The evening world. Newspaper, December 6, 1921, Page 20

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By Cousin HOW BOBBITY TOLD THE STORY. | eat KIN got home to her dear parents and her pet eat, Bobbity Bobtail returned to his wife. Bonny and seven wiggly nosed babios und Billy Brighteyes reached his home in the hemlock with bis four brigh:- eyed children in tow just as old Sol sank behind the tall treetops. ‘The Brighteyes chitdren had to hear, | #ii ever again, bow it was that Polly-| kin had saved Bobbity Bobtail frem | ‘Willy the Weasel and why it wasthat | Willy was afraid of Pollykin. | “Is Willy afraid of you, Daddy? | Eena wanted to know. | “No, he is not,” Billy Brighteyes confessed. “He ought to be," said Meena, “you are the biggest, bravest Daddy squir- rel in the Fair Forest.” “That may be so, but Willy the ‘Weasel is about the most formidable ve have.” 's formidable?” imquired Mo. ‘Formidable means dangerous,” Billy Urighteyes told his ttle son. afraid of ium, gruthful should keep out of tile way.” At just about the same time that Billy Brighteyes and his children Wore talking about Willy the Weusel, this sane slim fellow was furnishing rsation at Pollykin’s dinner ta- nd in the Bobtail home as well. ere you afraid whem you saw that Willy the Weasel wanted to eat one of the Bobtail bables know. 1,” answered Bobbity. gon’t catch your Daddy shying at a Little shrimp of sn aimal Willy ‘Weasel. No my boy. Why I never aid 2 word, T just stood still and . Lnever moved y once or twice but surely that is eusable considering that I am @ ra°- DI You are our big prave Daddy.” Brave If you like, certainly your ‘gadday, you winky-moned datterer,’ sald Bobbity as he nipped the ear of his younnest, affectiees hear bim, nny? +s to his wife, “Our son thinks I'm What do you kaow about tha “He has a right to think as he ses," answered Bonny. Pleven’ mean you DON'® think me “You ‘Willy the 2 meet Weasel if 1 were out for a walk.” “Oh, weil, you're timid. I've noticed it before, bat there is no real reason to be afrata. the way | stood there and stared at v fny he Weasel until he flinched. . Daddy?” Really, my son.” “Kiss me good-night, Daddy,” the littlest rabbit. “I'm going dream of being a big, brave man y pod-night, you will grow be a big, brave rabbit man It some day. Won't he, Bonny?” “Bxactly the same,” said the rabbit mother. And all the ‘rabbit bubies trooped off to _ There is one sure way that has never failed to remove dandruff at once, and that is to dissolve yang you destroy ‘it entirely. To do this, just get ebout four ounces of plain, common arvon from any drug store (this ia all you will need), apply it at night when retiring; use enough to moisten the scalp and rub it gently with the finger tips. . morning most if not all of your dandruff will be gone, and three or four more applications will completely dissolve and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of it, no matter how much dandruff you may have. You will find all itching and dissing of the scalp will stop instantly, your hair will be fluffy, lustrous, lossy, silky and soft, and look and ee) a hundred times better.—Advt. M JUNIOR S— Little Me One-third the regular dose. Made and adults. For Lumbago and Rheumatism The Evening World’s Kiddie Klub Korner 19M, ty Ge Pree Fubmeiey On, (The Mew Tork Brening World.) Conducted by Eleanor Schorer Woodland Wonder Tales Eleanor nteyes Chitdren in Tow. children op members. with «silver gray Ki | the Kiddie Klub day, Dee. 8. Right HOW TO JOIN THE KLUB. CUT OUT THIS COUPON. ¥ bs NAMA, Al mnt py ts COUPON 873. Eleanor, and look for the answers in in Recorder's Court here when Mrs. Korner on Thurs- NOVEMBER CONTEST AWARD WINNER. Year Claas. “What | Want to Be When | Grow sixty-day THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, DECEMBES 6, 2921. | MOTHER GOES ON PROBATION TO SAVE SON FROM PRISON: “I Spoiled Him and Am to Blame,” She Tells} Court in Assuming Penalty. DETROIT, Dec, 6.—Mother love) was found guilty last week, but sen- obtained leniency for a wayward son|tence was deferred until the court] could confirm reports that Reynolds was a drug add@et Accompanied by Reynolds's step father, Mrs. Slating tearfully assumed the blame for her son and volunteered to pay the penalty. “L spoiled him as a child, and after ,Charles H. Slating, wife of a promi- |uent Flint banker, agreed to go on a year's probation and accept the pen- alty for failure to report regularly ‘that the son could escape serving a séntence in the Detroit) he had grown up,” she told the court. House of Correction. Bhe received|“T, not he, am to blame. I should pay the sentence from Judge Faust follow-|the penalty. Let him go home with ing hee plea for mercy for .jme and I'll keep him there, try to} Charles, aged twenty-six cure him and report regularly in his | Judge Faust was abou stead. If I fail-to do so, you can give Reynolds for larceny, his third you were about to offense in two years, the latest being the theft of two pairs of women’s silk | hose from a department store. He | 5 FINDS $1,200 ON BEACH ambergris which he had found on | the beach at Plum Island near the IN FORM OF AMBERGRIS) mouth of the Merrimac Tuiver, Am: bergris, a waxy concretion from ist, deeply moved, accept: | With the Four THE MORNING STAR. When I wake up before the break of day, When the sky begins to redden and the sun is on its way, The emblem of Hope is shining bigh— The Moruing Star is in the sky. Pale and serene, that wonderful In a ite glory at the end of the ‘Thesi when comes the break of ‘The Morning Star fast fades away CECELIA MAYER, QUESTIONS —about the heavens, the ea Hfe, animal ife, races and people, ‘sctence, invention, the Eng- wireless, steam en- nations, Tish language, ines, geography. your qu What Every Soheo!l Child Should Know. James Hulahan, in the morning, ight rb ) Age 14, Brooklyn. ANSWERED. HAVEN, Ky., » pliant NEW age of 111 years, born a@ sinve al the ‘World War.| house of the late Faw: tions to Cousin’ wife was Drawn by Danie! Miller, Brooklyn. | HONORABLE MENTION. New York * Marion Kassel, New York City; I'ran-, ster of Newburyport came here to- retchen Strothman, New aay secking a market for a chunk of City; WOMAN FALLS FROM WINDOW. | Mrs, Grace Brown, twenty-seven, of No. 1632 Mumfom Place, Brona, lost her balance when a window she was trying to open suddenly raised at 6 A. M. “lto-day and fell to the courtyard outsidé her apartment on the first floor. was taken to Fordham Hospital suffer. ing from cuts and bruises. FORMER SLAVE DIES AT 111. Dec. 6.—Nanoy Milos {# dead at her home here, where} she always had lived, at the reputed She was said to be the oldest Woman in the South, ined in L. Miles whose fede o. Jefferson Davis. sperm whale, ts used in making per- fumes and is scarce. The chunk weighs about 21-2 pounds. Experts appraised it at $1,200 to $1,500, It is found usually only in warmer waters. She meats—No Everybody eh as ups, Tt io Balance on Easy Pay- enjoys the reat alk you will to—so why experiment? WE CARRY EVERY STYLE IN STOCK GOETZ & CO.» $1 fo 87 COURT, Cor. Livingston St., BROOKLYN _One Block from Borough Hall Subway Station EASY TO REACH—OPEN EVENINGS the ly eome it is a wi Just as Creofos snake. you that the natural resistive forces o! are so weakened that they need help. taking a treatment of* Creofos for a day or Creofos will immediately destroy both the germe in your system and those of pneumonia 8 and multiply if your cold persists. What would you do if you heard a rattlesnake? The snake's rattic is a horrible thing to hear. But arning of something worse to come. that are almost sure to get a you would kill the snake, kill the ! They are more dangerous than any They strike just about as quickly and infinitely more people. of a cold! ‘Take Creofos today. Heed that warning Creofos is sold by your druggist in three forme: CREOFOS 5 eS | influenza | i : é bE to own one like it. cent years. business procedure. Name... sion is to possess a Grand Piano. to find that supreme musical wish a reality? In the Loeser Music Salons is a Baby Grand Piano that, to see and to play, is indeed to long You will see on its fallboard a name famous for a lifetime. which appeals to every musician alike as— The advent of this particular Piano to sell at this price has marked the passing of a new milestone in Loeser Piano selling history. The production of a Baby Grand Piano bearing the W. P. Haines name, to sell at this figure, has also been one of the really great achievements in Piano making of re- Ask any disinterested authority. ——— If You Cannot Come Personally, Mail This Coupon FREDERICK LOESER & CO., INC., Musie Salon, Brooklyn, N. Y. Please let me have, without obligation, further Informa- tion regarding your W. P. Haines Baby Grand Piano at $595, referred to in your advertisement. |EXPLODING WHEEL INVENTION OF YOUNG EDISON |Intended to Clean Out German Trenches and Could Penetrate 150 Feet of Barbed Wire. FLORENCE, Ala., Dec. 6 ‘Thomas A. son while here with Henry Ford, told of a war weapon invented by his son that promised tremendous effective- ness. It was a steel shell in the shape of a wheel, three feet high and six inches thick, filled with high explosive and having a time fuse, y “This wheel said Mr. Edison, “was set on a shafting attached high powér motor. When it ruined a revolving velocity of 35,000 feet a second it was auto- matically released from the shafting. It sped on its course with time fuse set. It sometimes travelled two miles, cutting through 150 feet of wire entan- glenfents and through a wall, and shot on until the time fuse ex- ploded it, when it levelled every- thing within 150 feet. "It was intended to clean out German trenches with these weapons, but the war ended be- fore they were ready for use. NEW CLUE TO IDENTITY IN POND MURDER CASE Vermont Man Senda Ifioto of Minatng Wife—Dencriptions Tally. A letter received by the Hunters Point police to-day brought new hope | of identifying the woman whose dis- | membered body was found in part in A pond at Long Island City on Oct. }22. ‘The message, in Polish, was signed py Luwick Siuta, Bennington, | Vt. It aaid he beli the body was |that of his wife, who left him and | thelr baby, he said, on Juiy 10. Me | Ihelosed a photograph of his wife, and the police say he may be right. De- | tective Von Weisenstein was assigned to investigate. | | | ! part of-the body with the head.at- ¢ hed, arms and legs missing, thee legs of a Woman were found in Van \ ‘They are believed ta Cortlandt Park. to be part of the same body Sure FOR INDI urchase eaty. Selec ployer's. reference for Gitt Book 44, t elief STION Hot Sure Relief DELL-ANS ‘Some time after finding the upper! 25¢ and 75¢ Packages Everywhere ONS, Watches Jeve! > water far higher It is the very first Baby Grand at the low price of $595 in which Strings, Action and Sound Board of such sterling quality have ever been used. You must see it and play on it yourself. Apportion the Payments As You Desire The Loeser Terms on any Piano sold by us are of the purchaser's own making, providing they are reasonable from the standpoint Fourth Floor, Come tomorrow. Let This Christmas See Its Realization— That Long Cherished Wish for a Baby Grand Piano HE dream of every music loving heart who finds one of life’s chief joys in musical expres- What better time than Christmas morning to wake up sy A Delightful Instrument to Play On J An Exquisite Presence in the Room ¢ ) The W. P. Haines "8 Baby Grand, $595 | price than $595 to secure. of good age It is an instrument . For the W. P. Haines Baby Grand Piano is a true Grand Piano, with that unmistak- able superiority in tone and action that has always made a Grand Piano so immeasur- ably to be preferred, and that, until the ad- vent of the W. P. Haines, one had to pay a

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