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THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, MARCH 27, 1916. wired their congratulations, and It is PRESIDENT WILSON HAS vould te @iteeet aoe HUNT MAIL BAG THIEVES. |* Inspector Jacobs, with offices in the expected that Mr. Wilson will make prove iny orth, Th " Post Office Building at Thirty-frst Street 1 | y Post Office Offers $500 Reward for THIRD GRANDCHILD NOW a visit here this week to see his Y price | Capture ta Ferry Robbery, Elghth Avenue, has been instructed daughter and the new baby 1 1 had no! Lado be 1600 each toe Whe hi » take the statements of any one who we Dr. Edward P. Davis of No. 230} 2 9: ‘frm necded an -aanie \ reward of $500 each for the arrest ray have information tending to lead Daughter Is B ‘ {ys,] South Twentieth Street, who attend a Go d }ivsan de CGniain Teena eee and cofivition 6f the peraon oF to an arrest. her Is Bom to Mr, ant Mrsfaourn Parner sre wre went) Hay Tg She Making Good 2 ise. tat dats sono SOs, Want four Vommene. won| Sti eta: cars i A Sayre in a Philadelphia a Urs, Sayre, reported tw-day that) chance and got it, 1 was determined | pouches from a wagon on the ferry boat] will be confidential, and the informer f; the nother and daughter were both ee free to and believed in my ability to | pow agon y Till not Ge called upon to testify te bes keith Wilkes-Rarre on a trip from Jersey ospital, well. Dr. Davis attended Mrs, Sayre | . to 4 half of the Government unless he con- | Pe , : f How | to New York on Feb, 26 was off ve foe worernrrene. PHILADELPHIA, Pa, March 27—| When her tirst child was bora, and it} One Who Has Won Gives a Graphic Account of Hou | lyenterday by W. Ri ( genta to becom A third grandchild, a girl, has beon|¥48 to be under his care that she - born to President Wilson. The child ia the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fran- cis Bowes Sayro of Williamstown, Mags., and was born in the Jefforson She Made $6 a Week Grow Into $60 a Week by Making Her Brain Work, and She Is Still Striving to Reach the $5,000-a-Year came to the Jefferson Hospital. | Mrs. Sayre was Miss Jessie Wood- row Wilson before her marriage to| Mr. Sayre, who i# now the assistant | to President Gartleld of Williams Col | Tailors’ Strike Growing, but Employers Refuse State of no Loat OfMica Ina} mond. contained several ml loge. ‘Their first child, a son, Frat foal She ot U, | Mediation. Hospital early yesterday. ‘The baby,| cia Woourow Sayre, was born Jan Goal She Has Set Up for Herself. wh. re ' ee | ft ta sald, will be named Eleanor] 17, 1915, ja the White House. ‘Tho ae ee ae eee alalererict With the t Axon Say President's first granddaughter, born | in being diplomatic bue he bosses sitting —tigh tip Geen UR, Witton Cree smother | ay at, isis, Inthe oblid of Mat, and] By Marguerite Movers Marshall. | Vm Vagainat their demanda, shirtinakers, Mra. William G. McAdoo. She « de nw eIR ORR: aia The President and Mrs, Wilson | was named atte hen cnenumener 1 made) my brown Wor? |Journeymen tailors and a section After four years’ work sa@ «@ am-| sistant buyer the ¢ a buyer was offered me me to New York, the city tunities, “IT goon found a position at $40 per week carried with |t great responsi- bilities, and holding the position de pended on being a money maker for tho frm. Firat I won the confidence! nave tured down offers of media workers, with tie thought alwaya|tiom by the State Labor Department that we were partners in a venture.}‘The shirtmakers have been out for T'made it understood that our com- {over a month, the tailors not quite a | would mean increased salaries for us to-day their second week resting story of success I have yet! 8” and published tn The Evening World Vividly and with accurate detail this California girl tells how in fifteen years she worked up to a@ position Paying ten, times her {initial salary; how she scrimped and saved when she was earning $6 a week (the sun which 60 many social in tigators declare is not a living wage); how she devoted her spare time, not to pleasure, but to study which would ft her for more important work; how, when the opportunity was given her, she advanced the fortunes of others besides herself, and how even yet she is not ready to say, “It is enough.” _ tl That is the text of the most int the workers at the National Biseutt| factory began their picketing to-day with renewed vigor. The pickets! watch the workers and the atrike breakers and the police watch the! pickets Thm all cases the owners of factories ence 3 become | Tt brought | of oppor- received, the story signed “| to-day. Healthy Ways Mothers, today, encourage the chil- dren to chew gum. Children, who will grow up to be the great men and women, chew gum. It is a good sign, for it shows a spirit ‘of energy. And a healthful habit, too, if the gum is ~ all, We worked in harmony and auc-| The tallora are gaining strength ° And I believe that the secret of this girl's rise |cens followed. every day, according to Th SMITH BROTHERS from $6 a week to $60 a week, from tiny cog wheel to| “I took an extra departmont each| pyeeney, International Secreta: |year until 1 reached the $3,000 per the directing force which manipulates a big depart- I am not ready to say finished rs mental machine, Hes in the fact that while she did her full duty by each Jol | the union. ‘The Merchant Tailors’ So- ciety denied that the strike has af- year. until I win the coveted $5,000 a year. S.B. CHEWING GUM jhe undertook she always looked over the edge of {t to something bigger. | Beny u Geen are. bg bayise -|teoted the business in any Made with the same flavor and ingredients Siiiibnainisy ie {As she says herself, she made her brain work. She never allowed herself | Western and Eastern houses. though some custome as the S, B. Cough Drops—famous since i ase : = j 0 Decceie Seria re cape Ber eyes And GAs Open, Her reasntig DOWAES | vaicc “th som wetk wennty & CHARICE | ettae othe they tet 1847, It soothes and eases the throat. Caowine Sears Sdpetune!, : busy, and she realized that to stind still {8 to go backward [voles Shur arnoe AS, spring multe Tn some ahops the own-| Yas ieee yh THE LETTER OF ONE GIRL WHO jto pay $50, $5 a piece, for the ten best are no obsections to ‘Tolling stones. if] Fs thewselves have been found work. d MOP 5h ter POCA, HAS “ARRIVED.” letters trom gira who have made| 1%, the rolling you observe, Heten end |e on order to Keep the business Ra tab When ‘The Evening World o' h j Femnempes WiAt yon ate abd Hees. Officials of good in busines: , trade ¢ the National the pro-| "TL pers Biscuit Company, in order to ptect Made by the Makers of fessions, I hoped to prin “ry from | nese is the greatest pre y saat 4 1 is tackll thousands that have remained loys y Successful women which would de| (nit for words Tha Ie in bound to [are now sending them Ua Sour WT DROPS inspiring and practical, Both adjec-|command the respect and the recog- motor vans. The pickets to the nur Fonsi ne . ia tat t eventually bring promo-| ber of 500 were at the factory th jo, N. Ys Uptown Store Downtown Store tives At “i B. Bie” letter, and 1{nition the ball ig morning long bafore it opened, and @ Should Ike to receive othor commu- |" uxgy motto has been, ‘He can who Iaat night's meeting it wan decided to 3rd Ave. & i2ist St. Park Row & Chatham Sq, fice oteroring trom “one! nin fe oon” FR girls who have “arrived” and for the} girls who are just making a start “Dear Madam: These are the | qualities that were needed for my climb from @ stenographer at $6 a week to a buyer of ladies’ apparel at $60 a week, in fifteen years: Imagination, determination, en- thu: ym, cleanliness, courage, ' | efficiency, observation, love of | work, belief in self, and a goal. “I graduated from the Polytechnic || ft! High Sehool in San Francisco fifteen yeurs ago. A business education of four years made me well equipped to fare into the world, so I thought. I soon found that experience was nec-||!! | essary before I could reach the goat!) I was after, The sudden death of ||}! my mother shortly after I left echool | rather upset my idea of a career in San Francisco, It was deemed best ||| by our friends for me to go to Bos- | ton, where I could be near my rela-||{] | tives, ‘The thought that there are | } Our Ever Liberal Credit re Maker of Pretty Homes Wherever you go in Greater New York and its suburbs you will find countless homes made com- fortable, cozy and happy through our famous credit some in the world who belong to you gives you a surer footing, for you can | | at least go to them for comfort when the heart 19 heavy. Being alone will] ||} ) never drive away the blues. things you want and we'll send them home at once. But our credit terms are only one of many reasons for coming hee. You'll find the quality of the Frederick Loeser & Co. tre. Brooklyn-New York no red tape to go throu sh. Just come and select the | at Park Row and Chatham Square. Goods —Long Service Ahead of Them Balad teeny CoA Elta Noes ah the formal opening, of made over $6 a week could remain If your salary increased you had to |seek other quarters. The cost of teren “I soon found @ position as a ste-} Wa Gtve cur custamare a. gece aceliashalet for | 80eds—the biz variety we offer you to choose from Jf noxvapher at $6 per week, with a well chines Tarweckiy ‘on eit if rae Rae eal and our extremely low prices a pleasant surprise, J known co company. os was) iy deed ‘ : t d ) i ROURY r 5 ; i ie when the problem of how to live pre- that they never miss the money. Either of cur two big stores is well worth a visit. f] |sentea itacif, 1 went to live at a so-| present their invitation to you to atten Why don’t you open a charge account? There's | One is at Third Avenue and !2Ist Street; the other called girls’ home that accommo- | Open Saturday Evenings Reputation Behind the ard, room and laundry was $3 per k. It of course meant threo girls in a room, but your bureau and bed | te. ‘The girls manag lw Week to save | | | ee wares Piyaahles rales | for Women, Misses and Girls Sliding Couch "haa fo launder myecit. t wore ||{! | This Is a well built pt ramese |]| Sausred Aue meee | j° 3 | Saotcris, Smee tet ||] BGC aivare heh on Tuesday and Wednesday | ame wal ade icin i uunone and Fay nati they tone | ies ath, Mel ES GS | fetas’syet dls March 28th and 29th exceptionally fine automobile * night. Price * found at sales. | discove: Prices. always looked’ w faded roses or to go through a long summer. | loved pretty, dainty olothes, but knew that thelr Ilfe was short cloth il On the SECOND Floor | Suits, Wraps, Millinery f Blouses, Sport Coats, Negligees Children’s Apparel \ Union, eiving every spare evening to and must buy that ,, would alwaye stand | rain or shine. “I took a free eourse of salesman- ship at the | most practical, and with these | Woman's Bfucational efficiency. Within a the opportunity I was Rugs and Carpets j the study of | 1 had ng with the coffee cc " y 4 Sieele, Door Mar. one [rhe postion vtferet company. On the FIFTH Floor i f Jana all expenses. T had to travel Ru 2 | throurhout New Englanc ve OAR a f the Colonial Period, sila f|nrrangementa for thet cots Afternoon and Street Dresses 1600 Suite includes: Bed, Chiffonier, ure Rugs! neh socts Aviminater’ in chatr to mateh), regular chati reh socials $165.00 Costumes, Reception Gowns and making orrangements for the coffee to ba Jnerved at « The exper “ " and fairs | and ‘ood knobs throughout, Price fh ROrian ce Waa ok preanea eae a | Tan It Tin Boge are deired price i 82600 | LEARNS “'SALESMANSNIB, AND {1 Dance Frocks | cae . | : ira Attractive Buffet “=~ Many Styles of BECOMES A TEACHER. 20 1 studied all my spare time on 5 . hand rea j —— Thilo jubstens Refrigerators ona) eileemnanenip, and later |] uring, sewing, laying, line 7 ourse in salesmanship by cor ab See tres.” quartered | 0 a k This Ice box ts of |] | ondence, After a while I found I py | ater wood naa hard wood, oak fin. ff bie to write on the subject, and Reed Baby vy protey tah, width 36 | many o| were published ¢ | ain. Mirror ¥ Ia. This was a tive to try f Carriage imeanaren, "Where eight 39 1n,, depth fp | bis 1, and after three ye | ‘This well built In, and is bev- 46 in. c ® the real climb, baby carriage In led, Price, he Drese bards A ed for a position aa te butvone af our $26 50 ware. Spectal price. [| | of manghip in one of \e departr Goce 8 and ° Baby riages, $5.49 = ||| Many other atyles in Ice Boxes and refrigerators, The trated is only ($2 Monthly) A typical example of our many Values In. dining room furniture | Scare. |COWPERTHWAIT & SONS | Liberal Credit Terms . = i ea. catkly on 018 wath “Cleest kurniture House in America tite | i Rem ctome| 3rd Ave, & 121]st St. lam ene .! rownes n ape abel a0. ee eet . oe 688 . Br sor nausea ae ater re } Bet tant oe ann it Downtown Store; 192-205 Park Row Bis W. 42d Se, ses" gece ie lem Fi 10% OFF FOR CASH Between Brooklyn Bridge ‘Sub!’ Station and Chatham Sq. “L" Station hO Kenmare ft, 2a cor, aie Grae ; Ry dil tou! eatinsie Mr dag’ BCs»