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BAEITUNG EMPLOYEE | ARRESTED AS ENEMY. Federal Officia a Friend’ of Lieut. and Daeche Alfred Pick, believed by the Fed- @ral authorities to have been an in- timate of Lieut. Robert Fay, Paul Daeche, Walter Sc! and Max Biet tung, was arrested by agents of the Department of Justice rday Division Supt. C. F. be W has fcials Believe Pick Is Fay FAT REDUCTION IS NOT SINFUL | Mu owe of Benuty to refine the! ites Unc of hum We tooracy that thie meane ¢ wieed of rule, gomponite of b Thousands of fat wo of face, But they lee fer preferonce—beceuse & too ea the favor thelr tif. y tat women oa (not the good, pur y. No @ te necessary, Let them tak Prescription Tablet after each m Bt Bedtime form month The fat rink ‘ow nore bi oo Marmola Ta EASTER SAL HPL ARE BANOR r fection Bitmond, sie k gold len Drilllant Diamonds. & 81.00 @ Week. ee DEAL murder. ALL, WRITE OR PHONE CORTE AMERICAN WATCH & DI/ wali SN JEWELERS recommended that he be interned for the duration of the war. Fay, Daeche and Scholz are serving prison terms for plotting to blow up munition ships, Breitung is interned Pick has been employed in the office, g, No. 11 Pine of Kaward N. Bre rest, His critic nl vernment attracted attention to him and an investigation followed He {8 forty-two, and Je said to ha hee n in Slavonia and to hemistry in Germany aranemanociinocsinesanaes KING WILL MEANS FOUND I$ PRESSED FOR PROBATE Effort Made To Set Aside Docu- ment Which Left Widow Small Part of Fortune. CHICAGO, March 27.—A petition to ia a (set aside the first will of the late) James C. King has been filed tn the ace | Probate Court, it became known to-day, | in Marcy ©, Melvin seeks to gain ybate Of a gecond will which Gaston Means claims to have discovered. The first will was mado in 1901 and the ater document in 1906. etition has been deferred until May 16 An endowment of $2,000,000 was pro- | | vided In the firat will for the James C. | nf Home for Old Men, and a coms atively small sum was bequea'ed |to Mra. Maude King, the widow, whose death near Concord, N. C., led to the trial there of Means on a charge of He was acquited, The second will leaves the bulk of the $3,000,000 estate to Mra, King and makes no pro- vision for the home for old men. AMOND ot the Amert- | Hearing of the| |e A — Average price paid for live cattle Average price received for meat Per Bieer $84.45 . . 68.97 Average price received for by-products 24.09 Total received This leaves for expenses and profit Of which the profit per steer was. There are many other interesting and instructive f ») | HH 93.06 = 8.61 1,29 THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 27, ‘Kiddie Klub Khorus in the Brooklyn Show; | Patriots Sing ‘‘Stamps, raat Stamps: | Rehearsals for Evening World’s Patriotic Party, April 6, Re- veals Fine and Thrilling En- tertainment for Good Ameri- cans. ' One of tho finest features of the) Patriotic Party, to be held by The Evening World's Kiddie Klub on April 6 in the Majestic Theatre, Brooklyn, will be the singing by the Klub Khorus, for the first time in New York City of the Thrift song, “Stamps, Stamps, Stampa.” It goes to the tune of “Tramp, Tramp, Tramp, the Boys Are March- ing,” and the words are by Walter A. Lawson, Miss Ray Sawyer, “Band Mother,” who has been supplying the bands of the United States Army and Navy with sheet music, has sent one hundred copies of the Thrift song to the Khorus, for use at the Patriotic Party. Hero are the words of “STAMPS—STAMPS—STAMPS.” By Walter A, Lawson, we all are saving, Glan Btamp ron then Can Then the Allieg they wih pean And) thive ‘Teuton acon, wil ira That a fh ta the only land that's home, Tremp— Tramp toy a marching, oar Cheer wm homefolkaaon he Swift & Company's 1918 Year Book shows that Swift & Company sells the meat from a steer for less money than the live steer cost! Proceeds from the sale of the hide, fat, and other by- products covered all expense of dressing, refrigeration, freight, selling expense and the profit of $1.29 per steer as shown by Swift & Company’s 1917 figures as follows: facts and figures in the Year Book. We want to send our 1918 Year Book, to anyone, anywhere—free 4 for the asking. Address Swift & Company, Union Stock Yards, Chicago, Hy | Swift & Company, U.S. A. By) | Mention name, Goeth ot gory tare Rev to dring bim vioterunis to tele home! Speaking of thrift, Cousin Eleanor wants to remind you again that, al- ly for the Kiddie Klub, and each | Klub cousin ts invited, every cbild | who \comes is requested to purchase one or more Thrift Stamps (an in vestment of 25 cents per stamp) from Government agents who will be In the lobby of the Majestic Zreatre. OF course all the money collected in this | way from the Kiddie Klub goes to| Uncle 8am for taking care of bis sol- | diers and sailors. The stamps belong |; to the purchaser and may be taken home and pasted on Thrift Stamp | card, Kiddte Kiub members must wear | // thelr Kiub pins to the Patriotic) Party, and only one grownup ts al- | lowed to accompany each child. Cousin Eleanor offers to send two tickets to any Kiddie Klub member living outside Greater New York who will send in his or her request for | /// such tickets no later than five days before the performance That ts, the letter asking for tickets must be in Cousin Fleanor’s hands by April 1 address and certifi- cate number, One tloket will admit the Klub cousin and the other ticket a grownup who comes with the Klub member. The seats corresponding to these tickets will be held not later than 10 A. M. She though the Patriotic Party te atrtet- | ual Count Andre Marte Adrian Chance de |iimur of the French | and Mise Ethel May Crocker of Burlin game, Cal., whose engagement was an- | Mr: rs. * nounced In November, 1917, obtained » | York City. | TT | | MISS CROCKER GETS LICENSE | marriage license yesterday at the = | t U Dom wa | STITT TITEL LEI fms ek 8 agate cil BB 7H 27, 1918. ??| BROOKLYN OPPENHEIM.GLLUNS & G of City Clerk Scully, The ceremony | will be performed at St Patrick's nd Count Andre de Limor | Cathedral by Mar. J. Lavelle at a date Be Wedded to Cathedral not yet decided upon, | Allss Crocker is @ daughter of Mr and Mra, Wil ker of San | Francisco, Andre Aviation Corp of Princess ski of Paris and of Alexander of New and Brown WhereYou Need It To no part of the body is com- fort more necessary than the feet. year the burden of all your es and should be given every consideration. After wearing the Dr. A. Reed Cushion Shoe you discover just Sold only at 1372 Broadway, at 37th St. Fulton Street, Brooklyn Offer Extraordinary Coat Values To-morrow—Thursday Juniors’ and Girls’ Three-Quarter Velour Coats New Spring Models Just Received A swagger Coat in Red, Yellow, Velour appropriate for immediate wear. Sizes 10 to 16 Years 7.50 Checks, how useful feet can be. Shod in the “sensible” shapes your new powers of endurance will surprise you. The cushion of felt and cork in these shoes brings comfort where you need it most. Most styles $7 to $9. 12 Park Place, Woolworth Building. [SHION SHOES ¥ mn Made by Tor Weornen Made op ap SMITH SHOE CO. JOHN ERSERTS SHOECO. = “Right Kind of CHARGE ACCOUNT Pay $1.00 Weekly Smort Suits for Men $14.50 to $455.00 Offering an entirely new stock of sport 4 and distinctive Spring suits at unusually low prices, the superior quality fabrics for durability and attrac- tiveness, tailoring, trimmings, many lined with silk, up to the standard In every respect. Women’s & Misses’ Suits, Coats, Dresses | tailored s ny now Suits elty styl haf in Etons 5 and waist coat effects in a the new Brat . . $24.7 $] 5: 75 | nee serges and gabar- $] 8.98 iF ae 7 COLUMBUS AVE ee eet ON $1.00 A WEEE leer Why go limping around with ach- | ing, puffed-up feet— don't you get a 25-cent box of *Tiz” from the drug store now and gludden is your feet glow with and considering handsome patterns, beautiful faultless mente Furnished Dresses Eas'er dresses in the most ideal styles of the current season, ip all shades, Coats distinctive styles in fine quality wool To Those W Credi pen en 7 a4 Saturd, TA get your shoes on or off? Why | corns, callouses and bunions. feet. more foot torture. Ask for “Tis.” Get only “Tia.”— Advt. |7 ech Without “TIZ” FOR FEET | No More Sore, Tired, Tender Fe Feet; No Puffed-up, Calloused Feet or Painful Coms—Try “Tiz” draws the soreness and oflsery right feet so tired,}out of feet that chafe, smart and chafed, sore and swollen you can| burn, “Ti? instantly stops pain in “Tis” glorious for tired, aching, sore No more shoe tightness—no Plotes I Save Lecayea Feeth, Tighten Loose Teeth, and Treat Diseased Gums, SETS OF TEETH, Gold and Porcelain Crow Bridgework, Fillings und Ms of Gold, ilver and Po in carefully made at Reasonable Prices, ADLY DECAYED TEETH oots carefully extracted, Teeth thoroughly cleaned. Eroken plates repaired while you wait or if sent by mail pr-BLOoy, —TWO OFFICES— eS 5th St. 169k. st 34thSt, ' AV 8, SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK MONDAY WONDERS