |Whole Wisdom of Matrimony Summed Up St. Louis Preacher Tells Them “Love Not a Man| but See, That You Love a Man| Who Has Money,”’ No Man Can Advise, Them Wisely, ol gymnastics, By Nixola Greeley-Smith. Love not 4 man for his money, and take the first good chance you get.” Such was the text of a sermon on but see that you love a man who has * preached this Euclid Avenue *hoosing a Husband," week by the Rev. George L. Hale of the Baptist Chureh of St |siderations of fortune or power to the Western “don't wed a perfect man” (the pronouns quoted 4 strictly his own), “they ain't ‘Don't wed a poor man. “Don't wed a clothes horse. “Don't wed a house and lot. “Many women," he added, “are good samples whitewashed, should be labelled ‘handle with care.’ to the divorcee courts. joods delivered, }n They're lazy. hspoleie’ They don't pull They mortgage. Their husbands \inseriptions are Now [ doubt if any man that ever | sing women! one 4: who knows th Imonial choice can be when they're spoken to A SPECIAL SALE OF CORSETS in desirable model: has been arranged for to-morrow Corsets of white co Corsets of A NUMBER OF BRAS For Girls Is: ‘Marry the Man You Love’ DONT WED A PERFECT MAN ~ THERE AINT ANY | LOVE NOT pint. ~ BUT LOVE | A MAN WHO HAS MONEY es when they're asked, merits of marriage with one man ‘ather than another to their own ad- vantage. And such women fare best, undoubtedly, when they allow con- weigh in the scale of their decision. | their hearts are like portable ises, and can be set up anywhere ser elects, Such structures |} rs may not have the charm or the archl- _Thet ne tectural beauty of homes built upon ant tte a fundamental affinity of mind and mpi Mr- Reid and body: but they answer well enough for practical purposes, And if a| woman has not wjthin Herself jhe fatality of a deep, passionate profér- ence, joes weik to heed ud. | vice of the Rev. Mr. Hate of St. | «4, Louis | “Love not a man for his money, | Whe hat fools! but see that you love a man who has money.” ‘To practical Luman beings the iden- tity of the life mate dees not matter, ticularly after a few years, To ther more fastidious persons it re-| a main tor in living. Henry James spoke for | all romantics when he suid that he magined women chiefly “in their failure or successes a8 sex be- ing and that he considered “the great constringent human relation | relation most worth while in life for either. It ix a long leap, perhaps, from Henry James to Max Nordau, disciple who conceded that yan in love is much of Schopenh f we of mar “Woman,” said Nordau in his essay on “The Natural History of Love,” “has a more distinctly evolved ideal of the man she ne complete her, and she is less easily induced to re- linquish is ideal and to resign her- self to some other entirely different ubstitute, Woman will not ailbw the test attempt on the part of her Jlove with’ rational ideas, Woman make a mistake, and is unconsciously 1d entail irreparable consequer itinued from the to be dis & 75c. An Important Offering of Reversible Velour Portieres will be continued to-morrow Hitth Avenue- Madison Avenue, New York sequences share in the is concerned woman he or heeds to com= plete him is less distin Hence he is apt to fall in love more rapidly easily with the first woman he ha pens to meet; he is, for this reason, | much less constant; hence, also, he ean love much oftener, renotince more ‘easily and forget with much less diffi. culty; his love can be proportionately more easily controlled, subdued, and teven entirely vanquished by his judg- ment.”* T have quoted length because the it Met that woman's choice, not «man's, should determine the marriage 1 on, Limight be suspected of a pre}. due to sex disillusioned women counsel Is not to marry for love, that the identity of the hus- does not matter” particularly @ few years, [ should say that this is true enough where a girl is un- stirred by & strong vital preference, Vor there are millions of men and women to whom the whole of life is a \twillght sleep of mind and body, and in that twilight gleep what dreams may come ig a matter of very small }and a photograph made, which con- may weigh the " | suit of minority stockholders of the | was approved ‘of this type would do well to lov always the most important tac. | nothing when romance 1s 8p between man and woman" as the} more powerful and genuine than that | jJudgment to subdue the emotion of | feels Instinetively that she must not | aware of the fact that a mistake| 1917 AMNYSTERY IN DEATH OF FILM ACTRESS; CALLED MURDER Mother Asks Investigation on Arrival of Girl's Body From Los Angeles. RUTLAND, Vt., Jan, 29.—District Attorney C. V. Poulin of Rutland County said to-day that a photograph purporting to be of the body of Miss ‘Nora Benson, who is said to have died at the Pacific Coast Hospital in Los Angeles, Cal, on Jan. 3, and which seemed to show bullet wounds in the ‘yack, had been presented to him with the request that he make an investi- gation, | The photograph was given to the District Attorney by the girl's mother, Mrs. Chauncy Benson of Chicago, who was advised that the authorities In this State could not proceed in the matter until they had received definite information from the Los Angeles po. lice. Mra. Benson was told to write for information to support her theory of murder. The body of Miss Benson was shipped to Chicago and later brought to Fair Haven, near here, for burial, the family having formerly lived in this State. Mrs. Benson told the Dis- trict Attorney the girl went to Los Angeles a year ago to join a moving picture company and that a telegram announcing her death was received in Chicago early this month. The casket bore a card on which wa written: “Pneumonia, Do not open. rhis aroused Mrs. Benson's suspicion and on its arrival here she had the casket opened and the body examined, vinced her that the young woman had }been shot to death. After the funeral {she communicated with the District Attorney Mr, Poulin said the cause of the} leath Was given In the death certi ellow liver atrophy, air Haven sald | that when he ved the body for urpose of having a photograph he maw several bruises, but no LOS ANGELBS, Jan, 2 here to-d AMATEUR ACTRESS WHO WILL BE BRIDE OF W. F. PHILLIPS. J \ Mr. and Mrs. George Baylies Sanford, of No. 85 East Thir- tieth Street, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Miss Genevieve Leland Sanford, |s DOCTOR AT A MURD Testifies at Pittsburgh as to Person With Gunshot Woun Can Do. PITTSBURGH, Pa, Jan, 29—Dry George W. Mellon of Woodlawn, | Beaver County, has qualified as “@ European war expert on gunshot wounds. He was called as a wite ness to-day in tho trial of Leon \arter, Oakland manufacturer, / charged with the alleged murder of | Mrs, Harter. Dr. Mellon passed mort than @ year on the first line in Serbia, He testified that Mrs. Harter “probably could” have walked fifty feet, climbed a filght of stairs and lerossed a porch after she had been yt near the shoulder, He declared, that soldiers with jagged shra wounds frequently ran and for long distances. The bullet that hit Mrs, Harter In the shoulder a smooth of ald. BREAKS A to William F, Phillips, son of Mr, and Mrs Jeric D.’ Phillips, of No. 449 Park Avenue. Miss San- ford appeared frequently in ama- teur theatrical performances. She also participated in the activities of the Junior League. ALBARY PORK BILLS REACH $1,671 00 ALBANY, Jan. 29.—Although the Legislature has been in session only gregating $1,671,000 have been tntro- duced, most of them by legislators from rural districts who want the State to pay for dredging creeks, es- tablisbing fish hatcheries, building school houses, enjarging culverts and starting game farms, Each of these |troducer solid with “the folks at) of the death of Nora » been no deaths from yel- low fever or typhus, he said. Beek ci ct eno |Terma in Rock Island Sait Ap- proved by © nent of the CHICAGO, Jan Chicago, Rock Island and © Rail- way Company against © and Willlam H. Moore home.” majority in both Houses, made up) to say that most of the Introducers will get their pork bills out of com- way a Moore, the payment by them of $500,000 and ail the costs of the litigation, moment to them. Such people are} amazed, bewildered by the sort of love which says: “This man—this woman— or none.” In their minds they exclaim Strange such a difference should be twixt tw dum and tweedledec,.” y dwell in a sort of limbo of life, n from the heaven but safe fro: nell of romantic passion, W man who has mon |woman who is in love tr: another, Granting Pot nt; | petnind Soden hours 1n. the bank of for love may memory which will sustain and warm her when the winds come and rain falls and she realizes that she is fifty, West 42d Street FIPTH RACK. Thi Tremont 1 |W ‘108 Stern Brothers (Between 5ih and 6th Avenues) Will continue To-morrow, HALF-YEARLY SALES Household and Novelty Furniture, Oriental & American Rugs For which extensive preparations were made to provide this season’s most noteworthy price inducement | little bills 1s designed to make the in- | largely of up-State members, it ts safe GOLDIN: AND four weeks, “pork barrel” items ag- | | “Pape’ salon _ ispleasantandaffords InstantRelief. | A dose taken every two hours wa * With an overwhelming Republican, three doses are taken will end grippe 4 | misery and break up a cold. It prompty opens clogged-up mes | grits and alr passages in the eds stops nasty discharge or nose ru i Doe heedache, dullness, few relieves mittee and have them jammed through | Verishness, sore throat, sneezing, 6@res | during the closing days of the session. Only @ Vigorous exercise of the veto power by Gov. Whitman will save the | New York City taxpayers. poe hese NEW ORLEANS ENTRIES. | mess and stiffness. Don't stay stuffed-up! Quit blowing and enuf! Ease ear throbbing head! Nothing else in the world such prompt relief as “Pape’ Compound,” which cos! | Don't accept something else.—A TEETH ON CREDIT <A 22-Karat Gold Crowns My Soft ied Guaranteed to Nt M DR. FINCH 215 West 42d St, Next oor to Lorie 10 Kenmare St. *“, 409-111 Fulton! te Open 0 to 7. Cloned Sanday, West 43d Street their OF C and made a “regular only 25 cents at any drug store. It acts without assistance, tastes nice, causes no income venience, Be sure you get the ie Share)