The evening world. Newspaper, February 29, 1916, Page 9

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THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 29, 1916. » wt ULO BAR LIQUOR SALE| Man Who Taught Germans Efficiency | Maude Fay | ietivx.srsinszhettets Bap tainty states fetes | WOMAN DIES ON “L” ROAD. AT INN HE ONCE OWNED As Steglinde |gccry stone's s|inae Maer joyed by a large audience. The quar- co ‘Who Hit the Trail at Billy! Sa 8 Ameri tcan W omen Ar e to Blame At the Ope a. Gunday f | tet in E major No. 2, by Victor Kolar, lacked power and reson- | assistant conductor to Walter Dam- tinction; it had a Seen rosch, with which the programme kad bes was not always true to pitch. | gan, is interesting for the second ai omarion” For Fifty-Seven Kinds of Ineffici reseneaia oreo SE irks baad IDE F. of & “ranciseo | Witttam K. Lombard, who formerty | or £l y ven inds 0. ne iclency M‘::: ton foliage Et experience, face their) French composition, gave Mr, Sasiav- | Platform: the United States Hotel at Cran- or some ye . ead LJ 0 | Fh metropolit vudience Pipa sky ahd Mr. De Voto a chanee to!|,.¢ne woman, sar cend snee See oer N. J., “hit the trail” at a Bitty | ee $0064 | Prano at t unich Royal trepidation, If you and I recall one} show their admirable individual ed from Be > day mecting in Philadelphia and now | It’s the Woman Who Moulds the Man, Declares Prof.|';*** Opera, made her debut at t qutions they only prove the |qualities and thelr fine ensemble Pellet then taseuitied eae politan Opera House | sy Mallee v4 playin, For the end there was M.|h . eown I's Heense to aan neeer. ‘ bf Grimshaw, and So She’s at Fault— Ours the Seiglinde, in “Die Walkuere.” M « Fay was if aap a ret pluckily | Lakeu's snfinished quartet (n B minor tenement” whieh” whe owe iM 7, ahs ide, ad uere 1 to upset Mr, Gattl-Casazaa’s | } "alto. Mr. Lombard waa the principal apeak- Vulgarest City in World and Its Name |Fay ie tail, handsome and graceful. 1 ind (0 disappotnt the audience for piano, violin, viola amd ‘ele, _— @t a union meoting in the First Pres- , clined to pl ng to api ust wait 7 "AV & 2 Chur, Cranbiry, unday Should Be Grafton. a bit snehned to 5 ait] paul Rotmers, the tenor, gave the| RADWAY & CO. er second appearance, That Miss did not t be made for| third movements, eapecially the vaine he ot from every|It was well ‘played. Guillaume K Twenty-third Street oma ater how ex- | Lekeu's sonata in G major, a modern! mediately collapsed on the sta B46 PAOD ROOHEEE ® 3 « Ps ¢ ‘4 3 craolt Juation [#econd of his lecture recitals at the a to protest against renewing the _—_ ® . ho se w 3 Princess Theatre yesterday after. | INTRODUCE SIZE Me gave much startling infor- | 5 ing fall in thi for fou '. in Munieb | noon. Again he delighted a crowded 4 ea vi -Smi * fi e-mak , r large aud. ot de! ‘owded é he had gathered “on the other | By Nixola Greeley-Smith. 4 © | oes, ‘mo P eitiod fiw. was Yo t ee vara, [house by the lucidity of his explana- i of the bar,” and declared Nquor had) Prof. Robert Grimshaw of New York University was for twenty years 4 ahs saeupcorned, wa ak hoa e to Mine Fay. She got/tions, by the simplicity of his man- adwa ‘s : Place in society “nor anywhere elee.”| an efficiency expert in Germany, You must admit that a man who can) : a ; te n calls after each of bagel he Seo ngp tg arpa 4 Trduor has been sold In the hotel for| 4 tee . 1% « ich she apr ft. Z teach efficiency to the Germans has qualified as a super-expert é . How ret ed h Invaluable to a music atudent, Not ly @ century; it has the only bar in j © | throw a Jot of ineMiciont girls out of{ 1 irned to her for- |! e ‘ town. Eight-tenths So you will be grieved to learn that Prof. Grim-| ¢ $ oat th at Se ie wt 1. in which sho de- [that Mr. Reimers haw a great voice: ea a 7 tei ~ean vane’ 4 b 4 manded tl 1 sinence of the pro unfortunately eo jann't; pu hi shaw thinks the United States has fifty-seven variet ¢ ° ‘wi wen v 1 got! t aan thre: Sea with altene knows about voices and he knows of inefficiency and that American women are respon- | % : but) was not worth Sarnness of @ Puritan preacher, [about songs, and he knows about the of i consequent ° * $ Tae a at 7 1: Jsome, and sang beautiful. [art of singing. Hie programme yes | sible for ely Deore t a nsequently ar abot | ; : departmer _ xtuppin ad Hund sone, GAM Hae entree i eecday (raid te barra tue otk roukee 25e the worst failures in the world . ° n " r than a “e hovir erent to and the romantics ‘ } . Grimshaw, tall, gray, distinguished, and in} 3 Fl ieerand the vinis of ke A 6 i Sentach's Slegmund was |The talk at ° 50c For Neuraigiae nee accentuating just a little bit the first sylla-| * + | empl who had to t how tol # " As ae rts ince eae h Selatica r ble of his name, launched his views on the inefficiency | + {| do things. | It's useless t that } Hun w ently sine lthe talk it the folksongs was of Americans in gene and American women in par-|¢ | ican isn week oa ' ‘ ur to Valk yriew | tivatin interp lated fh the LINIMEN T + . ? a r edangkv¥ iter a ¢ tiation on phrasing, c¢ HELPLESS ticular, at a dinner given at the Cafe Boulevard thé |? | have paid mo $5. ‘The employer wit in r pat | ea ation on “STOPS PAIN” INSTANTLY other night. ° ® | dollars, the employ : rw Hfolkwonies were ’ Rub It On) And when I asked him yesterday to tell me just| % W| Son eke hoa act ber ae won OF [Hungarian 1 1 Sina, Rub hilt Does Not Blister 3 ‘ , ) yt asta st 1 t guese and on aurice how and why we were inefficient, so we may mend our manners, he did it] } ROBERT GRIMSHAW — @ } goods a we me et neue coaen tatdes a H ins Sey wae Mr. Reimers’s accompanist ot | Yee « RHEUMATISM: Prominent Merchar Merchant a in such a thoroughly efficient way that I felt for a moment as if 1 could |! 64+ #4000 see eeeeeeeoeoow | Is not eicliney, | the : MV Hana W | the piano | Rot get the possible result from myself without a given quantity of cyanide “te Health by “Fruit-a-tlves’ |s0 as to qualify at least as an efficient corpse. : a uote she Sahay United! States) oat ad | | | at blue-eyed, yellow mus-| our ed fellow may not bi cent.| have jus ent mentally, Now, if a vulgar) just 44 000 miles ewe of ‘Fruvactves I grew stronger PUTS ALL BLAME FOR AMERI- [ns : TORT Pee tear nies came Worl ub 22508 Overcoming War-Time Obstacles, We Have “Bristol, July 25th, 1914 . la “because ‘men are what women} man she can't help having a vulgar! of war? And we have | the pnt ma AN IHEFFICLENCY ‘ON, WOMAN rea Ready, as Usual, the March Sales--- ch American women are re For Prof. Grimshaw defines efficiency * | sncnmintne . efficient P | “1 bad a siroke of Paralysis in March | as ‘getting the best posi result! 4, ene Sou. Gitees. he Neha r 1a 1 with inefficient | me unable to walk or help ty yen effort or a given resu' wv plot a 6 ‘etty ” this left ble to walk or help! with a given ale th the blond musta the pretty duothelans in peadar 7S _ + Wnyself and the Constipation was! with thoaleast possible effort—deter-| pine eyes and the broad shoulder a GHDAURAEEG fon wae,” Peed, Cane ; | terrible. Finally, I took ‘Fruit-a-tives’| mining what are the desirable things) ang (he shiny white tooth bela i eee Baad Tatees Sera vy at , Broadwa for the Constipation. This fruit medicine | of life and attaining them with the) “Wel, why not?” T asked. “That's euhmar MAA Aid Nilesh? haan eee Astor Place Ninth, New York gradually toned up the nerves and | least expenditure of time, money and] eugenic, surely.” 1 well and iiead my store every iy, | “Wamen are to blame for Ameri- men cast of the Mi . | f const as again Ge any’s less ix yeara of our lives entirely and par-| vulgarest elty in tht world and Now| than 1,000. ousew ares in ces. | e 5) 9 ? itu | dive. Now, what is the use of a ly relioved the paralysis. By the ‘#rAay matter ALVA PHILLEPS Joan inefficiency,” Prof. Grimshaw told | woman insists on marrying a vulgar! ready to defend this country in trial size @6e,| tially during all the remainder. You| York women are responsible for that! phe United States navy is like | and know point | the curate's exe. You remember that y ina re - em, You do not mild) waleuancersd: drate wom ||| any wile ane hot uae h eas asked him at breakfast if his _— : . *, P 5 wend ark ob ity wolisa from his trip reaching . . wer, the pol rate, with @ pained sinile from Great Britain down é ay jan Ties seat ens P to Naples--was the only j bie Nolen 1h ws fat china “buyer” of an i natural in the chapter de- = a American store on the ‘ Th ly voted t otion 4, dealt with < ground. mei e Mn y lay ' _, s He went abroad to make sure of our getting y & ~ *b full supplies for this March Sale. » you know where Apnit And he made sure—scarcely a steamer has left but I know it's seven corners and behind 3 H C y 1 J Ww A R E Liverpool or Bordeaux these last few months that | whieh in used tires Gaye a yearit| S E Ss has not brought goods to Wanamaker’s. JLeap Year four days That Save Time, Money and Energy The “man on the spot” secured many preferences, I To Use Coffee + E c |NOw, JOSEPHUS, it A ‘ ‘ » § oboe ae One great ezy of the ageis | ‘There is no hit and_ miss It was admitted that going “to the front” instead / |} sur navy, no New York ||| conservation. Women are | about ii. [1 is an exact sei- | of dallying at home—waiting—entitled him to first tet marticularly che whe -tai|}| learning above all to con- | ence. call on whatever stocks were ready; to lowest prices; FY Ay hia own profes- serve their energy and | In general housekeeping | to have his shipments pushed forward and hurried. | fibre hom fastaal he buys the kitchen a So. this is a story of foresight, of foresighted ean ie Crt Oe i thee (Ord cna ae lea preparedness, not of regrettable unpreparedness with a 4 housekeeper is over. She i ion: Ge cabinetchas apologies, ; : inetti no longer the looked-up-to | oyervth aaa Hondecitlaione. | The plain fact which any one can see who comes \ n iigrienl= queen of woman realm Bae deofyl and-convenient; | 2nd inspects our stocks is that hs ‘ " She is out of date, inelficien there isn’t an unnecessary ° Meator heeaeri extravagant | inch We Are Ready in Every Way United Staten & | The aris ph Heats ag : | Her ironing table ean be | Ready with full varieties. Ready with usual Wanamaker wheat to the oF Pies ‘s WSeatg ANS ea converted into a bench on | qualities, firsts only, no seconds, Ready with the March ty-one bu ‘ yan ie badd shes he aby rays when there is no ironing | economies in price which make this half-yearly sale one of the Me tothe! peti ala te kind of labor | 10 be done. The seat of the | great merchandise events of the Spring. ars } ahe aving davine ten scomed beneh is a box which holds | ‘ Deron of eal by the old-fashioned house- | her little laundry utensils, 1,342 Complete Dinner Sets pr i ees il ia keeper uch as wax, clothes, ete, —in addition to our open-stock patterns—at prices averaging ; replied Prof. Gri She has studied and ex Her clothes racks fold up’ | a third under the market, ranging from $8 to $67.50. ; a perimented and knows tha when, out of service One thousand of these sets are in the store now; the first. of ali there is no ‘“luch her kitchen ladder for remainder are in transit—to keep up the assortment as the I r or knack about cooking, [t | ing high pantry shelv days pass on, ae ine {shell iatenduee, is a matter of putting the | chair when not in use. . : ‘ the name of New Y proper exact ingredients (o- | She has knife box with 27,740 Pieces American Porcelain Dy way ath ent e rigl ay f ¢ « . se | ‘ j i America leads ‘he a Mild in the right Yee a Talent er abe. ane Mw | at half the usual prices—in complete\dinnerware assortment, P guage SU righ set ied ht ee vipa AB Whe, ign | Sets can be made up of any size or pieces can be bought Aes amoient ; utensil with the right he: re righ me, | separately. For example: man is efficient 4 eally who {not ann On one tect and out on the And Now Comes s th 1e March Sale ‘Tea cups and saucers, 12¢ | er shoe while in that position. N each, e “ e e man is efficient who cannot run a offering these standard time-energy-health- -saving | Bread and butter plates, rin tine rin S t e Bot Us Aen Gl tae ee Do nk housefurnishings at prices ranging from 10 to 35 per Bi | his face without breaking his back. 1! cent, below all-the-year prices. Such as al eee GRE. sites We are inefficient in speech, Enamelware re Reena Bird Cages | Anes i PRs). ta Hy lelpblan says, ‘I ’ Japanware ‘Trunks Mirrors inner plates, $1.44 dos — Lovely New L. R. Corsets bra augare” In New. Yorke the wren Ware W waar pallets RBLHECRE) Fixtures. | PE antialco (Ml 350 American porcelain brealigs ech ¢ xen Aluminum Ware ooden Ware ress Forms " splendid ‘ = sia of 7 wlioee. aieau lei: eae Not even the most expensive corset that comes into our Corset Salons t 6 be Rraencs Nigkalerars peane eee ae 4 typical of the exquisite freshness of Spring as these moderate priced I. R. Corset 3 Brushes | Mahogany Trays | ; . Each model has been daintily planned and beautifully executed. lithe 7 t But economy is not the big thing of this Sale. Artwares Just Received L, R. lines are what Fashion, demands too, ie pol s from an yu Quality of the merchandise is more important, \ In the art room we offer new specimens of a straight front and back, a hint of a curve-in at thls country realize the frughtfulne Phe serviceability the convenience the efficiency of | puropean art. recently received from the famous the waistline. a en ee iG pronunola the “helps to housekeepins all are more important factories of The new L. R. Corsets include some ex- GRIM PROFESSOR'S JOKE, WITH than the economy. : ‘ BERNARD MOORE DOULTON PILKINGTON cellent models especially designed for large (A DIAGRAM, — One who does not know the helpfulness of this MOORCRAFT WOOD & SONS women. and a number of charming things for in cee ete a ae ie ae housefurnishing store has a great pleasure in store if all to be sold on a strictly commercial basis. slender and medium slender women and girls. " Grim he will make this March Sale the time and oppor- i h . tunity of paying a visit. or, New Building Cut Glass at About Half ° MN lt ° ha ? ith Some a little more than } ring Novelties : | C ems alittle more ti ‘ 4 Ww 2 x > € ialf price; some a little Fancy tape Greek gir- | active and eager women peated wath ma 5e a ake Instead of 10¢ less; the average is less <li Ang ites Sue) # opr : sew ee 1 Knickerbocker Hard WaterSoap than half -$10,000 worth Delicate pink Greek | as the fleet footed Greek is yi I 4s H for $4,675--3,000 pieces irdle, a trifle broader, | maiden Atalanta might ; a 4 lomorrow the selling begins to continue during | in th ip lect fi ‘ have worn, $3.50. v Buros bos March only. In all other months the price is L0c, | Othe ate } 2 our produ When | was in Pare RAR al eich aisctare 6 assortment includes | Corsets of Bouquet} | Weshall be gladof your Garnane an A n gewine son In March it is 5¢ because we omit the fancy wrappings sitvosh « exmething: ini eae } Batiste, white with the | visit to see these, and all \\ |] fehine cor tarted a plant there, and packing and eut our pre glass that is wanted, daintiest_ pink rosebud de- the other new models \, i ne It is the time to } pl \ inch pint jug, six tumble: First quality “blanks” } sign, $1.50 and $2. which are priced $1 to sy ; i y Kk, Wel Knickerbocker Hard ter Soup is the soap that lathers | and 14-inch mirror plateaux only; deep rich cuttings in ! Atalanta Corset for $1: Re Ack. Sof ‘yy ba wep RSTt as freely in hard water ' »production of a famou $5 complete. good patterns, } Corset Salons, Third floor, Old Building, N met Tt worked. Bor the German imported soap; an all-aroynd good toilet soap for the whole | Second Gallery, New Building, and Outposts at Subway Entrance, / ; te. ‘They know how. to family Main floor, Old Buildin New Building, and Broadway Passageway between Buildings, i JOHN WANAMAKER See Broadway at Ninth h Street, New York i art ed ihe eA gk ag y ’o you know what all this eR l/ ‘5 ce vst Sai it ee sitation for minimum wages fu women will do? If successful it wid |

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