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“10 a Make campaign. The budget ts outlined pablished herewith: NEW YORK the Tarift Biitor of The Brening World am very glad to add my method e€ savings, which to me is « pleasure. Although it te « Mitte difficult at first, I hope it will lead me to my success. fui future. weekly—$1,300 a year—and last year Time Now to Cleanse System of Winter’s Poisons— Prepare for Summer’s Heat. If you are familiar with the workings ef an automobile, you know that in order to keep the engine cool it is neces- sary to CARRY OFF THE HEAT through the CIRCULATION OF WATER. Stop the circulation and he engine would get red hot. Jn a way, this is what happens in the human organism. If the circulation be- sluggish of in a mental and physical ineffi- system the cells are not renewed or in- vigorated and as a result we suffer from weakness, lassitude, anaemia, lo ol weight and many other sympathetic ills To enrich and purify the blood so that it will tingle through the system, ca: ing nourisument to every organ and every cell, and promptly removing the waste matter, take malto-ferrin—the new One and and Evening World Thrift Campaign HERE'S AMODEL HOME BUDGET PLANNED ON $25 A WEEK Comptroller of Savings Bank Com- mends Thrift Campaign-—-Candi- ‘ dates for Prizes Tell How to Dollars Grow. “Splendid; first class,” were the terms used by Joho J. Pulleyu,| qyiy arranged as well, g Comptroller of the Emigrant Industrial opinion of one of the budgets submitted in The Evening World's thrift self. SLUGGISH CIRCULATION MAKES A SLUGGISH MIND! ao 17.70 970.00 sab writs,” to. 2) & nwnih, and Hight, 9d Boe “aw aw “BO ciate banks is on 4 per cent tvidendas left on my have u eatisfied feeling a; G,” IDEAL OF THE SAVING CLASS, SAYS BANKER uture for t “rhe w of that letter,” waid Mr Puli repre my {deal of the sav #9 of the country, The big hing about his budget Is, of course, his tneurance. His policies amount to $5,000, which is very exceptional on jsuch a malary, and they are admir- iving protec a baby and him He is certainly alive to the ben- and |¢fite of Insurance, for, you see, he | knows what to do with his dividends ” - “Op his salary he probably eould hn yee. JHot eave $5,000 in cash, but he has “Since 1 was married, June 16, 1918,|*@t much proteetion right now, and T started to save money: | LAST YHAR'S PXPONSKS. Savings Bank, in giving his\tion to hin wife, | in @ letter signed by "M. W." {ey which will bring him $1,000. His bullding and loan investment adds variety and will give bim some cash »} at an opportune time | “He, of course, has @ savings bank account, and thus we find him mak- {ng intelligent use of those two great economte forces—insurance and the savings bank. Me and his family are iso living well. ‘Their allo Wan clothing Is above the average wed oar, | 76.00) they are doubtiess enjoying It they go along, 5 i dideed “Citizens of this type are wonderft fenets for the countr , pete They don't the kind who They are the bone nation. Do you vings deposits of the amount to $5,000,000, persons like this man mendous force for good, by It the flag; they uld fight for tt and sinew of th realize that the Unite 0007 exert at discovery made by » French chemist. He found @ way to perfectly combine iron and hypophosphites with other well known tonic and strengthening ingredi- ents so that in malto-ferrin he has pro- saving and placing th duced « palatable, delicious b that ft je useful in fier that is mal national resources. v ls the eat & too many ettizens of ‘M ferrin has proved almost WHAT CAN BE DONE ON ONLY in results. You begin to foel its $2 A DAY newing, re-vitalizing effect at once, ” 4 Your appetite is sharpened, your food | 1°, vue 36 $2, 4 day this writer COUNTS, your strength, | vigor and | joving van incom early 810) a vitality return, you fortify your system | year from house, | against diseases and ax «result of these | which he : things you are bound to. be happier, | 1 me Mitt Hier ning World healthier, more successful in your busi ness and social life | Don't try to get through the coming | ‘Lum a laboring man, earning $2 a day. When | married fourteen years ago I happened to get janitor’s work and was allowed $6 a ‘month out of summer's terrific heat in your present | giz pent; that left me $72 a year to| condition no matter how good you think | jay for rent. For six years I lived you feel four rooms, In that time I saved Go to the druggist, get a bottle of this | $1,000. Then 1 bought a Mittle two story house of eight rooms, and rented four rooms for $11 a month. T bor- rowed $1,600 at the time to pay for this house, and in aix years I paid back the $1,800, “As my family grew up, more room. 1 borrowed new, delicious tonic itself, nd let it speak for If malto-ferrin doesn't do ay ye if you are not thoroughly suti our druggist is authorized to re rf money without question clipping to remind you.—Advt I wanted $1,600 and The Broad Way tothe West Every foo: twice every day walkers, track foremen and inspected once every month by the Special Track Inspection Committee. 24,000 men are employed in the Main- tenance of Way Department. hundred $9,600, are awarded annually to Supervisors this track is carefully inspected by 600 expert track constantly by Supervisors, laborers. = It also and More than and two prizes, aggregating track men for the best maintained roadway. is by such substantial construction such thorough inspection that the Pennsylvania System was able to carry during the last two years, 362,000,000 passengers without a ingle train acci- dent fatality to one of them. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD The Standard Railroad of America MM {n addition he has an endowment goi- | 1 $260 IN PRIZES FOR THE BEST COMMON SENSE PLAN OF SAVING. The Bveuing ¥ ng with the A an Avsoclation, is conducting @ cain paign for thrift. It te not the « thing in the world to Save money, but the read- ere of this paper during the next few months will be given every encouragement to learn how to Gok jh prizes amounting te $250 given to those who show of home or te designed primarily to help men and women earning $160 a month or less, The committee of awards will be announced later. Articles will be published on Wednesdays and Saturdays, The Amerioan Bankers’ Associa: tion offors $160 In prizes, and The Evening World adde $100, making $250 In all. The prizes will be Pp ch twenty-five prizes of $2 each: All correspondence will be fidential, but it will be ni for you to give name an all letters to Thrift Editor, ining World. KEEP LETTERS WITHIN 200 WORDS. The privilege of partici the cempaign le open to There are no conditions, a) buult an extension of #ix rooms with | the latest improvements, The house is now worth over $5,000 with a plot, of 25x160 feet. 1 am getting $16 month rent for six rooms and bath/ for one floor. ‘The other floor T oc- jcupy myself. 1 whore [ could | make more on y by putting | [it in real estate than by leaving tt in| the bank, I have made $1,000 on th | property alone, after paying all cor now it pays me $384 a year, If I ha not put my money tn real estate I would have only about $3,000, interest on t at 4 per cent be $120, N better My oldest THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNE HA CU VE SDAY, APKIL 12, 1916. ELOPING HEIRESS WHO 1S REPORTED TO DIED IN HAV AN, BA. GRACE MCLAUGHLIN PLAINFUE! The | Moosup, would | Ame I can give my children | Flet Cen 8 Woolle and Plat noth ore! and the Yoollen Mill hav advancing wages 10 MORE MILLS RAISE WAGES, "0 Ten ¥ Now General tn D, Conn, April 12.—In ad dition to the increase notices posted y+ terday tn the five woollen mills of this town, employing 600 hands, the mills at Almyville and ¢ *omp Ernest Schiller, who hi WHO ELOPED, DEAD IN HAVANA, SAYS REPORT === | Daughter of forme: apa Protec Chief of Police Fled With | Garage Manager. Miss Grace McLaughlin, heiress tol $260,000, who eloped last December with | George M rage Where ev \* it vee, Is reported to have died tp Havana, Ieuba Miss McLaughlin left the home of her Jaunt, Airs, Katherine Ingles, No. 4 Weat One Hundred and Twenty-ninth Street, | to Ko to mass on the morning of Dec. 9, | taking several thousand dolla Jewelry and securities with her, At the| sume time Stevens disappeared. Clues, were followed, but the couple were not! ctive employed | sald to-day that Miss Me- | Laughlin suffered from tuberculosis, He said Stevens knew this. | Mrs. Ingles was said to be very fll to- 1 would see no one, vorced from a former Mass., in Octobe: ood last Decembe not be effective onths, but another story had it ens and Miss McLaughlin were | Co cee || PATROL an O'Farrell, det amily McLaughlin's PH.” was reputed to be n in| Rrooklym. ‘ity of Brooklyn He was Chief of the ob police. HIPPODROME PARADES. of a single private watchman " tends Mie 41 Le the personal service of a carefully selected watch- om eneunata Aunivannsy man, the work is supervised and supplemented by a thir 6 in a newspaper con- | ¢ on April 17 Srexded <td: Philip & ; test for a peace slogan, offered by a| hres ti eettared ov Leh pF ans Meth apraee eat ‘ Newark ‘plano. company, adced| ,. Tirty-three small mills seattered over pand, ripping out “Isl Capitan” $ voted itself solely to the mo to n eit $400 plano. 1 Zantern Con Ge sneren: wee old times, the ) members ini or eiucker no vou noo |10 per cents sen S08 YOrk me OFgAN property. the Irish are not as bad as they wenty thousand on operatives; 4 ad avetal ef painted : M.Q now look for an {ncre 7 go vine \ eats Our charge for this This writer seems to have so pene nas nehiaeit month. is start by i outside work hi ne It will moered that eres | YACHT CRUISED 7,600 MILES. a B. awards, President o Service for the prot success of another L. T. Shoemaker, Owner of the hy thrift contestant ea, Navigated Her All the Way. HOLMES ELECTRIC to do extra work during his leis o American auxiliary yaent Adrew r ure hours. It is real thrift, no peal Leni ts salsa BL ; fatter how much it pays, In'this |@frived to-day roa cruise o y and led to his becoming a land- L. J. Shoemaker of Phil lord. was accompanied on th vO! e by y jends. Th WHAT A JANITOR DOES ON $21 *' Near nel eae Bid erate harale A WEEK. Bes Facihio island 660 miles southe|* ‘Th letter shows what a janitor, ¢ a hebretbt hater ua) aaNGs Bathe F and oth wy Spite Gash 10 ‘ *l wort of Panai Mr. Shoemaker de- | ot; im automob Us Fase ated Se, by thrift, can do ails ‘ report that he and his compan. {In fact, It was largel sutomob eat 39th St. sttor ot THe eg QR [Tons had visited this island for the pur- parade throughout, It. H. Burnside, th | Pay See ste ee rales baht }pose of searching for a treasure w Grand Marshal, brought up the rear with | | “My plan for saving is simple and | are eclat and & frock coat. 1 have proved It to be effective bs first thing is to start; start to-day, or at all events on the fir: pay day, ten cents or ten dollars, only | start, From that pay day to the next keep account of every penny you spend | “On the second pay day «o over| | your expense sheet carefully and ask yourself at each item if you could have saved anything. You will soon find numerous payments that can be curtailed or cut out altogether, A workingman to save must learn to do | without, not the necessaries, but the many little things that eat up the money, and a careful weekly study of your expense 8 will show you which are necessaries and which are not i} “My proof: Eight years ago T had 3 and two children and very little furniture; to-day I have a com fortable home in the city and a bungalow at the beach. My real Galata, Nodings and OAAR ycHle amount to over $3,000, but I lost $1,000 In a recent bank failure, [ have done all this a lived well on an average wage of per week | “On looking over what I have writ. | ten, there seems to be too much ‘I’ about it. My wife really saved the money. I earned it, but without her | constant care and house management | we could never have done it. My wife does not make any of her own) or the children’s clothes, as [ see | some women do, but by mending sh |makes things last longer than m people can A JANITOR The above 1s an enviable record to make on a salary of $21 a week It was possible only by the m careful saving over a period of years, and the writer justly gives his wife credit for the saving. He earned the money, but she was the one who saw that !t was not “GET THE HABIT.” wasted, and thelr bungalow ts one of the results (“LITTLE MOTHER" RUNS | AWAY FROM HER KIDDIES. | Crystal Dorries, Missing Four Days, Writes Father She’s Tired of Caring for Children | | Crystal Dorries, sixteen and pretty jhas been missing from her home at) No, 2770 Fulton Street Brooklyn, | since las inday, when she lett to | go to work and fatled to arrive at) [the store where she was employed, | Her father, Christian Dorries, a to- | bacconist, notitl the police yester day, and this morning received a le \ter from Crystal, mailed yesterday from Station C, Manhattan. | v er said she was safe, and j|not to worry about her he was tired, she suid, of taking care of so | many children, to shift rote and had determined for herse In a postscript “Don't blame Arthur or her | ries family and Crys 'A baby, nine Fleet to run i refused to take her. vstal her Brooklyn home Ma ‘ ton of treaties Little Mother afed under the care of the children | and the restraimt of home, | GO TO BRILL BROTHE RS. GO TO BRILL BROTHE THE saving to you of many dollars. Inariners declare Mes burled there “GET THE HABIT.” GO TO BRILL BROTHERS. Spring’s Smartest Suits and Topcoats Specially Priced at the Brill Stores This season’s newest and choicest fabrics and models at prices which mean a Style, fit, finish, long-lasting shapeliness and wear are predominating features of Brill Clothes and they offer you more, “dollar for dollar,’’ than you can buy anywhere the practically unlimited purchasing and merchandising power of eight big, busy stores, with a combined clothing market as great as that of any organiza- tion in the country. Suits and Topcoats for Men The SUITS, many of them 14 silk lined, in clude Tartan Plaids, Overplaids, Club Checks, Glen Urquharts, Homespuns, Fiskin ‘Tweeds, Plain Grays, Silk Mixtures, Pencil Stripes, Blue Serges, Blue Flannels, Brown Flannels and Green Flannels. In TOP COATS—Some wonderfully smart 14. silk lined Blue, Brown and Green Flannel Form- fitting Coats with velvet collar—fine knitted cloths, and, of course, smart Blacks and Oxfords lined with silk. * $18 and $20 Values At $15.00 Suits and Topcoats for Men Glen Urquharts, Tartan Plaids, Pencil Stripes, Gray Stripes, Silk Mixtures, Blues, Brow and Grays IN SUITS; and in TOP- +—Blacks, Oxfords and Cambridge silk lined. ngle and double Superbly tailored and finished $22.50 and $25.00 Values At $20.90 breasted 279 BROADWAY, near Chambers Street Union Square, 14th St., near Broadway 47 Cortlandt St., 125th St., Corner Third Avenue—Open Evenii Our New Store in Brooklyn ON FLATBUSH AVE. AT ) HABIT. And Our New Store in Newark—791 BROAD STREET, AT MARKET “GET THE GO TO BRILL BROTHERS, jd up the Brit- Ish steamer Matoppo, was surrendered from the Tombs Prison to two agents PROTECTION OLMES patrol service is more than the service highly eflicient organization which has for 40 years de- Let us give you further particulars about Patrol 26 Cortlandt Street, New York TWELVE OPERATING CENTRAI back of every garment is Presentation af @ Fededel warrant te- day and was immediately started on bie journey to Wilmington, Del, where he must stand trial, charged with pireey on the high seas. Schiller did not seem distressed ov his departure from the To amiled as he shook hands with Warden Huniey “Better Save what you Have than Hant for what you’se Lost” In addition to protection of its subscribers’ service is as low as $2.00 a ection of your property. PROTECTIVE COMPAN Cortlandt 10 OFFICES 426 West Sth St th § 19 West 125th St. $1 Willoughby St., Brookiva “GET THE HABIT.” OLIV SLL Lab.. Id OL OD SUaLLOUd Labd.. «LIV SIL near Greenwich St, ngs FULTON ST. “‘SUTHLOU ‘TT1ad OL OD “GET THE HABIT,"