The evening world. Newspaper, July 28, 1915, Page 8

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’ 28.—A despatch to Beratng Port from have gi ip hopes of elie ju go to Riker & Hege- ‘or any other drug store, and ounce of Fluid Enserol, gle throat a! nose night sod mataing. Keep weeks and test your d no has! Exclusively for the NEW YORK | must have been easier to do this, for | 4 | in the hair or at the belt, and all such, nrg cnet Tg ee Yay THE EVENING WORLD, WED Original Home Dressmaking Designs WIDOW ADVERTISES FOR A HUBBY, BUT HE By The Evening World’s Fashion Expert 999004444444 OOO1 OG 00004144 COOOC44H Just a Touch of Color to)? Relieve the Summer|*% Frock Is No Longer a “Hit or Miss’ Trick, but Must Be the Result of Careful Planning |+ When Gown !s Designed | ' —How Two Charming |: Afternoon Dresses May | : Be Fashioned. Covorighe. 1944, ty Tog Prove Pypigtoa Co. To give yuch of color” to a} 4 frock sounds like such an easy thing, but how very indefinite the su tion is! One can somehow imag! touch of color, but where and how to| 2 introduce it is perplexing when one| gets right down to it. Years ago it| 7 one could wear a colored gash, a col- ored ribbon around the wi but now the touch of color must be 4 really planned for in the developing of the frock, or at least give the ap- pearance of such previous considera- tion, Even when artificial flowers are used, which is quite the vogue still for evening gowns, they are placed) where one must realize they could not! be left out. And usually a strap or bow of velvet or ribbon the same | IBAUMANN&BRO 00 A WEEK often sighs for jus jation, | frocks a bit of often desired. that the original distinctive of the frock will not be spo! o@ other attractiveness will feriny cree ek an elaboration, with a tiny hem or picot-edge the popular way, some bright ep worsted may be coarsely overh: on their edges. ‘Tho suggestions ‘a little different.” Bu tt }out of the tiny holes, accomplishing ‘touch of color” and also on colored contrasting color is But to accomplish it eo qualltiog Fe individual and will be ap- 1d by those who desire some- frock flaunts dainty ruffles ai which are finis! id Should the ruffles be hemmed an inch or so deep by hem- stitching, which is also popular, a Peterman’s at your dealer’s. He sells and rec- ommends it because it does the work and because he is anxious to satisfy you. 5600 MUST BE A GOOD ONE Man Who Qualifies Will Get a Fine Fourteen-Room House, wipow Like t aca iJ fon. Mrs. Martha Stevens of No. 697 El- NESDAY, JULY 28, 1915. * the same thing. My husband desired that. I want a man who will be com- pany for me and will have a little money besides h's salary. We've got to keep the home. “I hope this advertisement will be taken seriously and that I will not be bothered by triflers. I want to have it turn out all right as soon as possible.” Her home comes up to the specifi- cations of the advertisement. The house has fourteen rooms and is tasefully furnished. It is said Mrs. Stevens is a cousin of Harold Bauer, a pianist. Her json Charles, a former student of Erasmus Hall, is an artist. WOMAN SUES JOHN D,’S Fy and T am willing \to submit to as Well as a Wife. “home, Address 201, Times Office, Rockefeller on 4 her for tw: Rockefeller y characterized the proceeding as villainous one” and said he would fight it to a finish. —_—_— GAS KILLS HOLD-UP VICTIM. Blackjacked, Robbed of Pay, Found Dead When Called to Testify. £0, Jan, 8.19 ty-four hot of Charles Widt, at No. 239 Liberty Street, Paterson, N. J., yesterday, found Widt, who was wanted to tes- tify against an alleged highwayman, jafter being robbed of his pay. Widt's death deprives th the only witness agains' O'Connor, charged with having held up Widt. Pont Powder works in Haskell, N. Ju. A detective who broke into the room | on the bed in a gas-filled room. He! N had been dead since his return home | K Widt, an employee at the du/f “Save the Pieces” y in a few hours. Let us prove it. Prescription Unnecessary, \ Best Crystal Sph. Lens 50c, bs Established 53 Yeare New York: 184 B’way,at John St. N 223 Sixth Av., 18th St. 350 Sixth Av., 22d St. 101 Nassau, at Ann St. West 42d Street, more Place admits she placed this ad- vertisement in a Brooklyn newspaper. “I have good reasons” she said to-day, | "for printing that advertisement, and I don't mind telling them to you. Jn my husband, Arthur, atrical costuming busi- >| ness until three years ago, when he lost money and killed himself. He loft mo this lovely home and I could not think of giving it up, Besides, | my husband, in a note he left for me, ») told me he wanted me to marry @ | again. I have no one to help me in \the upkeep of this big house, which IT am not able to carry. It was all right till two months ago, when my @ |only eon, Charles, married. Now 1 jam alone, and I do not want to give up the home I love. “It you think, however, I want a clubman, @ fly-by-night, or a man who ts not @ home lover, you are mis- |taken. The man I choose must be a ;teetotaler, I have tasted all the liquors made and can't see any good in any. The man has got to take a 3 | physical examination before I marry jten mortgage bonds of a company of | which he was a director an ook i holder. BROTHER FOR $109,624 Mrs. Leland Says Frank Rockefel- ler Defrauded Her and Beat Her. CLEVELAND, July 28.—Frank Rocke- feller, @ brother of John D., was mado defendant in the United States District Court to-day in three actions for dam-' ages aggregating $109,624, in which he! was accused of fraudulent representa- | tions In the sale of mortgage bonds, ment. The plaintiff 1s Mrs. Bertha M.! Leland, @ former cashier here, who now lives in Montreal. Mra. Leland alleges that by & relation of trust and coni tween herself and Rockefel duced her in 1907 to he in- $10,000 tn large stock Four years later she discovered {he property was of little value and thet his representations had been false, | In another suit she asks $60,000, alleging that Nov. 12, 1914, he “as- saulted and struck and choked me and bruised my body and, strained my right arm and shoulder.” In the third suit Mrs. Leland a: claimed he was blackjacked by O'Con- |, nor. string of worsted may be run in and an effective and original result. Also on ruffies a touch of color might be added the form of along the hem, or larger ping from the vory edge. sort might be added to of the neck and sleeves. If lace banding is trimming a frock, bow-knots of colored cording might be sewn flat at intervals upon it. Bow- knots of ribbon may also serve a retty purpose if a definite place can Po sound for thom, to insure ‘against a “tacked on” effect, —.—— DESCRIPTION. I am showing to-day a charming design for an afternoon frock which is appealing for just such trimming details and serves admirably to ex- emplify some of my suggestions. Especially apropos is the interpreta- tion at the right which shows an at- tractive trimming of tiny colored rib- bon bows. They are placed at the back as if to hold five shirrings which affect a wide girdle, A litle upstanding ruffle supplies a trimming ayality to the waist, which is plain at the back except for a few gathers at the neck. They are confined by a narrow band of lace con- tinuing from wider proportions tn front, quite suggestive of a bolero. From the drop-shoulder line a deep ruffle assumes the dignity of sleeves, with a band of the ribbon and a@ tiny bow to head it. Other ruffles flare gracefully on the skirt and honor their hems by a pretty vine design worked in colored worsted. Of voile or organdy of French crepe the effect would be delightful and simple to ac- complish. Quite a contrary use of materials | suggested at the left for this d "The two lower ruffles are of filmy | while the upper one, or tunic ruffle, guards them ferociously with a saw- tooth edge. Ribbon binding makes it exceedingly effective. The lace is used for the main bodice portion, but substantiated with colored silk to match the binding, which ap- pears again on the sleeve ruffles. Ap- ple green or any pale color on while| would be charming. dy gewn da drip- The same he trimming Be Good | To Yourself by keeping in physical im and you will be the best end to yourself and a pleas- ure to others, Most sicknesses begin in the ordinary minor ailments of the Gipest ive organs, and for these ailments Peecharris Pills have become the most popular remedy, because the: safe, so certain, an in their beneficial ion. They tone the stomach, stim- ulate the liver, regulate the | bowels, By cleansing the | system and purifying the bl they prove that they Of Good Friends Largest Sale of Any Medicine in the Westd. ae otis 17 . J Brooklyn: 498 Fulton St., cor. Bond St, when treat- Sensible people, their teeth need ment, go to a dentist. When they are ill they go to a physician. When their eyes show symptoms of Eye-Strain or Similar Troubles, they go to an Optometrist for an Eye Examination Because the Optom- etrist is the Qualified spectanety under the State saws. Published by The Optometrical Society of the City of New York. That Spare Room! Make it help pay the rent! Furnished Rooms are quickly rented to desirable persons through advertise- ments printed in The Daily and Sunday World Insert One To-Morrow! Formerly A. T. STEWART & CO. BROADWAY AT NINTH Good Furniture Never Cost So Little as in This August Furniture Sale (ORIGINAL) Third Day of Courtesy Tomorrow |. It is a fact, as any experienced furniture man will attest, that good furniture never cost so little as now. it is a fact because of the condition of the furniture business. There is no gain in shutting our eyes to this condition. The furniture manufacturing business has not been good. It is not good today. But it ought to be good. All business in this country ought to be good. Crops are good. Money is plentiful. But confidence is lacking. $80,000 Worth at Half Price We were offered — and we bought — large quantities of good furniture at our own figures; much of it at half price; in one purchase alone $80,000 worth at half price. Manufacturers want business. They need busi- ness. They are wiliing to make great sacrifices to get business. Their workmen need work. Their families need the worker's wage to keep themselves alive. Now—isn’t it only fair that we, we who have work and a steady income and money to spend—isn’t it fair that we meet these people half way and start to buy things that we need? No matter how good the crops, no matter how much money is in the banks, a country cannot be prosperous unless the retail business is good—unless people spend money. Everything that’s grown, everything that’s made must pass through a STORE—or a distrib- utor of some kind—before it brings back the money to pay the worker for his work. Keeping Money in Motion It is like the spring of water rupning through a pipe into our homes; if the neck of the pipe becomes clogged the water stops, then it dams up and becomes impure. When the retail mer- chandise pipe becomes clogged, merchandise dams up and becomes congested on the manu- facturer’s hands; or else the manufacturer stops work and workers are out of employment. To have pure water we must keep the pipes ——oh “From the Old to the New” To have good times we must keep chandise outlets free and open. To keep this flow of merchandise free and constant le must buy what they need, and not hoard Rial money. To induce people to buy freely, manufac- turers of furniture have lowered their prices enormously, Let us now do our part. Let us now fix up our homes, replenish the things that are needed. We will more than get our money's worth. We will bring happiness into our homes. We will give work to those who need it. We will help to bring better times to all the people of our country. New York Should Lead The country’s eyes are on New York. On gan Wert wants to be pros- pefous; it sees no reason why it should not be pros- pero, But it hears that ew ‘York is waiting and holding its money. If New York starts to buy, the rest of the country will start— money will cicculate—facto- ries will open and expand— workers will have work—and normal happy con- ditions will prevail. The August Furniture Sale (Original) is our part in thisco-operation, We have bought lib- erally. We have taken risks. We have shown our faith in what can be done if the people work together. Some one may say “this is your business; you make money by selling goods.” So we do. And YOU—everybody—makes his money by some one selling goods. Money is made only by selling goods. So you see it is YOUR business, as well as ours. Third Day of Courtesy—Tomorrow _ Make your selection at the new lower August prices marked on the tags, the transactions and de- iveries to date from August 2, when the Sale opens, All ae turnitare lace view—our entire ne stock -and special purchases—totaling million dollars—all entered in the sale, ct ia Fifth, Sixth and Seventh Galleries, New Building

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