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Newspaper Page Text
WHWffWJW" vv POOR LIU DAN CUPID GETS SOME TERRIBLE "JOLTS IN JUDGE GIBBONS' DIVORCE COURT THE DAY BOOK fm An Adless Dcdly Newspaper. N. D. Cochran, Editor and Publisher, 500 South Peoria St. Tel. Monroe 353. VOL.2; NO. 232 Chicago, Monday, June 30, 1913 ONE CENT TEN-YEAR-OLD BOY RESCUES GIRL FROM "WHITE SLAVE DEN" Little Italian Lad of New York's Slums Tells Mary Boyle O'Reilly How He Got Sister Away From Blackest of All Fates, By Mary Boyle O'Reilly. New York, June 30. The time has gone, never to return, when the ghastly subject of "white slavery" can be concealed from young girls. For their own protection even little wage-earners must be warned of this social cobra lurking beside their HERE'S A COOLING TIP (Sing It Tune of "Old Apple Tree") Get in front of the old garden hose, It's a mighty fine place, goodness knows, 'Cause the water is wet, it will wash off the sweat. Though you, may get a quart up ' your nose. When the weather is hot do not cuss, But, by golly, just take it from us; Put aside all your woes, Take a beautiful pose, JUght in front Qt the old garden hose. path. For their childhood no longer safeguards children! Three weeks ago two haiS-grown sisters looking for summer work in down-town New York suddenly dis appeared. Until yesterday no one could trace their whereabouts. Then Tony Mazzo, their 10-year-old cousin, rescued one of the two from the blackest of all fates! Brencasio Capotini, the hard working father of four children, sat, utterly broken, in his two-room cel lar home. "I can no talka Englis' well," he apologized, his toil-gnarled hands working miserably. "But I fry. "Signora, it is like this. When chil dren know more than their parents, then comes mooch trouble. I say true words. The children they go by da; school, goon they know more