The evening world. Newspaper, December 10, 1915, Page 12

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— ce Pepular Price Garment House in New York gua iw DPriceeG ist TREMENDOUS REDUCTIONS: “OFATH AVENUE” 2,000 Coats 1,500 Suits 10" 15 Many of our highest priced Suite and Coate have been vedweed for Saturday for the fret time and added te thie Reduction Sale. Formerly up to $16.50 Formerly up to $22.50 00 Formerly up to $30.00 EXTRA SPECIAL SEAL PLUSH COATS With Fur Trimmed Collars ome §=— 85 CLEARANCE OF Sess Formerly 2 and 3 times these prices Models of serge, silk, net, chiffon, etc., for street, afternoon and party wear. One Model— Pletured Above Exquisite new models, i ked aerate moe ornate 95c '1.98 52.98 Crepe de Some hy nay Hg Laces, Shadow Laces, Crepes son) dozens of other materials, si Skating & Walking Skirts and fol; pos y Speadinghs'eng Beacon Blanket Bath Robes NEW V YORK ‘WORLD SETS THE PACE ‘The World Selle 106,000 Copies More in New York Clty Thousands of Waists Checks, Plaids and Wag Stripes, re contrasting \de—also fine #, Gabardines, THE EVE NING W LD, CENTRAL OPPOSES TUNNEL PLAN FR But City’s Committee Seeks Early Compromise Agree- ment to Carry On Work. |WHAT HARLEM WANTS. With Removal of Surface Tracks Central Will Elec- | trify Improved Lines. The City Committes on Port and Terminal Facilities, which has been | seeking a remedy for the railroad nuisance along Eleventh Avenue and | Riverside Drive, has it# plane nearly ready for submission to the Board of Eatimate The New York Central Ratiroud also has its plans, which differ soma- what from those made by ‘ho city. Efforta are being made to get the elty and the railroad to agree on a joint plan. A meeting will be held in a few days at which o wutual Agreement may be reached. The New York Central has ex- pressed its willingness to remedy con- ditions as they exist along Uleventh ‘How to Get Rid of Pimples Quick! Science Now Gives Beautiful, Clear | Complexions in Few Days, Through Stuart’s Calcium Wafers. | TRIAL PACKAGE N MAILED FREE. fearon ee evra” ve easy con mnor of showile, vigeross d, sho will be at- Jority of ¢ pimples ‘oollsh to Have Pimples. art's Calcium Wafers Remove ‘Them in a Few Days. | by outside treatment, Femove plinples and The difficulty Its color ts binck or inatead of Ingredienta tn Calc by aclentinte to be able blood puri pri Mall esupon telow to. day for free trial package Free Trial Coupon ¥. A. Sturt Co. 315 Muart mie. Mich.: ‘| Contributions to Date Bennett Mfg Co., Kat, 18T6, Retery Users of ‘‘Eddys’”’ Sauce know the rich, piquant fla- vor it imparts to Roast Tur- key and other foods. Eddys Made byE. Pritchard, 331 SpringSt. N.Y, "| Willian | with the otty. Avenue. Un ae the plan recetving most con- sideration by the city the tracks would | be elevated from the Thirtieth Street terminal downtown. Above the Thir- tleth Street terminal the tracks would be covered until they reach a point |near Kighty-first Street. Here the ra{lroad would tunnel under Riverside Drive Park to about One Hundred and Twenty-fitth Street. From One Hun- dred and Twenty-fifth Street the tracks would be covered up to Bpuyten Duyvil. Inasmuch as the railroad must bear New York Central engineers are in- an because of the expense involved, The railroad announced a few days 1ko it Was prepared to spend $50,000,- 000 to ry out the Improvement, It janned to greatly enlarge the terminal of the raliroad between One | Hundred and Thirty-fifth Street and One Hundred and Forty - seventh Street. This terminal and the one at Thirtieth Street would serve to bandie the greater amount of freight received in Manhattan, "it iy also part of tho Central's gen- eral plan to provide for the electrifica~ tion of the réilroad In Manhattan, Harlem business interests are deeply interested in the plan with tts relation to the Manhattanville section. The Harlem Board of Trade has long insisted on a remedy for the railroad | in the M nville section, | he Committe vort and Facilities has devoted mi deration to that part of the con- templated project. The plans for that section contem- | plate the building of am arginal street long the westerly Hmits of the rail- pad tracks, extending from One Hun- ¢.ed and Thirty-fifth to One Hundred and Fifty-fifth Street, connecting | with the present roadways at those points, and so providing a desirable avenue for traffic and retaining for the city the permanent use of the waterfront there, The Committee on Port and Tun. | nel Facilities hopes to make its final report to the Board of Estimate on Avenue and beneath the Drive, but} Pee differences as to method have arisen SILK MEN MUST HAVE DYES OR DROP THOUSANDS OF MEN Paterson Delegation in Wash- ington Complain of Embargo | if by Germany and England. (Special From « Staff Correspondent of The Evening Wor WASHINGTON, Dec. 10. Vo are caught between two fires,” said a delegation of silk manufacturers from Paterson to-day, calling on Counsel- lor Polk of the State Department. “First Germany put an embargo on chemical dyes and now England has put an embargo on logwood, from which we made black silk dye. Un- less relief ia afforded fifty thousand workmen in Paterson alone will be idle within three months.” The manufacturers through former Goy. John W. Griggs and Senator Hughes presented these facts, Nearly all the logwood comes from .| the island of Jamaica, Out of the crushed wood a aye is made, used principally in silk dyeing. Cotton and ol manufacturers used German ye known'as sulphur blac rman export was cut off lox ck was substituted for all cotton ay well an silk, and tho supply rapidly used up. England has run out of chemical ‘and says she needs all the lox- wood for herself. Her colony, Jamaica, must send all its output to on and none to America, An to this effect was put Itt effect Friday, and now logwood is ta welght in gold. son silk manufacturers must wood or shut down aas soon The most any mill has is three months’ supply, Immediate representations were by tho State Department to British Ambassador Spring-Rice, and American Ambassador Page in Lon- 1 was directed to ask the English rment to be generous and please little logwood for us. ording to the Paterson silk men, ‘otton and wool mi 1 be all right for chemical dyes within a few weeks, as new Ameri- can plants are almost ready to put on et the much needed sulphur ny , and England has it all, a :) P, MORGAN GIVES $1,000 TO BOY SCOUTS Total -$67,- 247—Time Extended for Raising $200,000 Needed. J. P. Morgan to-day $1,000 in the campaign to raise $200, The total of gifts announced to-day at the headquarters of the Cam- mmittes was $10,471.75, This makes $6 contributed, When the $200,000 campaign was started Monday it was expected that the money would be raiked by to- ow night, but as many wealthy of the Boy Scouts are out y been extended National Preals Scouts, attended the on gathering at héadquarters to- |day and made a speech in which he loutlined the Scout movement, In con- cluding he sald: “It will be only @ short time until this movement is absorbed into the educational system of the country,” the expense of the improvement, the} clined to oppose part of the tunnel! | bara Shedd, scant supply on hand is used} contributed | for the Boy Scouts of America. | FRIDAY, DECEMBER 10, However, there is 29 “COMING OUT” PARTY | difference in oginion regarding che HELD AT SHERRY’S FOR Snveaiks of the surface tracks from MISS KATE GRIFFIN | 5 MISS KATE _W. GRIFFIN Photo by Rochlits,.- Dr. Henry A. Griffin of No, 91 Park Avenue gave a luncheon yesterday at Sherry’s to introduce his second daughter, Miss Kate W. Griffin, The chaperons were Mrs. George B.»de| Forest, a great-aunt of Miss Griffin, | and Mrs. Edward 8. Knapp. The other guests included the de- butante's older sister, Miss Helen de | Forest Griffin, and the Misses Peggy | Busk, Alice Baldwin, Rosalie Blood- | good, Dorothea Camp, Grace Colgate, | Esther Denny, Alice Davies, Gra nklin, Mary Francke, Elton Mercer | ch, Dorothy Greer, Helen Geer, Elizabeth Haldane, Mary Hartshorne, Adeline de Murray, | Margaret Perry, Helen Porter, Bar- hel Simmons, Glory Thomas, Marion Townsend, Constance Wickersham, Edith Williams, Muriel Wiggin, Isabel Yeomans and Madge Lesher and Mrs. J. Horton Ijams. i se Fatally Stricken in Subway Station. Diddle, forty-one years old, Dewey Place, Brooklyn, was dently {il in the Brooklyn bway station late last night aaa died few hours later in Hudson Street Hospital, Responsibility. counts Size—makes it possible for us to offer the utmost in eyegla: tisfaction. The question is so often put tous: “How can you give the services of an Oculist for each examination without extra cost —and afford™to sell glasses for as little as $2.00 a pair?” The answer is easy. {n our nine offices we have gathered together in seventeen business years an unusual staff of ex- perienced and reliable men. Carefully and systematically we have built up the Largest Optical patronage in the World, and the expense of maintain- ing this professional staff is a small ilem in comparison to the Large Business we do, Therefore we are able to put at your service the professional ability of our staff of Oculists (Registered Physicians). = For the same reasons we op- erafe our own nine factories and manufacture the glasses we furnish—Guaranteeing them to perfectly satisfy you. | Harris Glasses cost $2.00 or more. Fy Fy 442 1 ry 1408 St. Nicholas Dot 180i & 188, 1007 Broadw Willoughby, Brooktyn 489 Fulton to A. & 8, Brooklyn to Strauss ark Bhgul uouble the sation of of of fie ah away with arent ebsction ‘NE EXAMU\E TECTa FREE alive you showing fe eke Sel stae ee i crs of other, dentists. . cae \ Gold Crowne ae ayment way inert ee Lait you 215 W. 42 St, re oot to Lane shexmare si., %,cor od re Grand es om’ 5a) si tina, 1916. Stewart & Co, Correct Apparel for Women & Misses 5TH AVENUE AT 37TH STREET Will Close Out Saturday AT EMPHATIC PRICE REDUCTIONS High-Cost Coats—Women’s @ Misses’ Sizes The Most Notable Coat Event of the Season. Coats of Velour de Laine, High Lustre Plush, Suede Velour, Broadcloth, Wool Velour, Novelty Mixtures and Cashmere Velour, lavishly trimmed with luxurious furs, lined with fancy or plain colored silks and heavily interlined. Women’s and misses’ sizes, | 19.75 Formerly sold up to $39.50 Stylish Winter Coats | Fur-Trimmed Coats Of fancy mixtures; chinchille and Scotch plaid back Extra fine quality sill velour, suede velour, broadcloth fabrics: some are trimmed with plush or velvet; ‘and taney mistores, fur-trimmed, lined with flow- many are lined with soft peau de cygne sille exed taffeta silk and extra heavily interlined, and heavily interlined; women’s and Women's and misses’ sises. Reduced to Formerly to $45.00 10.00 24.50 Fur-Trimmed Coats High Lustre Plush Cpats With large handsome collar, cufie and wide border of skunk opossum or natural raccoon; also coats of Of wide wale corduroy, plaid back vicuna, velour de laine, heavy whipcord and fancy mixtures, trimmed sre imenad, fined’ ett with fur, lined with flowered silk and ‘heavily tHE ee Ss Sova ineetinedy eect interlined; women’s and misses’ sizes. ond Sa as 16.50 pet e Formerly to $29.50 29.50 Velvet Evening Wraps—Fur Trimmed Of silk velvet, Brocaded velvet or Mother of Pearl velvet, trimmed with luxurious furs, } 24.50 lined with flowered or plain colored silk and heavily interlined; in white, black avd pastel colorings, besides novelty shades. Former Prices to $59.50 Fur-Trimmed Velvet Suits Fon Ne EL A Of silk velvet, velveteen tenj Nonturey; tise chitton -Wuasters: end”"veioene women’s and misses’ aises, richly fur. br ios 29.50 Formerly to $69.50 Fur-Trimmed Suits Handsome suits of broadcloth and other wanted fabrics, trimmed with fine furs; coats are lined with soft silk and warmly erlined; women's and misses’ sizes. 16.50 Formerly to $29.50 Afternoon and Evening Gowns Afternoon gowns of taffeta silk or charmeuse; also combination of serge with satin; evening gowns of satin or charmeuse; women’s and misses’ sizes, Formerly to $29.50 10.00 Semi-Evening Gowns Of silk net combined with radium Lausanne ilk, alee crepe Georgette and satin; trimmed with fur, silver or gold lace and flowers. 24.50 Formerly to $69.50 Separate Dress Skirts Of broadcloth, corduroy, gabardine, whipcord, mannish serges, plaids, mixtures. Former Prices $5.00 to $10.00 Danse Frocks Of two-toned marvelous silk or flowered chiffon, with extra wide skirt; embroidered net sleeves; white and pastel colors; misses’ sizes only. 16.50 { 3.90 Ud dedi LE PICTURESQUE NEW YORK A brand new series of etchings and drawings by the best American Artists. First publication in THE Christmas Number OF THE SUNDAY SUN Out Next Sunday, December 12 These wonderful pictures will be beautifully reproduced by THE SUN’S new Lithogravure process, and have been drawn by JOSEPH PENNELL EARL HORTER and LOUIS RUYL CARTON MOOREPARK The Pennell etchings alone will make-the CHRISTMAS SUN the most notable Christmas Number ever printed. They are, however, only part of the artistic feast in store for SUN readers. THE PICTORIAL MAGAZINE will be devoted largely to great paintings of Christmas subjects, adequately reproduced in photogravure. In the list will be: The Annunciation, by Bastien-Le Page. The First Christmas Night, by M. Pierre Christ Comforting the Wounded, by Ferdinand Pouwels, a sensation of the Paris Salon. And A Double Page of Photographs of theHoly Land as it is To-day. This Beautiful Christmas Number of THE SUN will make a splendid remembrance to out of town friends Order From Your Newsdealer To-day. Don’t risk Waiting to Buy it on the Newstands. The Christmas Sun our NEXT SUNDAY , World Wants Work Wonders, World Wants Work Wonders, World Wants Work Wonders, i

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