The evening world. Newspaper, April 3, 1919, Page 22

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APRIL 3, 1919, 3 1 > P TES SVERING WORLD, TRURSDAT, ; 1 r i hanged int hi artillery regi- ° sons acting for the Government from ME 1 % 'HIS AMERICAN CROSS “ment ealiea ‘the sh Pennsylvania Grimwood °3 ce War Valor’’ frasmboting fusthese wits corieres |ERPURTERG BLA | aa H Y | n command. | t which they are interested, was BRITISH CENSORSHIP. + Giind N i he winter of | vine ed t y by Attorney General ae 1 | TAKES PLACE OF THE LEG Ses Bete cl Won Bride, She Now Says vii. (in| rancma {Never Let ai ( | Okla, lication of the report, sald the an- pone ‘ ‘i LOST IN THE ARGONNE his class. , Y nouncement, showed that nll lumber {Boston Firm’s Cables to China Held Her Hair Get Gray 5 the Nes a | ane for airplane propellers bought by the ' Se a a eee a. . i i " Government from the 3. B. Vrooman Up, Resulting in Forced . in 1917,/Refuses to Give Baby the Company of Philadelphia was inspect | Acceptance She Kept Her Locks Dark and of the unit when ry ¢ sy, ed by agents not appointed by Vroo- | a ad i GETS f) § f 10 HAY Hho bad Arullery Name of Her Self- aan! | BOSTON, April 3—The exporting ‘and Gulphur, } Me of the 63d Artiller, ‘ |firm of Ayres, Dridges & Co. here i 109 Meld Artlle Ss m of Ayres, Dridges 0. i cl ee arte ta Wes thee Aer QUA TROOPS DIDN'T sauoed A hie’ (onlay, when. it Ale Wes tek ne ne he unit to Iay the frst) 00000 | nounced that it had been obliged to heer ; Bet barrage on American || WASHINGTON, April %.—"Tt was] | FIGHT WITH JAPAN'S |scceet 9 cancetied order amounting! When you darken your hair with |) Veteran Patriot to Be Hero Tae imi eal avdioy and bh ante coe ald Mrs. Florence | to $100,000, believed to be due to Grea*| Sage Tea and Sulphur, no one can tel Dal hes Jost Nd Artillery sailed for | Brainard Grimwood to-day in ex- ' boar Britain's censorship of transocegnic | because it's done so naturally, so eve 2 of Public Ceremony at ee eee ear 78 nor | plaining her marriage to “Dr.” Will- |Churchill Says Bobheviki Had At-| orders. ly, Preparing this mixture, thous Ss Governor’s Island, field equipment behind, as well ax a}iam F. G, Grimwood, self-styled Eng. | tacked, Though Identity Con- Charges were mado that Great Brit-| home is mussy and troublesome. “Ges it number of troopers w ho, by reason lish war hero, whom she has sued in | fused j et ain was attempting to grab United | little cost you on buy at any drug . oF oan Weint oy nationality col |New York for annulment. States trade by “lifting” cable mes-|Store the ready-to-use preparation, Bole Ool, Asher Miner, of the 10%h Feld Miner's outtit wae probably the most | “Z trusted him,” she continued, “and LONDON, April %.—Questioned tn| sages. The Wool Trade Association eee by ie soweate Gone ad |) Astitiery 28m (Penneylvanta Volun- glot that went ¢ and in| wns only convinced of his wrongdoing the House of Commons yesterday a8| has taken the matter up in executive | Suighur Compound.” You ah eae t of aM shy when the detectives came to arrest to why American troops did not co- | session with a view to sending @ pro-|en |» tponge’ of soft brush with 7 i “halting pot | him not many months after our mar- operate with the Japanese in the fight- | test to Washington. and draw this through your hair, tal’ i Island from Major Gen. Barry at 11 line ¥ in that melting ing at Blagovieshchensk, Siberia,| Cables sent by the Boston firm to) N ottond oe pa f Ne of thi ba. h comes Americanism of (riage. {te China office at Tientsin on March |! one small strand at a time. iaeees t-Say, to an cmnenple : the sturdiest type-—the Wyoraing Val-| “If it had not been for my Iittle Winston Churchill, Minister of War, |e eae eee et coctively, with a | morning all gray hair disappents, and | @pirit which made the American | ley. of Pennaylyania | tay t would tive ive. tices the abe replied that the American commander |jast message on March 22, counter- | after another application oF two, yor. froops in France invincible. His left | Col. Miner, fitty-elght years old, | if 5 had @aid that the force which was|manding a $100,000 order, reached the|hair becomes beantifully darke Vag was blown off below the knee by a/ | | with the venteen-year-old volun. | tempt to sree myself, but I felt that attacking the Japanese might prove | Far East office on March 23, all hav-| glossy and luxuriant. ‘ ‘ fragment of a high explosive shell at | Sees OF Ime Coated Siete Bren. ter. |e Whe ChOes Sale S Gar: yey iy to be one of insurrectionary Russian |ing been repeived at the same time. faded hair, though no dic” f % in the Aegonne, on Oot 4 eee ee Oe cattavion fy jself beyond his reach forever, I hope peasants who were mistaken for Bol- |The reply sent from there tho follow~| grace, ig a sign of old age, and as | 1918, while he, in purruance of dutics \forees, No man who served with the |baby never hears his name spoken. snevilt worchti! affed that there was |Giesisetan tne feet tay cnods Te tre sll desire © youthful and attracti not required of his ponition, was com- |Amorican | Expeditionary Forces 18/1 am golng to give her my own] - —-|no doubt that the force which attack. | value of $100,000 had already been ac. | appenrances Bet donnie Coens q “ J ye titled to t ». 8. C, Ad y 's Si Si 5 ‘> s m@mandiing and assisting in the placing epanse dagger thet ad ae Gy el aiid shai P CORN TAXES BIG JUMP. ed the Japanese was @ powerful and|copted before the oanceliation | Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Compou! * | sf the guns of Battery F, the same y nary an Poethrhnctnliecdches well-armed Bolshevik band. reached China. and look years younger.—Advt. Is one and a half years old. The 5 — father does not know of the child's existence, and the mother says she hopes he never will, F, C. Brainard, a Washington bus!- ness man, father of Mrs. Grimwood, Investigator Finds It Is, With Po-| says hoe distrusted h.s son-in-law from the first time he saw him. His land, Key to Russia—Mutual | qaugnter was married to the English. | Distrust Seen. ian before Mr, Brainard saw him. “The girl was so deeply in love with VUFINNA, April 3 (Associated Press).!him and was #o blinded by his sup- posed war record that I thought I battery that was coremended, on Nov. @th by Major Gen. Hay, who was Wet Victory im Chicago and Wheat Shortage Ball Prices. CHICAGO, April 3—Com made an extraordinary jump in price yesterday amounting in eome cases to 7% cents « bushel. OMfctal announcement that wheat scarcity was so acute that wheat and flour exports from the United States to neutral countries had been s cited was chefly responsible, ietory for the liquor interests In the Chicago municipal election was also an FOOD IN UKRANIA Fal TO STOP REDS ( AEARN FRIDAY SATURDAY @poorated for “extraordinary gul- lqntry.” Col, Miner also wears the Grolx de Guerre. Gen. Pershing’s tribute to Col. ‘Miner, cabled at the time he was elted for bravery, read as follows: “Col. Asher Miner, 10&b Picld Ar- tMery—For extraordinary herolsm ia ae Mine ER. Sotion at Apremont, France, Oct. 4, 1918. Ono of the batteries of the regi- ment commanded by this officer ns- signed to an advanced position in di- rect support of an infantry attack} —That Poland with tho Ukraine ts the ImpOrtane Pastor, Traders took the was heavily shelled by the enomy| ey to Russia is the conviction of the | Would better make the bost of it a8! view that corn products would be much while & was going into action, It long as they were already married,” | more in demand for export. It waa @ correspondent, who has just travelled through the two countries, During the journey the correspondent inter- "| viewed dozens of persons who for Mr, Brainard said. Grimwood, who is now In England, where he was recently acquitted on a forgery charge, is charged with having obtained thousands of dollars |€ being necessary, to take another position, iner went for. ward under heavy shell fire and pe gonally supervised the placing of t popular opinion also that rye and bar- ey would be largely bought on the chance that the result of the Chicago tian would be interpreted as a ref+ ndum on Prohibition, and that with Lemon Juice is @Uns ip the new position. Col, Miner ») . a! ” @ peace treaty signed before July 1 Skin Beautifier, gontinued his efforts until he received | Months have been watching the de- Ba Oo pile totes in wee Prohibition would not be permitted to . & severe wound that later necessitated | velopment of events leading to out- ington, but sentence was suspended. take effect, amputation of his lex. like that at Budapest, and ; nev i lia : re t n if Also a Whitener Seal aavibintes 02 Col Miner Ino hes en Clears Liest. vi of Aireratt a -Of- €aso ale oO was impressed with the fact that the mere supplying of food would not nip Boishevisin in tho bud arywhere, There is plenty of food in the AN PARLY START NEEDED, (rom the Knoxville Sentinel.) ‘The best way to overcome a Bolshe- vist and transform him Into a good citizen ie to start with his grandfa- the produce world yesterday paid tribute to him on the floor of the » Exchange. During the cours: to one of the offices there, the brokers icarned of his Cha: WASHINGTON, April 3.—Lieut. & B, Vrooman, charged in the Hughes aircraft investigation report with vio~ Many women use just the juice of Jemons to bleach or whiten the skin, but pure lemon juice is acid, there- fore irritating, and should be mixed with orchatd white. At the cost of a small jar of ordi- nary cold crenin one can prepare a fall quarter pint of the most wonder- fal lemon skin softener and com- jon beautifier, by squeesing the of two fresh lemons into a bot- containing three ounces of orchard white. Care should be taken to’ strain the juice through a fine cloth so no oe pulp gets in, then this lotion keep fresh for months, Every ‘woman knows that lemon juice is used te bleach and remave such blemishes as freckles, sallowness and tan, and is the ideal skin softener, smoothener and beautifier. Just try it! Get three ounces of orchard white at any pharmacy and two lemons from the grocer and make up a gets wy of Niel sweetly fragrant on lotion and massage it daily into the face, neck, arms hands. It should naturally help to bring back to any skin the whiteness, the sweet freshness and flexibility of ry They improvised a daw on the floor of the Mxchange and held an impromptu reception. Ol. Asher Miner is 68 years old, a millionaire, a leader in the business Ue of Wilkes-Barre, Pa, and t Wyoinlng Valley, and he didn’t have to go to war; in fact, to go to war it wan necessary for him to overcome Considerable army opposition, based on his age. He could have remained at home, looking after his extensive busihess interests connected with the Miner-Hillard Milling Co., founded in 1795 by his ancestors, five generations back. He fought his way to the front andé fought at the front and the pride he feels in his D. 8. C. will be over shadowed by the pride he will feel when he takes part in the reception to the regiment he commanded in France, in Wilkes-Barre, some time next month. Col. Miner enlisted at the age of thirty-one in the 109th Infantry Pennsylvanta National Guard at Wilkes-Barre tn 1892 and served with tho organization through successive jonas, retiring as Colonel in 910, Tn. 1916 he heard the bugles calling Ukraine, but Bolshevism has got the upper hand through the expenditure of money from Moscow, by agitation and by buying troops. There is really @ national movement in the Ukraine. Unfortunately tne Poles, who might naturally be expected to co-operate with the Ukrainians, describe the lat- ter as being led by a group of adven- turers. The correspondent apparently was the first person looking for unbiased information to visit the West Ukraine Government and also the Russian Uk ‘The country certainly does not appear to be led by or peopled with adventurers, but by those anxious to secure independence ag @ nation, Premier Ostapincho said “The Allies suspect that we will join with Russia, This we will never do, The Russians, including Tolstoy, are all fools, Nothing good ever came out of Russia or ever will, politi- cally or socially. The Bolsheviki are fools too. ther. lation of Honest Advertising 'S is a topic we all hear now-a-days because #0 many people are in- clined to exaggerate, Yet has any physician told you that unreasonable remedial properties for Fletcher’s Castoria? Just ask them. We won’t answer it ourselves, we know what the answer will be. That it has all the virtues to-day that was claimed for it in its early days | is to be found inits increased use, the recommendation by prominent physicians, and our assurance that its standard will be maintained. | Imitations are to be found in some stores and only because of the Cas- toria that Mr. Fletcher created. But it is not the genuine Castoria that Mr. Fletcher Honestly advertised, Honestly placed before the public, and from which he Honestly expects to receive bis reward. Genuine Castoria always bears the signature of we claimed ECAUSE of last week’s inclement weather we are repeating, by special request, this, the fourth in our great series of Start-of-Season Sales, and, like the previous ones, is wholly unexcelled in values. We posi. tively state that we know of no other store where hats of such fashion, beauty and quality as these are obtainable at prices approaching this figure. which it bas been robbed by cai and rejoined, going to the Mexican ness or trying atmospheric conditions |porder: in charge of ‘thee regiment. —Advt. Late tn 1916 the 109th Infantry was WINE & LIQUOR PROHIBITION _ Is Fast Approaching Lay in your supply for those “Dry” days. Prices are steadily advancing and some of the famous and standard brands are rapidly disap- pearing. Our inducements are high quality goods at low and attractive prices, offered an estab- lishment of ong standing. ROMBITION! A WARNING AGAIN REPEATED If you intend to replenish your wine cellars before July 1st, NOW is the time to buy. Many of our patrons already have taken our advice and laid in stocks in preparation for the Prohibition period; and though we still have enough select merchandise in quantity to satisfy the most discriminating, it is fast becoming a question of getting fine desirable goods at any price. DO NOT DELAY Our Regular $8.50 eermira ts tl ANOTHER DAY ay SPECIALS “Lohy fone Ptabyanre oPeerp fiona. etter Wentaksy.s Kab ead | Merten Mosely Sherry and | bog a i fh g wholesale im ti ‘ ; rect hank ie leading wholesale importing 95 kberry, $2.00; . . . G9 1100| medicinal sre houses in this country, has been conducting NLY a few types from the immense variety and number of hats are here a WINE ‘VAULT CLEARANCE SALE through which thousands of cases of the finest Vintage Wines and Imported Liquors have been acquired by private purchasers and connoisseurs. We can still supply you with many of the most famous vintage Champagnes, such as Pol Roger 1906, 1909; Krug 1909; Lanson 1906, and others, as well as au- thentic Rhine and Moselle Wines, both Still and Sparkling, and rare Liqueurs. Among other rarities, we might mention :>— Chat. Lafite—-Barons de Rothschild 1898, 1903 Chat, Gruaud Larose Sarget 1900 Original Gilka Kummel Chat. Latour Blanche 1900 Original Old Chartreuse If you have room to buy in bulk, it is to your advantage to purchase Brandies, Ports, Sherries, Gins, and Scotch, Bourbon and Rye Whiskies in this form. Special inducements also, for a short time, on Imported Green Menthe French and Italian Vermouth We invite your inspection of our stocks. If not convenient to visit our establishment, tele phone or telegraph for our representative, who will bring complete information and price lists. HENRY HOLLANDER Importers of Wines and Whiskies for the Connoisseur ESTABLISHED 1877 149-151 West 36th St. TELEPHONE: GREELEY 3218-3219 pictured, Besides these sketched are many others, all having the fineness, grace and originality of those illustrated. All are new and exquisitely fresh, You may choose appropriately from hats of Directoire, poke, Watteau, Gains- borough, tam, sailor, long side, tricorne, and other shapes which fashionably revive quaint styles of the past or devise lines enchantingly new. The quality in materials and workmanship is eminently satisfying. In addition to those sketched above there are at least two hundred models to select from, Ma attan (J 11) eae PORT AND SHERRY, ETC. Sandeman Port or Sherry Port or Bherry., ook, bon, bond; full ats. k's Old Crow Duffy's Mait Hy Government Ciub 5s. SCOTCHA& IRI Rtraindon, torel Williams's G 1 White House Port or Sherry Cockburn & Smithers Port, Satvador Guel Port. ito or Amaroso Sherry Angelica, Catawba, Muse tel ; 60, . 228 10. SH WHISKIES bo 90 - “BEHIND THE SCREEN What Movie-Land Is Like When You Are Inside It. First-Hand Impressions of the Film Country and Its People. Jules Robin Gold Lab. Marquis Lat: Glencadam Highi'd Whis! john Jameson 3-Star ushmill 3-Sto : Brandy, Cal Ginger Brandy Mor Hennensy 3. Star, SSSSssa3 Stor ss; Dunville Bpec., Imp RUMS AND GI Callfornia Burgundy edoc, St. Julien, Bordeaux Bordeaux b E WINES 31 3 RHIN Se eBgaW pesusesest pipe even Z eseusoees Ruedesheimer . Rights reserved as to quantitle Orders receive cur careful and prompt attention, J. @ L. Alterman 135 8th Ave., bet. 16th and17th Sts., NewYork West Side of Avenue. Phones: C 2480—Chelsea 5686 Convenient to Subwey, “L’’ and Street Cars iterman . West Side of Ave.,N.Y, By KARL K. KITCHEN, Sunday World Magazine Writer, just back from the West. FIRST ARTICLE IN (Just West of B’way.) NY AO UPOL eee Ee treme mewemnn mer mem st nee PSs PERE o> eee ctr ee oeapresroneer eres niente

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