The evening world. Newspaper, March 12, 1917, Page 8

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‘ SS — STORM ALBANY” ERY OF ARMY OF ~ WOMEN TEACHERS ‘oes of City’s Pension Bill to Enlist Prettiest Tutors for an Invasion of Capitol. CALL MEASURE UNFAIR. They Oppose Adding “High Cost” Annuities to the High Cost of Living. Beginning bright and early to-mor- Pow, the battle cry in the New York Public schools will be something like— “Where are you going, my pretty ‘T'm going to Albany, kind oi And SHE compositely r &bout 16,000 schoolmarms, or presents an over- whelming majority of th who have declared war on the city’s pro- Posed Pension Bill. She ts the typical young teacher who, believing she ha been filibustered out of ber rights to bave her say about an alleged fifty- Atty measure that she thinks she will have to contribute about 75 per cent. toward, is eager to defeat it So, it's “Ho, for Albany!” She's @oing-—twice as strong as she went during the last session of the Legisia- ture, when 1,400 teachers invaded the Capitol and put their feet down on another pension measure the city planned to thrust upon them, and let sald feet stay put. A majority of the teachers, as rep- resented by their Committee of 150, e@ppointed to confer with the City Pension Commission in an effort to come to an agreement on a retire- ment annuity of the teache: like what the city says they have got to take at the price they have to pay for it. ‘The city’s bill has already been in- troduced in both Houses at Albany, The teachers tried for three months to get somo features of that measure altered 40 meet their own views, but the Pension Commission, represented W. R. Willcox, President of the hairman of the THIS WILL INTEREST STOMACH SUFFERERS Says Indigestion comes from an CN Sas acid. A well-known authority states that stomach trouble and indigestion is nearly always due to acidity—acid stomach—and not, as most folks be- lieve, from a lack of digestive juices. He states that an excess of hydro- chloric acid in the stomach retards digestion and starts food fermenta- ti then our meals sour like gar- bage in a can, forming acrid fluids and gases which inflate the stomach like a toy*balloon, We then get that heavy, lumpy feeling in the chest, we eructate sour food, belch gas, or huve heartburn, flatulence, water- brash or nausea, He tells us to lay aside all digestive aids and, instead, get from any phar- macy four ounces of Jad Salts and fake a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast while it is effervescing, and furthermore, to continue this for one week, hile relief follows the first dose, it is im- ‘ portant to neutralize the acidity, re- nove the gesmaking mass, start the er, stimulate the kidneys and thus vomote a free flow of pure digestive Fiices » ‘Jad Salts is inexpensive and is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined wittlithia and sodium phosphate. ‘This harmless salts is used by thousands of people for stomach rouble with excellent result dvt. ala 3-PIECE WILLIAM AND ———~ MARY PERIOD DINING | SON SC RAE SC SES EE aaa aa a a2 EE | a i, ania tees @ tae | AUHARH &BRO ‘Al 84 STQSAVEQ DOLLAR A W, ay 12 < 3 Cia — 5 AN ACLUUS, te: Pension Commission, and Henry Bruere, the, Vice Chairman, couldn't see things the way the teachers did. Consequently few alterations were | bcibersio¢ inh Taadtierw’ Commit: | 0 say a réferen@um on the bill was promised them. ‘It wan expected tt | would be granted before the measure was sent to Albany, but the bill is in | the Lexisiature und the teachers haven't been allowed fo vote yet, al- | though the Board of Wducation gave | Mr. Willcot, thé power to permit the referendum.’ The committee has | voted, sbowever.” “it cast an almost unanimous “no” at last Thursday's meeting. | Chateman Wilcox recently told the committee It would be discourteous for it to oppose the measure which the city had so generously provided for the care of its teachers when they have become too old to teach, and hinted that it would be far more Jegorous for it to disband. Now the committee has done one and is about to do the other, | | COMMITTEE LIKELY TO DISBAND AND REORGANIZE. William B, Hendrie, Chairman of the Committee of 150, said yesterday he could not forecast what that. body would do, but other members were emphatic in the declaration that the committee would disband at a meet- | ing to be held in Public Schoo! No. this afternoon, and reorganize in | such a way as not to be the catapaw of the Board of Education and the City Administration It 1s proposed to eliminate the reactionaries and take up “sound actuarial pension legiala tion,” It is the purpose of the reorganized Pension Committees to go to Albany and fight. Plans are already under | way to form an army of the city's | prettiest young teachers, to equip| them with “munitions of war" in the! shape of arguments and proofs, and! have them charge up Capitol Hill and | | bring it back with them, as they did two years ago. When a lexislator meets a pretty schoolmarm on the warpath all he has to do 1s to aur-| render. Let no hard headed Solon imagine | the New York teacher doesn't know what she wants in the way of a pen- sion Dill, or what she does not want | in the way of one, She has been | studying this subject ever since her | pension fund went almost as bankrupt as the Mexican Treasury, about four | years ago, Not only that, but she has hired her own lawyer and her own actuary and they have backed up her own opinions rogarding this city measure. TEACHERS DENOUNCE IT AS A} “HIGH COST” PENSION. The crux of the Pension Bill protest | is that the teacher isn't eager to burden herself with a high cost pen- sion as a compulsory part of her high cost of living. She is unwilling to pay about 7 to § per cent. of her total in- come for thirty or thirty-five years for an annuity of half pay for a few years fter she ims got too old to anything but collect the annuity She's willing to pay 3 per cent, more, She puts her foot down for a Qat rate. The Board of Education went for- mally on record as favoring the Pen- sion Bill for teachets. When a group ofithe Teachers’ Committee called on the board for a hearing they were met by Commissioner Dwight, Chair- man on Pensions, with the statement that he was opposed to a reforendum because he thought the question was none of teachers’, business. Pen- sions were as much an administration matter as buying of text books and | supplies, he declared, | To this Mrs, Fabricant of the Com- | mittee of 150 answered that it surely was the teachers’ business to have something to say about a bill that compulsorily deducted from their sal- aries sums ranging from §60 to $250 a year for periods of from twenty to thirty-five years, She was quite sure, she said, that Dwight himself would be interested In any bank in which he had thousands of dollars deposited. Mr. Bruere, the city’s pension ex- pert, holds that, under the circum- stances, there can be no actuarially |sound pension based on @ permanent |rate where the city Is to contribute \half and the teacher half On this point John B. MacNamara, the lawyer for the teachers’ commit- tee, has just reported: } “A bill should be prepared assur- jing the teachers a fixed rate not to exceed 8 per cent., or 3 per cent, av- erage, the city forever to supply any deficiency that might arise, and which bill also should assure the vested right to teachers in their contribu- tions.” TEACHERS’ ACTUARY ATTACKS | THE PLAN OF THE CiTy. ‘This view is backed by William H. |Gould, the teachers’ actuary, who also asserts that tho city’s conten- |tion that, under ita plan, it will con- tribute $63,000,000 to provide for prea- ent pensions ix misleading, He holds that the city's figures in thin respect are off by $15,000,000 to $20,000,000 The actuary alao says the city's proposed contribution to the reserve | the CITY'S BILL OR NOTHING, 18 ONE ! fund of $1,000,000 annually is insuf-) fietent. | Mombers of the teachers’ commit- tee asmert that the real reason for their disapproval of the city bill is that, in spite of their high contribu. tions, the security and stability off the now pension aystem will be jeop- | ardized by the lack of an adequate | reserve and by the absolute power iven to the Retirement Board to} change the rates in the ful The City Pension Commi announced its Intention to reorgan- jz all the city pension funds, includ- ing those of the Fire and Police De- partments. The teadhers smile when th think of how the fireman and Policeman wil] regard & proposition to take 8 per cent. of his pay to be put Into a pension fund. Suave, but unfair tactics are charged against the city in its pres- sure in behalf of its measure. Teach- ors assert that on occasions the achool machinery was used to disseminate sympathetic explanations of the bill District meetings were called, which it is compulsory for the teachers to attend. They were held at 2 o'clock in the afternoon and the pupils were dismissed. The measure was then “explained” by a speaker thoroughly friendly to the plan HELD TO BE A COMPULBORY | PURCHASE OF ANNUITY. Studen™ of the bill charge that it means plainly the compulsory pur- chase of annuity; that it is a pater-| naliatic insuran, heme worthy of conception in Germany. ‘They also| contend that in offering a 3 per cent, | option plan the poorer paid teacher| | will naturally choose the lower rate! and that, If she retires at the average retirement age of fifty-seven, aho will not get a half-pay pension because of} having chosen the lower rate. j After the deduction is made from the salary of the youngest teacher, she is left, opponents of the bill as: sert, with a weekly compensation per- flously near the minimum wage ad- Vvocated by the State Factory Com- mission for factory girls, As a final act in the controversy teachers’ committee has asked | the Mayor for a conference. While the Mayor ts very busy just now with the west side-New York Central con- tract, a matter also involving many millions, he has promised to receive the teachers in the near future. Tho} teachers complain they never were able to get a hearing before the City Pension Commission when they could be represented by their own attorney and actuary. ’ VIEW TAKEN, The Interborough Association of Women Teachers, of which Miss Grace C. Strachan !s President, doss not take the view of the city plan held by the Committee of One Hun- dred and Fifty. It has voted In favor of the bill on the ground that if the teachers do not accept this bili they may not get any penalon, A vital matter involved in this pen- sion legislation is the teacher's tenure, Acting City Superintendent Strauben- muller and l'resident Willcox have sald that if the city’s bill does not pass samething will have to be done. Me thought the tenure provision in the Charter would have to be re- pealed; that otherwise teachers eligi- ble for retirement would have to dismissed from the system. There are now 900 teachers with thirty years of service to their credit, Tee ee eel te in an tdio | Of everything for everybody. I lost all| After a atirringly patriotic address |The man was Apuaronily thinly ive threat, appealing to their sympathy, pie; fee fo mth Bh eh ow last night tn the Plymouth Congre- | ?ovealed no marks of violenc and that New York would not Gare 80 before the country with dismifma; an the reward of thirty-five years of faithful service. One of the arguments being urged hy the city tn favor of the bill ia that if {t should become a law many teach- ing vacancies would be created, and this would mean a corresponding number of promotions and appoint- ments Foes of the bill say this explains why nearly all of the men in the ays- tem favor the passage of the city bill, since they are in a preferred class for higher positions, Under present conditions a Woman cannot se above the post of an assistant principal, — WOULD-BE SOLDIER MISSING. Boy of Fifteen Determined to En- Mat im the Army. The determination of Philip Lipo- witz, a fifteen-year-old boy of No, 1027 Lafayette Avenue, Brooklyn, to enlist im the army and his second disappear- ance from home caused a general a to be sent out to-day by the police, His firat disappearance was on Feb. 22, aftor he had attended a patriotic meeting about the Washington statue at the eastern terminal of the Willams burg Bridge, His family found him tn uniform at Fort Slocum, but had him discharged as under age. This time he has been gone since lart Thursday. ——_—_ Youth ¢ Louis Foglia, elghteen years old, of No, 326 East One Hundred and Twen- ty-sixth Street, was arrested to-day harged with bu and with aulting Paul Cosam: who live in the basement of the same house, Cosamasso identified Foglia as the man who broke into their home early this morning, an ored as a Ba Our Liberal Credit | | | ea Raga Ce RR Oe RHE 3 Pieces, as - Illustrated, at x % bean Oak, consisting of | as % BLFFET 54 inches long, | $50°° } wih mirror; CHINA | i * CLOSEI 44 inches wide; | ble and Chairs x % PERVING TABLE 34 to Match == F inches wide. « PT erpeeeet ste srett geet? PPCeCRCRT TSOP OCC TOUTES CU Vel i“Wyeth's Sage and EASY 10 DARKEN YOUR GRAY HAIR You Can Bring Back Color and THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, MAROH 12) 1917. Solar Plexus, Not Heart, The Seat of the Emotions, Says New Thought Leader 1AL4OOIDO4 2449999 O94O9OO8 | 4 rs At Any Rate, When You! Feel Great Grief, Great Fear or Great Worry, It’s in the Spot Made Famous by Bob Fitz- simmons That You Have That “Sinking Feeling,’’ Declares Mrs. Grace Nieman. By Nixola Greeley-Smith. To pul the moral of @ story at the end has always seemed to me tg be taking an unfair advantage of the reader who may have tackled it believing it had ho moral. So the moral of this interview saying Col. Gardiner recetved the| man, Meyer London and Collector | taking one bottle with Mrs, Grace |medal as a souvenir. Malone as some of the suffrage 1 felt very much Risch; Makeue | Col. Gardiner sald: “You may say | Tenteons ts he atROL better, i have and teacher of|% “3 | that The Evening World communicat-| Mrs ne Gmroanees caw ee de P tamed a New Thought, in| Mes. GRACE NIEMAN: % joa with Col. Gardiner at hie country | Proceeds will Tea ealee utetoe the Potts ae never be atratd) joy, “1 can fox-trot,” and let him | B® Was about completing a communt- | next election. anes } I Pinkham’s. Vege- ef anything, in| jead me into the melee, and may his, “tion In reply to the War Depart- | Page | table Compound is the best medicine I fact, that fear is the father of fa-| fate rest upon his own head! mont pointing out the entire illegality | DANCER AND ACTOR HELD. | jive ever taken and 1 can recommend tality and that the thing you| “Suppose we affirm something which | of the proceedings, and now it ap-| Jit to all suffering wome Mra. dread becom through the very pot dla regret later on?” Lasked MrS.! pears, as far as he has been able to| Woman Charges Former Got Her! p,,,. Prestidge, Aberdeen, Idaho, force of your that happens you affirm is ceive, Yesterday Mrs. Nieman toid members of her New Thought Centre which meets every Sunday afternoon in the Empire Hotel, that to get what you want in this world you need only affirm to yourself that you have tt al- ready. "If you want good you must affirm | good,” Mra, Nieman assured me in| her home, at No, 1 East Twenty~ second Street. “The poverty of the world is created by the fear of pov- erty. Dread of ill-health produces it “I am a teacher of shorthand and a few years ago I had nervous prostra- tion as @ result of taking special post-graduate courses while giving) my days to my classes. 1 did not know | then that there was strength to be found outside myself, When If was} down and out, when my health was gone and my money was gone and | did not know where to turn, friends got mo interested in New Thought, and I realized that in the great abun- dance all around us there is enough dreading it, the thing to you, and the good the good you will re-| Ni red 8 affirm only matertal eman answered. alize that the enough love, “That often happens with those who Mrs. But the mistakes) of President Grant and in the name things,” of our matertal selves may lead US| o¢ Congress a medal of honor for dis- the| later on to spiritual growth, The tm- | tingutshed services performed in the | ortant thing is for human bejngs to|recent war were not. before. the| er ow granted is not a petition but an afir-| mation; that the things they desire| per of engagements, so J. cannot are in the world for them; that there! speak tEREE At tho moment, enough health, enough happiness for every one.” ah Rtv!’ adds BODYGUARD ESCORTS PASTOR HILLIS HOME AFTER WAR SERMON 75 Members of Congregation, Fearing Attack, Accompany Him From Church, 4 affirmation.” through two things — premeditation “AFFIRM” DIAMONDS OR AUTOS AND YOU'LL GET THEM. gationat Church, Brooklyn, in which {he spoke strongly about “Six Ways Into War,” the Rev. Dr. Newell Dwight Hillis was escorted to h home at No, 28 Monroe Place by @ bodyguard of seventy-five men of his in Which Germany Ie Forcing Us| CL. GARDINER TO GH TOKEP WAR NEDA ‘NO NONSENSE HESAS + |Preparing Communication to Washington—Honor Won by Bravery in Civil War. | Col. Asa Bird Gardiner, former | District Attorney of New York and |Member of the Sons of the Revolu-! |tion and other patriotic socteties, has no intention of surrendering the hon- or medal conferred upon him gfty jyears ago for his services in the! | Civil War, | The Evening World repeated to Gardiner over the telephone to- | & despatch from Washington | tating that his name has been| @ | stricken from the honor roll of the army, Unless he returns the medal, | $j the despatch continues, he will be! subject to court martial. | 3\ The onter followed the report of a| Tbe headed by Gen, Miles, |learn, that the records on which See- retary Belknap presented ‘on behalf “T am going to town to keep a num- but you may nay that T am going to stand no nonsense, no foolin A Washington despatch states that former Chief Clerk Crosby of the War Department made a statement in writ- ing to the Secretary of War on April 1, 1892, concerning Col. Gardiner's medal. In {t he said: “It was given, as T know, for con- spicuous bravery and distinguished conduct during the Gettysburg cam- paien, particularly in the action at | Bporting Hill, Pa, June 80, 1868, and jin the defense of Carlisie, Pa, July 1 \and 2, 1863, while serving as Captain, Twenty-second Regiment, New York Volunteer Militia Infantr: BS alt ‘Tattooed Mai NEW BEDFORD, Mass, March 12.— ‘The body of a well dressed man, with the | Agure of a Japanese dancing yrirl, encir- | cled with @ serpent, tattooed on his erms and shoulders, was found frozen in the lice of Assawampsett Pond yesterday. A SUFFRAGE SANDWICH HEADS THEATRE’S MENU Women and men in the public eye bearing cating for $65 fered as evidence, | recovered. Hai that he hi will make five-minute speeches be- | ee ae tween the one-dct plays of the Wash- | PROGRESS. ington Square Players to-night and Gupsy fortune tellers have dite the rest of the week at the Comedy| carded horses and wagons and sean iles, whic hey say gypsica The New York City Woman But-| jieryichere are using, frage Party has appointed Mrs. John Humphrey Watkins, Chairman of Manhattan Borough, manager, The ushers will wear yellow sashes, Mem- bers of the Junior League will enrol! suffrage synypathizers on yellow slips. | Magazine girls will tempt you with yellow wares, and even yellow can- dies will be on sale. The plays to be given are “Trifles,” by Susan Glaspell; “Lovers' Luck,” by George de Porto Riche; “The Death of Tin- tagiles,” by Maurice Maeterlinck, | and “The Hero of Santa Mariu,” by Kenneth Sawyer Goodman and Ben| Hecht. Mrs, Carrie Chapman Catt, Na- tional Suffrage President, will speak | to-night, with Dr. Katharine Be-| ment Davis, Miss Mary Garrett | Hay, Mrs, John Humphrey Watkins, Miss Mary Shaw, Judge Gustav Hart- | IDAHO WOMAN Lydia E. Pinkham’s V table Compound Did the Work. Nothing Iie it. “Last vear I suffered from a weal ness with pains in my side and back. en to table ine at Restaurant. ‘armer, nineteen years old, of No. West Sixtieth Street, a professional dancer, and Fdward J. Hand, twenty-one, a motion pleture actor Who roomed with Farmer, were to-day held in $1,500 bail each for the Grand Jury by Magistrate Murphy in Jefferson Market Court. They are charged with grand larceny by Mrs. Frances Meadowlake of No. 108 West | One Hundred and Third Street Mrs, Meadowlake testified that on noon of Merch & with a party sited’ Bustan: Farmer she sal rm He admired’ a dia | tressing ills pec should be convin Frank tee ed are constantly publishing in the news papers of the ability of Lydia EF. restore their health. you, try it I. Pinkham Medicine Co tral), Lynn, Mass. Y »Y'8| opened, read and answered by a Advt and later redeemed it was of- The ring was not ADE WEL A friend asked me try Lydia E, Pinkham's Vege Compound and I did so, After Women who suffer from those dis+ to their sex by the many genuine and truthful testimonials we Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to 'o know whether Lydia F, Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound will help For advice write to Lydia (confiden- letter will be woman, and held in strict confidence, “Suppose ca co! a for as jeman, juppor ir heart's desire is not I su sted to Mrs. we love unwisely oF suppose we hi the great national dream of material prosperity; sup- pose we affirm diamonds or automo- biles; can we get those thing through affirmation?" “The affirmation of material suc- cess is & phase through which many people pass, and there is no Youbt that this constant desire for money and success brings money and suc- | cess,” Mrs, Nieman answered, “Home persons hever rise above that phase, erhaps, but many of us learn to ask Por tho’ higher spiritual things. Do you know I think of the human being as a@ great fountain with fresh ‘sparkling waters springing always from a hidden so , but toward the | where the is nearly stagnant, there That scum ts the material standing outside the fountain the scum ts more visible be- cause nearer than anything else, “I think, too, of the human being as a great bird with one white wing, whioh is the soul, and one black wing, which is the mind. A person who has mind but not soul, intellect but not emotion, is like a bird with only one wing—he is a cripple. We must have the even balance of soul and mind to be complete beings. The seat of the mind is, of course, the brain, but the seat of emotion is the solar plexus, Whenever you thave been stricken with a great grief or a great fear ora great worry, didn’t you get that sud- en sinking of the solar pl v Mrs, Nieman asked me, placing her hand hei outside of the fountain, water of ch m: with a dramatic gesture on the spot| '°'Y. ministers preached yesterday made famous by Bob Fitzsimmons, on the possibility of war and urged Twaid I had, their heu to be patriots and loy- “Everybody does,” Mrs, Nieman as-| ally to support the President, sured me, “That is because the #lar plexus is the centre of human emo« fion. Now, to keep ourselves in al with the Stars and Stripes than ever Carter's Iron Pills favorable emotional state, we must] before, and the pastors talked more aftirm only the emotions we desire to| frankly on the likellhood of conflict will help this condition. feel. If you seek love, say to yourself |than they had previously permitted constant! 6’ If you seek| themselves to. In the Episcopal abundanc rand over again,|churches the prayers for “war and If you want fame | tu Lustre With Sage Tea and Sulphur. When you darken your hair with Sage and Sulphur, no one can tell, because it's pie 60 naturally, eo evenly. Preparing this mixtur though, at home is mussy and trou. blese For 60 cents you can buy at any drug store the ready-to-use | preparation, improved by the ad- dition of other ingredients, Sulphur Com- pound.” You just dampen « sponse jor soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small ‘strand at a time, By morning all gray hair disappears, and after an- application or two your hair peautifully darkened, glossy and luxuriant Gray, faded hair, though no dis- grace, is a sign of old age, and as we all desire @ youthful and attractive appearance, get busy at once with Wreth's Sage and) Sulphur Com pound and look years younger, ‘This ready-to-use preparation is a delights ful toilet requisite and not a medi+ cine, Tt is not intended for the cure, mitigation or prevention of disease, Advt. called | or sett yl | te fame; T " | 4 TERPSICHORE A MEMBER OF| | ! THIS CULT. | : iH 4 point I want to say that Lj lized how infallible Mra. man's system is until | heard a f months ago of the visit of a news. pauper woman to another leader in the New Thought mov nt, When the | interview was over, the leader said gractously, “Now, I'am going to give you a freo treatment for success in| stiffness, backache, with teeth with “Sozedont ilauld dentifrice tt your profession wy Any gently enters the «um tissue with ite PNabeae don't! pother.!’ the newana-| “St. Jacobs Oil. harmless but effective antiseptic propor- per woman exclalmed hastily, “1 AM ties and assures for you the possession of auecessful In my profession, ‘Ab! Pain ie gene! young teeth In normal, heslihy gums.— “Then,” sald t he leader triumphant Quickly ?—Yes! Almost instant re- 4 ly, you prove everything Te been Hef from soreness, stiffness, lameness yourself by aifirming your own suc ee fen allows & genie rubbing cess, You don’t me,’ Ja ys i Mrs, Nieman, however, is inuch too! Apply this soothing, penetrating oil Al) lesb or foun modest and charming a woman to,directly upon the ac! and like niagte, vertised In The W volunteer to treat anybody who had /relief comes, “St. Jacobs Oil” cons Msted at The World's Informae not soueh r advice, She pro- |quers pain, It fs a harmless backache, Feller Halidieg foundly essed with spiritual! lumbago and sciatica relief, which arene value Milosophy and the effi- ‘never disappoints, can not injure and pierre OVies ney the ills doesn’t burn or discolor the skin Harlem Office, ‘ “stitches.” In a moment you will for. Brooklyn Off \ ileves heraelt the thing she ip Be get that vou ever had a back, because Fon Bu, Braabieny eH peaks Auch vnnart it won't hurt or be stiff or lame. Don't teal nyd ae in wo muc 1 have u advertisement, made up my mind t t time Suffer! Get a small trial bottle of n ill-fated wight asks me ! foxtrot, I shall say to myself reso not out, ngregation. It was feared that arer who on, ang) members of ureh From any scores decorated of with mult were recited RUB IT ON BACK resented Dr. | scathing denunciation methods might seek personal revenge upon him, The clergyman himself had no such apprehension, and took the Incident rather lightly, but the male members of the church insisted upon guarding him throughout his short journey of about eight blocks. Two weeks ago, it appears, during the course of another patriotic ser- mutterings were heard from persons in the church who were the congregation. Murmurs of “liar!” and “he ought to be stopped!" came to the ears of some the regular church attendants, They decided to watch over Its per- Sona) safety “on the occasion of his next talk on international matters— which was last night. No outspoken comments were heard, although there was, it dissatisfied grumbling by a few un- identified persons in the rear of the Dr, Hillis was frequently in- terrupted by outbursts of applause. pulpits, the National flag for the first time in their his- perhaps some! Hillis's German of is said, other The city's churches, both inside and were decorated more profusely {Rub away pain, soreness, Straighten up! Stop those torturous 1 can “St. Jacobs Oil” from your drug; gow and get this lasting relief.—A some Two Splendid T °. hings One is plenty of open- air exercise. If you can’t all of that you sheuld, it’s all the more important that freely and naturally. Take one every night; more when you're sure it’s i Genuine bears ‘Signature Colorless faces often show the absence of Irom in the blood. Statistics Show There Are Too Many False Teeth It te due mostly to neglect of the «ums. They bleed. rece: 4 become infected. Then faire tooth take the place of the re ones. The greater part of the cause can be removed by the use of the right kind of dentifrice, While you are cleaning your nd World ist Jeffery Sedan $1630 In Winter when cold winds are blowing you need protection from snow and rain, No car is more comfortable than Jeffery Sedan. It is perfect for city or suburban «se on all occasions, business or social. When Summer comes simply remove the Sedan top and a standard Jeffery Six touring car is ready for cross-country touring, The straight lines of the Jeffery Hammock- slung body are the vogue for 1917. Jeffery Sedan, two cars in one, $1630, Standard touring top and windshield $60 extra. Poertner Motor Car Company 1759 Broadway PHOTOGRAPHS SHOWING WHATUNCLE SAM Is DoING SUNDAY ORLD

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