The evening world. Newspaper, June 17, 1915, Page 10

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“THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, JUNE 17, 1918, We vacuum clean, store, insure against fire, theft and moth IN OUR OWN FIREPROOF STORAGE VAULTS Any Fur or Cloth Garment, Value up to $50.00. Street WwW +A Manufacturer’s Surplus at Considerable Reduction land short $pe- } palues as high as $2.00 .. ‘ Pot Safe ete evades 5: 1t $3.98 Blades, box of SN nactie Waists in the very latest Isz dainty voiles w\th wide ertions of lace, combined with randie and embroidery. Low Mars and iace edge sléewes; swith fine tucked collarand , edged with colored organ- haat - embroidered; long 1.95 "se 1,45 aris’ 1-98 to $3.98 ei teen es $1.69 ; sizes 6 to 14. This is an extraordiaary value ’ ve ‘Third Floor " A June Reduction Sale in Razors, and Cutlery for Daily Use Sale Days—Friday and Saturday 4 blades, assorted handles, 47 c ironts, ahd Val,.Jace and tucks edged with colors; others with in- . Front and vestee, col- lar and cuffs of linen, Pearl but- tons add a strikingdinish. Long Second Floor. Main Floor, Razors, Trav foe Nail Clippers, Manicure and Heavy Toe value 50c, at Flexible Steel Nail Files, Nail Scissors, value i 40c pair, at.. Bone Handle Flexible Nail Files, and Cuticle Knives, value 150, atlOe 67- high as 49c, at Stork Embroidery Rasor at. i gate, vplue O80. at. 300 ” Strop, value 50c, at 39c mps, Colonials and Shoes Reduced $1 to $2 on Their Regular Low Prices Every pair in this sale taken from our regular stock and b specially reduced for this occasion. Patent, Gunmetal, White Buck and two-tone effects. French and Cuban heels, Flexible fe Sa SO a EA LET aera veeumaten = 5 LS ALN ET, SRNL welt soles. Two lots at these reduced prices: $2.45 Cc. F. KOCH & CO., In $3.45 125th Street We Come Along With Kitty Check your grip for Hours of Wiens sit back in your easy chair and take a trip with Kitty Gray through the land of amazing adventure and the realm of soul- romance, Not a dull minute in the wholejourney-notaslow- up in the rapid action of The Broken Coin our new serial story soon toappear in these columns. You will like this story because it is full of human interest with none of the ordinary slap-stick horseplay or claptrap sensationalism — but chock full of red- blooded life and realism. You can see The Broken Coin at your favorite Universal Theater every week. The story is filmed by the Universal Film Mfg. Co., which is a guaranty of excellence, while the fact that Emerson Hough is the author of The Broken Coin places it as the greatest of Moving Picture serials, and adv ature stories night in Beginning Monday, June 21, then SEE the pictures ut your favorite UNIVERSAL Theater Show TwoSchools| ry in Summer Show, at the Montross, The summer exhibition now on at the Montross Gallery, 550 Fifth Ave- nue, ls a combination of the academic and modernist schools. Some seventy ff paintings and a few pleces af sculp- | ture make up a showing which will be continued until July 1 Maurice Stern 1s represented by a| 5 if endy been seen in several ex- | f number of his Ball sketches with special appeal, most of which hibition There are three canvaases by D. W. | § Tryon. Two of these are landscapes | and the third is @ marine. They are | § all in low tones. The marine intro. duces a highly crescented moon. Elliot Dangorfield’s landscape 1s one | Pe in which the cloud mists are delight- fully expressed. Max Weber contributes a crude and | 9 elementary sketch of an island with | greenish yellow trees growing all | around there, and there and there. | Horatio Walker shows “Moonrise— Winter.” This picture deals with wood hauling by means of the old time | “pung’ sled that was horse drawn. | Arthur B. Davis has a panel show- ing @ group of cubical females, gor- , Blously prismatic, In their costuming. Some of these gBrotesque fomales wave their hands wildly as if galling for help, while others sit calmly in| Pe repose. There is nothing charming, nothing appealing about any of them. Walt Kuhn has essayed half a dozen The birds, in all of their appear with Indian red \d brown legs. The deep blue round is at least striking in its intensity. Charles E. Prendergast contributes | several of his engraved plaster panels in Jow relief in gold on white. Childe Hassam’s painting of “La Clarte, Cotes du Nord” has the walls of the building well expressed. He hi to cut off the wp of the spire, how- | ever, to get it into his feld. Another of his pictures shows “A Rainy Night,” in which several misty figure coming and ‘The flashing of lamps throug! oisture laden m ‘The same is true ‘ountry Fair—Still Life.” The green peppers and red ap ples are these things, and they are nothing more. “Le Midi,” by Allen Tucker, ts vividly impressionistic and in arbi- trary colors. “The Master,” and “Ivory Towel by George Alfred Williams, are small but well colored water colors. One of his “Pigs,” by Horatlo Walker, shows the animal in repose with his incidental thatched sty. “Windy Weather,” by J. Alden Weir, is a etudy in greens. A lal tree and its surroundings are fea- tured. “Long Beams: of Light on the For- ests, Grand Canyon of Arizo Arthur Wesley Dow, 1s done, The tremendous height of the canyon walls is happily indicated. The pigments have been exception- ally well handled in this painting. “Sunset,” by George Inness, shows a steamer with black smoke in the distance, In the foreground is a frag- ment of a stern and rock bound coast, with a charming cove and the gently incoming tide, incidentally shown. Mowbray Clarke's “Piobaireach done in bronze, is very disappointing. A. P. Proctor, on the other hand, has an admirable portrayal of a Honess, in low relief, done in bronze. The placque shows a well modelled animal in a good pose. It 1s dese: ing of high praise. A prowling p: ther by the same artist is also mei jgorious in high degree. BARON WINS BRIDE IN WAR ROMANCE De Wardener, Who Is Almost an} American, Engaged to Mile. Mercier. PARIS, June 17.—Baron Maxwell de Wardener and Mile. Beula Antoinette Mercier announce that they are en- gaged to be married, It 1s another love romance of the war. Their acquaintance ripened into love when the Baron, whose mother was an American, was with the American ambulance here, Later he became an interpreter for the British ambulance. The date for the wedding ts not fixed; war 1s too uncertain, The charming Mile, Mercier is-the daughter of Henry Mercier, an officer of the Legion of Honor and head of the largest French decorator’s estab- lishment. Baron Maxwell de Warde ner is the son of the late Baron Ru- dolph de Wardener, who became a American citizen after serving in the | civil war and Mved many years in Luna Park will welcome al dren of the New York stage to-morrow afternoon. The kiddies will be shown a ne} centre, equipped with all sorts of toy. I the thrillers by invita ent, fear of upsetting your liver or stomach if you wi! lationsthat the bi are expelled from the bowels and head- ache, ness end sallow skin go. ‘Small Pill—Small Deso— Small Price GENUINE must bear signature Use the Public Service Bureau Like learning, this Service Burean of Macy's can do you no good unless you use it. It might fave you a wrinkle or headache if you let it solve your knottiest problem of where or how to spend an evening—or a week-end, or vacation. No cost or charge. Worth Trying! Shop Once on a “Blue Transfer’’ day you try Transfer Shopping” — won't be a “day of trial.” No matter how busy the store, shopping will go smoothly. No waiting f or change or pack- ages—you merely hand the card to the clerk — the amount is put down—and = you are ready to pass on at once. When you _ finish, you pay the (otal amount of your purchases at the Main Floor Trans- fer Desk and get all you bought in one neat parcel without the least delay. A Pleasure? Try it! MA = 55 Women’s Tailored Skirts Reduced to$2.49 Original prices were $3.89 to $4.74.) Flaring and pleated models, up-to-the- moment in style, have for quick clearance been marked at lowered prices. Included in the assortment are: Lightweight Woolens in checked and striped effects. Cotton Gabardines. Bedford Cord. Palm Beach Cloth. Taken from regular stock, these are reduced only be- cause the range of sizes is somewhat broken. White Washable Velvet Corduroy Skirts, $2.89 A finely tailored Sport Skirt model with fitted girdle top and patch pockets; trimmed with self-cov- ered buttons. Macy’s—Third Fleer, Centre. Store Your Furs at Macy’s A charge of $1.20 on single pieces valued up to $60.00, 2% on higher ealuations. Each article freed from dust and hung on its own individual hanger in our cold, dry air stor- age vaults. Macy's—Third Fleer, 84th St. Women’s Coats "Originally $9.74 to $19.74 Reduced to $7.74 EARLY 100 smart garments, taken from regu- N lar stock and sharply reduced for quick clear- ance. Short, three-quarter and seven-eighth length models, in a diversity of styles and materials; the majority silk lined. Included in the assortment are: Top Coats of Serge, Covert | Sport Coats of Tweed and and Novelty Fabrics. Wool Plush. Incomplete range of sizes, but excellent selection. % Macy's—Third + Broadway. Men’s Satin Striped Silk Shirts, R.H. Macy & Co.'s Attractions Are Thole Low Priced Herald Square, “Not Advertised” Very often we pick up a nals lot of goods at a special price —too smafl to advertire, but genu- ine bi ins nevertneess. These lots isplayed around the store under ign “Not Advertised.” It Broatwag, 34th 10 38th S% it) pay you to watch for the signs. Macy’s Usual Price, $4.96 We secured these Hats from one of the best ma- kers in town. He had just . enough ma- terial on hand to make about 200—and as h&was anxious to start on Fall merchandise, gladly disposed of them at big con- cessions for Cash. We offer them to you at $2.97. Else. where in the city similar models are sold at from $5.00 to $7,50. Two Illustrated — oe f are | colored straw facings. In- made of fine Peanut Straw | cluded also are some fine with different straw facing in | Panamas—just the hat you contrasting colors; the ma-| want for your Week-end Out- jority have white tops with | ing and Vacation wear. Macy's—Second Floor, 84th Stroet. Here Are Real Savings on Victor-Victrolas! Forty-one dollars less on one “special” featured, $25 less on the other, and a good-sized saving on each style carried in a stock as nearly complete as any in Greater New York. If you can afford to pay cash, or if you don’t care for the dearly-bought “privile e” of paying so much a week or month, we have Victor Machines to suit your purse from $13.49 to $271—all priced much less than other stores would charge you for them NOW. _ Have a Victrola in your home this Summer—add Dollar Dividends to “dividends of pleasure” by buy- ing it at Macy's! Two Big Victrola XIV Victor price $150 Macy price $125 In fumed or weathered oak; or oak, exactly quantity limited. as pictured. $1.00 Victor Records, 69c Increase your machine's repertoire on the money saved by buying here. The $41 saved (for instance) on the “Victrola XVI" would buy fifty-nine $1 records at the Macy price of 69c. Two thousand 12-inch Black Label records to choose Cash Savings Victrola XVI Vigtor price You can relish your meals without | [5 from (of the 31,000" series)\—comic operas, popular songs, instrumental records—really too many to enumerate. Still, half the pleasure of buying records is in selecting them yourself, And besides these, you can get any records listed in the Victor catalogue—at reductions that mean extra records for the same money. Macy'e—Fourth Floor Rear. $2.69 Good news for men—800 of the] In popular stripes—blues, tans finest tub silk aim yon ever bought | and helio. at anywhere near the price—ready | Coat style; cut full and generous; t \orrow. Excellent quality silkswill launder | have soft double cuffs. perfectly and give long service. All rizes 14 to 17. Macy’o—Main Floor, 35th St. Two Notable Offerings in the SILK HOSIERY SALE For Men and Women AS a fitting climax to our June Sale of “Sample” Hosiery, we present two of the most tempting hosiery values of the year. Women’s Ingrain Thread Silk Stockings 69c Macy's Usual Prices would Equal to the be 94c, $1.39 and $1.89 standard $1.90 grades. my Technically termed “Run of the Mill”—meaning a thick or thin spot here and there; in some cases this is hardly perceptible and in no case will the wearing quali- ties of the Hose be impaired. The manufacturers do not call them ‘Firsts’—but the defects are of such minor importance that they are not in a class with the so- called “ Seconds,” The Women’s Stockings come in black, white, green, navy, pink, sky, champagne, taupe, smoke, fawn, suede ane bronze. p double garter tops; all silk or with lisle or cotton tops. Note the well reinforced heels—the double soles and toes. » tan, gray, blue, lavender, purple, etc. We cannot say too much regarding the quality of the merchandise offered bee not confuse it with the “regular One Dollar Value” advertised el Men’s Ingrain Straws Thread Silk Socks Of the Moment Might just as well wear the latest — assortments unexcelled and prices the lowest at Macy’s. Sennits, $1.24 Split Milans Low) fine Do- mestic and Impor Sennits. $1.69 Other nigh grade domestic and impo: straws, $2.74 Macy's—5th St, Entrance to Men's Hat Shop. Leather Photo Albums Usual Sale Price. Price, English Long Grain or Walrus Leather; Size 434 x 54ginches, T4e Pin Morocco Leather with gold border; size 54 x Tinches, The Men’s Socks come in medium and light weights; full- fashioned; reinforced heels, soles and toes, Some with silk elastic tops, others with cotton tops. black, white, Palm Beach, 87c Macy'e—Main Floor, Center. SETS fae acct Lew OL eee

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