The evening world. Newspaper, June 9, 1917, Page 6

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} en ( { ' { and He'll Go Through With It. Following the exclusive story in The Brening World widespread interest has ‘been aroused over the offer of Health Inspector Frank McGinty of Hoboken to virtually raffle himself in the mat- rimonial market for the henefit of the ampaign to provide camp comforts! for the New Jersey soldiers. Ordinarily the campaign was to have been brought to a close to-day, but, at & meeting held last night it was deride to continue for at least another” four | Weeks, in order to give McGinty the best possible show for his imoney—or rather, his prospective bride's money, McGinty is serious regarding his of- fer, and swears he will carry it through to the end. Here are his own views as expressed this morning to an Kve- ning World reporter: “Tam a bachelor and have a reputa- tion for amiability of temperament. I am also @ young man, although too old to come within the requirements of the registration law. I feel, however, that this is a time when every one should do his and her bit to help. In helping the soldiers of New Jersey to get some comfort out of life and thus make bet- ter fighters of them ts, in my opinion, doing good work. “So far the campaign for comfort | . kits has netted about $4,000. It is being conducted throughout Hoboken, North Hudson and East Bergen, and I 4 REST ATH No Age or Nationality Is Barred) ever, that all of the mon vent to the Camp ¢ made out to Treasurer H Lange, at th Street, Hoboken. 1 want to boost the fund, and I want to have the money actually contributed, not promised. eid, “and [am al THE CAPITAL PRIZE IN HOBOKEN’S LIBERTY BOND RAFFLE FOR A HUSBAND | } fea his way as any other. “I want it to be understood, how- must be omforts Fund, man ©, man Club, Hudson Ge “Whatever is given ix given to stay. The lady who sends in the largest amount has the oj for bett look of me when s, or nationality barred.” jon of taking me . if she likes the es me. No age r wo} McGinty this morning received a number of offers by mall. One of these is from a girl in Philad but McGinty refused to allow her name to be mentioned. She wrote saying that she had « ment in the paper and that she feit he was a man after her own heart. iphia, the state- “Lam twenty-eight years old,” sho » of a genial tem- believe that a great deal more should) perament. I am sure that we would haye been contributed. That 1 the| be able to get on with a 1 80 patriotic as you are. I Me a check for $500 for the camp | mforts fund.” reagon that | am making this offer. My offer is not confined to the ter- ritory covered by the campaign com- mittee. It is extended to ¢ and city in the Union. Whoever con- fund may, if she wants, have a mort- | kage on me for the rest of my life.” “Do you realize that this is a seri | ou proposition?” queried the re- porte: “Lam g ever it ds, \satisfied that it is good work, and I figure 1 have a good chance of find- | ing a good wife into the bargain.” “It may be,” said the reporter, “that some elderly spinster may grad off the prize.” “There are many cases where the eiderly ones are a darn sight better than some of the you ones,” re- plied McGinty, with a philosophical twinkle in his eyes. t's taking a long chance," put ia the reporter. “Anyone who gets married is doing that,” said McGinty. “I know what T am doing and I am going through with it. I want to settle down and NOTICE TO SICK WOMEN Positive Proof That Lydia E. Pinkhan?’s Vegetable Compound Relieves Suffering. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound for inflammation and other weak- | nesses. I was very | irregular and would have ter take a step, Some: times I would be) so miserable that I could not sweep | a room, T doc-| tored part of the time, but felt no change. 1 later took Lydia FE. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound and soon | felt a change for the better, I too it until T was in good healthy cond edies to all women, as 1 have them with such good results.”-—Mrs, Milford T, Cummings, 822 Harmony St, Penn's Grove, N. J Such testimony should be ac by all women as convincing evidence | of the e: lence of Lydia Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compe women, such as displacements, in flammation, ulceration, — backache, painful periods, nervousness and kin dred ailments.—Advt State | *4!d MoGinty, with a bi, eye’ | adds that she Is going to cor looking, and is, as he admits himself renow He is thirty years old, is clean shaven, has dark eyes and dark curly hair, Ho has @ set of teeth that an Adoni might envy. He is upstanding and was the reply, “IL am/| muscular, and, so far as is known, has no bad habits, g through with it what- | Street, had just Jame | Ritz-Carlton, that something was going on down the avenue, Coyne “Le ot speak too highly of Lydia} © cars raced down the street and turned west on Forty-third Street, past the Biltmore, Coyne leaning from the running board and firing at the machine ahead, by ph Pispeino of No, 2 ble pains, so that 1 could hardly man had disappeared | ree tion, T recommend the Pinkham rem- Hiswell four used w Til epted cel nd as al remedy for the distressing ills of O'Reilly 2 Aly. ds krantod a recommendation for a Ivoree from his wife, Dorothy Russe 1O'Reilly, daughter of Lita ites acts to the Common Pleas Court to-day. who is am inelos- “That is the way to do the thing,” down ‘@ to see me in a day or so. I guess Wibutes the largest amount to the I'd better get out and have a shave." McGinty is of medium height, good ed for his genial disposition. He has a steady position as Chief Sanitary Inspector of the City of Ho- boken, is an American born and bred and ta thoroughly democratic in his | ideals and opinions. His home ad dress is No. 606 Hudson Street, Ho- boken. TAXIGAB SMASH ENDS CHASE OF HOLD-UP MAN Thief Escapes When Pursuer and Third car Collide on Fifth Avenue. A tipsy man, wearing a high hat, stood at Madison Avenue and Forty- fifth Str | shouted “Phief! Thiet!” et early this morning and Policeman Coyne at Forty-seventh n Upped off by Halsey, night engineer at the n down just in time the hold- up man jump to the running-board of & swiftly moving taxicab, Coyne commandeered a machine riven by Albert Wagner of No, 335 st Fiftieth Btreet, and the two At Fifth Avenue a taxicab driven 8 First Avenue, north, collided vio- lently with Coyne's Both chines w wrecked, and Coyne Pispetn. ; we |tended at the station house and Coyne was sent home, the time reinforcements reached ene of the hold-up the tUpsy ——_—— Vender In Acquitted of Mur- der of After twenty-six h ary iberation a Court Justice a verdict of not guilty Las ial of Giuseppe *Matto- ender, Who Was charged ‘of eleven-year-old The child was found Brown, strangled to death in a Monroe Street r Oct. 10, ‘The first trial of Matio= ended In @ disagreement, > Divorces Dorothy Ru PITTSBURGH, June 9, of « wealthy Pittsburgh fa, in a Master's rep submitted HEALTH INSURANCE Your health depends upon clean and Sanitary sur- roundings in your home. A disinfectant is absolutely necessary to protect the health of yourself and those near and dear to you. is the safest, most effective and most economical d Kills germs and destroys odors much quicker than carbolic acid. Uncle Sam Endors infectant on the market. uses it in the Army Camps d by leading health authorities. Sprinkle daily in garbage can, sink, toilet bowl, etc. At all good grocers and druggists Refuse su itutes which may he stale and worthless, DISINFECT NOW! | the | Jeet \« | plicant i# Frank L. Waterman, of jeight 1 married and I might as well do Scouts, Preceding the ral be a parade of 1,500 scouts down Fifth Avenue from Fiftt: the wooden battl will be revi civillans, odward J Russell, the | mittee will inform hin \« ‘omptrol accedes to the appeal, and that thie wd add great strength fto such a ticket The plan thus to put the matter TOO BIG T0 FIGHT VIRGINIAN OF 25 ~ POUNDS REJECTED | \ |Drive Begun for 4,637 Men Still Needed for N. Y. State’s Quota in Regular Army. The first man, so far as records tn for military service on the ground of being too big, was turned down to-day by Major Frank F. Evans, in command of the Marine rps Recrulting. The rejected ap- Petersburg, Va., who stands six feet, hes, Is twenty-three years old and weighs 260 pounds, Another interesting Marine Corps applicant, who was accepted, was Jamea L. Frank, of No, 2341 Bergen- | line Avenue, Jersey City. . Frank fought in the British trenches after his first discharge from the Marines, ; He was invalided home from France after being wounded in the leg and has recovered Major Evans announced that he in organizing a Ubrary for the re- | cruits at Port Royal, 8. C., and the new cantonments at Quantice, Va, ! Books and magazines should be sént to No, % Kast Twenty-third Street. pecially welcome will be French dictionaries, grammars and fiction, A drive began to-day for the 4,637 men still needed to make up New York's regular army quota, which the War Department hopes to have by June 80, The district includes Long Island and Hudson County, N. J. To get the men there must be a dally average of 232, excluding Sundays, ‘Thirteen bo: races, will speak this afternoon from the deck ¢ Union Square at a rally for navy and peruits, conducted by the » Junior Naval and Marine marin Amert ninth Street to hip, The parade Ldeut, Commander Taylor expects that within the next ten weeks the navy's full quota of 164,759 men will be obtained, The figure reached 112,000. now a CATHEDRAL WEDDING | FOR MISS MULQUEEN Granddaughter of Former M: Gilroy Married at Noon to John S. Reilly. satel Mr. and Mrs, Mic el J. Mulqueen of No, 48 West Eighty-fifth Street, ant granddaughter of form James Halpin Relily of Brockton, | oid Nicholas Janitor counted his vote | unter was held in $500 bal eee | crime," said Dr, Quoen, “Everything Mass. | twi He figured that repeating was|sault and in $200 for huving impro also points to the fact that the author r id t = RDO Sr re ave been insar The ceremony was performed by| no crime when a bird was voting for | Pictures of the crime must have been insa’ the Right Revs Patrick J. Hayes, Auxillary Bishop of New York, and the nuptial mass was celobrated t the Right Rev. Mgr. Michael J. Lavelle, rector of the Cathedral, The maid of honor was Miss Made- laine Mulqueen, a sister of the bride, and the best men were Bernard and James A, Reilly, brothers of ti bridegroom, The attendants of th were; Miss Ellen Reilly, a sts- ter of the bridegroom; Miss Dorothy Miss » Schickel, Miss Helen Rand, vthegme Agnew, Misy Gera dine Nelson €nd Mrs, James Butler procession, The ush were ther of the bric ilroy Mulqueen, Harry Legor Pumpelly, Edwin Slocu Thompson, Dudley Kog Boyle, Gerald Griffin, ler, Thomas Corr James Ry James J. Newman. After the ceremony there was a rv tion at the home of the bride's parents FORMAL GALL TO CROPSEY TO RUN FOR MAYORALTY Committee of Republicans to Call on Judge—Manhattan Man Is Suggested for Comptroller orman . Daniel A. iward W, But- nd jr. and A personal appeal to Supreme Court ce James C. Cropsey, of Brook lyn, to consent to having his name placed on the Republican primary ballet as candidate for Mayor was ar nged to-day by a co) e6 of Re publican leaders. They planned to call om ‘Justice Cropsey either late this Jafternoon or this evening and formally ask that he run To strengthen the reque nent Republican of Mant, consented to become a candidate for rin case Justice Cr psey Republican w up to Justice Cropsey has been afoot my several days. Justice Cropsey himself had not been consulted in the uatter, Eve: his name was mentioned in connection with the Mayoralty nomination, Judge Cropscy has declined to talk ‘px wa The arguments advance to Justic ‘Opaey include one that Mayor Mitchel is not anx ous for a renoming pnitigd sUeNMLL enters the primaries tles tn any stern District show, to be re-| sions on every sale in his domain. —A Budap ma. . representing as many | Jelutched a fee on the upholstering.|4¢r tho leadership of Count Julius|to the U, 8. 8. Recruit in| y there will| the moving men come across, His| his power Count Tiss ery, A ja money from a turnip, ‘The perquisites | Es and emolur ime were many and varied. wed by officers and | share of all the gate receipts, But he Detectives, Taken to Ofiice, ¢ Mount Pleasant—who are searching was honest. He didn't believe in| giving bribes. But taking ‘em was a mustang of a di Any firm that wanted to introduce 4/ with her aunt at No. 419 West Seven-|Nayworen, a Lithuanian farmhand, debutante brand of coal or biscuits |icenth Street, yor | | month It by a Mulqueen, daughter of | Mayor Thomas F, Gilroy, was married at} noon to-day at St. Patrick's Cathedral meant the janitor had blinders on too.| were close by. They and Miss Davis to John §, Reilly, son of Mr. and Mrs, | sheared him closer than a whale is/and his sist jertrude Nelson, Miss Carr Mulqueen and his cousin, Frances Mahar, were also in the bridal rescott Bush, John Gibb, Harotd Paris 2d, stuck out so long that began to Holtz, who asked the police to suspect that the palm was our na- ut a’ confidential alarm tonal tree, Now they can hold out Mr, Holts is publisher of the auto their mitt until it gets sunburned and mobile Blue Book and has a New committee wilt on and will not rum nvenie w RLD, satenek , JUNE 9 ay Oh CATHEDRAL WEDDING FOR GRANDDAUGHTER OF A FORMER MAYOR NO HEAT FOR THE JANITOR The Hairless Mexican Dog Doesn’t Consider Himself Par- ticularly Dishabille When He Gets a Peep at the New York Janitor, for Whom the State Legislature Cooked Up a Bill Last Month That Scissors All the Velvet From His Hide—“No Janitor Is Now Allowed to Ab- sorb a Rake-Off From Any Firm Selling Merchandise | to the Victims in the Apartment House Where He Happens to Be Jailer. By Arthur (‘‘Bugs’’) Baer. Copy 1917, by The Breas (Publishing Co, (The New York Bvening World) A Mexican hairiess pup doesn't feel urftisually dishabille, because a Mex whiskerless pup has always been that way, He's acclimated to it. But if those Carranza spaniels had been accustomed to fourstepping around with a nice, robust coat of velvet betwixt them and the wide, wide world they sure would feel negligee if some dog barber clipped ‘em down to the epidermis, Same way with New York's Janitors, The State Legistature eooked up a bill last month that scissors all the velvet from the Janitors’ hides, Up until the time that the Legislature curved this bill ever, a jaintor’s career was all velvet. He snared all the velvet in the tournament, He skimmed all the cream from the chowder, When it came to spooning up| the financial gravy he was always willing to let the other guy have a fork. But this bill kills that deader ae 5 two barrels of salted herring, No 0 ED AS janitor is allowed to absorb rane: | TW NAM HEADING off from any firm selling merchan- dise to the victims in the apartment | house where he happens to be jailer. count Esterhazy | vet a close sh: vet percentages and plush commis-| AMSTERDAM, June 9 (via London).| | t despatch says that King] He stuck a fin In every transaction. | Charles has entrusted the formation| He assessed the ice, levied on the|of a new Cabinet to Count Moritz] milk, fined the sirloins, taxed the pa-| Esterhaay pers, got a bonus on the groceries), ZURICH, June 9.—King Charles has| the bread, inherited a commission on | dertake formation of a new Hun- the biscuits and demanded a ransom|garian Cabinet, according to de.| Victims, Believes Murderer for the coal. He got a kitty on the] spatohes received to-day from Buda-| Feat es azines, horned in on the repairs, | pest Was a Maniac. dragged down a percentum 01 the es | druggist’s accessories, flagged an| Count Moritz Esterhazy is affiliate| Dr, Louls Apgar Queen, of No. 201 honorarium from the florist and|With the Liberal element which, un-| West Seventy-ninth Street, returned ty from Mount The janitor got his bit from the in- | Andrass been generally credited] Pleasant, N. J., where he had been stalment houses and he didn’t get it| With anti-German tendon aiding in the search for the man who in instalments etther; ‘The renting} In an effort to reconcile factional| early yesterday morning murdered | rents had to kick in and he mado] differences which were th: tening| his brother, William H. Queen, and | offered a seat] the latter's wife and daughter, with | Esterhazy an axe and set fire to the house and Dr, Queen is confident the sheriff's men, police, farmers and National /GIRL ACCUSES *N “MOVIE AGENT.’|Guardsmen—the latter have been | guarding the railroad property near yh n the Cabinet to alm was always deco d for knav- Th ast month. ‘The pr could squeeze blood) after a conference rhazy and 4 nts of the janitorial ri Old Nicholas Janitor conscripted a ' ed Ay Miss Cora Davis, who ca: » Kentuc Jeuger to be an a the vicinity will soon capture the man suspected of the crime. The searchers are looking for Car) here iree. months ago erent complexion, hein and who live read an advertisement | formerly employed on the Queen into a new apartment house had to| for dirls for moving picture busi-| place, who had been recommended to be first ui d into the janitor’s| ne She called at the office of|the murdered man by the latter's august presence, No matter what]Arthur Hunter, No, 1547 Broadway,|prother, former Poll’e Judge John his presence was al- the Gaiety Theatre Building. On his| Wahl Queen of Jersey City, who took ways august, And getting anything 490r {8 lettered “Moving Picture | pity on Nayworen after he had been nitor was just as easy as sell- Maes Pie Beet tos chowea | *trested tn Jersey City, charged with ing wagons in Venice, You had to}, ‘prope oT ASTRAL np ha Na carrying a concealed weapon, An- the janitor first, You had to see} Sne: tries Janitor, and he’ didn’t want any | near-sighted guys ar If you didn't see t A. Queen of Flemington, N. J., for- merly on the bench of the Court of| on Pleas of Hunterdon County, | verything points to the farm | When it came to electing anybody, | charge that Hunter attacked her, In| hand as the man who committed the | pointment for her to yund, according to 4 Davis, She janitor that|but Detectives Chr all last evening n | Comr > — s brutality and the fact that ¥ & Woman Killed by Gas, Frank Shea of No, 290 5 | Street, Williamsbur by the odor himself, He got all the financial gravy, and when he got through with | the velvet there wasn't enough left over to thread a needle with, But now—but now—that new bill has ning was taken, eliminating rob- * bery as a motiv Nayworen uth Pourta sulien, glowering fellow, who res ed early people looking at him, He had a a 6 Be temper and several of the ‘ pom | warned my ‘other he was taking} chances in having the man around,” The axe with which the erime wi nmitted has not yet been found, A| Mount Pleasant blacksmith equipped | the weapon with a new handle the| fore part of this week, Mrs, Queen ex- that “the farm hand is so| he is continually breaking the | to the ocean. A Mex hairless canine |{) AOE Broroom the Seven Sutherland Sisters injshe had en di comparison with the clipped janitor, , Wind, it 1s thou Under the new law a janitor ain't Poet lowed to even inhale the aroma per- CLOSING QUOTATIONS. centage of a porterhouse cooking. He - isn't allowed to poke his janitorial) !® Ret changes from previous closing, han beak into the dumbwaiter shaft and sniff the soup distilling, He ain't even allowed 10 per cent, of the limburger in transit on the dumbwa hour, A gust blew out the “. BILTMORE BUEST VANISHES AFTER WRITING OF ‘DEVILS’ SD Note Left for Wife by Max Holtz, 4 Chicago Publisher, Hints er, A janitor can’t even listen to the coal being chuted into the coal bou- dolr without getting himself chuted nwo the jailhouse charged with vio- lating the coal-listening act. The new junitors’ suppression law prohibits a rie at Violence. janitor from licking postage stamps | for his tenants on account of th + 12) Tho police are searching the elty nutrition in the mucilage, ‘The Leg x jay for Max Holts, a Chicago pub- islature is determined that a janitor . er, Who left the Hotel Biltmore at shall janit, and nothing else, 3 4 sae He ain't’ allowed to take the apart 14/2 o'clock yesterday afternoon afte nent house caterpillar terriers out ing to his wife a note which led for an ankle excursion, bec would enable Nick Janitor to take the alr. he Legislature is determined that Nicholas Janitor shall take noth- ing. From now on the janitors will b use that » believe he conte uway with himself. Mr. Holtz, who is forty-five years und his wife came to the Biltmor ‘May 10, He had not been well and| aplated doing under the supervision of the A, A. U, had come to New York for rest and] They will be simon-pure amateurs, | 149 to transact some business. Soon} Simon was simple, which is the he left th jay Mrs.| son why an amateur is an amateur il found a rm him whic One more absolute monarchy has ‘ y me mac been wrapped up and put away. It's @ little tough on the janitors, but war is war, They had th us desk w "whieh we Holtz 1 ttorney for 2 und xplain everythi fled Louis 8, Pos r collecting hand all they will get it garnished with will be atmosphe Tough! ueh ffive at No, 239 West Thirty et. He was at his offi TOO WEAK But as ye sow, 80 shail ye reap. A janitor never gave us any heat, Now we shall gee how he likes that fl - KIN SLAIN, GIRL ENDS LIFE. Dora Dubro Polish girl, four Jown-and-out. His weakened con years ago became governess for the Nauue of overwork, hi exer children of Mr. and Mrs. Abraham nproyer eating and living, demands | Metzger, at No, 610 Lexington Avenue, SE ol ey A i HAG tp Brooklyn. he Was happy until she CoE eer icensths GOLD MEDAL | heard from home that all of her th Haarlem Ol Cap fonal Kem brothers had beon drafted into. the ‘ Holand, wil ne Th Russian Army at the outbreak of the |™ ta Bt i ri 1 ’ ps War, She heard of the death of two ft? { sii th gh y Pies wheth : her aunt a fow days ago told of the Eyaey nse 4 \ death of the lust brother, Dora was | Linu | : erase) ' overcome fest ‘ 1m , 4 dren this morning Mr. Metzger went.to {3 4 ! is y her room, There was ho answer to hist ‘ . 1 ly refund. your’ mon knock, He found her bed untouched, Utah’ Conve 1 epg? ant with the aunt's letter lying open.on it é » Searching the house, Mr. Metager§ 4 : ; finally found Dora's» an \h \ ' 1 Lee Ty ro [Ui Capeuled— ad _ ———$—$——————— TT | and Lazarus gave Billy Sunday subject for this afternoon's sermon. | To bring the story nearer home he nd painted picture of the man of wer ing the beggar at his gate and later | surroundings ‘Then he pictured of which the two died. the rich man and the poor man in| the next world, their conditions re- sed, the former suffering eternal torments and the latter crowned with ternal happiness is to be done some- | ve | where, “better beg for NEW HUNGARIAN CABINET rae HUNT oa {Which is certainly handing that vel-| Reports Have ( ave, and Dr, Wekerle.as Prospec- | jthe begga he rich m Heretofore the janitor had heredi- | tive P; Ne | lthe ‘ Pher ‘ tary and feudal rights to all the vel- | ive Premiers, | | single ray of hope about his condition {No friend is near to give him a kind | word or a cup of cold water. |body is racked with pain and there 1s no couch on which to rest bis weary | But his suffering ends at last bread on earth than Mr. Sunday said in part: is the — ot | men ‘See how different ‘hones. |As the morning comes the rich man | blackmailed the delicatessen, pirated | asked Dr, Alexander Wekerle to un-\Dr, Queen, + Belle Of One Of | passes the beggar—cold and stiff [The corpse is taken to the morgue | an enthusiast, because it really docsn’t and is buried in Potter's Ficid. “One day the rich man is brought | freezone has a yellow label. Look for home with a burning fever; s doctors are summoned. fter death there is no uncertain- 8 to what becomes of his body. The rich man’s funeral is a bril- The eloquent Dr, Blank He weeps and y and preaches the dis- ed man into the first seat In | famou quotes poet cont 1 expressions of grief, and his gin to scheme how best to Now what is left in the picture as to conditions after death? man scorching past the suffering beg- give Lim more than a passing glance when he was on earth ‘ow, throughout all eternity he never turn his eyes gar could not conditions bh » rich man is the beg ar, the beg- | e 1s no vindictiveness in desires the salva Tho presence srpetual ‘s0r- | ton of every just as a humane J ; dge Paul| the. attack her. Finally he made an ap- | Other brother ts former Judge Pau | gives ICHRIST Va SNCING “su NDA AY “ON TRIAL” 4 row RPUL VIRST NATIONAL PHOTO ALAY VERSION OF 8 AT FAG Louie da ARIS THEATK, STHE: LAND OF THE RISING SUN” — ~ THE INCOMPARABLE RIALTO ORCHESTRA ~ rath? STE Det selections from “THE Rendering Rimeky an CREA) | mee HERE THAN WATER INHELL, SAYSBILLY Sunday Modernizes Story of) Rich Man and Lazarus in His Sermon. th Treasurer of Assembly District Democratic Clab of Brooklyn, is dead at Np. $43 Mon~ roe Street. Clarence A. Henriques, _ Bri Commissioner under Mayor be dead at No, 22 West Seventieth Street in his seventy-fourth year, He was born in Jamaica, 1s Se wi Edgar Caypless, seventy i | eee Mayor of Honolulu and. poli leat adviser to Queen Lilluokalant, | dead in Denver. ’ Capt. Charles H, Lewis, one of the | most widely known sea captains of | the Atlantic coast, ts dead in Baltt~ more, THE MAGIC FLUID Few drops and corns or calluses loosen and lift off with The world owes thanks to LB genius in Cincinnati who di freezene, the new ether drug. Tiny bottles of the magie fluid can now be had at, any drug store for @ few | cents. You simply apply @ + few drops of this freesone upon a tender, aching cof or a hardened callus. Inq; stantly the soreness disap- pears and shortly you will, find the corn or caiius so loose and shriveled tha€ you lift it off with the fingers. Not a bit of pain or soreness is felt when applying freezone or after- wards, It doesn't even irritate the skin or flesh, For a few cents one can now get’ | rid of every hard corn, soft corn, oF }eorn between the toes, as well as painful calluses on bottom of feets Every one who tries freezone becomes | burt or pain one particle. Genuine yellow label.—Advt. PHOTO PLAYS. LIBERTY fui. “ar SON BROTHERS: cage MIGHTY ~E DRAMA | OW AN'S DEPTHS, Y E WoND! LATEST THRE Sthatal IN ACTUAL OPERATIO: RENEATH THE Free to Children \ perfect feoltca “ot * in use in tren bes given away at ry. Performance + woe OTHER MATS, (ne, Sun.) 25-50, Reserve |Your Beats Now, CRITERION TWICE DAILY, * Last Times To-Day and To-Morrow LAST 2 PERFORMANCES SUNDAY, HIMER ENSTELN'S SUCORSSPUL asunay Company) Sidney Jones. IF YOU HAVEN'T VISITED THE RIALTO ' SEEN NEW YORK, “CHE 13TH LABOR OF HERCULES? SOLOISTSMIALTO- CHOW MR. AND MRS. SIDNEY DREW in “TOOTSIE” GLOBE DAILY BS UNDAY 1308S,50. 5.30. 730.930 TAINED FOR AN tx TENDED RUN AITE RECORD BRIAKING R SUCCESS AT THE BA STRAND THEATRE Starcauitor iand Masia director EXPOSITION, 25-50 I FIGHTING WITH HE ALLIES ON THE BALKAN FRONT THE TANKS "ACTION" FANNIE WARD. HER STRANGE WEDDING*/ PMERY aha wairer Vaucnn TENOR, AOKSA\ Wessitst OnanA) s00e

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