The evening world. Newspaper, October 14, 1915, Page 12

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mn Y ' ! ete el “Oe ater eeheete iv + See ss : a tween tel hee ome of tree i The Mare wine? wee 8 cor 4 i ote he tive artment Rem rinse *t. a] urine — . — »& ap eet trenteneet eee tee Whee ream nde & wt news ie wee of the puline “1, whem few - 4 | . at peittven - The Hiroe Fore tet tort age Premidents Mayor apy € Municipal ws ee Commiastonare Com a { the Hoard of Water Carage Plan to Save People» wety offeere and other de ’ bot Under the eon s nm) ¢ ' ' wl te aehed * aan eorege Wee tt i hey Go, ot tow * querter of « mit , Me “ 4 he Glare © year will be caved \ J eee . “The ee a meat Hr were whereby #6000 « . "yor © wee of onre ons ¢ so anniahthsienns of vay | fOr the (remeportat at Mons we end from thew ao i shows « garage yoowned aulomottion I | gems ant of te 6 sightonn of the Mayors dope * | for care ened ly aevicned tee par | WOALO WANTS WORK WONDERS Fie Movs nin: ennetionsd ® recom lar dope: 1. And tt te ove d | eonted thet no oar be assigned for Uhe % aciusive use of «@ department head cheept on the designation of the ALL CARS TRANSFER TO mover Mth to 60th Street a Lex to MAV hd dOs “The World’s Greatest Player Value on the Market’’ This is the unanimous verdict of every one who has seen our new Walters Player Piano. It is so far superior to all player pianos offered else- where, at anywhere near the price we quote, that a comparison seems obvious. If you want to secure the World’s Greatest Player Piano Value, come to Bloomingdales’ and purchase our perfect and up-to-date 1916 Style *WALTERS=+ 88-Note Player Piano 295 (No tras On Terms of $2 a Week Price includes a beautiful Music Roll Cabinet and Bench to match, a Cover, 12 Rolls of Music of your own selection and FREE delivery. Basing the ‘‘value” of a Player Piano upon the cost of its manufacture—plus the cost of selling it—plus a legitimate profit, we justify our claim that the Walters is the World’s Greatest Player Piano value on the market, by the following facts: We have the largest output of any one piano factory in New York; therefore the per cent. cost of manufacture is distributed over the greatest number of instruments, making the cost of pro- duction of each instrument less than the cost of any other make. e manufacture and retail every Piano and Piano Player we sell; therefore eliminate the manufacturer's selling cost and the middle- man’s profit, which means a tremendous saving. We sell more Pianos and Player Pianos than any other house in this community; therefore our selling cost is the lowest. ‘@ pay no commissions to teachers or profes- sia musicians to boost our instruments; therefore we do not have to add that expense to the price you pay. All the Expense We Save Goes Direct to You GREATEST PIANO VALUE Our New Style “L” wads) \. Walters Piano Price Includes Stool, Cover and Free Delivery $1 a Week No Interest No LEX. TO 8D AVE. G0Tu TO GOTH BT. \, Extras raaxeren'to BLOOMINGDALES’ | it was suid that there are only seven | CITY CARS USED FOR HONEST WORK ONE-THIRD THE TI ‘Tt ie & wignificant fect,” oe: report, based on & careful tally, “ther S12 bourse during whieh these were avaliable for user, only 26,98) OF 33.6 per cont. were consumed | in productive functional work service “The very highest percentage of un occupied time is in ieelf suMetent to emo the present system under which motor vebicie t ortation ia furnished to etty artmenta, The average mileage for a vebicle during the period in question was 2656, of 26.4 miles a day, The averngo assigned time per day for a vehicle was 47 hours; the averege rate of travel, in cluding all stops, being 6.04 miles per hour. This low rate of travel indicates that tt i decidedly uneconomical use automobiles in any part of the <ity that is reasonably well rT with p cc nervice trans facilities, since it not only com per mile, but saves itt time The cost per mile for the service of a city automobile chauffeur under present conditions, the report @ays, jooeds 23 cents, againat @ reason able figure of 10 or 12 cents, "The aasigning of @ car for the exclusive 6 of one individual Inevitably leade to an abuse of that privilege, at leas! to the extent that such vehiclas may be frequently used for short trips simply because they are avatiable rather than because they are actually nesded.” CUTTING DOWN THE MUNICIPAL EQUIPMENT. Among the other recommendations in the Bruere report are: “That, at the direction of the Mayor, in those cases where the head of a department is subject to emer- gency calls, one car be specially as- signed for the exclusive use of the Commissioner, and provision for its maintenance and operation specifi- cally made in the proper departmen- be placed tn.the Municipal garage ¢s- tablished fh the. Department of Bridges. That all passenger auto- mobiles not conforming to the new standard to be used be sold at public auction. The new equipment will consist of 64 cars. Thirty will be of medium weight and to cost not more than $1,500, The remaining 2% are to cost not more than $500 each. ‘The ninety-four cars now in uae cost $201,310 a year to operate and main- tain. Under the proposed scheme It is estimated that the operation and maintenance cost of the 54 cars will approximate $107,556, or an annual saving of $93,754 during the years fol- lowing 19: oe COTTON PRODUCT TO REPLACE BURLAP Linoleum Factories Making Experi- ments Forced by Scarcity of the Latter. PHILADELPHIA, Oct: 14,.—Tronch building on the battle lines of Europe is responsible for an enormous short- ago in burlap imparts and threatens to | work great changes in the manufac- | ture of linoleum and oilcloth in this | country, | Burlap is the principal factor in the industry. At the George W. Blabon | Company's works at Nicetown to-day linoleum plants in the United States, and that all of them are experiment- ing With coarse cotton as a substitute for burlap in oase the shortage of the latter commodity continues. “The chief cause of the sca burlap in this country,” it w: by an officer of the company, “is due to the fact that the British’ Govern- ment commandeered a large percent- age of the product of every burlap factory in the empire for army use, chiefly for trench bullding. Shipments of burlap to this country are growing very scarce.” —_—— OBITUARY NOTES, ~ Gilbert H. Crawford, member of the law firm of Crawford & Tuska, died yesterday at his home, No. 296 New York Avenue, Brooklyn, He was for- merly a Trustee of the College of the City of New York and was at one time & menober of the Board of Education ot New York City. Mrs. Catherine Freel, widow of E4- ward Freel, contractor, died yester- day at her summer home at Port Jet- ferson, L. Il. Her estate of $760,000, it is said, will all xo to her daughter the wife of Congressman Curran of Connecticut William A. Clany, long a Demo- cratic leader in L Island City, is dead at his home, No, 31 Hunters Point Avenue, Thomas C. Wisker, for twenty years custodian of the New York County Court House, died yesterday in Belle- vue. His six children were reared in his ap nt in the upper story of attorney in the Court House. Martin E, MoClary, Northern New York for the New York Central Railroad, died yesterday at bis home in Malone, N. Y. He wasa jeading member of the bar and was jective in Republican politics, TEXTILE TRUWPHS OF PAS CENTURES APATERSO SHOW Picturesque and = instructive Feature of National Sitk emiverntion la ical embttition of tenvien, covertne © perted dating from the | ePenth corntury wert the presen! time j® connects wih the m Naelional onven held at Paterson, N ul ioued unt On; Hh The neatly printed exibition sate eur containg 580 numbers The # nG Wae made possible by the co-oper on of the Metropolitan Museum or art of Une Hrookiyn Mu 4 ooum of the Hrookiyn Inetitute of Arte and fotences, the Museum of Vine Arts, Boston, Mase, the Mu soum of Arta, Cleveland, 0; the Mu eoum of the Khode Isiand Behe ot Design, Providence, R 1, and the Museum of Devorative Art, Union, of New York City Testiies from the collections Henry Golden De Genthe, JP More ore, French & Dikran Kelekia o Looe &@ Co Laigi Oreell Hobart de Rustatjaell and Yamanaka & Co., all of New York, were shown under the immediate supervision of I. A. Meyer-Kiefatahi, Pb. 1), director Mf the exhibition ‘The work done by the Metropolitan Museum of Art of this Cooper of speration with manufacturers and lecorators imay have inspired the present showing In Paterson, b initiative in assembling the arose for the first time on the part of the members of the Silk Association rather than through the efforts of the associated museutas. Museums abroad have recognised the importance of the past to the prosent day in eo far us josign forms are concerned, and no- table gruseums exist in the City of Orefeld, Germany, and in Lyons, France. The American museums are coming more and more to the Bur opean point of view in this regard, and it 1s hoped that @ permanent mu- eum grouping of classic and other textiles may grow out of the Paterson experiment ‘nteresting examples of Hellenistic and Coptic tapestries and loom wi ing from Egyptian tombs of the third to the seventh century were the ini- tial showing. Then followed in se- quence Saracenic textiles, early me- diaeval textiles, Italian fabrics (Lucea, thirteenth to fourteenth cen- tury), English embroideries of the thir- teenth, fourteenth and fifteenth cen- turles, Italian textiles of the fifteenth to the w#ixteenth century, ecclesiasti- cal vestments, Italian fabrics, Span: EB EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 1 wae Dy gf #- 7 e Sescun, ons ont Hae were W'ADOO RECOMMENDS MILLIONS FOR SHIPPING ” ar Treasury fu comttar Teth Ve Trade th feo Foregn INDLANAPOLIR, ayer to On u wie meno te (elty Beoretary of the Treasury M: pring Mil to Bintee with navel " time and to be ot upbutiding foreign wade te| | tee of peace The sew plan, oF probably will be presented to Con-/ reas at the Coming session, proposes An appropriation uf $50,000,000, whieh le lo be eapended by « Shipping Board to consist of the Secretary of the Navy, the Secretary of Commerce, members @x-officlo, and (hres mem- bere to be selected by the President and confirmed by the Be: Under the pian advocated by Becre tary McAdoo, the Ship uid empowered to organise directors —— HONORS HIS DEAD SERVANT.) Stephen W. Roach In yriends te Lam Tack's Funeral. Dosens of the friends of Stephan W. Rowch, wealthy clubman, gathered yoo terday at his home in Harrison, N. ¥., to attend the funeral of Lum Tack, « Chinaman, who for twenty years was Mr, Roach's servant lam ‘Tack, Was seventy-two yoars old, was a member of the Metho- dist Church, and the Rev who Roec! who had taken of the funeral, pinned a bunch of Lum. Tacks. breast. Mr, had intended to buy @ lot in which tol bury his old servant, but Mra. Satter, wife of Judge Harry Sattler, asked that the loyal and ry popular old man be allowed. to rest. in her. plot. in Green wood Cemetery, Rye, There were many Ohi t the funeral and four served as ern aceiieemenane MRS. ROBERT J. WYNNE DEAD| el violets of Ex-Postmas Stricken on Street. LOS ANGELES, Oct. 14.—Mra. Rob- ert J. Wynne of Washington, wife of © General MANY SHOTS ARE FIRED = IW WALD CHASE AFTER MAN WHO GOT AN AXE STOLEN NEWARK AUTO Hanker's u Re Taken, but Mar With Pistol bscape One Prisone Pinel Ghote and & wid automer ae played © pari in the capture a0 alleged autienvbile (hint moat New ark verily to-day by Hate Motor Ve hicks Inspector Horry Mo hedge serond man im the car jumped out, fired several shots at Inapector Hhedd, whe returned the fre, and then men aged Wo make hie cocape Just before midnight Josepn M Kikor, Present of ants Ne notified the polloe that had beep stolen from im front of bis home a No. 8 Lin- oln Park Inspector Bhede ch-powered aut trace of the Rikor car going toward Biisabeth, He Gnally ovemook the machine and was about to head It off nhar Lyons Farms when it suddenly stopped and one of the two men in it Jumped out, are revolver and be a shooting at Bhedd. The laspec tor drew his own revolver and emp tied five chambers of Mt at the man, who turned and started to run across lot Meantime the man in the stolen car had started aguin and Bhedd took up the pursuit After @ long chase he overtook the Kikor car 3 crowded it up on the sidewalk and called on the driver to surrender, By thie time the shots had at- tracted the police of Elizabeth and officers from Newark out after the stolen and they went to Shedd's aid. ‘The privoner was taken to New ark Headquarters, He gave his nam: as Henry C. Mullen, twenty-two years old, of No, 69 Wright Street, Newark ——_—— POLICE LECTURE THAW. Backed His Auto Ai . Mydraat at Long Beach. LONG BRACH, Cal, Oct. 14.—Back ing their maohine againet a fire hydrant at the foot of Pine Avenue Inst night cost Harry K. Thaw and J, 5. Rigiey, hiv chauffeur, lecture from the police an hour later, When Thaw promised to be more careful where he parked his auto- bile they were allowed to depart from the police station without having their names on the blotter. at Fire jeride Poison. Man Dying of Bt former Postmaster General Wynne,| William Knapp, forty yearggoid, te ee laste SONtUrY). Hitpeaw, | died suddenly here lest night of heart|aying in the Knickerbocker Hospital of Arabic textiles, Persian textiles in|tTouble. Mrs, Wynne, who was fifty-|bichloride of mercury poisoning. He Oriental rug weaves and figured silk | nine years old, was stricken while| was taken to the hospital after he was fabrics, Persian costumes, Turkish |W&lking along the stret. She died! round in agony by his wife, in their textfles, miscellansous Oriental tox-|*iP Site? yeing taken to @ hospital ome, No. 112 Weet One Hundred nd tiles, Japanese textiles and Peruvian | to the Exposition at San Diego. The| Second Street, yesterday aftemoon. He toxtiles. body will be sent to Washington for| said he had swallowed the tablets three Among those interested in the pres- burial’ hours previously. 125th Street West 125th KOCHeG, = ty inc. West The Maker That Made the Fountain Pen Famous Throughout the Land Sends Us 974 $6 Fountain Pens That We Will Place On Sale To-morrow, Friday at $1 95 each ‘These are No. 5 Gold Pens, iridium pointed. Enough precious metal in them to be worth $2.00, without the cost of the barrel, the gold bands, the mechanism that sets them working and the labor involved in making them. We are not permitted to publish the name of the maker. When we say they give you Ideal Service, that will be suff- ctent for all Fountain-Pen users. Hard rubber barrel, omamented with two gold bands. The maker's guarantee and the same broad Koch guarantee with these at $1.95 that goes with all our $6.00 pens. Main Floor, Three very desirable models in Wool Jersey and Taffeta Petticoats, $1.98 4—T made of fine flounce of Model and taffeta, accordion pleated. Model “2—Two. neat. ruffles, in black, or black top with change- able ta! in the gon finished with two deep accordion pleated flounces. Second Floor, Silverware Sale of Importance to All In which the newest and most effective designs are priced below regular Sardine Dishes with fork | "Yance'Mesight bright nai Bread Trays ut at ri) Castors, 2 and 8 bottles 3 Frult Bowls, Shefficld plate, on nickel silver, beautt- Tonst Racks fully ‘pleted, tn fancy design Bud Vases $5.00; at... The Children’s Cups Baking Dishes, Syrup Jugs reelain linkin Card Trays Value $4.00; Each Cracker and Chi ver, plerced designs, glass silver’ cover. Value $3.50; at Ple Plates, Sheffield plate, designs, with Guernsey pla $2.50; at le plate, on whit extra plated rim. quadi wi $2.95 | Custard Cups ig Smelling Salts Bottles Each At Jat dian wit on nickel, Val at jerced O5¢ _| premise fi 800 Pairs of Women’s Dressy andjSale of Combs and Serviceable Shoes $] .99| Hair Ornaments At the special price, ee, ¢ ihe They are the fashionable models of PR a: ee mene aed the season, with smart high-arch lasts. Rend designs, sot with | brilliant Patent leather, gun metal and soft $1.50; at ‘ kid. with brit Right-weight soles, con-| ,¥:° $1.00; structed for easy walking. With Brilliant rhipsston ‘Third Floor, 1 a — - a — Vieerned the woman's bead hed See . . ~ thew WOMEN SLAIN IN SHACK ““<. oeSea * J + ndee th om (het Ghat FROM NEIGHBOR HELD o— ‘ Dutta @ atene . reeien ite F nf Locked Lip, 0h hitting Deekor on "ewhee fells ¢ mg St 7 fousekecper’s Death if = or whack forty ote them The wee slain we oe » from the hea! . Decker want | 06 Ht € o'clowk Inst ove od an axe A ithe hat bie house yer thy \qvephoned the New Dorp p | woner Vail and Distriet-Attorney | Farm ment out in an automobile and on (hetr veport I tor Faurot bur. | |ried there from Headquarters He Generous Trial Glass Jar, 19¢ [00 —-~-- dn Fresh Cake a Week Old Bake a cake with cow-butter or hog-fat. It will be soggy, stale and more or less rancid after the third day. The moisture evap- orates. The bacteria develop. Bake a cake with SAWTAY 100% Pure Butter-o:-Nuts Whatever you bake will be quite as fresh at the end of a week as it was when it left the oven—and delicious. Even those afflicted with digestive disor- ders may eat the cake without distress. SAWTAY, 100% pure Butter-of-Nuts, is easier to digest and more completely assimilated than any other fat or butter. save SAWTAY is Economical—Use one-fifth less and over and over. SAUTE PRODUCTS CORP. Woolworth Tower “The Woman Who Dared,” By Dale Drummond The “Rigoletto” Quartette “Lucia’”’ Sextette at popular prices—$1.50 for both hese inspired compositions have thrilled untold millions and thrill us to-day just as they did those first audiences. Can you afford to be without them? Stop at, your dealer’s to-night and hear them again and see if ‘ou don’t want to take the record Now Appearing toms with you. The number is A5709. COLUMBIA peune®” (72 )RECORDS DISC | Sunday World Wants Work Monday Morning Wonders, The Evening World A Married Life Seriat With «@ Moral for Hasbands and Wives } f

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