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MRS, WINBURN, SWEETLY; | MR. WINBURN, SOURLY; | “THAVE NOTHING 70 SAY” Advertising Agent Advertises Dif- ferences Between Wife and Self Neither Talks. | Jesse Winburn believes in adver tising for every one—except himself. | He is President and Treasurer of the New York City Car Advertising Company, No, 211 Fifth Avenue, well |known in business circles and re- puted to be wealthy. Mr. Winburn did live at No. 876 Park Avenue, on the twelfth flopr of a classy, new Japartment house. But he does not At least, this advertise- jment printed in a morning paper de- clares not: 1, JESSH WINRTRN, FORMPRLY RESID. ing at No, 876 Park Avenue, Borough of | Manhattan, New York City, with my wife, | Lily Winburn, hereby give notice that my | ak! wife and I are now living separate and | apart, and that I will not be liable for any | hereafter be contracted by | any more, Constipated Children Gladly Take At the Park Avenue apartment of Mrs. Winburn a telephone call was answered by one who said she was Mrs, Winburn. In a saccharine voice} she begged to be quoted as follows: | “Just say I have nothing to eat The New York City Car Advertis- ing Company has a suite of offices on the sixth floor of No. 225 Fifth + Avenue, When Mr. Winburn was asked about the notice he got red in the face and said: “You can go straight to ——." “California” He refused to deny or affirm the aca gala report that a divorce action is to be filed, They taste fine and They-do-the-work | ETTER THAN 4 HAVE EVER TED 48 | p teen ea trrtebered | | | lieve you of sluggish bowels, bil- | tousness and that headache that comes and goes. You've had your disappointments, naturally. DON'T YOU KNOW THAT AY ARIS THE DOCTOR (| _—_INCANDY Forn | nd after being used by -. THE IDEAL LAXATIVE “California Syrup of Figs” For the Liver and Bowels Tell your druggist you “California Syrup of Figs.” want genuine Full directions and dose for babies and children of all ages who are constipated, bilious, feverish, tongue- coated, or full of cold, are plainly printed on the bottle. for the and accept no other “Fig Syrup.” Look name he DocTorR’ ADVICE by Ma Lewis Baker’ q ations answered below are f se wishing further advi address Dr. Butlding, ed at any In Weil-stocked Any druggist can order of KES oven itself after many ii stocked a BLOOD PURIFIER? You don't know it? Well, Just a tomorrow you'll : 1 50c and 81.00 per Trial size, 106. only aggravate, Sulphorb Tablets we you sho the blo but if purl many | tried so writes: "'T hesitate to vice AN mY case {8 80 unusual. a word, wh ye tng “Hes Goet nak irean | [A SHAMPOO WORTH TRYING | and formerly did not know what {t n red of nervous. Sometimes T fear ¥ will become and if this con It is not necessary your hair so frequen tirely and properly c d each time by the use of a really good shampoo. | ‘The easiest to use and the quickest! drying shampoo that we can recom- mend to our readers is one that brings out all the natural beauty of the hair and may be enjoyed at very little ex-| pense, by dissolving 4 teaspoonful of} canthrox, which can be obtained from| any druggist, in a cup of hot water. |'This makes a full cup of shampoo |liquid, enough so it is easy to apply) Jit to all the hair instead of just to the} jtop of the head. ‘This, when rubbed Jinto the scalp and onto every strand Jof hair, chemically dissolves all im purities. It is very soothing and cool-| ing in its action, 4s well as beneficial | to both sculp and hair, After rinsing} out the lather so created, you will find the scalp is fresh, clean and free from dandruff, while the hair dries quickly and evenly, developing a |bright luster and a soft fluffiness that makes it seem very heavy.—Adyt | to. shampoo if it is en-| rvous system has need a tonic In- that will ald in d-energy to your grain Cadomene for several months, supplying more f Take three ‘ableta regularly —\Aavt. Persistent Coughs are dangerous. Get prompt relief from Pi tops irritation; soothing, Effective Colds, Coughs and Grippe and sate for young and old. No opiates in ‘ ef BY DR. SAMUEL HAMILTON ih. Commonly the first symptom of a 5 F cold is a chilly feeling, accompanied ., by sneezing or a tickling in the throat. The | most frequent causes are getting wet or cold STOP THAT - feet, or going frem hot rooms suddenly into cold ones, catching cold from contact with other persons in crowded street cars or assemblies. Frequently there is an inner cause, namely, the stagnation of the blood, coiused by cones tion or biliousness. No one ever takes col leas con- stipated or exhausted, and having what we call OT TOE VERY START: mal-putrit I, Which is attended pith impoverished HURLBURT S blood and exhaustion of nerve force ere isa continiial absorption of poisons into the aystem, fd CAMPHOR PILLS i " b nothing better than Castor Oil, or a vegetable extract of May-apple, aloes, jalap, ekce rolled into sugar-costed pills, and sold in every drug store as Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. 1t is the common practice of every doctor in the land to give a good purga- = tive in any case where he cannot be sure of what will develop. The first pring te do fas every one shquid know is to “clean house!” For the cough there is nothing better than the old Golden Medical Discovery, a botanical extract which Dr. Pierce put on the market fifty years ago. This contains no alcohol but does contain wild cherry bark, cohosh, Oregon grape root, and other botanical extracts which are not only good for the system, but check the cough, and this is the very best alterative and tonic that T know of to take for the grippe, as it offers a scientific method of treating the blood by improving the nutritive faery eer of the patient. The “Medical Discovery” \ secomplishes this by first restoring the enfeebled digestive or , 80 that food — natural tissue builder—will be digested and taken up and assimilated by the eras ‘There is nothing better for diseases of the stomach, lungs and | ‘sod taas eld remedy which every druggist keepe ia liquid or tablet form. —Advt, is ee tanless the entire intestinal tract is kept clear and clean as poasible. For this there is articles reported 4 Found Bureau." Room orld Building, wil) be listed advertisemonta ¢ The World's jes, or can bo tly to The World. ry man, New York, of Brookiyn Office, 4100 Main. can be left at any o Advertising A become a lieutenant?” “When will my our own dish Sergt. Si THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, MARCH 27, 1919. CHAMPION ANSWERER OF “FOOL QUESTIONS” IS THIS DEVIL DOG OF THE U. , Sergt. Seder is serving his eighth eo listment, It matters not to him enemy club, o trigger f tor all GIRL INDICTED FOR MURDER MAY BE TRIED NEXT MONTH Fourteen-Year-Old Defendant Ar raigned and Attorneys Ask | Hearing Soon | The trial of Filippa Gambino, the |fourteen-year-old girl indicted fo (iret degree murder for killing Tomasso Troia, twenty-nine, in th | home of her parents, No. 227 Sullivan Street, Dec. 31, was set to-day for some time during April and will prob- jably be held before Judge McIntyre | in General Sessions. When the girl was arraigned be- fore Judge Rosalsky this morning, a | representative of her attorney, Caesar | Barra, said that no motions weuld be made and that an immediate trial way desired, The girl claimed that Troia, who was a boarder of her mother, aa- sauited her. District Attorney Swann may ash for a dismiasal of the indictment, it was said this morning, and have the case of the girl sent to the Children's Court for Juvenile Delinquents. TWP FOR TIRED AND SORE FEB Use “Tiz” for puffed-up, burn- ing, aching, calloused feet and corns. Sergt. Oscar J. Seder Wanted to Go Across, but Instead He Got a New Job. Everybody knows him as “Oscar.” The word everybody could almost be used literally because, in his capacity as one of the oldtime “Devil Dogs’! Oscar J. Seder has travelled all over this world many times. The Marine Corps officers were deat to Oscar's request to “get across.” ‘They gave | him a new job. | Oscar answers more foolish ques- | tions than anybody else in New York, | dea" | office of n, No. 2 heir lot with the “sea dogs” come ss: Seret. Seder for information. Many | gq,” 42, fo limping around with ach» of these applicants’ relatives and ehaton, potty oe ls sean | | swecthearts also come to Oscar to get “the straight dope.” Some of the questions which Oscar bumps into every day are: “What are the Marines?" Do the devil dogs leep in hammocks or in pajamas?" If I enlist now, how soon will T hardly get your shoes on or off? Why! don't you get a 25-cent ox of “Tis” from the dru; your torture feet? comfort; takes down swellings and draws the soreness and misery right out of feet that chafe, smart and burn. “Tis” instantly stops pain corns, callouses and bunto “Tis has a boy of his own in| 18 glorious for tired, aching, sore feet. Corps and for this reason’ No more shoe tightness—no more husband get back from France?" “Can I take my dog with me to the barracks, or don't we have to wash the M store now and gladden| |, “Tis” makes your feet flow, with | SAXON CREDITORS MEET. ireniCteat"*| WELD NEW STERN ON SHIP,| Dr. Charles W. Eliot, President Emert- tus of Harvard University, will lead @ | Miewest Job of Kind Undertaken on| Lord Dafferin. 4 financial reorganizataion pian pre-| The welding of a new atern on the | duscussion on present day relations be pared by the creditors of the company, | freighter Lord Dufferin was begun to- sTetelctink rhage PoarorndBboheacims was attended by stock! ing only 6,000 shares of An informal meeting Fes FCA F Secretary ¢ pany, p “Democracy in Industry’ funcheen day at the Robins Drydocks in Broox-|® i lyn. The Job in said in engineering |Kiven by the New Jersey Chamber of Biggest of the kind|Commerce at the Robert Treat Hotel, Newark to-morrow. oh rs represent. 11 of the Lord] Dr. Eliot's suggestions to employers ae 8 by ‘the|inclhide abandoning of industrial Detro e th co-operative management; scien. . n y mployment management; ‘profit Protective Committers, which Aring: diversification of occupations laims amounting to $2,400,000 Japanese uilders liective bargaining between em Wan Announced that unless ‘# who are touring the |ployers and workers. At a banquet to was an at, unlean the atog States for new ideas in thls | follow the conference Louis F Powe Ac tant Secretary of L . will speak Personal Appearance need not be neglected because of the high cost of other necessities. We know it’s not always con- venient to pay cash for clothes, no matter how necessary, so we have arranged a “Charge Account’’ Basis of shopping that enables you to buy your clothes as you need them, paying as little as a dollar a week. Now, with Easter well on its way, is a good lime to open an account with us. Select from a Fine Collection of Smart Spring Suits 42.05 ° of which the suit illustrated is an example. A vari- ely of fashion’s latest tailleurs, well made and smartly fin'shed, variously, trimmed with braid and buttons and full lined with silk, pussy willow or peau de cygne. Blue, black or tan. Not Forgetting the Most Charming of Spring Affairs Misses’ and Women’s Smart Capes in a variety of fabrics and models, finely made and trimmed in a fashion to do justice to the most fastidious taste. Come in and try someon. We are sure you will be pleased to take advantage of Our “Charge Account’ Basis of Purchasing. HECHT BROS. 53-57 West I4th St., near 6th Ave. bats for 1,000 in the Patience League, foot troubles.—Advt. ment inspection of meat. cut up. All meat entering into Inspection Act of June 16, 1 Unfortunately, however, t commerce is uninspected. meat supply! hoof. On the fair assumption VISIT THE ARMOUR BOOTH Brooklyn Food Show and Better Homes Exhibition MARCH 17-29 Is the Meat You Eat from Healthy Animals? OTH in the dietary and in the family budget, there is probably no food so important as meat. Under normal conditions, 43% of the average income is spent for food and half of that, or approximately 22% of the income, for meat. i demand that the meat it eats comes from healthy animals. Few appreciate the importance of Govern And fewer still realize the careful examination of the animal before slaughtering and the inspection of every part as must be Government inspected under the Meat plants operate under U. S, Government Inspection. ‘ offered to the public which is prepared in establish- ments that do not have Government Inspection. Muth meat which does not enter into interstate According to official statistics, this covers about 409; of the national Last year, in our establishments, Government inspectors rejected 59,267 of all the animals killed. Nor does this include those condemned on the percentage exists in the two-fifths of America’s meat which is not U. S. Inspected, think what ARMOUR 4%» COMPANY The public has a right therefore to present methods may mean to national health! Armour and Company uareearvedy endorse Government inspection. Steps should be taken to enforce the inspection of all meats with a thor- oughness equal to that of the United States Gov- ernment. You should take this up with your State legislators. They can bring it about. True, the condemnation of unhealthy animals costs something. It may also be that you now buy uninspected meats at less than prevail- ing prices. But, under any circumstances, the safeguarding of all public health would be justified at many times present cost. And because condemned animals can be made into inedible greases, fertilizers, etc., as Armour and Company now do, loss can be reduced to a minimum, With a clear comprehension of the import- ance of Government Inspection to your family’s health, good sense demands that you make sure you are buying from a dealer who handles Armour meats, interstate business 906. All Armour here is some meat that an equal unfit CHICAGO ganization through the courts fe ‘| INDUSTRY TALK BY DR. ELIOT.