The evening world. Newspaper, April 26, 1918, Page 14

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Off without pain or soreness, after you 14 LADEN LEA AE Otte | PEEL OFF CALLUSES WITH THE FINGERS errr rerir rin torr on. UF Callus Spots ol Une or bottom of the feet peel right 7 ‘ i i ' ‘ Cinein« ee 1 * | Old-Timers and Young Hust- lers in the “Moulding of | Public Opinion” End An-| R allused the dead so it peels off with the fingers. A quarter Freezone costs but a few ounce of cents at ony, pharmacy, nual A. N. P. Convention} ut is suffictnt to re : po Move. guety corn ‘or With Banquet—United in| {iiss the only wat to, ‘Their Loyalty. free the feet from corns | | and calluses without soreness, danger or in Editors, publishers and owners of fection. the biggest newspapers in the t 1 After the corn or | aaa’ : . | callus 1s Ijfted away the skin beneath © after three days of hard wor fe pink and he thy, and not sore, der t auspices of the America tender or even irritated.—Advt : bie Publink i ‘ WORLD WANTS WORK WONDERS noir pencils and sat te ee eee ees Buy LIBERTY BONDS or prepare tobeg THE EVENING WORLD, Men Who Make Newspapers of Nation Cheer War Speeches at Waldorf Dinner FRIDAY, APRIL 26, elected 181 What Daniels President ao who does R.A, CARUTHERS SAN FRANCISCO KREAD room f The men who m of the who are of va JOHN Ww. RaucH BAGLE” HAarmony/ play at « Buccerr ING asp ” Jorn S. COHEN ATLANTA the grand ball ith Jorf-Astorla id public opinion, | world al opinions, ° merc from dri ie but of opinion regarding the war, whose pens und Influence are behind . Jour boys “over there’ and backing up President Wilson tn a fight to a ping German [I frre only the Kalser’s finish, made a ! homogeneow gathering under the ayonets:! ertar hors and banatro which be decked the big ballroom This is one of several advertisements contributed by From the North and theRouth; From the East and the Far West w tcc Onor, an AB A OL Fifth Avenue at 53rd Street. 50 Broadway (Standard Arcade) 279 Broadway at Reade St Brooklyn: 1285 Fulton Street The Highest Class Talking Machine in the World VERY worth-while human sentiment— patriotism, duty, gratitude to a generous Re- public that has opened wide her doors of opportunity to the oppressed of all lands— prompts the command—"‘Buy Liberty Bonds.” It is a proud privilege given only to free men to lend the very limit to their country in this trying hour. If you don’t buy you must answer to your own con- science, “Walk On Canons Your foot-sole as nature made it is equipped with cushions of muscular tissue. But nature's cushions were uever made to use on concrete walks. ‘They need help. So the Dr, A, Reed Cushion Shoe is made, It furnishes the extra cushion that human feet require to meet the strain of city life. You can’t avoid hard pavements, But you must be fair to your feet if you expect good service from them. ‘I'he idea of the felt and cork cushion in this shoe is borrowed from natur SOLD ONLY All 1372 Broadway at $7th St 12 Park Place, Bldg DcAReed CUSHION SHOES era, they were tired; down to wine their troubles, their Ured senses, speakers, iels, | Justice © Secret hammering Stablman of | war ing of patriotism | the roof wa ne nudging H nooga used to m , of this hotel, or seventy thought we had a big gathering ?” And me: and dine and forget with music to soothe Then came tl cretary of the Navy Dan ary of War Baker, Ex rles E. Hughes and oth yn of t d be press forgot forgot they hi it into the people of the United States that we had to win the up on their fect like ordinary citizens at the They just sto an # threate eting,” the C, Adler Me od outpo said Major Nashville of the Bann Chat when t in the old Myrtle Ro and if we could get sl 18 STILL WARM. the jglass to the Major chuckled at thought of old times, and raised gallery, where some st and most beautifu i | the | their sex were brighte tired business men. mits that he years,” to se stil He's sal ur shouted until B ner, ta we m xty of the buneh together, we |ADMITS TO 75 YEARS AND HEART hi ft t looking down upon the The Major ad- venty-five summers and 1 loves the ladies, en in Nashville forty d John 8. Cohen, editor and President of the | Newspaper He's the in stature the Atlanta Journal for twenty-two years, He began newspaper life as a|' reporter on the New York World, and now see where he is, He's the whole | works on the Atlanta Journal, which Publisher Atlanta Journal, roos to show that there However, man who didn't go dowr comma, | “and is now Chairman of the Southern Association. greatest of them all but big in heart | breadth of brain has no limit Mr. ¢ ts |chance for a New York r« here |to make good. Herbert | | on of the owners of the |Hagle, Yer, right act home of Mr, Gun I, of the oldest mem | yclation and has ssions than any one night. He sald so him it from a reporter und newspay nembers when the hek J their sessi thirty years ago. his Blbert H. Baker ht f ut he & whet me he « o amor Ta ny ust to Ml table a a pu ha Pribur f pay t look old elth Newsp 1 toe publi jand Pla sh hort his sways @ Atlanta Al Sec’y BAKER Jouanact them, Some of them are bound to stick.” What ‘kled the Major was when —— Mr. Hughes sald Germany hadlonly RALOEH ne hope pf winning the war, and AND that was for America to fa RDMUND Ww He's the Wilson's know he advocates morals, that must imbibe I'm going to téll Mr. Hughes about that this evening. 1 think & , wapape rs. some cf cgather with |i to the conventions of the pul D | alive, string of papers in Michigan were at | erty Loan. drive,” he said. “Last the banquet. They were Edmund W. | Saturday night was the turning point and Ralph H. The former is editor |and we're going after more, In Sang and manager of the Grand Raplds|amon County, Abraham Lincoln’ Press, and his brother George, who | County, we beat the quota by $500,06¢ Is president would | Maybe all those newspaper men a 1 the Booths |not doing their bit. Maybe—jyt lovk ‘of Michigan at tho ware lat the results time, Ralph, the youngest of the family, is president of the Booth Pub- lishing Company, which has eight pa- pers in the State. ‘The father of the Booth boys is still at the bully old _age of eighty- SANFORDS two oF THE t two. He is Henry W. Booth, and 5 nt a earned his living many years by bis Boorns and th everything sa pen. But the boys were smarter than WHO Own ered an the father. They went in and learned THE BIG Majc p Bell was on |the business end of, the newspap. hewapaper Mun, ame, nd—well, that’s why they were BOOTH f the profes ga’ . y the professi 1 |there last night. Reporters will tak BOC TH | butt Is e'greut friend of tho proferln |fhore inst might: “Reporters wit taxs — Comforts Stomach or the press is giv t the war The 7 PAPERS | |General ts In charge of tho cantons | «Jt A. | +. puiiser ot tue| Bowels and Nerves ment D ind left hie {5am “ retin, AAb Ue! Lees Purest and best of warming ers so long that familiar figure he has "7 ot the Boston | familar few stomachics. Good for weak be, was te snd swung sae ired d gavel with t and ‘convic- [{* on susb Bal stomachs, tired nerves an rwanda newspaper man betore {yakes In the Mr aching muscles., Helps pre- jonel inthe Givi War. [Woks ten years younger tha vent colds, chills and grip. wag a General on Ge ast ye here must be s neral on Gow: | wonderful about that Califor | Always healthful and helpful. ot | mate | When purcha Hn took dor the © I Trade Mt ners’ | Col, Robert Ewing, publisher of the | Cee errr mattute. For i are. tt t of |New Orleans States, thoroughly en- | Gasman ot purlt baie ison unny |joyed himself, whether toying with a | ¥ all druggists and grocers a dat Ligsett s has been with Mr.|squab, sipping champagne or puffing | Ade Ia ea bat Mr. Law- ja big fat black clgar. He Is one of = 8 y know wh he | the big newsaper men of the Southern would do without him. Mr. Rogers ts | Tier, Rireitt content to have it known he earned) And don't forget Editor Si : He d h GWEROERT h purs with Editor Lawson andj Rees of the Iilinois State rf 1c ea ac € let it go at that. And bis friends sey | He's proud of his paper and pro Wrinlon: Sterna that the outdone navy. He and "su view “Of u SECY DANIELS is war for Rventis Ww retary of War of the guests who wasn't ajonly one in Iilinois, outside of Chi R aper man, spirit of the waiting going Is very & 0d. Newton D. but he wasn’ litor Daniels ered right in paper ata tand for an De Baker | t to be osphere n inter= and when b sn't busy is the most were : foetal cheer, “none orceful care nowspaper man in the| | HASTINGS . tian the pres mination He and Mr, Stone started the “UNNN ITEM of the ne the making of News forty years ago. Now he has | opinion it has availed Itself of the the paper all to himself and says that Te & dete not only fogthe winning s the only paper in Chicago, and a - = the world.’ his old partner is at the head of the ( aN And, a little later, in his speech, eanih ) ‘here is no rank in sacrifice. We > \ common seamen in-the navy But the band began to play when r) < aro all uncommon. And tbe of the greatest newspaper mer \ class of men are fighting our them all came in and approached “ les in tho 1 erehe the dais, Josephus Daniels—every- | ‘a gv d= grin ag lal b 48 probably heard of him; ! wo of (he. Be the everybody in the navy has anyhow, | and the Kaiser knows him by name He was formerly editor and owner | seen etnias ke Sea of the Raleigh News and Observer. | 6 CASTO 4 IA u was all that when he came to] New York six years ago to direct the| | COL. ROBERT EwinG of the Navy as editor my brother editors. assignment know tha T have eration of the to n had The nav of its ep or td to be hi n't th 1 th was waiting and the band w and t that he made]}that specch with those of his car one of the gr most patri- | palgn tie speeches he ee p his lite: | THE MAN, NOT THE PARTY H. de Young, editor, owner and publisher of the San Francisco Chron: | BRAND, WINS HIM. jcle, was so impressed with the speech | “If Hughes had talked like that that he declared it sounde like on uring the campaign,” of the besttepublican oratorical ef- | Stahiman of the N forts he had ‘wer listened to, Mr, de | would have supported him. T started en has been connected with| New ison, of | TWO VETERANS KNOWN ' V njoying adding rite true \ight to he News. d then WORLD OVER br, Lawson ago News, has himself \is own t the fi He read Manage © gan tl pap he enjoy tex But he didn’t hay a the ooked up at iu f He THE t t 4 owns high alicity campaign for President Wile | retary of the Navy to “NEW ORLEANS DAILY STATES ” Bears the er you,” he sald ty who paign NEN. | which elected President Wilson to his yan Pere: lyecond term. Mr. de Y ung didn't | Signature ny ag ntend to do it, and has never beea | |. rd to take the dit for the mpaign, did we levernent HfORNIA. wh } no doubt as to the re- tate, has by tosniae pearat r t kind of feath eee Ih calneranih with |§ bedfelfows anyhow, and whi inti it wen Wada ected Mr. Wilson’ they also 1 was given an elected Hiram Johnson, Independent Republican, to the United States Sen -late. It's a long story, but— “California 1s extremely loyal,” ago to cover said Mr, de Young. “It hasn’t the hye teria of the East, because we have na no doubt ag to the final success of . the war. In every demand made by 4 the Government we have come for- ix ready to throw ever wor fato this war, and | Ward Ip excess of requirements. The “producing t power planted ¢ bit of soll ant ts mo and | und more ship Iim| £ here again as one of the t of| Incidentally, Mr. Hughes was on »p and | the dais in person and made a crowd | 10g speech, full of fire and patrioti Mr. de Young wasn't the only assemblage who compared at clubby on the hand | and man in the n big x its loudest the oldest®paper on the |out to support him, but he fluked reat many of the young | Down in my country I support Demo ork for him in|crats, Republicans and Mugwumps , journalistic posit in| { supported Mr, McKinley for Preal- ni art and. editorial | @ business bra Jent And and | Mr. a both wer Wilson for President 9 pcrat for Governcr, ed. 1 hot “REMEMBER! THE.TAG OF LUseRtTv ri jy Sureort Li You Always B For Infante and Children. The Kind Have ought tn ¥ © For Over 30 Years. —WHOLESALER MUST UNLOAD— 1,500 Spring Suits, Coats and Capes SALE an LIKE THESE ge AT RETAIL « ouR WHOLESALE SHOWROOM STARTS 8.30 SUITS i) 10: THESE ) 10 Best 1 ~ THESE FkI “ted & SATURDAY 1 Ow Come Come Early for Best Value for Value CAPES LIKE “|450 High Class Spring DRESSES Crepe de Chines, Satins, Serges, Silks, Etc. Inc. ‘MEYER & BERNHEIMER, tte. 4th Floor, 15 WEST 34th ST. js 'tv av... Over Riker’s Drug Store Take Sees his people. And his people are proud |¢ of him and say that his paper is tho | cago. “We went over the top in our Lib- other stores, at . . match with Here are suits that we will .any line in America priced up to twenty F dollars—and we will give a written guar- 4 antee that if you can equal them under twenty dollars we will refund your money. | They are made in the latest models and in } the most popular Spring patterns—and I every one bears the “GUARANTEED” label” We are manufactur nd that’s a fact v | prove—and we sell direct to the public at about the See our windows—and jet these suits do their own talking Men’s Suits See These $15 Qualities a. | rices retailers pay to jobbers on Sale Tomorrow at BOYS’ SUITS © The famous ‘‘Schoolmate”’ brand, same as those grades selling 37 50 Verecial at a Suits $3.95 slash Regular $5.50 grades of other stores; ner and tickle their col ODD PANTS For Odd Coats and Vests; Regular $4.50 & $5 grades, on sale tomorrow at 2 These are good, strong, serv Men’s ee $ Here are $3 and $3. 50 Grades, at 9 palr of these p tory wear, The: y nd cansimeres in an 5 ar onal va Size All Stores Open ill 10 P. M. Saturdays ) Gh Surp von gftesg srs, | BETWEEN N, W. CORNER Yonkers Store, 34 North Broadway 15th and 16th Streets 83d Street [Pe -yOuU WANT 10 THE MEANING OF THE FIGHTING IN FRANCE Read Col. Repington’ WHICH APPEAR IN MORNING WORLD KNOW Cables THE

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