The evening world. Newspaper, May 5, 1917, Page 5

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pa TI hee a Waa 2 Government ing to Fear, Saye Meenbée of Lloyd George’s Cabinet. . 5,-American bust- Send Rhondua nme of thi UT OUT ANY CORN No Humbug! Afew drops and corn lifts out with fingers—No pain bottics of the new ether com- called freezone can now be ob- tained for very little cost at any drug store here. ‘This drug freezone is the recent discovery of a Cin- It is needless stered ra callus, be- cause they shrivel up and lift out, root and all, with- i man. to ever again be with a corn out a twinge of pain. Apply a few drops o' it right off. marvelous dru t or calluses, but dries them You feel no pain, or — irritate while applying it, or ferwards, It doesn’ cause any ronndin, Tt fe now really foo! hurt you twice. freeszone i bearing 2 yellow wrapper. ecceptanthing else — —Advt NHELl to fear from the war, The protits in England have been above normal alnice the war be- freezone directly upon a tender corn or callus. Ine stantly the soreness sub- oa) sides and shortly you find the corn or hardened cal- lus so loose that you lift inflammation of the tissues or skin sur- or underneath. lish to let a corn A few drops of Hi that is necessary. The Don't | (3s ach, busi through the 'w q < founded are likely to prove un. it haw not been that case . except itp abi Near cr profits Pr — were PF 180,000,000, Poimce he esp tery « the 60 per cent. “Moreover last ears profit. were achieved with but it evidence of bo-called teri obtained {ts due proportion in increased wages as witnessed by ability of the work- ingmen to meet the increased cost of living and at the same time spend more. “Tho latter fact is one Of thé rea sons why tradesmen have not suf- fered as perhaps they anticipated. JOGKEY REDFERN DYING, VIGTIM-OF AUTO RASH the date was the war. Still another wedding hai account of the war Is that Elise Prov Smith, and Mrs. © ; West Fifty-eighth Street, to Edward A. Hurd, son of Mr, and Mrs. C. Ru sell Hurd of Milton, Mass. take place noxt Wednesday afternoon inthe Church of the Heavenly Rest, the Rev. Herbert Shipman officiating, and will be followed by # reception in Car Smashes Into Street Barrier and| the Ritz-Carlton, Turns Turtle—Skull Is Major and Mrs, R. Dickinson Jew- Fractured. ett of this city and Washington have announced the engagement of thelr daughter, Miss Elizabeth M, Jewett, to Howard Morrell Peck, gon of Mrs. Ernest Hamilton Peck of No. 48 East Seventy-fifth Street. PIMLICO ENTRIES. Injured by an automobile after a life devoted to horses, Arthur Red- fern, once America’s premier jockey, and described ‘the boy worth his weight.in gold,” is near death to-day in the Coney Island Hospital, Fifteen years ago he rode for James R. Keene, E. R. Thomas and William ©. Whit. | & ney, and at his best received $19,000 for first and second calls tor his ser- | *" vices. Once John Mackey offered | is $30,000. Last night Redfern and his’ wife left their home, No. 1753 Seventy- second Street, Brooklyn, and were on | "ar Twenty-second Avenue when, at Bixty-second Street, suddenly loomed | 4 in front a “closed street” barrier. : ht itch pif ack Whether Redfern saw the barrier rasa "io a ea ea | or noticed it too late to stop Is not ens Gy Riaoonde. ue known. The car struck the obstruc- Rasinetie | {enn annie Broom, 11 tion and upset, RACK rhe ‘Bongrite Hendiceo: Mrs, Redfern was thrown clear and escaped with slight bruises and slight | cuts, Her husband was caught under *| the machine, Automobilists came up, t| released Redfern and sent in a hurry | | call to the hospital. Dr. Frank, who| si responded, said Redfern had a com- pound fracture of the skull and would die. ier aleonon J Ne aba“ Robert “Oliver, 180: ylbvay _ poevadber ee and up- (lamp) ie vieldian mie mip.) aie ‘tims’ Kruter, Tidy Pieeb Bal took on welght he quit the tur, iH 4 pixty yard, —Tymp Dagan, genuine is sold only in these small | jf°cncexphrt-chautfeur and propri ety 3° TY bottles packed in a little wooden case, Fe erat Glooaay ienu He ts thirty-nine yea: ita Its Bppealing excellence ts the chin - applied to finest, most vigorous and result of the master-to brewing § science th healthful cereals and hops. \ Bottled ai the ISER-BUSCH On Sale Everywhere. Families sup- plied by Grocers and Retailers, ANHEUSER-BUSCH AGENCY Dealers New York, N. Y, A. BUSCH BOTTLING CO, Dealera Brooklyn, N. ¥, Be two wigts ivan _ 138. Of That This Woman Worker Among Prisoners Is Certain, for Her Lovo for the Man Is No Ephemeral Thing but Born of Mental Sympathy and Not Through Physical Attraction —Strange Story of a Strange Courtship. When I opened the door of the writing @ love letter. It is hard to interrupt e woman forgery in the After Mrs. Ford and influence of Emporia Gazette, attempt. POSITIV! “If nothing happens to change my mind and Mr, Salisbury’s mind we shall be married just the same,” sald the little lady with the soft gray eyes and the firm jaw which was given her so she might be able to obtain what the saft eyes should shine upon, “That was not what I thought when I came back. Judge Kimball, the Kansas Judge who had sentenced Mr, Salisbury, told me I should think of my little boy and that there were plenty of good men who wanted to marry sympathetic women like me. ‘But, Judge,’ I answered, ‘those men don't need me. Mr. Salisbury needs me. And a woman loves most tho man who needs her most.’ But I thought about my little boy, and when people told me I was injuring his future I decided to give up the thought of marrying. And I went to the prison and told Mr. Salisbury that we must forget each other, that I would keep up my efforts to obtain his release, but that he must marry one of the rich women who are in- terested in him. sor Mr. Salisbury ts @ very unusual man, a scholar speak- ing ten languages, and he can write a letter that would separate your soul ‘trom your body, he 1s so eloquent.” “How old is your little boy?" I asked the energetic young business woman whose eyes had grown softly bright when she spoke of her little son: “He is four and the finest, mos: splendid little fellow in the world,” the mother answered. “His name 1s Charles, and when I write to Mr, Sal- isbury he always says, ‘Give my love | to my new daddy.’ When I was per- | suaded that my child's future would be damaged by marriage to a man who had been in prison, I was will- ing to give up my personal happiness, but now I know that if I can influ- ence Mr, Salisbury to be the man I KNOW he bas the power to ve, his influence on my little son will be for good, and if not, why, I can tako Charles and go away in time. THE PLAIN STORY OF A STRANGE COURTSHIP. “Can you explain how you hap | pened to fall in, love with a man you j bad ne’ I asked this mati | | ‘KIDNEY AND BLADDER PAINS | ‘There's no use suffering those awfu Gistressing pains due to clogged-up Dolsoned kidneys and diseased urinary tracts, Wrenching rheumatic pains, lum lead. Beware of < OLD you aes Memb dy, a | 80 pleasingly occupied, bat I did it, and Mrs, Alma Goldsier Ford proved instantly that she | {)" is the philosopher she claims to be by admitting that she was the person I sought—the New York woman who went to Kansas to marry a man she had never seen, Winston Salisbury, now serving a sentence for rp State penitentiary at Lansing, Kan. Come reached Kansas she asked the Gov- ernor of the State to pardon Salisbury, so that she might become his wife, and si enlisted the sympathy Wiliam Allen White, editor of the » and of other Kansas editors in her When she returned to New York recently friends declared that,| appalled by revelations made to her in Kansas which related to Salisbury’s i Claiming: three-year-olds | P@8t, she had given him up. But she denied this with vehemence and fire yesterday, and. proclaimed to me her unalterat#e intention to marry the || man whom she came to know through her womanly interest in a prison w work, SHE'LL BE MRS. SALISBURY, OF % " tat, forthright heroine of romance, “why, that is the best way to.fall! in love,” she anawered frankly. “Then | you know the feeling you have for each other is based on real mental attraction and not an ephemeral | young and foolish together with a lot of false glamour. I hate Jove storie: you know; never read cause the thin, unsteady. came to love each other through mental sympathy. I wrote him first because while in prison he had founded a society for placing ex- convicts, called the Humanitarians, which had become famous through- out the country, I wanted to find a position for @ released prisoner and wrote to him. “He answered, and a correspond- except when I was in Ka: I have written five or aix single type- written pages to Mr Salisbury every about prisoners, and then one day Mr, Salisbury wrote that he exper'enced a strange mental sympathy for me which he had never felt before in his life “Maybe that was just a. pose, cause all men pose a little bit, I and only young girls believe’ & thing they say. be- ‘ind, ery: | If a man tells me he; I know that he HA® loved before, q phic office whieh Mrs, Alma | < Goldater Ford maintains in Room 1610 of the St. Paul Building I came upon & plump, attractive woman with soft brown hair who was engaged in physical sympathy which draws the | % | ortetk Wewern 118% ence began. For the last five months, | 27m day: ™ “At first we Just exchanged tdeas| | has never loved before I just laugh, |W the conversat! bim to get the Governor t ry. A * Just Line the are everything he ie low and obpesne. — ve nt all Of whee appro ‘We are havin; wrote a wonderful i it he has been replied, “but haa come, so if The thing about it, will But of course I shall there for? Oh, ‘Mr, Salisbury are tia What he did was to tion notes. bd tell me of bust- But he got caught, saying, Mra, Alma Gold; med her in ed prisoner in CLOSING QUOTATIONS. ‘With net changes from previous closing, nt . Lew, ah is nl - mt % By f i ih ge = off ee “ut Bt q -%* FY e) $h % : ie : son i i 4% We Wisiivordti BS a A 1 in” 1a im wal fmm hy AEE Montana Tower Co a Yerety Conenildated 2 10 ag Blige: Goat" Gor ct. $24 Pullsen, Pejace Cae a Ray Con, Heading |. Rep, Steet’. 22.) Singlalr O11 fi ie Readonrd Al Line.’ 14% Seab'd Air ee mt, on Blom Sheffield ou mY MW Ar Witive Overiand ¢ he js & man, It's perfectly natura | that he ehould, “Well, after a time, 1 found 1 was making ¢xcuses to write letters to others, and after that we always of them @s Interesting Ladies, you know, A VALENTINE AND SOME AR. DENT LOVE LETTERS. “Then one day Mr. Salisbury was taken with a keeper or an assistant warden to Leavenworth and he bouglit me; one of them was a and underneath was @ verse. The last line was, ‘I wish your heart were mine.’ and Mr, Salisbury had run a pen | through the word heart and written ig red hear over it ‘friendship,’ "Then. the back, he w to } leave it as it was, but I did not dare, And in my letter I asked him why he had crossed tt out. Then he wrote saying he had not the right to ask a woman to marry him or to wait for him indefinitely and to accept dis. grace And { replied saying that a man would Wait through years for » man she loved; that waiting didn't matter, Then T went to Kansas And a rude shock met moe when 1 got to the prigom, You see Mr. Salis bury and I had Corresponded secretly urinary tracts are quickly cured by GOLD | Kiven Copies of the letter to the War MEDAL Haarlem OU Capsules, If used|den, When T got to the penitentiary every day thts favorite old remedy will) t ant Warden told me about it ward off the danger due to the itty the letters we had written pemanese R, and "A ae | ered were disgraceful; that | Four liver stomech, Kidneye and bladder. | bublia tem now, b it killa and drives them out without dis- | mo OVeH i. 30) BION \ comfor pajn Now thene letters wore ardent n> Pain iilen eidthat ence One ta: | Mrs. Ford sald with a Uttle viet your dealer supplying ou with | mil GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules, It} u Mr, Salisbury and I. nave a 8 wand ui | boo been married before and we pene , Hol. | about certain aspects of marri amly a8 YoU might write about ew hat, Ob that Kansas Warden wes \orrivly shocked, Dhey.are very Kansas, and then in Mr. Salisbury’s | letters ‘he referred to other women, So I wrote to him that a man as re markable as he is must correspond with @ lot of interesting ladies, And} he wrote back that he did correspond a lot of valentines and sent them to| pe fidential), will be opened, read and answered inch ston total ‘317.100 BOTH MOTHER AND DAUGHTER ‘Decorate Your Windows {Relieved From Pain and Soteiee by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. r three or four years I gaftered | @ great deal of pain periodically would have to lie down. My bac would ache and 1 would feel very | weak and mise able 1 rem bered how my mother had found relicf from pain by using Lydia ©. Pinkham's table Compound and I decided to try it, and thanks to the Compound it helped me just as it did my mother, and I am free fron backache and that prem weakness that was so hard to bear. I am able to do my work dur- ing such times and am recommending Lydia FE, Pinkham’s Vegetable Com iq Pound to my friends who suffer as T did.”—-Miss Meta Tiedemann, 1623 Jefferson Ave. Brooklyn, N. Y To know whether Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound will help you, just try it, For advice write to Lydia E, Pinkham Medicine Co. (con- Lynn, Mass. Your big ef by| @ woman, and held in strict confir | dence.—Adyt, The thin for YOU to do ito IRL. One way is to be EFFICIENT Sicha 4 expenses. Buy OUALITY ONL at the Towent peive. ~ 4 Pe on IT Fo mpm an ce Q ove Tar ana Ts Stare MORE iNT otto rome, liane, BARING « moment of A Depositor's Account (D, cy s check on the home account. S wim ana eS i Ds Ac ters cho AKCGaDeA Ob ebuliei al the minimum of risk and waste. yas pies pp or a money in the D. A. and it WILL quarterly) maki irk REST (computed e i pe ghep aia + in Teer haan RH Macy LC Depositers’ Account Department Hersld Square PRIVATE BANKERS © NewYork uthorized ind under the supervision the Suportetntont Desking of the Bhemr of Wow Verh i Beya—main Floor Balcony, 34th St. v UNITED CIGAR STORES Vege: | Next Week With the Large Color Sheet in : To-Morrow’s Sunday World ‘Easily Detached To Be Displayed SSS Photographic Portraits of JOFFRE and BALFOUR FLAGS IN COLOR Order Your Sunday World To-Day

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