The evening world. Newspaper, November 10, 1913, Page 9

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| RLS! GIRLS! GIRLS » DROVE SAD CANDIDATE SS TOSTATE OF FRENCH Someone Put Fake Ad. in Paper to Get the Goat of J. Kelleher. \ pu Jeremiah Kelleher, who ran for the Assembly in the and was badly sweet dream at when there waa jp the door of his apartment on the fourth No@r at No. 194 Hast One Hundred and Pick Out the Dyspeptic You Can Te!l Them Anywhere and Especially if You See One Eat. & Gtiert's Dyspepsia Tablet Will Digest Any Meal. wenty-fourth District n, Was enjoying « clock this morning o this | to! ie" und surely convi: you that food not hurt you. rain of the whier Stuart’ gester te to aid nature to db without exhaustion, and tt certainly as compllabes this resuit Stuart's Dyspepes r | oa tu Be Like in | Every drug sore | Va Stuart's Dyas ja Tablets and) em in huge | jes. No ma: ere you ara! ‘ocaied, you may Go| to any druggist aad buy a SOc bux that you a long Absolutely you dys-! pepsia can be pro- “8 Kaew I'll Be Bick.” ye these tad their diges- | tien always perfect. e ov then tue to Quturday, November 15th, Inclusicve, from 8:30 AM. to © pM. each day, Macys will present jutent: knocking on | year-old twin sons of Mrs, Sarah Tun- PAID $5.05 FOR HIS SEAT. | Hat He Might Have Saved #5 IC He In which tnurly, M up the stairs | a tee already puet have wet inte the wrong | cant seata | | gered, push bewildered Kelleher! moved to a morning news| pig 1 Magistrate Tee Kelleher sald he didn'« put ti 10] neg Philtigacn # f% the paper, The girle didn't appear to] gegpite his excuse that he h to sit beileve him, 1 a ' cause it made bin | seed. When 1 wax jamm Were bexinair jown to th et Being mc quietly went ¢ ey he | se, Ketieher| PAT . Made his! his sweet | tention ‘UFES STRUGGLE WITH ILLNESS Mrs. Stewart Tells How She Suffered from 16 to 45 Years Old--How Finally Cured. Ohio.—"“Because of total ignorance how to care for myself when verging into womanhood, and from taking cold when going to school, I suf- fered from a di ‘ement, and each month [had se pains and nausea which always me lay-off from work for two to four days from the time T was 16 years old. 1]. “I went to perees AS ey a or he frerward 4 « or re. {ter and while there a doctor told me of Fee ee teeny ve. | the Pinkham remedies but I did not use with the object of {them then as my faith in patent medi- cines was limited. After my sister died 1 came home to Ohio to five and that has been my home for the last 18 years. “The Change of Life came when I was 47 years old and about this time I saw my physical condition plainly described in one of your advertisements. Then I began using Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg- Damage to jetuble Compound and nnot tell yo: or any one the relief it gave me in the first three months, It put me right where I need not lay off every month and during the last 18 years I have not t house in which Brook ot thei experi mously they were but they weren't any madier than 1 , who hid out in a safe place blocks away and got reports nee at hie home from t being hoaxed, trusted frie Neighbora and friends of Kelleher cir- culated among the girls, assuring them that Kelleher had no ed the ad- who used his nn hundreds of girls work and looking for positions. Pat ietit TWINS START A FIRE. Children's Play Caun Four Balldings. Abraham and Jacob Tunkin, the five. kin, who lives on the top floor of the] paid out two dollars to a doctor, and have been blest with excellent health for « {i Uhree-story frame flat at No, 184 Livonia avenue in the Brownsville section of Brooklyn, were left alone by their npou mother this morning while she went to ince the Change of Life is o a grocery nearby. The twins starte| a] have been # maternity nurse and being fire In corner of thé Ritenen. They | Wholly self-supporting I cannot over- were watching {t gleefully when their [estimate the value of good health. 1 mother returned, grabbed them up and|have now earned # comfortable little dashed out of the house yelling “fire,” [home just by sewing and nurdng since The two other families got out and yr Id. I have recommended to many with good re- excell to take before iss EVELYN phemia, Ohio. some one turned in an alarm, Batailion Chief McAuliffo sent In a second alarm because a high wind was sweeping the flames over the neighboring houses, all ‘ of them frame etructures, ‘The firemen |, If you want special advice write to had a lively half hour quenching the | Lydia E, Pinkham Medicine Co.(con- flames, but the fire burned out the top| fidential), Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by 2 omen and held in strict con- it and after ADELIA nN In 1858 Macys was founded the ORIGINAL DEPARTMENT STORE~at 204-206 Sixth Ave, In1902 Macys opened the '4 | doors of the present Building’ ¥} | at Broadway. 34th Street, [E4 | 45 th Street & Sixth Avenue, being PIONEERS of the PRESENT RETAIb | SHOPPING CENTRE 3 of New York For the Week of? ‘Monday, November lOc 4 Carnival of Values Never Approached Elsewhere Every Department in the Great Store contributes. The most seasonable merchandise, in large quantities & comprehensive assortment at lower, Macys usual Lowestin-the-City prices Economies in Celebration of this great Anniversary event for every member of the home and for the hones itsel? Suggestions galore for Holiday Gifts. J Scores of special purchases. Hundreds of lots marked at. special reductions for the Prand Je Auniversaire. Many Thousands of dollars of savings. even, than RH Macy ¢ Co HERALD SQUARE HEseegbh. NEW YORIC GIMBELS. 12,7383 Rugs the popular 9 x 12 Ft. Sizé. S. Sanford & Son's Carpets and Rugs, since 1838, So there isn’t a thing we had to say to make them wanting rugs or carpets, who needs to be admonished of The Vast Scope of Our Purchase The Price Reductions Are Am Every rug and every yard of carpet is absolutely and business buildings, are alike interested in the Sale. ON THE SIXTH FLOOR Other sizes, from Mat at $1.16, usually $1.50, to 11 ft. 3 $30, usually $40. long. Also Velvet Carpets at 75c yard, from $1.26, and Tapest 66c yard, from $1. Stair Carpets in each grade. All Those OIL PAINTINGS (Our Importations for This Season) Which Have Been 865 to*1500 Are Now $48.75 to $1100 But for a Short Time Only It is rather a peculiar proceeding to reduce prices on Oil Paintings which have been in America only a few weeks, at the very beginning of the holi- day season. But we are very proud of our collection which our experts selected personally in Europe, and which includes among others the work of a number of Salon exhibitors. So, to bring it to the attention of more art lovers than now know it, we make this unusual offer, which amounts to A Price Reduction of 25 Per Cent. on the Paintings between the above mentioned price extremes. Sixth Floor Cold Wave! And Sharp Savings A-Plenty on Blankets & Comfortables and many Blanket mills, in order to sell to GIMBELS for the first time, made liberal concessions. Then, too, the fates took a hand to your advantage. Some of our fine Blankets have become soiled from handling in the course of the past few weeks. But the} / savings outweigh these sentimental hurts: White Wool Blankets, All-Wool Plaid 3lankets, Oye Were 36 wee ly f ae se rove ‘ere $6.00, Woven especially for oh ve see ee ee us. All the new block covers; fullsize, and blue bor. Wool-filled Stik Com- Smooth-linish Wool Blankets, cot fortables, $6 ton basis; in white and gray; full bed] Were 36.60, size; $3.00, were $5, White and Gray Blankets, $2.85 Pair Were $4. Smooth-finish, durable Blankets, for rugged service; fine for servants’ room. we pluced Special Family 3lankets, N 5 Pair among our tine BROCADED SATIN Woven from the long |COMFORTADLES at $15, many §2 They won't remain long in Second Floor Dainty hives of French sateen; plain borders; fine wool filling; full size, Winter-Weight Com- fortables, $3.60 50. Cozy, ligured-looking ine tilling. AS ‘THIS ANNOUNCE- Wis LOing tO pris, Were $6.50, staple wool; many extra sizes among | ones, them, tight. There’ll Be Little Hesitation About The Going of These Go-Carts At Such Low Prices Inhospitable as it may secm, we are turning them out to make room for Christmas stoc Baty will tump the rough spots and hit the hioh spots in life | soon enough—now ts the lime when you can really ease his going, These are floor samples of the ALWIN FOLDING GO-CARTS, You can take them right with you in the car or train - an ev- cellent solution of the carry» ¢ me-daddy provlem. $14 and $16 Styles 8 At $8.50 5 $18 and $20 Styles At $12.50 Fourth Floor Store Opens at 8.30 and Closes at 6 Mostly the Superb Beauvais Axminster, and in $30 Beauvais Axminster 9x12 Ft. Seamless Rugs, $21.60 $4.60 to $10.50 Hall Runners, $3.60 to $8.60 Beauvais Axminster quality, 27 in. and one yard wide, and 9 to 15 ft. $1.66 Wilton Velvet Carpets at $1.10 Yard Our buyers spent weeks in quest of the new lots;! os bas NOVEMBER 10, 1913. ® GIMBELS | This Sale of the Mill Overstocks of the ramous SANFORD RUGS and CARPETS Deals in Huge Quantities and Extraordinary Savings 55,000 Yards Of Carpets and Borders in FULL ROLLS. Wilton Velvets, Plain Velvets and Tapestries. have been the “bread and butter” of American floor-coverings. From the Aroostook to the Rio Grande, and from the Columbia to the Oklawaha, they carpet the floors of thousands of homes. better known. And there isn’t a housekeeper within reaching distance of New York, the importance of getting some of the fine advantages of this occasion. Because: Makes Certain a Wonderful Variety to Choose From azing on Goods of Such High Standard of Quality perfect, except for a few rugs among those in the Subway Store, which are mis- matched, and sold as such. Cwners of private houses and apartn ents, managers of hotels and boarding houses, as well as clubs, institutions Some of the extraordinary offerings: IN THE SUBWAY STORE Odd Borders at 35c and 60c Yard Tapestry Carpets, 46c, 65c and 66c Yard from 75c to $1 Stair Carpets, $1.10 Yard, Regularly $1.65 $26 Beauvais Axminster 9 x 12 Ft. Seamed Rugs, $17.50 $16 Tapestry Rugs, 9 x 12 Ft., at $8.76 $18.60 Triple Tapestry Rugs, 9 x 12 Ft., at $10.60 $28 Cashmere Wilton Rugs, 9 x 12 Ft., $19.60 Another Prize Sale | Has Come to GIMBELS This Time from JULIUS SM°LIN The Milliner Who Is Renowned for in, x 15 ft., at ry Brussels at ° Smart Trotteur & Chic Dress Hats | We were agreeably surprised when Mr. Smolin offered us his collection of Winter Hats] + |] at an almost unheard-of concession, for it was an unprecedented proposition. And he frank, | ‘} admitted that he hopes that he shall never again do anything so radical. The cause for thi disposal—which in our enthusiasm we nearly forgot to mention—is that he is moving his | shop uptown and does not want to bother with any stock, es As these Jats are fashioned after the Winter modes of Paris, many of them are trimmed with fashionable furs— some of the Dress Hats are trimmed with ostrich plumes and fantaisies, These Hats at $2.50, $3.75, $5 and $6.75 Are About 33'; Per Cent Leas Than Smolin Wholesale Prices Third Floor . aW40 OfSurpassing Brilliance--The GIMBEL ° . Collection of Fine CRYSTALS ° Which We Now Have the Pleasure to Present Beauty, character, wonderful divers- itv are the keynotes of this gathering. Mere size is a side issue, though we are told that even in that attribute this GIMBEL Crystal collection excels. But that doesn’t interest you, except as it makes for more moderate prices than the specialty sho) slong the Avenue can afford to charge for such exquisite wares as can be found only there—and heze, Look at the glittering spread, which y only overnight has demanded—and re- ceived—more space than ever we grant- ed it before, Consider that, if you are veeling wedding presents (and crystals are amazingly popular nowadays as wedding gifts) or Gla sware for your own domicile, or if you are starting oy on your Christmas shopping, you can choose here rom TWENTY designs in English Rock Crystal Services. Me FIGHTEEN designs in Gold Crystal Services. axe Ker TWELVE French, SIXTEEN Bohemian, FIVE Swedish, CI OP | de ol THIRTY-EIGHT American Table Services—all in “open (a stock’’ patterns, and including, for instance, Water Goblets from 766 to $150 a dozen! You will find the various classes grouped on separate tables; and, besides, tables of English «1 Cut Glass in Roel Cry: {fects : Vv i able rand height. Liqueur Sets. Cut Glass Punch Bowls. Cut co es, Handker , ete, ‘Table Decorations in new conceits, up to an ex- sism by Webb at $126, ¢ icks and Candelabra, in charming Colonial effects. ts and various decorative pieces, And Cut Glass from practically every maker of note in Ame - It’s almost bromidie to mention the names of Webb, Corbet, Baccarat, Tschernisch, and the other masters of glass-making, as represented in this GIMBEL collection— their presence here is long since spted fact. ‘l'o one who loves beautiful Crystals, a walk through the Salons is a ‘delight--and a temptation, when one thinks of Such Special Offerings as These for Tomorrow: h Rock Crystal sitet engraved Crystal gary ee deep cut Electroliers at . Govlets, $27.60 doz $ Service Empire desixr S40 Water ug, 6 glasses, one \ $7 1 $17.76. mirror plat 1 geo ¢ $20 doz. ecanter, 6 glasses | ae _ one 4 doz. hae jihad able Glass Services ays vale’ Of Sixty Pieces gold ce ae $ Hy harted an this coe } goblets, che me, r ' LE. dog, | ston, $%. 76. Ft eee $1.40." Couktuth eee | eT p Cut Fruit Bowl, $4.78, fee, eae engraved border, fe a G) win sie doz. ; $ al Ser 60 pieces, 19.75, Deep Cut Crystals ¢ 0 Semiveo secnt Bohen iat Rich deep cut Punch bowl J doz. j Crystal. 993.78, 492.76, let loor 7 /- ( y J v i, S Q i Broapway NEW YORK TMIRTY-THIRD ST. LA = = RK 5 ee Sat

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