The evening world. Newspaper, October 4, 1912, Page 23

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incon TRYING T0 RIVAL "HENINBUSHES Women Waste Their Time in Politics, Declares Mrs. Annie N.. Meyer. . ‘ a * FOR SPUYTEN DUYVIL TUBES. | hem tor Ns ¥. Central Tracks. | ‘The committes of the Board of Bsti- ing elimination , Eleventh av a provement of the Central's west side tracks made @ report yesterday ‘avor- Ing the building of tunnels under the ship canal at Spuyten Duyvil. Tho prevent biidge is objected Nkely to interf: wate The company, track tunnel will cost $4,000, of four tracks twice a8 much, propose to erect @ bridge which wilt give a to as mi twenty-four foot clearance. The com- mittee recom: e use of the bridge for freight al unnel@ for pasnen- wer tratfic. The rcofing over of the tracks adja- eent to Riverside Park is also recom~ mended, WHY THEY CAN’T COOK. Science Understands | the Stomach Treating Indigestion with Stuart’s Dys- | pepsia Tablets Is an Exact Science. They Give Quick Relief. Medical men hav 4 more about ny other vital They Must Learn to Make Good Soup Out of Chickens’ Toes, “The influence of the restless, tmpa- Went women, who are trying to ape fhe men, are responsible for the lack Mf appreciation of the art of house- teeping to-day, The average American | ™ voman is ashamed of admitting a keen terest in the duties of housekeeping. The 1s supposed to have a soul, A lot *€ rubbish ts constantly being sald in Yertain circles concerning the narrow- teas of women's sphere instead of do- ME and saying what Is possible to Heighten the respect for her real sphere “the making of the home.” ‘This is the statement made by Mrs. Annie Nathan Meyer, founder of Barn- imi College, in answer to the charges drought by Prof. William T, Bartholf f the Laine Technical High School of Shivago. In an address before the Na- fona} Vocational and Industrial Con- fress, Prof. Bartholf advocated the Wolition of the various forms of higher dducation in the pubitc and high schools amd the substitution of @ practical jee in home cares and cooking. He! Sbiata tii taalse tal , “The modern American. girl ts the ¥ 11 have no indigestion. You food forest cook in the world and the cause |“) Teest thoroughly. it fany @ man takitig to drink. There You never can tell just when your stom. ® euch @ thing as too much culture. reli al nec Li dhl bral, We keep our girid. in schoo! stu warning. If you eat @ big meal, if you Rareiauette Whee Hey ious: ve 4 eat hurriedly, take one of these little tab lets, You will avoid @ lot of pain and misery, Some of the most prominent men carry thene tablets in thelr vest pocket when they attend banquets, etc, and never fall to take them, disorders ‘They have gone further, powerful digestante that | troubles | properties will digest 8,000 grains of t's Dyspepsia Tablets are not « ‘They are @ scientific compound the stomach with the di+ is which It te itself unable to en your stomach ts sick and rking right—when 1t fails to give ly take care of the hg the various grades of roast beot ind.the proper way to make bread. The police, of this city declare that a &rge percentage of drunkenness is due © the poor cooking at home.” MOUSEWIVES MUST STUDY UP ON SEVERAL THINGS. “Most assuredly America has the foorest cooks in the world,” says Mrs, Meyer, “and until ail the housewives lealize their mistakes, and study the jhemistry ‘of foods, the hygicne of the body, @nd learn the value of the Ufrerent Kinds of meat, we will con- finue to remain so. I do not agree vith Prof. Bartholf that the co! ges | ire to bide. Nearly all the good at has done toward Wettering Pnditions’ has Been brought about by wllege bred women, “The modern woman of to-day has litued the home, Her influence hu» ined many @ good hou ‘ause she de, ashained to ¢ winion in public and 5. jpinion of other women. Ther huch aitention paid to the prot nal women, nd too little time giv the making of a home. Th» wom if, to-day are trying to go Into politics, ja become the equal of men in busi- jean. pia Tablets are sold by Values Here Our facilities for tailori are worked out to the point, and we can give you more for your money than | “They do not appreciate what they an accofmplish at home, and lack the| Fue knowledge of woman's sphere they are working on a e trend “The alm of the woman's rights move- nent is to ret aw the home. It f narrowing the in! ence of the home hstead of uplifting it. The housekeeper # belittled, and her art Is regarded as f@-fashioned. “Many of our colloges to-day are leaching domestic science. They are ying to teach the students how to be, hodern, scientific housekeepers. | “The madern housekeeper will have to fae vas and run her home on a other merchants, Men's and Women's Clothing Our credit prices are a third to a half lower than casb prices elsewhere. Don't take our word for it. Just come in and see, You can clothe your entire family here on a payment of $1 PER WEEK basis. Shé will learn to ty dishes from the left-overs, fs usage of various cuts of meats that @ has hitherto scorned. For instance, pe will realize that the heads and togs chickens make delicious oh ing: nt of her enor nous wf Europe on jarbage pails, which are the cause of host of ov disease, she will economize ind find a use for everything.” 09 WEEALY OPENS AN ACLOUNT LIBERAL CKEDIT TERMS) $3 Pen $50 $7 %cn"1 90 $10°¢n" $159 | $5 "tn" $75 $59 to $500,915°%n" $200 "| siyles, sizes 7 to 18 yeas. ee Face ave VENING WORLD, FRIDAY, OOTOBER GIMBELS GIMBEL CLOTHING for MEN Finds Its Rosition Assured Gimbe! Ciothing for Men is essentially well-bred. It begins to split off from the common run of clothing wit the fabrics. We choose them ourselves—the products of the best mills—and turn them over to our tailors to make up for us. This assures the absence of those restless patterns that make a man need “watch his step” when he is choosing a suit. Here are only fabrics of a reserved disposition, such as men expect to find on a custom tailor’s table. Plain colors, the new two- toned mixtures, with here and there a smart check—woven of soft-finished worsted yarn, which looks better and wears longer than the cheviots woven from woolen yarn. Now, having gotten the’ cloths to suit us, we next go after the cu/. Here again, we avoid eccentricities, Still, there are sufficient good variations in style to suit the tastes of many men, You have a choice, for instance, in the length of the soft lapel, in the spring of the waist-line, a dozen other details, which some of you may like just as much as others dislike them. Bear this in mind—whichever one of the twenty or more models you see to fit to choose— you are always sure of being WELL DRESSED in Gimbel Clothing. The Fine Fall Showing Is Ready —We Want You to See It TO-MORROW SUITS trom $15 to $45 OVERCOATS at $15 to $37.50 Special Values at $15, In Particular, a Group $16.60, $17.60, $18.50 to $22 Silk-lined, at $16.50 Fourth Floor GIMBELS—Ready for All the Boys Who Will Buy Fall Clothes Tomorrow We are looking forward to one of the busiest days of the Autumn in the Gimbel Boys’ Clothing Store tomorrow. Partiuliy because a great many ents will have come to realize that their boys actually need wafmer Suits and Overcoats. And for the rest of it, because if these parents appreciate the great advantage {| of getting yood Clothing at moderate prices, they will bring their boys to share in the wonderful collection of fine Clothing that we have provided for them. And money counts nowadays. They will find here, for example, unusually good Boys’ All-wool Suits at $5 And a great range of the finest Clothing for boys that Fabrics that will /ast because they are made neither of | skilled craftsmen can make, in unusual fabrics, in single cotton, nor of shoddy. In handsome brown and gray | or double-breasted Noifolk, and plain double-breasted mixtures with TWO pairs of FULLY LINED Trousers, | st vies, at $10, $11, $12, $18.60, $15 and $16.60, which are amply cut. In Norfolk style, sizes 6 to 16 years, plain double | The Boys Who Need Overcoats Will be proud to wear these stylish new long Coats breasted style, sizes 9 to 18 years, Boys’ Blue Serge Suits, Extra Trousors,$7.60 | with belted backs, or belted all ‘round warmly, lined with wool or serge, at $10, $12, $13.60 up to $25, All-wool, fast color. Winter weight, with two psirs of fully-lined knickertockers. Rie or double-breasted | For smaller boys, there are new all-wool Chinchilla Henceome Suits with Two Pairs of Trousers, sizes | Overcoats at $7.60, in a smurt Polo style, with belt all 7 to 18 years, of still finer materials, at ¢8.50— around, Navy blue or gray, 214 to 10 years. ts’ Noor In short, whatever Winter Clothing a boy needs, he can get it to his own and his lasting satisfaction—which means absence of regret—at Gimbels. Fourth Men’s Shirts at $1.85 Each That Belong on $1.75 to $2.50 Levels Here is a comfortable margin of economy on Shirts of a high charact ar —the bes! Shirts, in looks and in fact, that we have sold under the market since we came to town. Offered at the very beginning of a new Shirt season, with the express intention of making some new friends for the Gimbel Men’s Shop. Expertly made, of fine madras and percale, imported and domestic, including many custom shirtings, in the designs that critical men prefer. Plain or plaited bosoms, attached cuffs. Shirts that by right belong in our $1.75, $2 and $2.50 ranks, tomorrow at $1.85 each, Main Floor Men’s Fall Derby Hats at $1.95 $3 to $5 Grades--Little Less Than Perfect It’s a stiff penalty that the maker of these Hats pays for the slight flaws that have crept into the making of the bodies. But he 1s proud of his reputation, so that defects that you can’t see, and that we can hardly discover ourselves, scale the price down to $1.95, from $3, $4 and $5. About a thousand of them, all in black, on the new Fall blocks; self-conforming, light-weight or full stiff, with low or high crowns, and wide or conservative brims. Al! sizes. And hundreds of men in New York are planning to get new Derby Hats tomorrow! P. S.—A collection of broken size-ranges in Imported Soft Hats that were $3, is also $1.96, tomorrow. Yourth Floor [8 J 4, 1018, Be Sure to Visit Tomorrow wala Lomenade des Cotleltes» The Authoritative Paris Fashion Ex e +) menade, by beautiful women between 10 A. M. Exhibition uisite Gowns, Wraps and Furs from all the famous couturiers of Paris worn, and 12 Noon; 2 and 4 Tomorrow the Younger Generation Is Especially Invited We shall display the new School Frocks, smart Topcoats and dainty Party Frocks that have been created for Mademoiselle this season. Righth Floor A Sale That Is a Sale! W foe es in 12 New Styles Tomorrow at $3.95, $5, $6.95 and $8.95 Worth Anywhere from $5 to We took the jabot from one costly imported model, the $10.75 clever little turnover-collar stock from another, and many of the other new ideas that Paris has just sent, Jae used them in these Blouses, so that they would be distinctive and also the re pensive styles, ions of the very ex- Four Styles Are Illustrated, But the Other Eight Are Just as Charming The foundations of some are of the lacy nets that are delightful Some have rich-hued silks inset to give the effect of a semnone ane | wi is $3.96, 95 or $8.95 it possesses all the earmarks of d feowe, A lade gust the colors for the new suits! iled with the chiffon, when veil pred Bi good style. Navy, Third Flor” Two Women’s Coats Causing a Furore-— Specialized Tomorrow, $16.50 & 27.50 The Chinchilla Cloth Coat, in the smart three-quarter length, is without a doubt the Coat for morning wear. It is good-looking and practical. Tomorrow we shall have a new model in this Coat that is faced with broadcloth to match its collar that may be fastened into a high turnover stock, or worn open to form revers; Navy Chinchilla cloth; trimmed with red, green or Copenhagen blue broadcloth, brown with tan; tan with brown; light gray with navy. Imported three-quarter length Coats of smart woolens— $16.50 to $85. These were made to our especial order by tailors of London and Berlin. the best The fascinating “Cyrano” Coat in corduroy will be $27.50 tomorrow. It was clever of Fashion to think of this cutaway coat, for it is just what a woman needs to wear with charmeuse dresses. Taupe, brown, gray and black, with collar of either white or taupe. Lined with peau de cygne. Velour de laine Coats, also quite dressy, $35 and $75. Evening Wraps of Rich Charmeuse start at $82.60 for a charming model with large shawl collar of fluffy Mufflon—and ascend to $75, for our Domestic reproduc- tions. Imported Models up to $395. Gimbel $6.75, $8.75, $10 and $14.75 Millinery Third Floor Is Designed by the Most Skilled Artists In America As we want the woman who selects one of our $6.76 Hats to feel as satisfied as the one whose choice 18 a costly model, we have our Medium-Priced Millinery made in our own workrooms by our best milliners and under the personal direction of our chief artists, who are recognized as the geniuses of America. Every Gimbel Hat is designed on a manikin’s head so that its every angle is just right —and, do you know, we ave even fastidious about the way our hats are lined! Five hundred distinctive Hats at $6.76, $8.75, $10 and $14.75 fos tomorrow, including Tailored, Demi- dress and Dress styles in all the exquisite new color har- monies, besides black-and- white and all black. Some of the most charming are adorned with ostrich. Third Floor GIMBEL BROT NEW YORK HERS

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