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ATTA Nh THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JANUARY 10, 1920, J |both a picture and a verse or tine well clothed, who ts eating a folly| book. Idid not miss one single word. /and thank you and the dear Méétes If | of greeting. Christmas dint be the little Jeanne |] followed the play from the book, and | for such a lovely performance. It was The Evening World’s ||| A prize of one dollar will be given we saw in 1917? Yea, it is! Yes, the|I opuld tell cach one aa they came on Ticpunrnnnnnnnnnnnsintoniiovaiinantinnnibieglonennnsete to each of the ten kiddies, aged from ood, brave Americans Have come|the stage. When it wae ail over {certainly great, 1 admire everything. Pf e 6 || [six to fiftegn inclusive, who send in and freed nce from the | thought laid myself, |{ met my cousin up at the Manhattan 2 > the pretti@st and cleverest designs clutches of Germany. The armistice | Your lit Oper of d she loved it, too. ?It All Depends onthe Hole |Kiddie Kluk K or mer Jit rinteeicinice sihes incl snes Rom cet eka rieey ort. | Preto ania tee fone TO = ‘ . drawn and the verse or line of greet- Day that wondert tion, the = i ¥ 11 cannot express how lovely I th = 4 Comyrtamt, 1990, vy The Pree Publishing Co, (The New York Brening World.) | ling be written enti sender American Red C EAR COUSIN %SLEANOR: You|!t was, Cousin Eleanor. Many thanks 3 i ‘ unt at . Gn nid Ce ak Gave pled oF poor people a Beats srry about the kid.{t the kiddies, and Ob, I must not for- 1 - And Harlem’s Baker Wins Conducted by Eleanor Schorer traced. On the back of each Valen- ‘There are good things to Hea! Tha plan Worry about wie Kid’) get you, Your little Cousin, NATALIE c = tine m e written the name, age, Clothes to wear, and, nbote gl, dies’ The play was a success, Evety| GORAGNARE, New York. f ; é jtine must be w se |ielddie that was in or out of the pla shits & About Old New York for the little ones, Little Jeanne, in play address and certificate number. of the kiddie who designed it and also the signature of one of the kiddie parents or guardian telling that it is a corner, 1s hugging a doll in one| Just tried to make it so, Our violin-| ® hand and holding a big plece of cake|'St Was wonderful. The girl with the in the other. peacock feathers was lovely, too. Now the fenst don't th™k I could describe to you BOWLING GREEN. ine how New York looked to a little Dutch boy u HOW TO JOIN THE KLUB AND OBTAIN YOUR PIN. ‘Was Like “Grand Old Temple of Justice’ DayS! Aas you in we entered is over. A man a a; ’ : the bay o agile wooden ship some 800 yoars ago? Do you suppose | original. we darful-—ho ely—it w = in Harlem’s Own East Side Court When Joe yc sw ines i nnd then the horizon bristling with the Jagged COUSIN ELEANOR —JUIDS, up, crying. “Vive j aL NY Wel ete ime Tan 5 . : : roofs of “skyscrapers indeed, He passed some little green islands TC i thank you very much for sending m° ~ Tried to Prove Louis Was Stealing His} 1 heath (He ahaddyr of Port Ainalerdakn. NOVEMGER CONTEST AWARD | the Hekets. 1 hope some of your other| he spot Seen acai if yroductions will soon be out id that * Farther North Doughnuts and Augusta, m Hotes How ie) abate pleawant, | Sometimes the India| pa wag oy (tee tay, iit ih 8 \ye can. try and have SVERTHODY | Oe entis cont MALU, § . ‘ |with its four cannons proudly chiefs, reapiendent with feathers and|]™ was Chr rosea come, Your cousif, CLARA ‘LUKUN hd AND ABDI, » German Matron Withan Eloping Daughter, | trter the tite villaze tat nestied in| beads, gathered around a Plazing fire|A little town in France, | Shivering SOM, New York. an ty tte es of ay is ‘ ’ : . ite shadow. Directly ck of the fort]im Bowltng Green to discuss with the] with cold, with soba shaking her lit- EAR COUSIN F Twent — econ SRearbere. fa cet ek ~ Said She'd Bing-Bing Herself. was Buwling Green. It was then, as! White men on serious subjects, Atl tio frame, a small girl was looking at to sce the play. “The Wishing FAR COUSIN ELFANOR: rt mny| $uuetatee? omy Klee Pie ey ry Shel rs Jit ts now, a broad, open space, and {such times every one held his breath | the blackened remains of her home. d 1 think it was the nicest seem rather Jate now to write COUPON NO. SEO * cman amma ar oe ce setved alternately as a playground, | [0" fear of the outcome: For who. in- The little girl was Jeanne Acquin. taj; Lever saw. [also read the you, but really J did not forget to write | « > in the last race Market place, fe ground and| deed could tell whether the meeting | che waa an orphan whose father had a 4 ~ — By Roger Batchelder. a dark he “phe | re being no complainant pres- | meeting place as the occasion de-| Would end in the smoke of the peace | ;, Killed , fiehtiny oriousty for seidirs ecemed like old times at the Har- ont to press the charge.” announced | manded pipe or the boom of the cannon? | Franee, and Whose Saather had been ‘fem Court, which is on 131st | Judge Sweetser, blundiy, ‘I discharge | As every good New Yorker knows. es \killed ‘by «a stray German. bullet. New Issue i ou a) utoly n if rite 1a ute’ e yo enjoy v oon- | «irl to live wit m in ugderground ‘Gere was Assistant District AUOMEY |rinatdy for the complainant, she is|which they played in thelr leisure! test 1 7 | Cell: hres dase bets te tats | ‘Diren: ho mad think of the } ne | r st last year so much that you jars, Three days before th s . m0, W je one | not now in Germany ‘ [hours on its grassy lawns. ‘Then, and | would 1iké to have another this year? |Mans had left the village, on thelr sokl days at the! An afternoon visit to the Wasting. | when the villagers rallied around the ie ii : y' | way ruthlessly destroying Jeanne's (MASSACHUSETTS CORPORATION) . ‘Igrand old temple |ton Hetghts Court, at 167th Btreat and Maypole or danced on the green, it/ Several letters have said so, Well,|/home. On Christmas Day Jeanne st. N . Sc Nichoiaa Avenue, found. overy- | Was @ playground, to be sure. Tt was|! am glad to hear it and your wish| had crept from the cellar where she of justice, when he jf) quiet and peaceful, The only|@ market place in the season when |shall be granted. Thero is little that | was slaving and hed pon Satonie ct helped the Judges | there. according to the|the settlers and tho Indiana brought |! would not do to please you; 80|her home once more, not. knowing tear off justice by comes Sunday morning, |thelr produce and the skins of tle|#mall a favor cannot be refused. We|that it had been burned. And when the yard. Andjsfter raids on gentlemen and ladies | nnimais the} Will begin our Valentine contest | she saw her beloved horae !n ashes—- in aha Harlem [of color who disport themaclves with | forest jright now, Like last year, It will be| well, wouldn't you nave cried, tu again, |Minsiasippi marbles, leaping dominoes} But sometimes the little Dutch chil. jat once a drawing and a writing later, Christmas OFFERS $3,000,000 7% PREFERRED STOCK REFERRED AS TO DIVIDENDS AND ASSETS PAR VALUE $100.00, NON-ASSESSABLE, they had hunted in y, a F eee aeatrepe Oe Wie k Pavone every employee it carries 2,000 times as much. SSeS tained three dozen of his doughnuts. mk ji ‘ ‘ | bseateasvetese j ne | ~ an = | SMITH PUBLICATION doughactaY inquired sou | Back of cach railroad worker there is a | Tene Cacheooser! them are ety Harlem| | i gistvset: er a Court is to the | ang such. Iron saw there sight® that were not contest for a Valentine consists of little child, happy and | bistrahlara oy tfey uppor east side as | = - — AUTHOR UTSTANDIN Midi ae a | = 7 Per Cent Preferred Stock seco aoe : Sa.ano,008 t the lower. iCommon Stock 1,000,000 1,000,000 Judge Sweetser | [Dividends have been paid regularly for the past seventeen years. { Who was on the bench, had much to | }Payable January 1st and July ist. There is no better 7 per cent + ido with the elusive doughauta The investment in the United States. } ion that he asked was: “How ‘ you tell your own doughnut from body else's, and why?” And | Joseyh Ross was unable to | ' _dentify nis doughnuts from those of | Louis Abramowitz, a Harlem baker, the sparks flow. It was a cago of Harlem doughnuts aguinst Mropx sinkere, and Hariem won. Joc, who peddies doughnute for a Bronx doughnut factory, had for some time missed a number of bis wares on every trip. Whether they rolled away or just sank, Joe couldn't tell, But he had étrong suspicion concern- ing the conduct of Louise, a Park Avenue baker ot Hariem. Louis made the Harlem sinker, which he claimed was much more buoyant than the Bronx variety, and when Joe . made pales of the alien products in bix territory, Louls felt strongly about the matter. é | “Your doughnuts sink; mine Soat,” said Louis with some heat. “That's mine* have @ aller hole,” parried Joe. \ At any rate, the fact remained that when Joe went back to the Bronx, he = - wy always a gross or two short. And hiv boss refused to accept the ex- | Planation that they sank gn route, | “Find out where they” go to,” he ordered, “or you'll have to pay for) urem.” So Joe decided to Sherlock a bit Yesterday morning he went to a house in 113th Street, where both he | ‘and Louis sold doughmuts, placed 4 | bag containing three dozen in front | of a door on the bottom floor, and ‘then hid behind an ash can to find out what happened to the dough-| nuts. If they sunk, he was deter-/ Mined to watch the process. At 6 o'clock along came Louis with the! Marlem type of doughnut. Louis went wostairs to @ customer, left some! sinkers for breakfast in front of the | door, and came om with a package. sinkers,” came back There was a fight, and the sinkers, whether of Bronx or Harlem, strewed | the streets, When the tussie was over, Joe picked up the and brought them to court with Louis. | ' “How you know they are your doughnuts?” asked Judge Sweetser. “Look at the holes; they are of reg. Blation size,” said Joo. “They aré not; they are the big declared His Honor. “The evidence f* not conclusive, Louis is dis- charged.’ ‘Next came Au- gusta, a true @aughter of Ger- many. For some To try to control railroad * rates by arbitrarily limiting profits is to put the manager who makes his profits by effi- ciency and economy on the same level as the one who tries to accomplish the same result through extortionate charges. —Hadley Railroad Securities Commission ; Report to the Prasiden 1. FTWHE old-time’ pack- bearer could carry a hundred pounds ten miles a day. The railroad is the modern pack-bearer. For $10,000 investment in tracks and trains and terminals, with steam and electricity harnessed like a great beast of burden. Without this mighty transportation machine . the railroad worker could do no more than the old-time packer. But with it he is enabled to earn the highest railroad wages paid in the world, while the country gains the lowest-cost transportation in the world. The modern railroad does as much work for you. The past few for the price. Europe and Asia. actually doubled 1914 $16,860,343. the preferred stock outstanding. price $100.00 per share. will be mac to have this stoc! This company owns and oporates 105 W. 1. Douglas shoe stores located in the large cities. W. alao cold by bver 0,000 shoe dealers in the United States, Game CULE eu ock ies een ate. and the retail pric A groat demand for W. L. Donglas shoes has sprang up in loading cor . Our domestic business bas $20,000,000 per yoar. {n common with other great businesses we need additional capital to meet the urgent requirements of incroasing domestic and foreign trade. ditions of business also demand more capital. The cost of labor and material has nearly doubled so that twice the amount of capital necessary under the old busi- ‘ess conditions is now required. ' Send certified check, cashier's check, Post Office Money Order or Express Order to y If you are looking for a safe and permanent investment we beli ‘thi It ts an old established business, : table 4 aivineiae ates listed upon the stock exchange. our shoes have been more extensive: advertised than ever before, creased 60 that our gins Shoe ¢ in four y s. In 15 the les were $8,009,6, 1 and in The past six months’ business was at the rate of over The new cou- Street address. City or Town W. L, DOUGLAS SHOE CO., Brockton, Mass. Full of folks @,Folks of fiction, real as life—folks of real life, fascinating as fiction—men and women, boys and girls, they throng the pages of People’s Magazine for January. @It’s for folks in general, your sort of people, that Dr. Frank Crane discusses with deep wisdom and far-reaching vision tho question «What Christmas Means” time Frank Giresat hed! half a cent as the pack-bearer could do for a et eit 4 cy ig reas full day’s pay. i G,It’s for you folks, too, who love a story with salt-water and aged seventeen, , | a sea-captain and a touseled-head youngster in it, that Stuart Frank's parenta The investment of capital in t ransportation Rivers has written, “The First Christmas on the Sally S. came from Italy, and on that ac- count Augusta declared that the wed- @ing would be promulgated only over er dead body, #0 to speak. Not wish+ fng to hurdle, Frank and Esther had fone to West New York, N. J., and been married in December, And as! _ Esther was not yet of legal age, Au- Busta Schweitzer brought Frank to aida’t act ike you in Germany, With that remark she ran from| court and started down the street like | = = MEAN THIEF TAKES EVEN WEDDING SUIT! , When a burglar cleaned out Gus Knauster's tailor #hop at No. 170 Sends + Ptreet, Brooklyn, early to-day he took ‘even Knauster’s wedding suit, which he| had worn the night before, Tho thief! went into a hallway adjoining, climbed! roush a transom, opened the door and removed boite of cloth and sults b: making several trips, depositing the loot in a Nassau Street hall not far ewey, il Policenian Frank Spollen of the Pop Jnr Street station saw & boy lugwing a vig bundle and followed him. The boy Aropped the bundic and fed, It was the last of $500 worth Fr stuff stolen sovess tne: and other industries increases production, spreads prosperity and advances civilization, - 'Yo enlarge our railroads so that they may keep pace with the Nation’s increasing pro- railroads will be stimulated, the country will be adequately and economically served, labor will receive its full share of the fruits of good management, and investors will be fairly rewarded. This advertisement is published by the Association of Railway “executives, nse desiring snformation concerning the ratlroad ture by writing (0 Phe Association of Railway Nxevutive tion may obli 0! Broadway, @,And then the story, written by one of the youngest, and cer- tainly the richest, cub-reporters in ‘all the land. A simple, straight-forward, charmingly frank story it is, this self-sketch of “Cornelius Vanderbilt, Jr. Reporter” “* ** “* For the one who dreams best and writes it best there’s a $50 prize in the con- test that follows the story. it there’s an idea you can use. ‘Then there’s the beginning of a thrilling two- part love and politics yarn by Cleveland 1 court on a Gharwe of abduction duction, to improve them so that freight may ja wop,” atid Augusta to Judge sweets be hauled with less and less human effort—a | UT ofthe common run, rising by Fdwards that you must cig right into ft ser. ., " Ne * | sheer, old-fashioned American today to get the sweeping swing of it, ARE rel on Rag eM rd constant stream of new capital needs to | gr to be leaders of men, come auch an article on handwriting that tells you f your daughter,” said His Honor stern be attracted beloved characters as Alexander Grae what you can learn of your friend’s 76 osoan om Bell, of 2 fame, who hold: character, da letier hy a girl of eight- {Blgnt Twill bing-bing myself They ‘Under wise public regulation the growth of with James Hay, Jr. In every page of women-folks a’talking and dreaming. H People's Magazine On Your Newsstand Tonight ’ will appeal to The net earnings available for dividends after the Federal tax and all other taxes were paid during the past four yearshave averaged nearly four times the dividends on fhe preferred sta tstanding, |W: L. Dougias naine is known throughout the world. a uable asset worth mi! ions of dollars, ant © propert, most vaduable trade marks in the United States.” bie lh Rea binctars tate You would make no mistako {0 order at once as many shares of this stock as you can afford to buy, If you care for more particulars fillont the coupon and mail at once. Application ‘he trade mark Ht is one of the Stamping W. L. Donglas n: on the bottorn of the shoes before they leave the factory has saved the woarers millions of dollars, : aarantees them the best shoes in style, comfort and service chat can be produced W. 1. DOUGLAS STIOR CO,, Brockton, Mase: Please send prospectus of the W. Ix Dot ny and special option 1¢ to purchase within ares of theT company. recent tis une fs