The evening world. Newspaper, June 7, 1917, Page 12

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aie TOGETUPR, WOULD FIND OUT. (From the Toronto Mobs.) A ery demure looking MOTHER DOUBTS | VArmy inssie who was travelling in a) teeter train was asked by @ man sit pting next her whether she believe: ai word in the Bible. ; Fee," she replied. "I do ” answered, “and when I'll ask him about it.” je he's not te Heaven? with Shen you ask mimi was the salva tion Army girl's reply. STOMACH wl that Jona, hes iwallowed | ~TARENTO| FORE = “THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, Onn | 1911 " \I Believe ‘She Is f Is Dead, He Answer to Cocchi’s State- ment in ent in Italy. Almost every day, if you are trou bled with your stomach in any way, somebody tells you of a new that will “positively cure you people tell you to take pepsin, ¢ er tell you to take bismuth, still others) 12 last and was never seen again by say there is nothing like pancreatin- while hundreds of people tell you te take bicarbonate of soda. ‘These are all very good remedies, | “ but no one of these ingredients is| ppers had taken Ruth out of this enough to correct your stomach trou- | © ble. It is almost necessary that al of them be used in some proportior or other to quickly relieve you of whatever is wrong with your diges- tive machinery. In gastro-pepsin tab these ingredients is perfectly com- medy |® pair of skates at the machine she e|of Alfredo Cocchi in West One Hu ont Avenue, mother of eighteen year-old Ruth Cruger, who called te *| dred and Twenty-seventh Street Fe! | any one who knew her, said to-da |ahe had no faith in @ statement at tributed to Cocchi in Italy that kid intry 1 n | tectives had questioned him conc ng Ruth Cruger’s call at hi | Was quoted as saying he knew 1 Jets, each of | D6 of the girl except that he had ‘Majo heard from others she had been take: bined in exactly the right proporition | to Europe. to do you the most good, Go to your druggist to-day and ask for a 25¢ or Cruger, whose robust health has en- 50c box.—Advt. pmect Panty MANUFACTURERS | taken out of this country. LESALE PRICES, Bie Reductions, One Week Only, UST PROOF SLIP COVERS | cas MADE TO ORDER! more convinced that the mystery Paclatin “ivnm 20 yards allowed Soeater i i rs be solved until Cocchi was brought! Lioy = 10 here and made to tell the truth. | ker. ary Write or phone Cheisen’ $457" and man will call with samples. U. S. UPHOLSTERY CO., 242 SIXTH AYV.. Near 16th St. tirely broken since her daughter dis | appeared, “I do not believe ahe wa talk about it, You must see our law | yer, Mrs, Grace Humiston,” Mrs. Humiston said she was all the the girl's disappearance would neve | There is as yet no explanation, sh | potnted out, ax to how Coccht got xechl, Who disappeared after de “L believe Ruth t# dead,” eaid Mra. 1 canno! fimows to have had only $15 when he! disappeared. Mra Samuel Untermyer was now asso 4 with he as couns Humiston said ff se rt tal ne ities le poking to firs. chi has chan) about prosecuting her “iamane” te ing Ner. eard from him once,” she | sata “Me te pid me he was living with maid nothing about that girl. I shalt | be glad if they bring him back. It is T\itke him to run away and leave me He did it before while we were be- trothed and left me in Italy, Then were married. 1 hear also from my sister who is visited by Alfredo every week He tells my sister many ties. He told her he sold his machine shop | He did not sell the shop. I had but $15 to pay_a bill which he did not pay , |\WALDO LOSES Wi WILL CONTEST, | Rhinelander Clause) 9600,000 in Trnst. of Justice Newburger in murt to-day the will ot e. Rhinelander will made It. The Court y stand Just an he the seventh clause of the will eft $600,000 in trust for oh r Waldo, # valid Walto held the $600,000 was not left individually and wholly to tho trustees, B. Aymar Sands, deceaned, and Leroy Elgar, and that he, as sole sure clr was entitled to the residuary its income, The decision, it is r “, will 4 |pealed fromm t| former Police Com n be immediately ap: arenes Cane Made in Sanbary, Pa. SUNBURY, Pa., June 7.—Three men man are under arrest here fon with the search for © who kidnapped the chil Keets, Springfield, Mo., t They are John Ambras, Joveph and a Para, Barney Basa and Maggie Am- bras. They were taken into custody at the request of Wilkesbarre police 6 | money enough to go abroad. He is/as they stepped from a train here. W. L. “DOUGLAS retail prices are “THE SHOE THAT HOLDS ITS SHAPE” $3.00 $3.50 $4.00 $4.50 $5.00 $6.00 ¥7.00 $8.00 | by Wearing W. L. Douglas Shoes. The best Known Shoes in the World. ¢ ‘You can Save Money . L. Douglas mame and the retail samped onthe bso of ail ahora at the factory. value is guaranteed and the wearer | | protected against high prices for inferior shoes. The the same everywhere. They cost no | more in San Francisco than they do in New York. They are always worth the price paid for them. ice is 2 / Tose ti or .L.Douglas [steep cays supervision of experienced men, all working with an honest determination to make the best shoes for the price that money can buy. For sale by over 9000 shoe dealers and 103 W. L. Douglas stores in the la at W. L. Douglas learned how to de- sign, draft and fit shoes, alsogained valuable retail shoe store experi- ence in Golden City,Colo, . 93 Nassan Street. corner Ath St, s o #2202 Third Av., cor, 120th St, Store Write for booklet, howing how to Vb Goreglad rder shoes by mail, President W.L.Dougias Shor Co, postage free. 210 spark St. Brockton, Mass. JW. L. Douglas Stores in Greater New York: *2779 Third Av.. bet. 146th & Sta. B47 Eighth Avenua” “ee 250 West 125th Street. BROOKLYN 708-710 Broadway, *1367 Broadway, cor. *478 Fifth Avenue, cor. 11th Street. © cities. If not convenient to call + L. Douglas store, ask your local dealer for W. L. Douglas shoes, If he cannot supply you, take no other make, BOYS SHOES Best in the World $3.00 $2.50 $2.00 BEWARE OF FRAUD None genuine unless W. L. Douglas name and the retail price is Stamped on the bottom TAKE NOSUBSTITUTE *S59 Manhattan Avenue, 1779 Pitkin Avenue, JERSEY CITY—18 Nowark Avenue. *HOBOKEN—120 Washington St, *UNION HILL--276 Bergenline Ave, EWARK -- 831 Broad Street. TRENTON-101 K. State St., cor, Broad ed with a * carry complete lines of W. L. Douglas Shoes for Women. 219, 221, 228, 225, 227 Grand Street No Deposit, 50c Weekly Opens a New Clothing Ace Bring This Advertisement With Discount Off Your Credit Purch Fine Dressers INT 50c Weekly Mplendid sto Dresse: Oe Our stock of ¢ ay 14. 98 tiful patterns; Cor. Driggs Ave BROOK The Best and Largest Line of BABY CARRIAGES more complete; Enamel and natural finish OPEN MONDAY AND SATURDAY E' 164, 166, 168 and 170 Smith Street KLYN Cor, Wyckoff Bt. GOODS DELIVERED ANYWHERE IN GREATER NEW YORK | $125 Worth of Furniture | No Deposit—-$1 Weekiy You and Get Your TEN Per Cent. hase When Opening a New Account Rockers ‘ount Me CITY WEEKLY arriages was never some very beau- all well made Sunday World Edition Limited to Demand Readers of The Sunday World are requested to place their order in ad- vance with dealer, their news- This is the only way to be sure of getting a regularly, as The Sunday World is sold out || early. || age of news-print paper copy Owing to a short- the newsdealers’ orders are || limited to actual sales, he sent for me to follow him and we/ Four Arrests in Keets Kidnapping | |to World Readers! | hia father and brother in Bologna. He | n he came to me and took | 2 Prisoner in Keet Baby ¢ volved in Abductions Planned by Kaiser’s Agents. |for much money and left me $5,000. | = SPRINGE baby and a St. Lois munitions maker | established ance seemingly is as far from a@ solu- sipimsanis drove an automobile many miles over | others, vase relies Hill roads, following instruc- }to return home disappointed. arrest last night of George Walker, a| outing At taxicab driver, one of {he seven in! written cc AUTOMOBILES. | Where Do -You Give Your Trade— "Aeven persona Under atest in Gin-|eustody, that (t was thought the Hak | the ebme’ gor detatied by Piers ben acne know whet t wth? nection with eileged plots to kidnap C.| connecting the Clement plot and the Pring ag a Wn aah he Taras the child's father, A. Clement, a Springfield jeweller; a|Keet baby kidnapping soon would be | Prose! mae winter by le! Walker had made sev- to-day still maintained their innocence | eral visits to Police Headquarters | terious of any connection with the disap-|and each time inquired about the} pearance of fourteen - month - old| Keet case. He was implicated in the] eoi4 Ga Lloyd Keet, son of J. H. Keet, wealthy | Clement plot in the signed confession | Cjement pr Poy: banker of Springfleld. Missing |of Claude Plersol, twenty-one years! « r E r ft urround oid’: .| To-day it was said that three of the| might be don to do jobs in that surrounds the child disappear: | Srisoners taken in connection with the da, Mexico or anywhere in the various plots still remained in jatl tion as it was on the night his father| here, while the whereabouts of four one a Woman, supposed to have been apirited away by the au thorities under fear of violence by tions of the supposed kidnappers, only | citizens of Springfield, was unknown With Piersol and Walker here re- | City detectives announced, with the|Mained Taylor Adams, who, accord- agents In the interest of kidnapping « | hoping, St. Louis munitions maker. “Riley,” at wh eeting was held, A mys- h 1 a to $500 for my part o I was t that we Act on States that the German ag "are passages from Piersc nfession as announced by cutor O'Day. While efforts of the authorities far apparently have falled to estab- lish any connection between the AUTOMOBILES. to the Back Number Storekeeper or the Modern Merchant? T TAKES business knowledge to run a home these days. The housewife has to make every penny of her allowance count. She hasn't much patience with Jast- century business methods, which keep her from getting the greatest possible value for her money—busi- ness methods which increase the cost of a bag of flour by six or eight per cent, for instance. According to the United States Bureau of Census, that is just what inefficient delivery methods alone are doing. It costs some storekeepers eight or ten per cent to send your goods home, while others are doing it for only two or three per cent! You pay in either case. Who gets your trade—the back number storekeeper or the modern merchant? And how do you recognize a modern merchant? By the quality of his goods, by his prices and by his service —eco- nomical service! The service which sends home your morning’s shopping by old- fashioned horse delivery is costly. The horse and wagon limits a storekeeper’s volume. He can't cover enough customers to keep down the cost per delivery—a few people must stand his whole deliv- ery expense. The service which tries to deliver your goods with a converted pleasure car moter “truck” is costly and—undependable. A pleasure car isn’t built to jounce over all kinds of roads with a dead load of eight hun- dred or a thousand pounds. So it makes fre- quent trips to the repair shop, where it runs up big bills. And in the long run you pay those bills. The economical, dependable service is the service which shoots orders to your door ina classy, sturdy delivery car, built for merchan- dise delivery only. It is VIM Delivery Car service—20th century service—and by it you will recognize the modern merchant. The VIM Delivery Car is the only delivery unit built solely to meet merchandise de- livery requirements. It is designed with a thorough knowledge of a hundred different lines of business. Easy on tires, economical in gas consump- tion, cheaper to operate than a horse and wagon, and without a pleasure car part in its whole sturdy make-up—that’s the VIM Delivery Car. And it is the easiest delivery unit on the market to buy—through the VIM Deferred Payment Plan. Thoroughly equipped VIM Sales and Ser- vice Station here for the benefit of VIM owners. Full information on request. MANHATTAN MOTORS CORPORATION 56th Street at Broadway, New York The shane 6 sells for $665. Com- lete with O; pen 7 Express body, 715; with Cl fanel_ body, $745. Ten = wep ite veh types of body. All prices F. O. B, Philadelphia. DELIVERY | ithe Liver and Bowels ONE PILL OR MORE EACA NIGHT arrests and the Riepaoolng of the ing to Paul M. O'Day, County Prose- bi Mrs. K | Make You Fea Sos A a

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