The evening world. Newspaper, June 13, 1922, Page 16

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bg ' t 4 on 16 H ; \ SEEKING PUBLICITY, /Bobbed Hair Not a Fad at Vassar, | y ut TRS SUCHE Only Two of the Twenty-five Girls in Historic AND IS HAPPY NOW ‘Ceremony Appear With Shorn Locks. POUGHKEEPSI®, June 13.—When | ladies fair who walked bestde the lake twenty-five sophomores and through the alsles of the forest. down the greensward at Vassar Col- vais of @butte tren lege yeatorday, carrying tho historic Gaisy chain, it Wak discovered that only two had bobbed hair, Seeing these students is looked for- : c ward to with more eagerness than n any other event of oommenoemen! mily Davie: time, for they are not ‘chosen for ath-}lo'te biekin letic or intellectual ability but for the} \ouine Kort same reason that Paris ploked Helen marched Paulette. Lorayne, Alleged Wife of Grafton, Took Too ){ Many Headache Pills. . South Manchester, stoper, Kanens City, »per, Conshohocken vis} Mount Union, Pa; ville, Ky.} Char nd Rapids, Miéh,, » Yonkers, N. Y¥,; t, Ann Arbor, Mito! tlamy, Dorchester, Maus, , "The desire for publicity and an | @erdose of headache pills furnish the Janation of the supposed attempted is jfide in the Pennsylvania Station r late Catherine Sunday night of Paulette ; : beauty. allan Har Lgrayne, former actress and alleged} —Peeuty. artinan th \Wite of Joseph Donald Grafton, who] Five thousand persons saw the ex- wk = indicted: for bigamy fast April.| ¢retses tn the open alr theatre yes } i@ was the diagnosis of the au-|ferday, when a pageant was given aatnftetde 1 ‘ thoritie’ of the psychopathic ward at that represented the quest the : rey feds Bitievue last night, where she was] KNight “twenty-two” to win the hand 1 of the lady of learning, The nt was in poetry, arranged by Healy of Chicago ahd Marion orted as greatly Improved ” ‘or a week pictutes and interviews Gre @f, Mis Lorayne wore published In id " ate on newspapers after she had c med Gab tae hist wite ct Graft of Lafayette, Ind. Tt was suimptu 6n of a wealthy Pittsburgh fafni- ataged with knights in armor ttre mafiufacturer, who married) in Qujck ‘successton Ellon Curley Mp- fatyre atid Pegty Davis, a chorus girl An well ax proposing the eighty-fifth. annual exerclées of Mount HOLYOKE GRADUATES : in Tangerine," RECORD CLASS OF .211| to Ethel Mary Muir, also in the ‘Tan mm @erine company. SOUTH HADLEY, Mass, aster of ‘aris woe When Grafton was indwted for aaa Q ot Florence Louise A graduating clans of 21 y Gy 4 deatunce sistant in the de stry Bigamy Miss Lorayne claimed Graf- fon had obtained a license to marry , ber.in February, 1921, had taken her to visit his family in Mtteburch and) ——————— — introduced her everywhere as his ' wife. After five months of dining, dano- tng and motoring with Graftom, Miss Lorayne asserts, he deserted her and she returned to her family in Boston. But family and Boston made a con- trast to the preceding months that Miss Lorayne scarcely liked, So she! came to New York in search of fresh’ adventure, and. found instead thé drab life of an upper west side in the Matory of the ¢ deareos at the handa of y relieved by the téléphone calls and visits of law- yers and reporters which attended the Grafton bigamy case. Then Grafton disappeared and a blanket of boredom descended once more. . For two months Miss Lorayne, un- able to find an engagement as af adtzess, remained in obscurity. Stn- ? day, she went to the women's roont fn ‘ Btation, took a mouthful of pills and became hysteri- @a). She was taken to Bellevue, whére the physicifitis were unable to Gingover any trace of the bichloride of ury she s@id she took. we tent she was shown the first story of her ‘suicide,’ with her pio- tute, in an evening paper, Shoe read the story and, With a contented smile, went back to sleep, 3 rs SUES BROTHER-IN-LAW AIN FIGHT OVER ESTATE Wisow Says’ Exeeutot Loaned Himself Much Money. Burrogate John P. Cohalan to-day gent {0 a referes for AAjudication the application of Mra,.Hdith M, Whitte- more, of No, 616 West 116th Strest, for an accounting of th fam Waldo Van Arsdale, who 1809. The widow, who is thé petitionor, femartied Aug. 4, 1920. | The petition states that the value THE OLDEST SHIP the’ Pennsyivai wl ot 65, 2 entitled to the in- come duting life, She states that her brother-in-law, Henry Van Afadale, of No. Ancoin Avenue, Orange, N. J., eéciitor has been paying her the in- a come but chas ‘loaned himwelf out of + funds of the estate $57,848, which act, ehe Alleges, js Mlegal domi MoNaboe, of No. 68 Will- was designated as reteres. Ky pax hi Take along some spicy po- tate salad—plenty of it; for come back for more if it's Premier Po- ” tato Salad: = Y Used Bera velice caret con ghee? ery, 1 choppe . Sooo salt and enciscen therenenty with Balad Dreosing Send for our free book, “Balad: Suppers, Picnics,” which show you @ score of other ap- zing dishes to take with'you in the car. Address FRANCIS H. LEGORTT & CO. (1 Went Sth 6. New York, 6.Y. Its flavor has placed itona Million tables a y Here’s What You'll See: Torture Devices of the Early 19th Century, in- cluding the Coffin Bath, Branding Irons, Cat o’ Nine Tails, Black Holes, Punishment Balls, Flogging Frames, Airless Cells, Leg Chains and Handcuffs, etc, i The Most Remarkable Ship Construction, built by hand labor and ‘almost, unfathomable to Shipping Experts of today. ; ue The Iron Maiden and scores of Torture Relics, that even antedate the Convict Ship, which was built 132 years ago. | | a Cells Occupied by Replicas'of Some of the Most Famous of the Thousands of Convicts, Polit- ical and Nefarious, Transported from the _ British Idles to Australia a Century Ago. Official Documents Proving the Authenticity of Everything on the Ancient Vessel, MAYOR HYLAN To the casual spectator it writes Cioreation-<-- rs, Hylan NOW AT TH - BATTERY-Pier One The Ancient Australian CONVICT SHIP “SUCCESS” (Launched 1790) WORLD’S MOST REMARKABLE EXHIBITION. . ALREADY VISITED BY TWENTY MILLION PEOPLE. A Relic of the Days When, For a Minor Offense, a Man Could Be Sentenced Overseas And Other Evidence of Man’s Inhumanity to Man Guides Explain Everything—Open from 10 A. M. to 11 P. M. Daily and Sunday Electrically Lighted ‘Throughout—Can Be Inspected Night or Day. am Rankin of Chicago and new] on the value of newspaper! MILWAUK Fifty seven memt Wis., June 18. f the national com nting the nineteen de of advertising lated Advertising have oldeted No. 3092 The “ROADSTER” A typical Rice & Hutchins oxford, showing the rugged lines that men like in an outdooi shoe. Good to look at—comfortable to walk in D SIGNET MEN’S SHOPS Mail Orders Promptly Filled 14th Bt. at No. 6 Past 126th St. at N Sth St. at 1945 Bway fi0th 8 fed St. at No, 137 We Brookiyn: 367 Pult We Have an EDUCATOR SHDE for Every One ard Avene AFLOAT AND THE => if ‘a q rrr Ni il Mt presents a gripping and interesting’ spectacle; to th Rt is a wiiiaile Id mine of curious and Be tents and I found the visit both pleasant and profitable, _-—— Se TUESDAY, JUNE 18, 1922. lome Furnishers since 16594 Jessa S BAUMANN BRO’ SIXTH AVENUE AND 18TH STREET THIRD AVE. and 84th ST., All Stores Open Saturday Evenings. THIRD and BROOK AVES. at 160th ST. , Our Only Bronx Store Bronx Store Open Monday amd Saturday Evenings. This Month, the Bride! Even as our stores are the ideal places for the June bride to select her home furnishings, they offer the same wide variety to assist you in choosing a gift for her that will be 100% welcome. A beautiful desk, a cozy chair, a useful and ornate lamp, tea-wagon or smoker—we have all these and many others in infinite variety and at uniformly low prices. We weleome an opportunity to show you. ~ and jenim, Complete with Sprin, Mattress; covered in 3-Piece American Walnut Dining Room Louis XVI. Period American Walnut Dining Room Suite, consisting of Buffet, China Closet Dinin, Ferdi ite inches, 6-ft. extension. Three pieces, as illustrat Suite . All Stores Open Saturday Evenings Our Only Bronx St Bronk Store Open Monday and Saturday Even’ (“Lower Prices than Elsewhere -Alway. my ENOZ Use itasdecve fra KILLS MOTHS your clothes (Will Not Stain) Every dealer in fine merchandise who has used ENOZ knows that it is the only effective insurance against moths in existence. Every household in the land should have it to save clothes and valuable articles like feathers, furs, oriental rugs, upholstery _ ~or anything else that moths destroy and damage. ENOZ is a powerful proc- essed compound that goes entirely through the finest fabrics seeking moths, moth eggs and insect life of all descriptions and utterly destroying them. It leaves not the slightest stain. It has no effect on you or your property save the effect intended. Wholesale clothiers, furriers and dealers in | tapestries, rugs and carpets thank ENOZ for saving them millions of dollars a year and doing the work that has never been cone—and can't be done by moth-balls, camphor, napthaline and other so-called preventives. { Remember: Sich cence ENOL Enoz Kills Moths rk raite wath. ee It le more thas @ repellent | Pint of Enoz......—-——-.. $1.00 | juart of Enoz $1.65 gal. and gel. elses even more economical. Improved Sprayer. $1.00 i Junior Sprayer eoiienien «a0 t and household eavipment sito: where. If youre doce not sell | hie name; and enclose price and we will supply you. ENOZ CHEMICAL CO. 703-7 N. Welle St, Chicage Bold by drug, 4: New York Branch: Phone Stuyvesant 8197 61 E. 8th Street, Real Estate Ads. for The Sunday World Real Estate Sectio MUST BE IN THE WORLD OFFICE BEFORE FRIDA’. . CIRCULATION. OVER 600,000

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