The evening world. Newspaper, May 29, 1916, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

‘ ty in! yee TE FORTIRED AND SORE FEET Use “Tiz” for puffed-up, burning, aching, calloused fect and corns. Why go limping around with aching, pufted. up feet—feet so tired, chafed, sere and swollen you can hardly get thoes on or off? don’t you a %5-cent box of “Ti” from the store now and gladden your tor- tured feet? “Tis” makes your feet glow with com- fort, takes down swellings and draws the soreness and misery right out of | feet rt and burn. in in corns, calor glorious for tired, aching. sore fect. No more shoe tight- ness—no more foot torture. —Advt DOES RHEUMATISM BOTHER YOU? The Doctors Say‘‘Use Musterole“ So many sufferers have found relic in M FROLE that you ought to buy ‘small jar and try it. Just spread it on with the fingers. Rub . then First you feel « gee glo’ adelicious, cooling comfort. MUS" OLE routs the twinges, loosens up stiff- THE EVENING WORLD, WOMEN ORGANIZED TO SWAY POLITICS cnestiiennae Go to Chicago Prepared to De- mand National Equal Suffrage. |PARTY OF THEIR OWN, Now Vote in 12 States, Elect- ing One-Fifth of Elec- toral College. Women Suffragists will enter into the first time with a political organt- zation of their own, backed by the power of the ballot in twelve States whieh contribute one-fifth of the votes in the Electoral College. When Republican and Progressive dolegates arrive in Chicago for their conventtona on June 7, they will find 4 large company of women already in convention, working to accomplish one and only one thing-—Woman Suf- frage on a national, not State, basis. “Wo call,” reads thelr proclama- tion, “upon all our fellow members in the Suffrage States to assemb on joints and muscles. SROLE is a clean, white o} pak made with oil of mustard. It p: trates to the seat of pain and drives it Spey, but does not blister the tenderest mit takes the place of the mussy, joned mustard plaster. MUSTEROLE is recommended for |{er their dentifrice Plew fry, Bronchitis, Lambago. Croup, Asthma, Neuralgia, Sprains, Br Chest (it often prevents Pneumonia) At your druggist ‘and a special large hospital size for #8.50. | but is a cream, not a paste. MU'S-|the highest percentage of actual cleansing Jeral Constitution which the Congres Be sure you get the genuit TEROLE. Refuse imitation: yu ask for, The Musterole ¢ leveland, Ohio. get wha! World Wants Work Wonders, ROWEL uf it cM old-| Many people, sea, {of every can of powder remains on the Bull Neck, Headache and Colds of the | washstand, having dropped off the brush. pany, | frice Habit is a hard thing to overe for example, still use! chalk (or powder, as it is also called) | But powder is in- A third convenient, mussy and wasteful. the national campaign this year for! .|of the mational amendment if they Obesity Reducing Exercises Presented in Series of Handy Charts COPYRIGHT, 1911 Arranged 6; IN IST6 CAMPAIGN $ CHART NO. 37 pauiine Furlong OBESITY REDUCTION { FIRST—Stand with feet about hteen inches apart, arms extended full length above the head. ECOND—Bend the body forward at the waist line and at the eame time reach out and touch the floor with the tips of the fingers about twelve inohes in front of the right foot. To do thie the body will have to be slightly twisted to right side. ward and touch and relax a few timos, if it plete eet. cation of charts, vesides writing articles bearing on obesity reduction, CHART NO, 38 WILL BE PRINTED IN THE EVENING WORLD WEDNESDAY, with us tn Chicago on June 6, @ and 7 to launch @ Woman's Party which will work independently of all exist- ing political organizations to secure the Immediate passage of the national Suffrage amendment “The fact that one-fifth of the elec- toral vote and one-third of the vote necesmary to elect the next President comes from the Suffrage States gives voting women such power in Con- greas as to make certain the passage stein, Mrs. Robert Adamson, Mrs, Harriot Stanton Blatch, Mra. Phoebe Hear: Mrs, Charles Farnham, Miss Marion May, Miss Lucy Burns, Mrs, Clarence J. Smith, Mrs. Charles A. Beard, Mrs. Frank Cothren and Mrs, J Lambie. Adauenson, whose husband ts vie Commissioner of New York City and a practical politician, aaid to the vening World: “The question has entirely passed the debatable stage and Is now a plain political issue. By putting Suf- frage first and party alliliations sec- one, women can be the deciding fac- tor In the next Presidential election. “Ry standing together, women can form @ party strony enough to secure immediate passage through Congress of the Susan B, Anthony amendment, enfranchising the women of the Unit- will unite In its support. Congress has blocked the amendment at every turn, however, and only by the tn- sistent demand of women voters can Something vastly better can be had by , in 25e and 40c jars}using Albodon, which comes In a tube, It contains and polishing properties of any denti- | on the market. Your dentist, ing the ingredients, will tell you} sufficiently abrasive to replace It has in addition the, merit of being antiseptic. It is further- more free from grit, which cannot always be said of powders, Try it to-day, Price 25 cents a liberal tube wherever toilet articles are sold, and a free sample kn it is Straight powders. =jcan be had by sending your name arid address to The Albadon Co., Dept. B, 154 West sath St, N.YLA postal will a its passage bo secured.” THE SIMPLE AMENDMENT WHICH THEY DEMAND. Susan B, Anthony, in 1876, dratted the proposed ame nt to the Fed- ed States.” ONLY REAL VOTERS TO HAVE VOICE IN CHICAGO. While women from all Statcs will go to Chicago, only those delegates from States which already have It i» short and aimple,; granted them the ballot will vote in jeonvention. So far as official pro- ceedings go, It will be strictly a wom- an voters’ Convention, Those who havo not yet secured the ballot must content themselves with being en- thusiastic spectators on the side lines. ‘The twelve States wherein women will vote this year for President and their votes in the Electoral College are as follows: Arizona, 3; Californi. Colorado, 6; Idaho, 4; Tlinois, Kansas, 10; Montana, 4; Nevada, Oregon, Utah, 4; Washington, sional Union for Woman Suffrage now urges. [reading as follows: “Whe right of citizens of the U nited belie! to vote shall not be denied or} bridged by the United States or by! any State on account of sex. “Congress shall have power, by ap- propriate legislation, to enforce the provisions of this article.” New York's delegation to this wom- an's convention will be headed by Mra, O. H, P. Belmont. Among her| 13 associates will be Mra, Ines Milhol- Jand Bolssevain, Mrs, manuel Ein- HGH PRICED Tall oR High prices and high-priced tailors, like the bubble when punctured si nply, vanish before the unequalled quality, eno same value?” The differenc man, Jobbing house and tailor, all of which you pay for, store, your Suit at our nearest rious buying power and ever increasing business of R. & C. Suit at the single shop tailor when 814.75 at & C, buy not in the quality but represents the profit of commi the ion Tighten your purse strings and get A Sale That Knows No Competition 1,042 Patterns—100,000 Yards Here Are a Few: All $25 Values, Made to Measure, $14.75 Dlue Serges Black Serg Gray Serges Nevich Tweeds Brown Worstods English Tweeds Oxfords y Cheviots Fancy Mixtures Silk Mixtares Green Stripes Pin Stripes Penell Stripes Black Chevlots Glen Urquhart Plaids Scotch Platds Tartan Checks MAIL ORDERS FILLED————, We Guarantee Satisfaction. ¥*{j for Sempies and sett ADDRESS MAIL ORDER DEPT, 149 W, Thirty-sixth St., New York REAL $25 VALUE 3 PIECES OR OVERCOAT EXTRA SPECIAL REAL 620 VALUES To the thousamls of men who know Ritchie & Cornell only by their famous $14.75 Suits, we call attention to our extra special line of superior woulens, of real $30 value, which we offer at Ae " $18.75 ) (a7ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES, SAMPLES CHEERFULLY GIVEN FOR COMPARISON- Ritchie & Corneil, 1BS7 Broadway, Between S7th and BAth ate O45 Tieoa 35. “THE WORLD'S LARGEST wean Ohh end doth Sireete Nght venues Seat 224 she gig Se Hy Avenues Soar Venn Ky sa tit Piatbush 06 Filth Ay Bobu W, Mitchte ©. “M1bs ‘New ‘Mata bes 'vonkora, i ety Near a ie Sh Brogan. Bete PH a ow Btore) oda —— TAILORS—WATCH LS GROW" ibutors John mion MAN. g. Vernoi, N, ¥., Disttitutors.Dantel 13, Cornell SEE ADS, DISPLAYED IN ALL OUR STORE WINDOWS |. BY THE PRESS PUBLISHING 00. (THE NEW YORK EVENING WORLD.) REDUCES WAIST LINE AND FAT ON SHOULDERS. THIRD—Return to starting position. FOURTH—Turm elightly to the left side, bend for- the left foot, Return to upright position, drop arms second Bend two-cent stamp to Miss Furlong, Evening World, No. 68 Park Row, New York City, for each and every back number of charts desired, but order paper of your newesdealer in advance to insure obtaining com- Letters not over 250 words in length Misa Furlong will anawer on days alternating between pud- MONDAY, MAY 29, Morchants for Women _ jish “cas Se one 5 ei t floor twelve inches In front of Bend to each side five n the last five Presidential elec- so the Woman's Party publl- declare, “not one of these adily for any one| ver of votes could | Hon results. In 1912 none of the equal Suffrage States would have required a change of) more than 7.8 per cent. of the total! vote to swing the Presidential election in that State. | “Even a small group of women de- termined to stand out for the long- delayed enfranchisement of their sex throughout the Nation can form the balance of power, Over 4,000,000 women can now vote In national elec tions in twelve States. “These States elect one-fourth of the Senate and one-sixth of the House. ‘Choy cast one-fifth of the electoral vote and one-third of the votes necessary elect a President. The number of votes now held by women is more than one-fourth of the total popular vote cast in 1912. “Since 1896 women have been mobdil- izing their votes in those twelve States and they are now_ prepared to ask something of the Republicans in re- turn for their plea for aid. They will ask a plank in the platform definitely supporting the Federal suffrage amendment. It can’t be refused. JUST A HINT OF A THREAT TO THE REPUBLICANS. “The Progressives, in January of this year, have reiterated their accept- ance of equal suffrage and have there- by made equal suffrage a national issue. Alone, the Republicans carried bet two States tn 1912. They must pull with the Progressives, and Woman Suffrage 1s a practical yoke, | GOVERNMENT PAYS “Can the Democrats ignore women voters in twelve States? By no means. They, too, must have a Federal amend- ment plank; but they cannot escape 80 easily, While in power the Democrats have been urged, begged, implored to make Woman Suffrage an Administra- tion 1g@asure. Having the power to secure passage of the amendment, If they fail to do so before the Roepubli- cans meet in convention, a mere copy of the Republican plank will suffice them nothing in the Presidential cam- paign, They will have no story with which to campaign yond the Mis- aissippl; they will have been tested and found wanting.” —__—_ PRINTING AND POSTAGE FOR CALDER’S SPEECH Republican Candidate — for U. S. Senate Finds Cheap Way of Campaigning. The United States Treasury has been drawn upon to help pay for the terary propaganda expenses of Wil- Nam M, Calder of Brooklyn In his candidacy for the Republican nomin- ation for United States Senator, Many thousands of printed coptes of a speech by Mr. Calder are being sent free through the malls to voters throughout the State, Moreover, the document was printed by the Govern- ment Printing Office in Washington. Mr, Calder is not a member of Con- gress, He ts not now entitled either to have documents printed for him at the Government Printing Office, nor to have anything sent through the mails tree, But & very simplo lttle subterfuge saves Mr, Calder the cost of postage stamps and printing, An obliging friend who is a Member of Congress lends his name as a cover, In this case Edmund Platt, member from the Poughkeepsie district, ts the man, His bame appears on the document in the smallest type and most incon- spicuous manner allowed by law, while Mr, Calder gets big black type } and all the headlines. | On the cover of the pamphlet ap- pears the following ttle: “National Defense. Address of the Honorable, William M. Calder of New York, de-| livergd at the anoual banquet of the Reco: Print Mr. ry tative Piatt. the mails by means of ta document bear the frank of Mr. Platt, but in much larger letters they pro- claim, Calder.” represent @ housand 1916, and Manufacturers’ Asso- Y., March FOUGHT OVER THEIR CHILD. Draw Crowd and © Interfere. ‘When Joseph Letarte and Mr: Sullivan were arraigned early t Night Court, it was learned merly were busband and wife, the large crowd they drew to teenth Avenue and Forty-sixth Street was get possession of daughter, Maud Letarte. he girl been tat No. 469 reet. Thi yisived the' alder" @id not deliver the Congress nor did Represen- It was put into Gov- rnment print and sent free through ‘leave to secured from the an waa official rec- ‘words spoken on thon ir, Platt—Mr. Speaker: Avail. “ae 4 of the wish to say that lowing address was deliv- my former colleague, M. der, who a all probability will bo the next Republican nominee for United Btates Senator from the as ag i New York, Little Falls, N. Y., March 34, 1916. ‘Then the ‘was handed to the Loutse day in J be did n did tence. For A Long Life Life and a merry one—keep the liver active and the court a, clerk, who passed it on to the print- ors. The large envelopes containing the GENUINE vad ay of Hon. William M. SIGNATURE ba eg and postage of at least $20 por out of public funds, HE KNOWS. “Beware of the Wall Street touch,” remarks Mr. Lamar, starting for the Federal Prison in Atlanta, —_—-- I am a Major in the Army. I want to tell you that “Heimar” is the Army officer’s cigarette, In Mexico, in the Philippines, at every Army “Helmar” makes hard duty easier, it tastes like Home. “Helmar” Turkish cigarettes ought to have amilitary medal, The mildest tobacco for cigarettes Ie_Turkish The best tobacco for cigarettes Ie Turkish. Don’t pay ten cents, for anyhody’s cigarette y i ms until you have tried “Helmar,” a f. elevating, gentieman’s smoke. Makors of the Grnde Turkish Singrgyros ea Eqsptcn Coreen bard Merely curious to know which their ten-year-ol ue Since the couple separated three yearg 4 h living West fot a4 police were told t ughter last night, she start ‘The, ce wd

Other pages from this issue: