The evening world. Newspaper, April 20, 1911, Page 10

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THURSDAY, APRIL Tromthtge™n a? sneata'as cmt t| RUSHED TO HOSPITAL IN AUTO THAT HIT HIM.| 20, 1911. How She Knew. the Detroit Free Pres.) THE EVENING WORLD, Him or have anything to do with him ed the hostess, sweetly, ¢ i por aruemiay morning he | hs {Brooklyn Man's Umbrella Hid] an ns and not NANBOBS UPAND. °° BEATENIN STREET eee ; NP Rae | 1% ng at the bar three Motor C: n entered. They side. Ignoring ut a side door x years old, inton street, Brooklyn, ‘ourt street in front of ~ANISHES AGAIN BY BLUEIACKETS a Former Manager of Newark An it re Sailors of the Michigan Take? ing downp It Means Hebrew Orphanage Seen at | ‘ Revenge for Cutting of Paateuel, appror-hea A 6 4 . MALTED “MILK Holland Steamship Pier. | ~ Their Rations. and Scheringer did not see it SRE ti car told Ewe Wie mee More healthful than Tea of Coffee, CHILDREN IN ASYLUM.\ 0 ee mane Agrees with the weakest digest ——— ls t Shel tHe d lifted into ious, invigorating and nutritious, . ae ; en your hue were broken Rich milk, malted grain, powder fort, Her @ letters you Mother Left Destitute, They) cess » Are Cared For in Place Where Fatlier Was Head. canl addressed to Ir 1 don't got it And it only costs were made, — Yar | BIG HOTEL FOR PITTSBURG. ©» e men who moh JP Ha, Manager of the| Stenetnre to Cost €6,500,000 One of Newark Hebrew Gephan Asylum, who by sy he the re digappeared two ny new develops, sighied @ishin a few miles of his f be lost again Primselaar is a nat We ‘pent his child orphanage in he came to A teen, he dedic Blazing a New Path in Shoe Selling Cost Plus 5% o> UNUSED EE AVT AND USS have some fresh mush- “Just Say” :|HORLICK’S A quick lunch prepared in’ minete, * | Take no substitute. Ask for HORLICK’S, O@], Others are imitations, “ct The man who thinks, what he is getting for | than the name on the | his clothes from me. | more of fawistant moved to New y to be # tendent of the Newark asylum and the he remained. He masried and had tw @hildren and he his n Aabel buy Moe Levy | | | 119-125 Walker St., New York. | Arlingte otel Tatt, 0: Haven Ho St. Paul, Minn. on Dusiness con- led with an orplvinage there. She an hp not heard from him since, Beyond | punite, | THE JOHN WANAMAKER STORE Another Windfall inWomen’s Suits | .$18.75 for Models Tailored to Sell at Much More A iittle windfall, to be sure, but just as appreciable to the women who gather its fruits! It includes about seventy-five excellent tailored suits of the quality we sell regularly for $25. These will be sold to first comers at $18.75 for the - easor that they represent remainders of a tailor’s Spring cloths and there- fore came to us for less than usual. Some are of gray, hard-finished worsted, pla nly tailored; others of serge, both plain and braided, including blue, black, violet, tan and gray. In every detail they are regular $25 suits—-Make your selection at $18.75. Women's Suit Store, Second floor, Old Building. THE JOHN WANAMAKER STORE This Is Not a Long Advertisement But an IMPORTANT One— Table Linens and Towels At Quick-disposal Prices Fragments of a Tremendous and Rapidly Moving Stock—Repriced in a Way that Spells ECONOMY Only natural that sets should be broken—napkins ‘‘get lost’? from table cloths that match—-that certain damasks prove so popular we are unable to kcep a well-rounded collection of them. So we have gone through the whole stock, have collected the derelicts, and here they are, at new prices: 600 yards of Irish cream damask, two yards wide, now $1 yard, instead of $1.25 and $1.50. German bleached damask, 63 inches wide, $1 yard, instead of $1.25. Heavy German dice napkins, 19 3; x 19 3; inches, $1.35 a dozen, instead of $1.75. Napkins of good quality, $2.60 to $11.50, were $3.50 to $15.25 a dozen. Table Cloths, that have lost their match- | ' Table tops of good Scotch and Irish damask. 36 x 45 inches. 55c, were 75c. 3645 inches, 75c, were 95c, 36 x 45 inches, $1, were $1.25. Flemish linen tray cloths 18 x 27 inches, 35c, were 5c, 20x 30 inches, 50c, were 65c. Towels, hemstitched bleached Irish hucka- back, 22 x 38 inches, $5 a dozen, were $7.20. French Cluny Lace-Trimmed Cenires, Table Cloths and Scarfs | Centres: 20 inches round, $2.75, $3.50. ing napkins, $2.60 to $11 a dozen, were $3.50 24 inches round, $3.5) $1.50. to $14.75 a dozen. 30 inches rou re $6.50, ij ee 35 inches rout re $9. German silver-bleached table cloths,| —cioths: 43 inches tun were $13.50, hemmed, ready for use. 4 inches round, $10.75, were $15. 68 x 68 inches, $2.25 eack 72 inches round, D, were $39, 68 x 86 inches, $2.75 eact Scarfs; 20 x 54 inches, § “ii 68 x 106 inches, $3.25 each, were d Building. THE JOHN WANAMAKER BASEMENT STORE Men's All-Worsted Suits, $15 and $16 _ Qualities are such that men who get these Suits will be justified in adding several dollars to their vacation fund. F Men who know say “$20, $22 and $25 suits.” Men who do not know will be likely to estimate them at even higher prices. But any reasonable man should be satisfied with a $20 suit f-r $15 or a $25 suit for $16---especially when tailored as these suits are tailored. Patterns are conservative, suitable for men of all ages. And all sizes are here from 34 to 44, regular, long and stout. If we could offer such values always the Base ree Clothing Store would soon require the entire coor. Al Use Gubway dour, Basement, New Building, JOHN WANAMAKER Formerly A. T. Stewart & Co., Broadway, Fourth Avenue, Eighth to Tenth Street ong Tenormin vramane OU folks who buy shoes, ponder on this! Read every word ! You are paying for your shoes ten, twenty, maybe thirty per cent. over net basic cost. The exact amount of this percentage depends on whcre and when you buy, and from whom. —Because the Retailer feels he must have twenty per cent. average profit on his goods to keephim happy. And the average Manufacturer wants ten to fifteen. Now comes the Regal Shoe Company, with four enormous factories, employ- ing over 3,000 hands, making nearly two million pairs of $3.50 to ) shoes last year—and offers you its en- tire output at just exactly Five Per Cent. Profit over measured, sworn-to, cost. Think of that! Five pcr cent. above certified cost, instead of possibly fif- teen, twenty, thirty per cent. above variable cost. And this from the same company that gave you the Buzz Saw expose of cheap soles, and ‘‘The Window of the Sole’’—the same Com- pany that eighteen years ago started the Factory-to-Consumer plan and to- day sellsits outputin 43 States through nearly 1,000 Real Shoe Stores and Agencies, This new ‘5% Profit’’ departure in Regal Shoe selling comes from theone shoe Concern in the world that has always given you not only advanced styles but advanced economic methods of selling. The Regal ‘‘Cost Plus 5%’’ plan means for us a larger volume of busi- ness—of course. But for you it means emancipation from the ‘‘Get-what- you-can’’ method of selling goods. It means that you need no longer be the slave of a trade-custom that arbi- trarily fixes prices at the selling end instead of at the making end. Five per cent. above cost means— for you—a direct, positive, known saving in shoe money that you can see with your eyes and feel with your hands. It means a positice, accurate system ¢«° buying and selling that op- erates with exact justice and exact economy in every locality on the map. Last year we made and sold over one million, eight hundred thousand pairs of $8.50 to $5.50 shoes. Ponder on that! In dollars and cents the pub- lic paid for these shoes nearly Eight Million Dollars. One cent a pair saving on this output would have handed back to our customers the handsome economy of eighteen thousand dollars. At ten cents a pair, the saving would have given back to them $180,000! Under the new Regal (5% Profit) Plan you now buy any pair of Regal Shoes under a sworn certified state- ment of exact cost, figured out to a decimal of a cent. No guesswork. No_hit-and-miss estimate; no equivo- cation; no room for misunderstanding or doubt. Regalized Shoe Selling blazesanew economic path in merchandizing which Stee manufacturers must ultimately ‘ollow. j 4 So, go you today to the window of your nearest Regal Shoe Store. See what that 5% Profit over a known cost means to you. Then go inside and ask the salesman to take any pair of Regal Shoes out of any carton and explain to you the cost statement on the tag—every item of cost in that shoe. This is how you may more in- telligently buy Regal Shoes on a basis of exact cost as manufactured in quantities of nearly two million pairs per year. “SWELL” King Calf Blucher Oxford for Men Measured Cost. . . $4.00i%6 Plus 5% Profit . . . $ .20 Total . . . - $4.20i%6 Selling Price $4.20 Regal Prices now run as follows: $335 $345 $350 $375 $385 $400 $420 $435 $450 $485 ete, REGAL (profit) SHOES FOR MEN STORES IN REGAL The Sunday World’s “Want” Directory makes more offers AND WOMEN GREATER NEW YORK. FOR ON Hroad dew York Cit of positions than any other two mediums in the universe | seater Lord & Taylor _ Founded 1826 ° Cold Storage of Furs Wearing Atparel & Automobile Robes At a Very Moderate Rate. | Oriental Rugs, Curtains and Draperies Stored and Cleaned Spectal Sales For Friday and Saturday Leather Goods Exceptional Values. Smart Envelope Bags 9 inch size—with long stitched leather) handles, satin lined, with purse to match. | Black, navy, green, purple and red. P4050 Long Grain Morocco and Black Satin. J 7 inch size—black, brown, gray, navy and | TRVOHGEE se cca ccs rvsscnseniaceveewss J $2.50 Special Values in Neckwear and Veils | Tucked Net Guimps.... $1.00 & $1.50 Real Irish Lace Jabots............ $1.50 Net, Lawn and Batiste Fichus 50¢ to $2.95 Organdie Sailor Collar and Cuff Seis Hemstitched border............. 50c @ 95¢ Silk Shetland Veils Large variety of new meshes, for traveling or motor wear, in black, white and colors, 95¢ to $2.25 Handkerchiefs | | Women’s pure linen hemstitched Handkerchiefs, 14, 14 and 14 inch hems; also, Shamrock Lawn Handkerchiefs, with imitation Armenian edge, 60¢ per 15 dozen—value 75¢ _ Toilet Goods & Notions L. & T. Hair Brushes, penetrating quality, 90c., $1.00 & $1.25—values $1.35, $1.55 & $1.75 | L. & T. Hair Brushes, extra long bristles, $1.15, $1.35 & $1.65—values $1.95, $2.50 & $2.95 Klean-Thru Nail Brushes... .....40c, 50c¢ & 60¢ | L. & T. Tooth Brushes, assorted styles, | lic, 2 for 25ce—value 25e each | Thegul Dentifrice, 48¢ size, at ie connect Lily of the Valley Oil, $1.50 value for... .75c Extracts, assorted Odors, $1.00 size “5.45 “ “ “ 30c “ “ Lace Edge “ “ 1éc + 1.50 doz, Princess Regular ff 8c“ , .90 doz. | Children’s Hose Supporters, value 12c, at 6c Imitation Shell Hair Pins, * 26ce, “ 1Se Sewing Scissors, ae | | | “Dainty” Shirtwaist Shields, 10c pair .$1.00 doz, | 45c, “ 25e 500 dozen Fine Hand-Embroidered Huck Towels 75¢, $1.00, $1.25 & $1.50 each Broadway & 20th St.; 5th Ave.; 19th St, Sunday World Wants Work Monday Morning Wonders

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