The evening world. Newspaper, February 2, 1916, Page 5

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The CORSET of HEALTH, STYLE and COMFORT for SLENDER WOMEN Our original ‘‘Mili- * | tary-Belt’’ Corset was introduced in 1905. It reigned supreme for years. A host of women would wear no other cor- set; and many thousands remember it yet. Three years ago came that wretched fashion craze—the “slouch.” Too many women changed from corsets to “rags;” but now, common sense hay- ing returned, they long for their old favorite. Well it’s here! We have made a new Mil- itary-Belt Corset that’s even more graceful and helpful than the old one, and the Introductory Sale is now on. Two models, for SLENDER and MEDIUM figures only— 330—short to 333—higher top 1 $300 You can’t ‘‘slouch”’ in this corset—the Military-Belt bids you to stand erect, to breathe deeply and to assume the poise of youthful health and grace. If “‘topless’’ corsets have left you with a lump of fat above the waist-line, these corsets will take care of that most comfortably. In appearance, con- struction, material and style, this corset sets a new high value at $3.00. It is the acme of comfort, and the best corset in existence for women of slender and medium figures. Ask your dealer for the NEW Nemo “MILI- TARY-BELT.” Good Stores Everywhere Nemo Hypianic-Fashion Insitute, New York The WORLD SELLS 100,000 COPIES More In New York City each weekday than ANY OTHER morning news- standard of Jurors Give Jndwe Delehanty a Pen. The panel of jurors before Judge Delehanty in Part 3 of General Sessions to-day, after being dismissed for the term, through one of their number, Abraham Oppenheimer, of No. 795 St. Nicholas Avenue, presented Judge Dele- hanty with a gold-mounted fountain pen. Judge Delehanty, who was ap- pointed by Gov. Whitman to fill the vacancy caused by the election of Judge Faward Swann as District Attorney, Aisposed of more than eighty cases in his court during the month of January. CASTORIA For Infants and Children IN USE FOR OVER 30 YEARS yt tat Signature o! 4 To Stop Cold in the Head Get Ahead of the Cold In the Little French Blouse Shop Paris Blouses, $3.85, $5.75 Simple dainty affairs, made of a fine French cotton voile that is like no other. Delicately pink or creamy yellow in color. Hand hem- stitched with delicacy and beauty. Hand-made, the ma- jority with the well-fitting how to cut. Fastenings are usually tiny linen buttons and | loops. Waistbands are | elastics. Truly these blouses are ||| eloquent of the Paris that knows so well how to make “little blouses” with all the charm and air of an expensive waist. | On sale for the first | ||| time, Thursday. Little French Shin Third floor, Old Building. whole world. home the furniture.” | that will give satisfaction— be made. cuffs that the French know | on | The Sale formally opened yesterday, lowest price at which good furniture can There is furniture here of every kind, for every room in the house. THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1916, SENATORS SLASH COLOMBIA AWARD AND VETO APOLOGY Cut Treaty Payment to $15,- 000,000 and Vote “Mutual Regret” in Panama Affair. WASHINGTON, the proposed payment to Colombia from $25,000,000 to $15.000,000 and alter- ing the apology of United States for the partition of Feb, 2.—Reducing proposed the Panama to make it a mutual expres- sion of regret on the part of the United States and Colombia, the Sen- ate Foreign Relations Committco to- Formerly oh: A. T. Stewart & Co. ‘An Interesting Fact About Oriental Rugs Desirable groups this side of the water are few. just as low-priced. Keshan, Sarouk and Shah Abbas, $72.50 to $165 | ee AR ieee wide; 5 ft. 10 in. to7 Large Guendijies, Afshari, Etc., $40 to $67.50 Average about 434 ft. wide and up to 9 ft. long. Guendji, Pergame, Etc., | $32.50 and $35 314 to 4 ft. wide, up to 9 ft. 4 in. long. Guendji, Mossouls, Etc., at $29.50 314 to 4 ft. wide, up to 814 ft. long. Mossouls, Etc., $17.50 and $20 Average 314 ft. wide, up to 7 ft. long. -down to the Smaller sizes are scarce. largest in the country, for sale. us by a wholesaler of Oriental rugs a few days ago. He paid our retail price for them—the price for which any of our customers might have bought them. Some- body is going to pay more for those 29, But the balance of our stocks remains—just as desirable, day ordered a favorable report on the long pending Colombian treaty. The vote on the treaty was 8 for Senator Clarke of Ar- kansas was the only Demovrat vot-~ to 7 against, ing against it. By a vote of 10 to 3, the committes also favorably reported the treaty to pay Nicaragua $3,000,000 for a canal route and naval bases in the Bay of Fonseca, —_—_——>___—_ ROB MILLIONAIRE HOME. Silver and Ice Yacht Trophies of Rogers Stolen. Feb. 2.—Burglars entered the country residence of Archi- bald Rogers, Standard Oil millionaire, at Hyde Park on the Hudson, in the Sheriff Conklin and Archiba POUGHKEEPSI®, night. went at once to Hyde ‘The burglars entered the house while the night watchman was in the green- houses, between midnight and 1 o'clock, They took all of the silver from the ‘They stripped Mr. Rogers's den of valuable cups he won as an ice After the intruders piled the cups in the middle of the floor they dining room. yachtaman. Park. were unable to carry off all of them. Ninth, “ Hieoadway a at New York We have, we think, the 29 were bought from Fine Daghestans and Cabistans, $25 to $75 344 to 4 ft. wide, up to 8 ft. 7 in. long. Large Size Cabistans, $80 to $125 Uptollft. 4in.x6 ft.2 in. Kazakjas, Afshari, Etc., $20 to $29.50 314 to 4 ft. wide, up long. Shirvans, Lesg to 4 ft. 10 in. ‘ies, Etc., $15 to $25 About 3 ft. wide; average about 4 ft. long. Anatolian and Pergame Mats, $5.25 to $9.50 Fourth Gallery, New Building. | We Are Now ‘Sending Home the Furniture’ In the February Sale We have had the four Days of Courtesy during which thousands of people | came to see the wonderful spread-out of furniture on the Fifth, Sixth and Seventh | Galleries—-an exhibit we are told by world travellers not equalled anywhere in the And all of it, including our entire regu- lar stock, is offered at a reduction in price ranging from 10 to 50 per cent.; the | average is 30 per cent. We believe the furniture is the best | stock ever presented in any sale. We know that the savings are all genu- ine savings. : Furniture prices unmistakably have ' gone up, but they have not yet gone into MA We have kept prices down 4 effect here. by large forehanded buying and planning. A Random List The regular price of each piece of furniture is stated on its tag, so that actual | savings—which range from 10 to 50 per cent.— 4-piece mahog 3-peamahogany bedroom suite,$76 room suite, $101, 9-piece cream e bedroom suite, twin bedstead, $697.50. 6-piece mahogany bedroom suite, twin 4-post bedsteads, $238, ce mahogany bedroom suite, ines, twin bedsteads, $173.50, ve mahogany bedroom suite, ze 4-post bedstead, $221. iece mahogany bedroom suite, ze bedstead, $107.25. room_ suite, $154.50, Solid Colonial design, Mahogany ex Colonial design Mahogany si Colonial Mahogany dresser, $ Mahogany chiffonier, hogany chiffonie ve Jucobeun oak di 0. g-room. muhogany-finish _dining- 4-piece room suite, Adam design, $115.70, y finish dining- 4-piece American walnut dining- Queen Ann 10-piece American walnut dining- room suite, Adam design, $312. mahogany buffet, Colonial design, $6 Solid mahogany china closet, sroll, ion table, may be known. mahogany design, y cove “F seats and bac . 5-piece mahowany seats and backs, $81.60, scroll, 50, ere; pestry covered ar ion seat, $40. Mahogany wing rocker backs, velours upholste able, scroll, mahog- Fifth, Sixth 4 New Building. ‘ebruary 1, and we are now “sending | Is Any of It Going Into YOUR Home? There is furniture here of every grade living 268, red suite, $124 suite, tapestry suite, velours | Tapestry covered davenport, $88, peatry covered wing arm chair, | 'm chair, cush- cane panel res ats, $16, m chair, cane deputies room | panel backs, blue figured | puts and five pillows, $2! STEAMERS FEARED LOST ARE AFLOAT, cialis Earlier Reports Indicated That Takata Maru and Silver Shell | Had Sunk in Crash. HALIFAX, N. S., Feb, 2—The Jap- aneso steamer Takata Maru and the| steamer Silver §! » Which were re- | ported to have been in collision 200 miles southeast of Cape Race last night, were at at 4 o'clock this morning, at which hour a wireless message was received at Cape Race, N. F., from the Takata, | The message addressed t6 the agent) of the Marine and Fisheries Depart- | ment by the Cape Race wireless sta- tion, read: “At 4 A. M. received wireless | Takata Maru. Reports engine room and stoke hold flooded. Takata Maru also reported that she had been | sending out numerous calls for as- sistance and that the steamer Silver Shell was standing by. The Silver Shell reports all Hh SE al SAYS WIRELESS ‘MITCHEL APPOINTS PERMANENT BOARD TO AD UNEMPLOYED _—-——— No Out of Work Problem Now, but Judge Gary Plans Guard for Future. Judge Elbert H. Gary, chairman of the board of directors of the United States Steel Corporation, who was the head of the Committees on Unem- ployment appointed last year, wrote to Mayor Mitchel to-day, declaring | the services of the committes are no longer necesary. Because new problems of unemployment may pre- sent themselves from time to time, Judge Gary recommended a standing committee. “It is gratifying that there is this year no occasion for active service by the Mayor's Committee on Unem- ployment,” writes Judge Gary. you will recall, the committes #up- piled relief within the limits of the funds available to tt for many thous- ands of unemployed workers and suc- ceeded in various ways in co-ordinat- ing efforts for the aid of those dis- tressed by lack of employment. “Because there are many phases|— of unemployment that must be dealt with constructively and continuously, and because, above everything else, there is a need of preparation against future recurrences of acute unem- ployment conditions, there ought, per- haps, to be some body especially charged with giving thought to these matters In advance of a possible fu- ture fallure of employment. Never in my experience has so much thought and effort been put forth as during the past year in attempting to find means of minimizing unem- ployment and avoiding its distressful consequences.” Acting on the suggestion of Judge Gary, Mayor Mitchel appointed the following standing Committee on Unemployment, to take the place of the larger one which goes out of existence: George W. Alger, William C. Breed, Newcomb Cariton, Edward T. De- OAs ___ Pave 5 vine, James H. Post, Walter B. Hugh Frayne, Mrs. Alexander Kohut, Miss Lillian D. Wald, Henry Bruere, William D. Baldwin, Charles L. Bern- heimer, Herbert Croly, Frederick Cy Howe, Mortimer L. Schiff James Fy Holland, John P. Coughlan, Miss a Me} Kleeck, Miss Anne Mor- wan Doremus. Light? Watch Johnny make’em fly! Hot Biscuits (can’t you war taste them?) made TWO KILLED, FOUR HURT IN WAR PLANT EXPLOSION Boiler Blown Through Roof of Fac- tory Tears Through Roof of Laborer’s House. NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J., Feb. 2 —Two men were killed and four others were injured here to-day when 4 boiler exploded in the plant of the Howe Rubber Company. The butld- ing housing the boiler was totally wrecked and other buildings were damaged by the fire which followed the explosion. ‘Tho dead are Edward Ringel, thirty- elght years old, and John Krubl, twenty-seven, Those injured and who aro In criti- cal condition at St. Peter's Hospital are Edward Stet cher, twenty- two; George Ly: twenty-five; Wiliam Rupprec 1 Jobn Schlenk. The cause of the explosion has not been determined. Tho company had been filling war contracts, Officials of the plant and the police are con- ducting an investigation. The oxploding boiler’ was driven through tne roof of the one-story factory and fell on the roof of the home of John Scalchi, a laborer, and tore down through the roof, but with- out injuring any of the family. piadincnl fs Sheahan, MAD CHINAMAN SHOOTS FOUR-YEAR-CLD BOY Fires Five Bullets Into Body of Child Who Came to Laundry to Get Warm. Sam Sing, a Chinese laundryman, at No. 875 Forest Avenuo, the Bronx, at 1 o'clock this afternoon fired two bullets from a revolver into a four- year-old boy, After the shooting, the Chinaman battled with police and de- The same Suite in quartered oak, beautifully finished. Special........ $295.00 tectives and fired three shots at him- |] | sel without effect. ‘The boy is dying Suites ' Odd Pieces |] ] at Lebanon Hospital Fumed Oak Suite,g pieces, Special... .$125.00 | Fumed Oak Serving Table. Our former price tard Krabs, the victim of the) & Adam Mahogany Suite, 4 pieces. $18.00... .ccccrcecesvccecccecsceces 0.00 mad Chinaman, lives in tho same Special $187.50 | Golden Oak tira “Table. Our fone Thouboy ‘had been playing in tho] @ Jacobean Oak Suite, ropieces. Special $195.00 | price $35.00......4.+eeseeeeeeeeeses 17.50 aed Chippendale Cathedral Oak Suite, 9 pieces. Sheraton Mahogany Berdiag Table. Our ing bi Special $225.00 f 5 Shop, the police say, and shot. him. | ff Colonial Mahogany Suite, 4 piece EMER BIER Pee Cdiss iret anc eal ‘ he bos, ‘soreamiie, ran into the Special $230.00 aa Mahogany Buffet. Our former as ae fo) oe Ivory Breakfast Room Suite, 10 pieces. $85.00. oe eee reece eee eee nens ‘ i" iar mie Ma Special $245.00 3, Adam Mahogany Buffet. Our former price Degilio fought to hold the Chi Queen Anne Suite, 10 pieces. Special. .$382.50 BIBGOO shins acs ta ecetan ever ena 125.00 Mahee'® Policeman sent for an am-) ¥ Sheraton Inlaid Mahogany Suite, 10 pieces. Jacobean Oak China Cabinet. Our former Sing told Assistant District Attor- Special $385.00 DEICERIE OOo ecsaisenieealese eens $37.50 ney MeLaugh had been Hepplewhite Mahogany Suite, 10 pieces. Sheraton Mahogany Crystal Cabinet. Our POUR URES Boro Special $475.00 former price $85.00. ...2...06.020005 A | Chippendale Mahogany Suite, to pieces. Fumed Oak Extension Table. Our former | Special $1045.00 PTICE $40.00. ... 2.20000 Fe Je Sixth Floor Ellis of and Alfred Borden, Spencer Borden | Mass., was the culmina- ce begun in this elty | land, won of Mr. and Mrs. ot Fall River, tion of @ it is said, was introduced | a ov the telephone by Mra. | D. Humphreys of Mount Kisco | w. York, who is @ sister of the nd who is well known in the | thampton sums Tel “AFTER “La Grippe” ora HEAVY COLD you need Building Up GET THE wa, PoRT UWINE Combined with OLIVE OIL and in @ week or two, note the im- provement, Ask your doctor, No taste of oil, At your dealer's, $1.00. Take no substitute, 38th Street Lord & Taylor FIFTH AVENUE MID-WINTER SATE of FURNITURE Planned with a view to the homemaker’s important interests, this annual event has been prepared for on a bigger, better basis than ever before. its scope by the fact that $500,000 worth of Quality Furniture has been assembled for special selling and offered at prices that mean Savings, peti ner wi ls 10% to 50% throughout. Made exclusively for Lord & Taylor. Special..... ‘ ae 1 ee re cence. em omen: 39th Street Judge of William and Mary Dining Room Suite Ten pieces, solid mahogany $375.00 3] ea eee ee er eter ere o HIGH NOVELTY BOOTS For Women In Colored Suede and Kid $10.00 a pair Fine Suede Leathers In shades of gray, brown, sand, purple, fawn, blue, pink, green and chamois, Glace Kidskin Insmoke grey, champagne and fawn, also in white. High-arched, gracefully modeled on the most aristocratic lines and with Louis XVI. heels. Clearance of WOMEN’S SHOES $2.45 a pair Several thousand pairs of Shoes taken from regular stock and reduced for quick clearance, Size range incomplete, but there is excellent selection in sizes 244 to 5. For Clearance—300 Pairs CHILDREN’S HIGH-CUT SHOES Our former prices $2.75 and $3.50 a pair $1.75 Laced and buttoned shoes in tan, dull or patent leather, Sizes up to 12. oe ee ee ae ae a aD ae. a asp SENOS SEHD eee eee eenoens Second Floor oe OE OO: Se em | ' ' ' \ ' \ i ' ' ' ' i \ \ ' ‘ ' ' ai BED COVERINGS At Special Prices A mid-winter sale of staple quality Blankets, Comfortables and Bed Spreads at radical reductions from usual prices, Blankets, all white bound with wide pink or blue ribbon; also pink and blue bordered Blankets. Our former prices $6.00 and $6.50, a pair.... § All Wool Blankets. With pretty hand- kerchief borders in pink or blue. Our former price $9.50, a pair ... $6. Extra Quality Blankets. Fine all wool in extra size 80 by 86 inches, Our former price $16.75, a pair 2.50 Comfortables. Fancy silkoline covered. Laminated cotton filled. Our former prices $2.00 and $2.50, each... $1.65 Comfortables. Wool filled, sateen cov- ered, with plain sateen backs and. bor- ders, Our former price $6.00....$5.00 Down Comfortables, A limited number only, Our former prices, $4.75 and MOCO. ccseseectens $3.75 and $6.75 Bedspreads: Crochet $1.95 Satin fin and $3 Hemstitched batiste, Our former prices $1.50 and Rie $1.25 and $1.50 d. Our former prices $3.00 4 $2.65 and $3.00 1 Our former pis 1 BECO srsceccveresecsoreres . ee ae see ae ere eee ee 4p arena ancen rena ancanrancencancancancan: Sizth Floor cs es ED SD ©) SD 0) ED () ED 0 ED (0) ED 0 ED () ED () ED 0) ED () ED s BO) ED 0D 0 SD 0D (0 ) ED 0 ED 0 (ED (0) EED-0- ED 0 ED 0-GED (0) ED 0-<SESED © E>) D0) D-DD 0 ED 0 -<D (0) ED © ERD 0 -<SED () D (0) D0 ED 0 ED 0 GC

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