The evening world. Newspaper, July 18, 1919, Page 10

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i y A oa \ a ‘ A | 7? i ARS WOLD ami + winstsie ‘ unded 64 Times He’s.Honor Guest At Entertainment Given at Yale Club AANAULT BROTHERS Pubrem. Reem mre Chowne oe ghs Dipesmeiegel prem! Menge gen tg plod 8 +4 annual labor to lessen fwrere cutlined to-day. by ‘Dr. James) Tiny of the protection accorded to its ‘T. Shotwell, American representative | workers by law.” on the organizing committe of the| Four delegates from each nation in ., 4 le of were will be This meeting, he dectared, wit! be] sunting the Government, vs the first step taken in accordance | resenting pital a with the peace treaty on behalf of labor, S*®twell, head of the History representing labor. ey may be wo: companied by technical experts, who Diviston of the American Com- mission, commented on these four START NOW 10 CLEAR YOUR SKIN Found Exhausted and Starving After Mother Gives Him Up : As Dead. SPRIN GGROVE, I; July 18.—Six- year-old Harry Nutter, blackened by gan sit in the conference, but will not have a vote, . expbsut 14 wizened by starvation, wv Gur Day snd Women | 1, an sisht-hour aay throuehout the ON NEW HAVEN ROAD the wesas * S070 M tent sone Ie deine clea, fait Skin fee from Age fil Chikren in Industry |, “I the treaty at powers have | ie bar wandered trom home Jay | 4rating eruptions) SO © to Be Taken Up. ~ of the eight-hour day,” said Shotwell Freight Engine, Carrying Victim’s "Saat dade, pos Voownstiga partially to his OUr hardest task, the most stubborn i at the conference will undertake to and difficult condition of diseased skin you have to overcome. It is qualified and ready. Its makers can put mo more of perfection in it to make it Body After Wrecking Motor Car Hits Milk Train, MOOBUP, Conn., July 17.—One man death. Yesterday a party of berry pickers heard @ faint bird-like chirp. |Tracing it they came upon the child, draw up definite laws which will em- body that principle so it can be ap- plied by each nation and prepare a ay July 18 (Unite! of the international o- naked and skeloton-like, He sank inté mote valuable to.you. So let it serve . Wouterence, created by the/detaiied treaty on that subjoct to nl gay aed bette Slr . attired ;® coma which lasted until to-day, when you; utilize its splendid healing help. . » treaty, when, it convenes here make the obligations reciprocal among | freight, amine ‘exo as Beef Qe awolte with hig mother's arms about| Sold everywhere. Fo? free sample him. Doctors say the boy will recover. He was too wei happened in the IT SWEET h the indignation, 0. orrow—try | write to Emergency Laboratories, 248 West 47th St., New York City. Poslam Soap, medicated with Pos- lam should be used if skin is tender and sensitive—Advt. gang's motor car, on the Midland di- |, vision of the New York, New Haven ment: “The peace treaty,” he said,|and Hartford Railroad to-day. The “ptovides that each nation provide freight, from Providence to Willimantic, remedial {egisjation with reference to|@t Glen Falls crossing, struck nhengloyment, The pti canta in| motor car, killing Charles Minko and October will discuss definite Iaws.” iat app rs gh ie Sees toe ~ man ai inko’s body 3. Women in Industry. “This is to| were placed on the tender of the én. be taken up with reference to three | gine, which being uncoupled, was start. Separate problerks,” Shotwell stated.| ea for Witimantic. As the sharp ‘First, safeguarding tho health of curve was rounded the engine ran into mothers, obliged to work for their| the m™Mk train from Willimantic to to-di tell 2%. State help to remedy unemploy- ‘0. Ah ‘ell what ven MORGENTHAU IN WARSAW. Hopes to Assist ne tlams Alike in Poland. _ LONDON, July 18—Henry Morgen- thau, member of the American mission to Poland, has arrived in Warsaw, ac- jcording to @ despatch to the Morning Post to-day. Homer Johnson of Cleve- DIAGRAM anowinG WHERE BERG. WHITE WAS WOUNCED 64 TIMES SLumvnare living, “It is proposed to prohibit] Providence, which was just making the * oe ex) ee trom, France, f their work for ® certain period before | *t*tion | stop. = Both engines were saying the mission was due to the)’ and after childbirth. To provide for| "Mashed. but the crews cscaped by United States Government's friendly de- jumping. Passengers in the rear coach of the milk train were thrown about but none was badly hurt. Me —_————— These Federal Jobs No “Snaps.” WASHINGTON, July 18.—Government work ts no “soft Job,” acording to Sec- retary Redfield, who in asking Con- gress for authority to employ ten ad- ditional clerks in his office, said that during the last five months ninety em- ployes bad worked 432 days overtime. & mother’s maintenance during the period she is not permitted to work, each nation will be required to create @ maternity fund. The second wili be enforcement of prohibition of night work for women and third, considera. tion of women in» dangerous trades.” 4. Children in industry. “The main question involved » he said, “is the prohibition of child labor up to fourteen years of age. There is a definite clause in the peace treaty stating that no country shall be asked eire to assist the Jews and Christiane alike. Amelioration of conditions for the oy tau benefit everyone in Poland, said. Cadum Basinol i enlist again, if I'm fixed O. K., that's| Valescent soldiers xrom the Camp! ing forest fires in Montana and Idaho ' ry | Merritt and Fox Hills Hospitals who|tnat to-day were threatening two ' RD AVENUE ‘That was all. As far as Jack-was| Were at the show as guests of the| Western Montana towns and millions { N. W. Corner concerned there wasn't any more to| Yale Club. They had come into town |of feet of standing white pine p andy in cars sent out by club memb; High winds an@ abnormally high 1 {in cars ei y mbers, 6 by dias ance angen ans csbocomnataahecsiotar tans 83rd Street tell, He admitted a D. 8. C. for gal Summer Clothing he savings are there 28 to 42; at...) to sell—and see tl If You Need Pants, Read: pairs worth from $2 to $8 will be offered i July Clearance at $1.35 to $5.90 og for everybody to see. Every pair guaranteed. 4 Work Pants mreuaw 92-70 hat work Extra Special! Shirts Two thousand brand new garments made selling now in other stores at $1.69; reduced to. .. Men, you won't fully realize what a remarkable offer thi: Ml y hae splendid garments, Th PH Food together for sale purposes, Kivery one guaranteed. “Our own regular stock, made of fine percale Of fast, washable colors, Coat models with soft cuts, oe they are rt: $6 Worsted Pants Save $2.35 a pair $3.65 on these at We won't urge anybody to buy them. They are here—and if you don't tak them, somebody else will; for the: Rancens OF hoe Maw S Parrot AZ NH Revue Sergt. John B. White, the Most with some three or four citations, and hé figured that maybe he was the only man in the A. E. F. who could Pvr, Laue BRYON Claude Lyon of Pittsfield, Mass., who got his with shrapnel in the left arm at Soissons. He'd been having a fine Pimples Cadam. Ointment makes pimples dey up and fall off, leaving the skin soft and smooth. Its soothing, anti- septic and healing powers stop the itching at once, Cadum Ointment is also good for rash, blotches, scaly skin, eruptions, sores, burns, chafings, ringworm, scabs, itch, insect bites, etc. Yor chafed, blistered. feet- wilh If you are foot-sore, and have te stand on one foot and then on the other to get reliei—you need Resinol Ointment. For quicker results, first bathe the feet with Resinol Soap and warm water, then apply the ointment on retiring and bandage. ‘This treatment also brings heartfelt relief te sufferers (rom ecsema and other skin eruptions, Por free trial of soap and vintment write Resinel, Baltimore, Md. Do You Chafe b 4 time that afternoon until he went to phate sf? Fe ane, Sbenenere | Shot-Up Man of the A. E. F.,|wear five wound stripes that meant 4 Window on, the 18th floor of ‘the MENNEN Suaranteed; sizes 28 to * . five major engagements of the war. ; Ra page orgs ~ . Me shaft to the 18h floor of an office a Enjoys Evening of : Ite | ana then, the cigarette finished” he Peliine Belly. tame rank ere és Ia $ ment Furnished by His Bud- | hurriea back to the darkest corner|a pretty and very blond girl, in the Men’s *8 Pants + Ye ot ‘| of an orchestra box to watch the|Window, and Claude smiled, and the dies—He’s a ‘100 Per Cent? Snow. girl smiled too. Then Claude who $7; now Reduced " f i used to be a signalman, wigwagged for this sal Fighter. Sergt. White was wounded in five |over “hello.” The girl smiled, waved, i satan + eg major battles—Cantigny, Solssons, and wigwagged back “My phone is rn 4 Som: ‘anderbilt—— Lyon found the woretels of exceptionally fine quelle Gerst. John B. White, Reguing|tHe Somme, St. MiBlel and the Ar-| Dott Aone in tres seconds, and ia f ties : i4 pl not a pr less than ir wort! regular $8 grades serges, with light and pelt tri Hh and 1” ey are not skimped shirts thrown is full cut, well made and TH AVENUE Between F 15th and 16th Streets Army, U. 8, A., who carries the scars of sixty-four wounds received on the Western Front in nineteen mon:hs of ville show he'd seen since he sailed for France on June 14, 1917. Six feet four inches tall, but slight- ly bent on the crutches that sapport his crippled leg, “Sergeant Jack’'as bis friends at the Camp Merritt Base Hospital call him, paused in the lobby of the Palace Theatre while oue of the boys lit his cigarette. “Yea, I've been wounded sixty-four times,” he said, “but don't go making any fuss over that. I'm a regular army man, been a regular for etght- een years in China, Alaska, the Phil- ippines and at the border. Fight- ing’s my business, and the wounds don't matter. “The doctors over at Merritt are taking care of them. I've got-two years to do on this hitch, and then I'm going down ‘to ‘visir my folks in Spartanburg, 8. C,—and may | Va in action, he allowed it was true that he had a.Croix de Guerre gonne. He was fairly peppered with faachine gun bullets. The Argonne battle accounted for seven of them and for a series of shrapnel wounds knife slash paralyzed his left thumb | and he has several bayonet slashes. The wounds to his left leg, in which ‘twelve machine gun bullets struck between the hip and knee, caused him to be sent home. Before that he twice ran away from hospitals to get back to the battle line, He still has @ machine gun bullet under his chin | and two in that left leg. General Pershing issued an order when White was returned to the| United States that he should not b2| put on any duty until, he had com- pletely recovered. Two weeks ago his ankle was broken in a motorcycle accident. JUST ONE WOUND AFTER AN- OTHER WITH “SERGEANT JACK.” White was the leader of 167 con- and at noon there had been a big dinner at the club house with a jazs a minute had the young lady on the wire. “Oh, no, I haven't a name—and I'm afraid that you can't call——The Boss as vaudeville went. He went back to the window and signalled that his address is ward 38, Gun Hill Road Hospital, and that visitors are wel- come on Sunday afternoons. But across the way the Boss came out and shut the window. It's a tough war.” THREE STATES FIGHT SPREADING FOREST FIRES Two Towns and Millions of Feet of Lumber Threatened Despite Efforts to Check Blaze. SPOKANE, Wash., July 18.—Every available man in’ Western Montana, Northern Idaho and Eastern W: ington is being employed by the Fed- eral Foreign Service and the private forest protective associations to fight temperatures, combined with parched forests, are all but rendering the ef- Smooth and velvety ae he of @ rose ie - t petale fahtine, forest wars, and anes ang which destroyed the nerves and |/Wst,came In. 1 opty smiled the re. the complexion aided by* itals yesterday afternoon in e other end, and 1 ‘3 Cotton P hosp! muscles of his left leg. Ho was|celver #eked at the other end, Nadine “Face Powder Maniacs Yo Pants | Outing Serges laughs of the first New York vaude-| struck by snipers three times, | Lyon's day was just ruined as far This délicate bea: impa: an indefinable charm—a charm which in the memory re of it rn or the return of olorations, Sol Green Bones diet oe toate NATIONAL TOILET COMPANY, will bring °°, ar eran tNUXATE IRON { 1,000 men fighting the many _ and and dancing and singing ana|‘°rt® © . Nerrtbive on the menu from olives|forest fires usele: The towns!! How You Can Remove You need aid AIO ES = to ice cream, The affair had been| threatened with destruction are Ath- E T, f Hai ¢ erton’and St, Regis, in Montana. very Trace of Hair arranged by M. N. Buckner of the!” Retween 700 and 1,000 acres in the not surer Yale Club, and .was chaperoned by|irciena Forest are burning, ravaging (Toilet Talks) : Cre 164, 166, 168 and 170 SmithStreet Cor. Wyckoff St. 79100 WORTH OF FURNITURE $1 WEEKLY BROOKLYN, House of WHALEN BROTHERS carries the bi and gives the easiest and best terms of wore. XD Smart Suits 28% up Girls’ House ED SEAL We advise an Eat, Over 60 Years. OPEN Ovictr® Now at 1 Price. Every Red Seal Record formerly sold at $2.00 to $7.00 IS NOW REDUCED TO $1.00 to $3.50 81 to 87 Court, Cor. Livingston St., Brooklyn One Block from Borough Hall Subway Station RECORDS early selection, EVBNINGS, Phone Main 4053, Migs Loulse Smith and Mi: Mabel R. Beardsley of the War Camp Com- munity Service. And although White couldn't be made to say more than 4 word of his battles, his enthusiastic buddies from Ward 10 at Camp Mer- ritt talked for him, “He's 100 pef cent. fighter all the way through,” said a soldier friend some of the timber and destroying the old mining town camp of Jimtown, one and one-half miles from New York. « Lift off Coms! from Jacksonville, Fla. “I went over with him on the Pastores in June, 1917, We were regulars, 18: Division men, ‘and had come right from the border and ,the interior of Mexico campaign, to Hoboken, In France they shoved us up to the front and we went into action at Cantigny. White led the company after the Lieutenant had been killed, and he himself was badly wounded with shrapnel. Was in a base hospital when they gave him the D, 9. C, for ‘conspicuous gallantry under fire.’ Came back and was wounded with machine gun fire at Soissons. Then a Sniper wot bim again during the San Mihiel offensive. He's put in more time in hospitals than half the men of the A. E. F. put in in France, Got his leg full of machine gun bul- men when a shrapnel r them on the Marni record—I guess its near the best in all the A. BF." And hidden down in the orchestra box Jack watched the show with calm, gray eyes and unsmiling lips. Didn't seem to care for pretty girls, or chatter, or song and dance, Didn't laugh at the jokes or the songs or at anything till Eddie Fov that well known New Rochelle father led the assorted children onto the stage, And then Jack grinned the bros in the house, PRIVATE CLAUDE WIG-WAGGED AND MISSED THE SHOW. One of the 157. soldiers wasn't watching the show; He waa Private Doesn't hurt a bit and Freesone costs only a few cants. ODO) With your fingers! You can lift off any hard corn, soft corn, or corn be- tween the toes, and the hard skin calluses from bottom of feet. A tiny bottle of “Freezone” costs little at any drug store; apply a few drops upon the corn or callus, In- stantly it stops hurting, then shortly you litt thet’ bothersome cor oF A stiff paste made with some pow- dered delatone and water and spread on a hairy surface about 2 minutes will, when rethoved, take every trace of hair with it, The skin should then be washed to free it from the remain- ing delatone. No harm can result from this treatment, but be sure it is delatone you get and you will not be disappointed.—Advt. Get Rid of That Persistent Cough Stop that weakening, persistent cough or cold, threatening throat or lung affections, with Eckman's Al- terative, the tonic and up-builder of 20 years’ successful use, 80c and $1.50 bottles from druggists, or from ECKMAN LABORATORY, Philadelphin callus right off, root and all, without one bit of pain or soreness, Truly! No humbug! VO 1919 Summer Resort Annual and Auto Tour Guide Price, Five Cents. By Mail, Ten Cents, Address The World Summer Resort Bureau 63 Park Row, New York

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