The evening world. Newspaper, October 10, 1913, Page 5

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. ‘ER RVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, OOTOBER 10, 1918. 3 |" RADIUM VACUUM JA Satisfying Relish for Steaks, | | Fish and Gravies. wONConnope ID, ’ It’s Copper and Brass \, $2.50 Don’t be deceived. A child can op- erate it. 1 tlonal report appraises additional assets, | Roval Palace amd the Archbishop's resi- ailverware, valued at $1,000. dence. No damage was done to the ied May 15, 1892; total, buildings, both of which were wnoccu- $1,000, pled at the time of the explosion. joman, died Nov. 1, 1908;|” 3 poats, tame; net value) A Weale Stomach? @ Have you indigestion or dye pepeia, a torpid liver or any ! | budget for next year will be held (ct. 2 at 19.90 o'clock. The Board of Est'- 81,080, 256,61 , A ; “| sos. bs 192, 711,441,186 mate set the date to-day, Under the)” turing 1906 and before deficiencies j will be printed and distributed not later| (yo meere , subsequently they were : than Oct. %. No official statement of @ budget totals end included | (2.86. IN LAST TEN YEARS —>+— in the tax levy, Alexander Cromar cf Edinburgh, Scot- t Board of Estimate’s Figures | ¥ The foregoing figurer are incluaed tn | land, die’ March 3, 1907; assets, stocks, a bulletin issued by @ committee com- | ee in Now York, $49; net vaiue, | Show Big Increase in Outlay | for City’s Maintenance, —_| {per, 179,967, 896.16 the total of the tentative budget has yet been made. ‘ The following will show how the budget for administration and main- © has doubled in the last ten yar Gog English | — Mess Trae] auce prised of Comptroller Prendergast, | Acting Aldermante-President Enter- brook and Borough President McAneny. ————— APPRAISALS OF ESTATES. Joseph Mose, @ retired merchant, died March 20, 1913; total estate, $99,200; net value, $36,463. Mrs. Rosaile Myers, wife of Theodore} MILAN, Italy, Oct. 10.—A bomb was ++ 163,128,270.37 | W. Myers, died March 2, 190; an addi-' exploded to-day in tho vicinity of the Co— ONEILL-ADAMSCO—ONEILL-ADAMS Sixth Avenue, 20th to 22d Street, New York City Sixth Avenue, 20th te 22d Strget. New York City Sixth Avenue, 20th to 22d Street, New York City Florence A. Ahlstrom, diel Maren 15, other of the many ills com- | 1913; total aswete, 8,515; net value, $36,470. Wesley Bigelow, di 1912; to- ing from 8 weak stomach ? | tal entate, $2,898; net value, $1,758. DR. PIERCE’S 8OMB.NEAR ROYAL PALACE. |Golden Medical Discovery Eeploston tn Milan Fatle to Dam- ; for forty years has done a + 998,641,240.17 108,962, 622,28 111,562, 400.59 118, 60,582.08 130, 421, 606,66 1908. 143,672,266,17 1900, 156,662,748.14 A statutory hearing on the tentative! 1910. Boiling water, soap and com-| pressed air do the work. as Grocers and Delicatessen Stores, 10€ The only washer that can be tahen apert| Made by E. Pritchard, 331 Spring St, N.Y. ted.) = — ", PRODUCTS C0., Ine, No Extra Charge for ft. Advertisements for The World may be Mf af 1858 BROADWAY, New York, | 42% Amerikan Diane Memenge office ta the eit? until 9 P.M. —()NEILL-ADAMS CO—— Siath Avenue, 20th to 22d Street, New York City Saving millions by co-operation A saving of $117,375 through this one transaction in P/ANOS (EDITO ) Copyright, 1813, by O'Netl!-Adame Co. “Creeping into the lives of men everywhere is Nurses’ Tease’ uate’? age Structure. ent mace, {8 Gieteating Shoe these distressing ailments. Order a Bottlc trom Your Dragaist today Shoe Rests Tired Feet ‘Wearit, and note how differ- ent your feet feel at the end of your day. The easement is immediate, and lasts. P. is relieved, muscles stop ach- Little stories the thought that co-operation is better than com- petition. We need each other, and by giving much we will receive much, ‘“‘We are reaching enlightened self-interest.’’ @ Co-operation is the act of working jointly together. @ Co-operation is the act of two or more persons uniting their skill or resources to produce some- thing, to buy something, or to share the profits on something. @ Co-operation is based on a well established fact, that two or more articles of a kind can be produced more cheaply than one; that two or more articles of a kind can be bought, and afterwards sold, more cheaply than one. It’s a simple principle. A child can see it and understand it. A stick of candy costs acent. ‘Six sticks can be bought for a nickel. @ Take the matter of this piano transaction as an- other illustration: @ The manufacturers who are interested in this plan saw that if they could sell more pianos they could build them at a reduced expense. To sell more pianos, they must get the co-operation of piano dealers like this house and other large dis- tributers throughout different sections of the country. @ To sell more pianos, these dealers were shown that they would have to be con- tent with a smaller profit on each piano sold. But by selling many more pianos they could make a larger aggregate profit. @ To sell many pianos instead of a few, it was unanimously decided that the cealer’s proposition to his customer would have to be attractive. That it would have to be fair, square, open and above board—and, above all—more liberal in all its conditions than pianos are regularly sold upon. q It was also pointed out that the co-operator’s proposition to the public would have to be uniform on each and every piano distributed on this plan. That each and every person who participated in this co-operative plan should share and share exactly alike. @ In contrast to this plan, the usual method of selling pianos has been: If there were twenty pianos sold of a given grade, they were sold under twenty different conditions of sale, and, in many cases, at actually twenty different prices. @ So, with these things in mind, certain piano manufacturers and certain mer- chants (including ourselves) came together. @ The manufacturers said: ‘We can make better pianos, and make them for less money, if we can get a bigger market.” @ The dealers (we were one of them) said: “If we can buy cheaper so that we can offer more attractive inducements, we can make a bigger market’’—which resulted in this Co-operative Association. @ After the Association was formed, this plan was worked out. @ We started with the idea of selling more pianos through an incentive. But what would the incentive be? What would induce you to purchase a piano? Logically it could be but three things: G (1) A lower price; (2) easier terms; (3) more liberal conditions of sale, all the way through. @ We reasoned like this: Suppose something could be made and sold at a profit for a dollar each. Now suppose, by making twice as many of these somethings, and by employing quicker and more economical selling methods, these same somethings could be nade and sold at a profit for seventy-five cents each, what would be the result? @ The result would be that two sales would be made, aggregating one dollar and fifty cents, where there had been but one sale made before, amounting to only one dollar, and two persons would thus save twenty-five cents each by the transaction. Do you catch the idea? @ We have worked out this plan. To put it into effect, the three incentives above mentioned have become the very ‘‘warp and woof” of this whole proposition. The price has been lowered; the terms have been made so easy that, as some say, “they are almost ridiculously low,” and it is left to your own good judg- ment if the conditions of sale are not the fairest, squarest and most liberal upon which you have ever known anything to be sold. QONFILI-ADAMS Co. Sixth Avenue, 20th, 21st and 22nd Streets Main Store—Fifth Floor. Take @@nd Street Elevators of co-operation A thrifty housewife apent a couple of 8 up-State last Summer, While she met a farmer who had fine. eggs to sell. The farmer had selling eggs to the country store- keeper, who, in turn, had been shipping them to the commission merchants in the city, the commission merchant, in turn, selling them ‘to the city retatler, from whom you bay Now this good woman saw @ chance fora bargain, and made # deal with the farmer to ship her y-four dozen ean each week, for which she war to give him eighteen cents @ dosen, Win- ter and Summer,. Coming home she tc her friends and neighbors. Besalt—n! families with hers divide the twenty- four dozen exgs, and divide the cost of getting them by express (which amounts to about three cents a dosen), making fresh eggs cost her and her friends, the year round, about twenty- one cents a dozen—ell through 0 operation. the a, amine H dividing the con and the freight and hauling — expense. In this way they have their Win: ter's supply of coal at a_naving of over $1.00 @ ton— through oo-: Switzerland ts one of the foremost countries In promoting co-operative cleties, Switzerland has long taken leading position a nations in nation fairly operative societion representing every shade of commercial manufacturing and financial activity. e ng graduate dentists of n Dental College purchased fourteen dental at one as one thereby c0-opera- Just as one thousand persons will save collectively $117,375 in the purchase of these seven hundred p and three hundred player-ptanos, 01 save an average ‘of hundred and seventeen doll thirty-seven cents, one In Russia the Gov operates with variou tad! ; forts at less pense than were paying her board tidividually Avcording ty the last official report there are 25,141 erative societ ntal memberslip ‘ot and has @ membership nulvidual Hability tm Axed w wh rural co-operative banks with membership large. ly made up of farmers, and the empire—and last one billion, five ‘mar! operation. f operative sovleties, ne tive societies and other kinds ol sof Germany have h gives ald to th buying, in #eliing and in banking he members in this nation-wide co-operatic le in the moveme: rt ral defe: fi wate the the t auno n fOr the membership of the co-operation ment. Lessening the price QTo lessen the price of anything and lessen it materially is no easy matter. A merchant may sacrifice some of his profit and thereby reduce prices a little. He may here and there make an advantageous purchase, and thus lessen prices temporarily. But to make a big, stable cut in prevailing prices it can only be done in one way, and that is by selling greater numbers. Selling greater numbers means making greater numbers; which in turn means buying materials cheaper, making for less cost, and the elimina- tion of expensive selling methods. Selling greater numbers means con- centration and co-operation—cen- tring every energy on the work in hand, and giving much to others and receiving much from others through working together. @ Like this piano transaction—When every energy has been put forth by nanufac- turers and ourselves, and where every in- centive, in turn, is being given to our cus- [ Miqreytineia tomers, to make a low-water nark in piano | the piano or the prices. iano, 4 And this we have accomplished. Through this co-operative effort we are offering to eaves, hesnaeet parece a Leaoia “ two hundred and forty-eight dollars and seventy-live cents, ¢ same as has been sell; es A ‘ three Bundred and fifty to four hundred deuarge FR: HRS AE VES Pe Ne They are offered at one stable price, and that the lowest at which such pianos have ever been sold. The price has the advantage of not only being the lowest but it is the utmost price as well. For when you have paid the two hundred and forty-eight dollars and seventy-five cents there are then no further payments staring you in the face. No interest—no extras bobbing up—but just one low, stable and absolutely fixed price of two hundred and forty-eight dolJars and seventy-five cents covering everything. ES anos Lessening the a terms q You can buy plenty of pianos at a dollar and 25 cents a week—and even as low as a dollar a week. It is no new thing to be able to get a piano on terms as low as these—you will see them advertised almost every day. q But to get a piano like these at a dollar and 25 cents a week is a new thing. @ These are pianos such as are seen only week in the best homes. The initial 0 f cents weekly, n the player-piano is payable 2 dollars weekly, WITHOUT INTEREST. This gives you threo hun vith NO Hanging with the, erro only flve conte These are pianos such as any one might well wish to own. These are pianos of which any one might well feel proud, q They are instru- ments which regu- F Niet A AND SY. larly sell for at ‘ it at | least ten dollars a Ad'paca | Onno sd a's much more as the customer wil! give. € But here you have as the result of this co- operative effort--a good, durable and desirable Piano upon the low and uniform terms of only one dollar and twenty-five cents a week. @ We do not ask you to pay these easy terms and your neighbor some other terms—and some one else still other terms. q But the seven hundred persons who obtain these seven hundred pianos pay exactly the same terms-—-to the penny. @ Each and every one of them are privileged to take one hundred and ninety-five weeks’ time in which to pay for their piano. They can pay in less time :f they wish: That is to say —they are not compelled to drag out their payments over the whole time allowed them if they prefer to pay in shorter time. @ If they do pay in shorter time they profit still further— getting fifteen cents (cash pre- © mium) for each and every week the time is short- ened, 6 standard 48 from the price graph, Mame ss ssreere ing, ankles keep upright, arches are held in place. Leaden steps become buoyant. Built on a ial Coward Last, with flexed sole and tubber heel lifts, All sizes and widths. JAMES S. COWARD 264-274 Greenwich 8t., N. Be (HHAR WARKRD STREET) Mall Orders Filled | Send ter Catalogue 17- Jewelled-: | Adjusted Watches Gentiemen’s Size Only =); shew nv cornnlete” Watehs - ate os 1 K. Vateh f K: Railroad Watches at Cut Prices! te ‘hased from us can be ree ea anees + within J Miamands, Watehes, 3: Broadway, New Yor! 180 lomes Furnished| Credit Terms ui" $49-98/$ 3 Down 750) § « “ 99.98 7.50 66 5 | Write for Catalogue, Matled Free, 1° A Week Opens an Accoun 2190 3 AVE 70°51 30373 Avel96 Sr} Purses are filled, By use wd Of o Wield Want Ads. =

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