The evening world. Newspaper, November 13, 1919, Page 22

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ore friends. AGTORS HONOR "0 MASTS, AS YEARS PALS Blesin ind fl Heath cali! Warm Tribute From Stage and Managers, ‘ Just. four things wore missingte fake yesterday's and Inst night's eelébration of the forty-fifth anhi- Yersary of the firm of McIntyre & Heath the greatest thing of the kind since the Knights of Pythias com- canhgey the coming together of mn and his famous pal: ‘There was no street parade down (Main Street at noon, with the making eyes at the gallus and dance men. immediately preceding the just, : er Dan Quinlan for. to say, “Géritlomen, be seated.” ‘And there was no birthday cake ‘with 45 candles in it But outside of these few minor flaws—which nobody noticed until to~ day, when the boys began mulling it over—the McIntyre & Heath affair ‘was as happy, as delightful and as wudcessful an affair of the kind as° the United States of America will know until W. X. Y. 2%. Anderson takes his foot off the gullete of hie fellow citize Not many Pweckn ago the ‘tender Javenals of the press were writing— qesin—of\ the “passing of the Last dbo ¥ ks and long he wave. Among those Wie casembled to. do benor 40. two fas minstrels were Fred Wilson, American clog dancer, who cele- iP the oldest ving wag NORCROSS STILL WORKING ON THE CIRCUIT. nat cal for a baaso my ae frog yoy fee ee nee ree because he is is over at the Orpheum for 80 many years manager, rose = & 3 er, irind and the Columbia Furnishings Are Mysteriously Company, who told @bout Jim and Tom as he e@wore be had ‘King and all the royal family of terp- originators: ; and—oh! lote| elderly man, who remained’ unidenti- ethene} fied, drove up to the house of Misi y began with a® matinee oho. slemander" in the 44h | Sophie Loderhose, the herot Theatre, where Jim and Tom | pban' ned twenty men once famous | Dean ‘of them named | ning, entered the apartment of Miss Loderhose, remained there about an taten Island and an even | hour, and then carried some of the eed lk now appear-| furnishings into their automobile. o “riot,” ‘The. BARNEY FAGAN'S sToRies|® , PLEASED THE BOYS, by heer was merry from be- Pan Quinian recited ia Lew Benedict told a vregplar First Part 3 about a doc. ter, Uncle Charley Morris made a Fred Wilson, ninety-two and read @ and insisted on tak- ing an. encore. Harry Sayers paid eloquent tribute to the qualities. of fheart'that make James McIntyre and ‘Thomas K. Heath good fellows and Barney Fagan refused ‘respond to the toast “Olden Day: Hariey called them the “Golden and his pals cheered him to the “echo. The minstrels liked ‘best Fagn' ‘orles about Charley Mabie ‘and the song-and-dance boys, MoKee told ‘te guests of honor how ‘highly they are régarded by their newspaper friends. Jim MeIntyre spoke—from the heart Feweped Tom and himself. His was shortest -but happiest speech of tae i. The party might have been going now only that two thousand ; including the Shuberts, would eo been disappointed if Jim and “had not rushed back to the shop for the evening perform- Interlocutor Dan Quinlan explained said Dan, “were stib‘in character,’ They had removed the burnt cork, but coming fresh trom the, matinee, and with the evening pertormance so close at band, Jim Metntyre still was Alexander, the foolish, susceptible nigger so easily imposed upon, while Tom really was Henry Clan Jones, the sl coon, who for forty-five years has been putting thines over on bi “if there was a birthday cake, Henry Clay Jones would have scooped “jim ‘and Tom = MOVERS INVADE ny why- there was no birthday | | LODERHOSE HOME|" LATE AT NIGH Taken to the House of ‘Girl's Married Sister. ) Mr and Mrs. W.P. Phillips and an of the lever mystery, at 14a itréet, Brooklyn, late last Loaded with kitchen utensils, cloth 9) ing and miscellaneouthousehold goods the auto went to the Phillips home at No, 817 Putnam Avenue. Unloaded, it told teporters that her he fuged to, taf wer, if town and re! ot 4 fue We Pitlipa Weald not w tatement as soon as he mething definite. Mr. and a eninine a 4 bit upset. Nothing definite Wwe Willams: Hoffmann. jr. jonaire.. A Medford, L. 1. re ian, and perhaps somé- name to improper uses. mance. would investigate it, tor named Hoffmann—H, W. ot otherwise—is known to the medica and dental societios, or is listed | the city or telephone directories there OIL BURNERS BEING FITTED While Other Cunard Ships Soon Will Be Changed. Cooyrlens, 1519, Oy Te Pew Pubtining Co ‘ork "Yrening Wor LIV: RPOOL, ‘Nov. Tamia the alt tions Olympic at Belfast, an oll burnin, Paratus is being installed, and the indications that the time is not far Wt, candies and all, We couldn't have stood for that.” ——-——-- + Recount Orde Serta o districts in Paterson, N ordered by Soret F. Min- The re-| Ti A recoun: of the Mayoralty votes of | f ocean going vessels t and Aquitania, as well |vexsels under construction ¢ and associated , handed over by companies will en shi tons 0 tons of in the —Advt. dealer named Adolph Hoffmann said he han “3 cousin in Los Angeles who body gr deen putting his relativess | He didnot know his cousin's first name and said he had no reason beyond the similiar- ity of names for linking his Califer- nia relative with the Hoffmann ro- Mr. and Mrs. Phillips, when ques- tioned about this ce! sald they Word was re- ceived from Los Angeles that no doc- TO GREAT OCEAN LINERS | The Olympic Now Being Altered, a. Ing made in the White Star liner | tant when coal as a motive power will divappear from the majority of the oth tor “the e ‘The also probably be pe available THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1939 “aN | Noted Stage Stars of the Long Ago Join in Greeting McIntyre and Heath George Washington will sail for , OUR PEAGE ENVOYS America Nov. 15 and probably will be N D ary-docked, HER NATURAL MISTAKE MAKES THE BURGLAR ACHE. (From the Cincinnati Enquirer.) The burglar occupied a cot in the accident ward In the hospital, His head ‘was tied up ja bandages and he had a fractured arm and a broken rib. Delegation / Notifies th the Supreme Council of Its Intention to * Leave France, PARIS, Noy, 13-—he American F the love br Mike, what hap- delegation to the Peace Conference pal a haw notified the Supreme Council of |" Sroke into a house about 4 o'clock ita intention to leave France during|this morning,” explained the burglar. “And thi woman of the house’ met the first days of December. This tact! in the dark hall und mistook ‘me. for ‘was made known Dy American Peace | her husband. hought | saw him Contegence circles this afterngon. just getting hom The British peace delegation also has expressed the same desire and the general impression in French con- From the Birminghacn Age-Herald,) ference circles is that the conference! «you could have heard a pin drop will conclude its work by the end of | while the leading man held the leading this month, lady in passionate embrace." The members of the American dele- ‘Well on, will probably sail from Brest That's why I lost patier the “ ——>—— DIRECTOR TURNS GR AT UNUSUAL SCENE, N gal on the steamer America, but the date; ™usloal director spolled ¢ © by, re ‘sailing has not been definitely |StppINE his baton to the floor fixed. delegates originally, had at that heading: lady “artis eraetied to gait.on the George Wash- |{° n married to her if ington, but the latter !s in Brest har- | to view such scene: bor badly in need of repairs, Thé rotesi lonal water pre} vd: ila lai ‘as learned ‘about the phantom lover, whom Sophie had identified to her friends as Dr. H. ‘@ multi-mill- r 4 | Your Hair Needs Danderine Save your hair and double its beauty. You can have lots of long, thick, strong, lustrous hair. Don’t let it stay lifeless, thin, scraggly or fading. Dring*back its color, vigor and vitality. Get a 35-cent bottlé of delightful “Danderine” at any drug or toilet counter to freshen your scalp; check dandruff and falling hair. “Your hair needs stimulating, beautifying ‘“Darderine” ‘4 restore its life, colér, brightness, abundance, Hurry, Girls! by Mrs. Milla D. Shonts to break her husband's will and retain control of sides investtgating the removal of $50,000 worth of furnishings from Mr. been trying several days to solve the disappearance of the furnishings trom source cloge to the executors that all of Mr. Shonts’s personal property had been removed at the order of the ex- ecutors appointed by Mr. Shonts in his will, and stored in fireproof vaults pending settlement of the estate, The executors who are seeking to have Mrs. Shonts removed as temporary ad- ministrator of her husband's estate are De Lancey Nicoll, Edward J. Ber- wind and the Guaranty Trust Com- pany. ‘ besides his Pennsylvania property, |’ of Chicago. ‘The farm, which was one of Mr. Shonts’s favorite retreats, was worked by tenant farmers. So far as could be learned, has been put by Mrs. Shonts or her attorneys on the furnishings rémoved, but they are said to be of a class with those removed from the apartment, valued by Mrs. Shonts at $50,000. ing the will she will receive no part of Mr. Shonts's personal property, as in the separation agreement of 1917} she relinquished all dower rights. The property would therefore go to the two daughters Otherwise it will be included in the residuary Amanda C. Thomas, described by Mr. Shonts in his will as “my friend.” Miss Theodora Shonts,“Mmay not come from Paris until the contest over her FURNITURE MISSING IN FARMHOUSE OF LATE MR, SHONTS Pennsylvania Home of Dead Traction Man Also Stripped, Widow Learns. The fight in the Surrogate’s Court his estate disclaped yesterday that be- Shonts’s apartment at No. 930 Park Avenue a few days after his death, Mrs. Shonts and her attorneys have $9 to $11 **What’s a Combination Last?’’ Feet vary as much as people. To furnish every- one his and her fit, Walk-Over Shoes are made on countless models. For your fit, you may require only our combination last. That’s merely a shoe two widths narrower at back than front. If your shoes don’t fit right, come in and try this one. For looks it’s a humdinger and for comfort it’s perfect. Walr-O e New York City 179 Broadway 150 Bowery 1173-75 Broadway 252 W. 125th Street 565-7 Fulton Stree 1439 Broadway 622 W. 18Ist Street $406 Fifth Avenue Bronx—557 Melrose Avenue Yonkers, N. ¥.—7 N. Broadway Newark, N. J.—795 Broad Street . Paterson, N. J.—118 Market Street Poughkeepsie, N. Y.—297 Main Street -for sho r salads - the large farmhouse of Mr. Shonts near Philadelphia. It was learned, however, from 4 It was also learned yesterday that which consists of 280 acres with a modern equipment, Mr. Shonts owned several building lots in the suburbs No value, Park ‘Avenue If Mrs, Shonts succeeds in break- Brooklyn 1355 Broadway in equal shares. estate and, go to Mrs. The Duohess de Chaulnes, formerly will actually comes to trial, = = srlendidy Practical recipes. Compiled by ss leading expert cooks., le Write us to-day forthe’ a new Corn Products a xy \\) \ ONO S sel Purity and uniform quality are absolutely -certain with every can of MAZOLA, MAZOLA-cooked foods are easily digested even by delicate people who cannot eat animal fats. MAZOLA is the pure oil from golden corn kernels. HUGE! OOORANEAOQAECQQTUOVEOACASERA ATER GAG UAUUCTOUENLE A AENEG DUEL peiuiats , | IT MAKES LITTLE DIFFERENCE WHAT YOU NEED—A sunpkiy WORLD “WANT” WILL GO AND GET’ ‘tt, ” ere ee

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