The evening world. Newspaper, September 23, 1908, Page 5

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NEED CRIS, SAYS | ENGLISH LEADER —— Mrs. Ethel Snowden in Tour | Has Found Sympathy With Movement General. LACKS ONLY DIRECTION Believes Now! Parliament Will Grant B: of Encland, t to Women | American | An English ally to the novement of Woman's age has A delicate ust arrived tn Id, unaf- ramed little woman, ected, manner belies tion as rcknd@edged | frayists, slipped into > ork last gvening as qu as the humblest un- s he of the English woman's § ballot, is as wu as any di rmat domestic partner lution will bring 1 chise, DUR SUFFRAGETTES \2navist Switragette Leadar Who Urges Women to Organize MRS -RILIP SNOWDEN correctives are It was at D: No. 2 West F found th has be speaker since lard." fluffy-haired girl of about twer cordially shook my hand, and blue of extreme intelligence smilini me, my lively illusions fragettes suffered a relaps We. Need Organizing. The youthful leader—blond, graceful and slim—looked more like a demure girl than a Suffragist of even the safe and sane variety, “What do I think of the movement in America?” she replied, as she set- ted herself comfortaply in a huge arin: | ohair in Dr, Aked's study, ‘For three months I have been attending meeting» throughout the West, and believe that in this country there {s an jmmense amount of sympathy for the movement, which {s as yet unorganized. Why? Because the American women do yet realize the importance of the fran- chise. It will take some crisis to arouse them, some great moral question in which they will have no yoice, be- cause, they have not fought for the ballot. “Then this smouldering sympathy will burst into flame, and like wildfire it will spread oyer the country until by | its very force the movement will com- pel the baliot.”” “But does the American woman really want to vote, and would she do so if she had the right?’ I asked Mrs, Snow- atest wor an | den. “Yes, I answer to both questions,” gaid. the English leader. Wy where women have the Ch their ad- fying answer 1o belleve that our sex | anxidus for the bi lot is wom 1g While [ was a ¢ and attend@ Dr me interested In While the Americ since then have ¢ that with en will be | rliament wo granted the right to vote “We were at first ridimlec , dut now women unde movement, w seriously by a haps the Times. In America we are treated with good-humored tolerance | because it 1s not known how bik thing the cause {s. Over 6,009, 8 suffrage In Eng and I do not believe it will be | long be.ore America will be running a close second. Will Aid the Cause Hers. | "T hope to ald the cause in this coun- try while I am here on © tour, | and to the Amerienn Sufi ts I sug- gest that the sympathy which prevails | be organized under women whose whole that men g 8, except per- | souls are bound up in the cause. It is | the, women who should be converted before the men are considered, for I find | that the men are comparatively easy to | eonvince of the justice of our cause. ) “While in New York I expect to ) speak of our cause at the Colony Club | at Mrs. Mackay's request, and tie New | York Suttragists are also planning a meeting at Carnegte Hall. Then I shall speak at Yale and several woinen's col- ‘And what do you think of our men and women?” I asked, for the question j was Inevitable. ° | ! “They are delightful and charming came the quick-answer, “I can no fault with them, even if I to. I admire your women extr and believe they possess splendid p bilities which haye not yet been | ized. And the’ men—woli, at odd 1 I ! ‘ments, 1 am termpted to fee! so: them. -.0, I'v@ never been in jall, but my naid has, so don’t you think that's clent to make one seem a@ shrieki Buftragist?” —— MRS. CATT JUBILANT, Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt, of No. 2 West Highty-sixty street, president of the National Woman's Suffrage Associ- ‘ation arrived from Europe yesterday, fubllant over the progress suffraxettes yave made abroad. She went to Amater~ dam several ne Cad to atte id the eres, jernas ‘oman's ig a ot "whlch hq" ae ‘ ee Tee &@ Cleveland, Sister of the Cincin- natl, Iy Launched at Hamburg. At 1 The Cleveland is a Cincinnati, v of Blohm & Vo: auncled yest nd, the lat it is sluggis| ship of the For information see ticket agents or apply to L. F, Vosburgh, General Eastern Pas- senger Agent, 1216 Broadway, cor. 30th St. Telephone 5680 Madison Square or send a stamp to Advertising Depart- ment, Grand Central Station, N. Y., for folder giving rates, routes and particulars, BEECHA because they relieve the overworked liver, and gently stimulate it when f These pills control the flow of bile, restore its right con- sistency, and work for the immediate and lasting benefit of the stomach, bowels and blood. Whenever a furred tongue, dull, yellowish eyes, nausea, or headache indicate bilious conditions, use Beecham’s Pills at ‘once, to correct the bile and Regulate the Liver Boxes 10c. and 25c., with full directions THE EVENING WuH#LD, Autumn Outings AT GREATLY REDUCED FARES TO THE ADIRONDACKS GREEN MOUNTAINS AND THOUSAND ISLANDS Excursion tickets on sale September 15th to October 6th, good returning to October S1st, REDUCED RATES AT MOST HOTELS Practically all hotels and boarding places quote special rates during the Autumn. YEW YORKN "AMERICA'S GREATEST: RAKWAY 6YSTEM” Bilious Troubles Bile causes no end of trouble. Sick headaches, bilious attacks, Jaundice, constipation and many distressing ailments arise from an excess of bile, or from obstruction of the bile duct, || pations and indiscretion in feeding and drinking are i need to be guarded against, When the liver is disordered the best bile oe, sedentary occu- ile blunders that ’§ PILLS Madam, Why Do You Cook With Raw Milk? — Van Camp’s Milk is richer—it’s purer—it’s cheaper. It’s immensely con- venient. It means a cow in your kitchen. It’s always the same, and always whole milk. Why do you use milk that isn’t? Perhaps you haye always used milk- man’s milk, and you hesitate to change. You have always bought your milk in bottles or bulk, and it seems peculiar to get it in sterilized cans, But here is a milk that is twice as rich, yet at a lesser cost. This milk gives a flavor to milk dishes which you never can get from raw milk. Here you haye fresh milk whenever you want it, avoiding all shortage, all waste. « Won't you abandon the old ways for one day, and try a single can of Van Camp's? Milk Without Germs Every drop of raw milk contains a myriad germs. If the cow is tubercular, there are germs of Consumption. If the milkman is diseased, the milk is often mfected. If the dairy is uncleanly, the very air is germ- laden, When a disease germ gets into milk, it breeds millions like it. . Those are the chances you take when you use milkman’s milk. You know not. from where it comes. You never know what it contains, Butr’you do know, perhaps, that two- thirds the mortality of children is due to germ-infected milk, There is not a germ of any kind in Van Camp's Milk. That fact has been proved a hundred times over. Do you think it wise to serve impure milk when you can get milk like this? 20,000 Inspected Every day we milk 20,000 Holstein cows. Every cow is inspected. So are the men who milk them, Cows Our dairies are sanitary. Cleanliness is carried to extremes, Every condition is constantly watched. Our buildings, where the milk is evap- orated, are built without wood, Here every means known to science Ts employed for your protection. Then the milk is sterilized after the can is sealed. This makes it certain that no germ can exist in it. The result is a milk that is safe, wise to use a milk that is not? That Is it Delicious Flavor The delicious flavor that Van Camp's gives to milk dishes is due to the fact that this is whole milk, It is rich Holstein milk, with two-thirds the water evaporated, Nothing else is subtracted—nothing whatever is added. This is not like condensed milk, which is half sugar—a milk that you can't use in cooking. Van Camp's is nothing but teilk. Yet you mever have made from raw milk such delicious milk dishes as you will make from Van Camp's. The rea- son is, you don’t get the whole milk from your milkman, When he serves you from the top of the can, you get an excess of butter fat, For the butter fat rises. From the rest of the can, you get little butter fat, but an excess of solids. For the solids fall. Your milk is never twice alike. Analysis of Van Camp's shows about 30 per cent of solids, of which 8 per cent is butter fat. That means that you get the whole natural milk. That is why Van Camp's, in your cook- ing, is so much better than rfw milk. It is nt because of anything added, Six Cents Per Quart — — ee One pint of Van Camp's, when you put back the water, makes about three pings o: rich milk. ~ The cost of such milk, when you buy Van Camp’s by the case, is about six cents per quart. Six cents for a quart of whole, rich milk—milk without germs in it, Milk that is always the same—always fresh— always ready. Never a waste or shortage. Van Camp's is as thick as thick cream. So thick that you add one part water for coffee. Yet it costs half what cream costs, Children Van Camp's is the safe milk for babies approved by the highest authorities, With children, it will ayoid the many bowel troubles caused by germ-infected milk, The slight almond flavor, due to steril- ization, is a flayor that children like. And it signifies purity—freedom from germs, Children can safely drink it. But don't give them raw milk—any more than raw meat. There is too much danger of germ infection. For Van Camp’s Milk comes in § and 10- cent cans—at your grocer’s. Try one can and you will want it always. Then it is cheaper to buy by the case—also more convenient. Produced in five states by the datvfes of the Van Camp Packing Co., Indian- apolis, Ind, Van Camp’s Milk et eee te att Evaporated—Sterilized—Unsweetened ¢ ° $ Van Camm Packing Ca Indisaapedis, lod, i \ LD pitindiitiniatlhipaaean dinar sin inacinrniwieend <stunires WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1908, Victor Talking Machines and Edison Phonographs on Weekly Paymente of $1 SIEG NO CONNECTION WITH ANY OTHER STORE TN, Free Transportation {0 patrons of this store to and from Double ‘8, & A.” the Subway and the 4th-and-Mad- dij ison Ave. Cars; the 3d Ave, El, and Suriace (ars; the Lexington Green Tree Ave, and Broadway Surface Cars, Persons who reach us by any Purchases Made of these routes Change at 18th Street ‘9 the Crosstown Before 12 0’Clock may hereafter : Omnibuses beare —Single Stamps {ng the sign ‘For Patrons of Siegel Cooper Co.” No fare is col- After That Hour lected in either direction from patrons of this store. Men’s Shoes---Read This Shoes that you could ateunder $1 98 not duplicate under $3.50, will besold at This Is a lot of good, welted-sole shoes Intended to be retailed at $3.50 a pair. The cut on the tight shows one of the five up-to-date styles presented, Coltskin, calfskin and patent leather shoes; lace ‘and bluchérstyles. Choice of five new fall $1] 98 Btyles, at..seeeee tees eee eee eeneee @ More U. S. Army Shoes at $1.98 We have recetved from the manufacturer two thousand more pairs of shoes made for, and accepted by, the U.S. Quartermasters Dept, but sold to us becaus: ofa change of style in the so'diers’ shoes, Cut 1 omleft shows thestyle, Made of the best wear- Fi r ing leathers known tothe trade, Could notbe § ' \ duplicated by a custom shoemaker under $5, Fine shoes for men who are much on their fe on $1.98 (Siegel Cooper Store, '¢-ond Floor, Rear.) Tailored Lingerie and Net Waists 41, 51.50, $1.95 and $2.95 Women’s White Batiste ‘Tailored Waists—as illustrated; a decidedly | new and novel double-tucked model Eton waist; front, back, also new tullelength sleeves designed with narrow side plaits; plaited col! finished with plaited bowtie; a ve smart model; special to- morrow at.... The prices are all “special” —not reduced from former figures, because these are new goods, but lower prices than we would ordinarily sell the same garmcnis for, This combination of fresh, new, pretty goods and special low prices is attrac- tive and unusual, r $1.50 Women's Lingerie Batiste Waists— elaborately trimmed with wide Ven- ise lace insertion, Val. lace and medallions of embroidery, forming fancy yoke; bodice lace trimmed; | the sleeves are full length trimmed with emb. medallions and Val, lace Insertion; morrow, Correct Fashions and Fabrics at Moderate Prices Women’s Rep Waists—tront em- broidered in preity scroll designs in combination colorings; aiso in solid black; designed with a graduated yoke of cluster-tucking; the sleeves are three-quarter length with em- broidered cuffs, embroidered and tucked collars; special to- 5] MOFTOW sssesrerseees no Photographs This (a One of Special ae 1500 New Hats Dozen Fine Cabinets, square | or panel shape, regular price of uhich@ is $3.50, ior.. $2.50 And those who do not wish a dozen can avail | themselves of 4 Cabinets, worth $1.75, for... 95¢ special to. $1.95 Women’s Fancy Net Waists— de- signed with yoke of Val, and Cluny lace insertion; bodice below yoke is elaborated with rows of Cluny in- sertion, edged with Val. lace; lace- trimmed Sleeves in full o quarter length; white and & ecru; to-morrow, . (Slegel Cooper Sior | Fi Center, Aprons, Dresses. and Caps three+ for Nurses and Maids Maids’ Dresses—of fin: quality percale, in good assurtment of patterns, in light colors and black and white shepherd | checks; waist is plaited, with | turndown collar; bishop sleeves { / j i with cuffs; skirt cut full and fine i ished with wide hem; price 4. | HOMOFFOW. eevee sssscseeee DOI (Benedict Studio, Seventh Floor.) Mason | Fruit Jars | They are fitted with porcelain- Maids’ Dresses—in gray and white striped percale; waist trimmed with plaits; wide gored finished with bias bands; Price to-morrow ...... skirt, @ $1.50 Nurses’ Regulation Uniforms—of ffe gingham in stripes and plain | colors; extra full skirt, with deep hem; price to= @ ~ morrow. Soorceni yt vec: we opened this mil- tment we Nave made ita fixed policy to sell a better trimmed hat for $5 than any other store in the United States, And we have done tt and shall continue to do it. There are 1500 fresh proofs of this ready for your inspection to- morrow, Fifteen hundred pretty hats—as rich and stylish as most Vint— BQ a dozen. e) c ¢ that you will fiad around town at BHT, prices trom $7.50 to $1U—no $5 £ Halt Gal- 4 dozen bdc a dozen 89¢ two alike yourchoice at (Slegel Cooper Store, Third Floor, Front.) | (Siegel Cooper Store, Second Floor, Front.) Maids’ and Waitresses’ Aprons— of fine white lawn; cut full, and trimmed with wide bre telles; to-morrow...... G andrubber rings, Here’s the way they are priced for to-morrow. according to size: i j Maids’ and Waitresses’ Aprons— ot tine white Jawn; ¢: with and without bri LO-MOTTOW. se ecccesees ' Maids’ and Nurses’ Caps— full assortment... Je to 2be (Siege! Cooper Store, Second Floor, Center) The Pure Food Exposition and Harvest Festival Sale Continue. Mail and Telephone Orders Filled Promptly. These Specials tor To-Morrow. Samaeeeh eames! Maracaibo Coffee | or rich golden Santos coffee, fresh | from the roaster; » ground or} 817 | am Biscuits F o'Clock teas, Waldorf to Bae Dainty Biscuits Freshly baked Arrowro: usually sold at Al 12 be GROUND OATMEBAL—best quality 9¢ Scotch style; 5 Ibs. vane Ae | re a § WHOLE ALLSPICE FANCY WHOLE CLOVES—Ib GRAPE JUICE Strictly Fresh Absolutely pure Evaporate resh milk; use it the same "1 man’s) milk—fo oh se, and for ¢ Your choi Gold Cross Blue Label Borden's Peerless Van Camp's | PARLOR MATCHES—4,000, deliv. sted ia Greproof nale 48e HAZEL SCOUKING SUAP—10 bars, 9. untain qu 47e; 5 SWE 4 yellow onions, . St, Charles, Pest) = eliow turnips, or 30c PURE WHITE PEPPER, © Granulated Sugar | a ee il at ts Best refined; 25-19. Dagsseseoes $1.38 | | | Haze! Bacon | BEST L OV | style mi id suger 1bkbe en ice, Neces; Ib. 4 fi ttpend bird Potatoes ured; nice, firm pieces RIPE CONCORD GRAPE! elections from Long Island. | | Bushel Peck J, 9x * New Seeds 98e Bie || | Het Wenpraia always receive 60 Ibs. to} | | J 5 abit Coruway seede.ss-) 3 tha tba tad is ins tothe vest | | | ured: willy” Coriander seed: 42¢ lie 2 you buy in the Slegel Cooper y Feanel seeds..... Grocery. a Rae Ls BRE, Ow ihe tnt ob ATS eons esate Sali

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