The evening world. Newspaper, June 7, 1916, Page 3

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Vee tee j PEACE TALK OVER PHONE BY ROOSEVELT AND BORAH Idaho Senator Comes Ov Out for Hughes and Plans Are Made for Naming Com- | mittees to Bring Harmony. (Special From a Staff Correspondent of The Evening World.) CHICAGO, June 7.—While George W. Perkins has been holding the Moose herd in check, conferences have been in progress that make it) possible for some of the leaders of the factions to say peace is in sight.| ‘These predictions followed a talk over the phone early to-day, with Sen- | ator Borah of Idaho at this end of the line and Theodore Roosevelt at the other. There is talk of the appointment of a joint conference by the two conventions for the purpose of arranging a compromise Senator Borah and other Republi- ¢ a cans who have been working bard) gaig, come here as he did in 1912, b for harmony for several days, Ye8-!inis time to remake what was unt terday afternoon completed thet) made upon that occasion, Others canvass of heretofore uncertain WeSt-| wore openly skeptical at this sugges. | ern delegates, including those from) 4i4y_ California, Washington and Oregon.| ing the world outside of Chicago, Senator Borah entered the lists 48 89} ine Keen interest balloting, with unqualified champion of JUstle®) i eiiminaries out of the way, cannot Hughes, declaring that “nobody mutt be satisfied for at least forty-eight Hughes could win against Wilson hours, with the possil exception of PEACE TALK OVER WIRE BY Toi. pijoregsive conventior ents R. AND BORAH. n the next twenty-four hours may Senator Borah ai once sv *' show striking developments and in- conference with George W. Herkin® dicate strongly the probable selection While at Na 8 ether Fie ff ty) of @ certain man for the Republican held a telephone conversation With’ ination, but as yet there is no Roosevelt. at Oyster Tae , Lal ess Ap certainty what the delegates will do had concluded the telephone talk) ok they get under way on roll call. with Hoosevelt and the conference, i THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7, |Noble Women of France Do Not Weep _ But Give Husbands Sweethearts, Sons, To Save Nation, Says a Grande Dame Comtesse de Perigny, an American, Reveals Brave 25 00 SUF, iy 1916. Spirit Animating Women of Her Country, From Highest to Lowest, and Tells Why They Cheer- fully Watch Their Men Go Out to Be Maimed or Killed That France earey Be Preserved. Her French Sisters—Tribute to the American Am- | bulance Corps—Nursed Her Own Wounded | Husband Back to Health at Front—Laborsas Head of Nursing Staf’ Broke Down Health. By Nixola Greeley: smith. A brilliant woman seldom acts or talks like one, { wick and of Helen C, Bostwick of 800 Fifth Avenu tinuous service at the French front. She ha rest, but intends to return to France in July. | Heartening Up the 1e Fighting Men Is Sacred Duty of; Give Mary Garden jor Geraldine Farrar two days to study the part and I'd back her against) Major Oswald Arthur Gerald Fits- | Mary Woolstonecratt or Charlotte Bronte to impress any man that ever lived. | gerald, Kitchener's military secretary, So it did not astonish mé yesterday to find that an The Comtesse, daughter of the late Jabez A, Bost- broke down as the result of seventeen months’ con- ‘ome to America for a brief 1 saw her yesterday at the BRITISH BLAME SPY FORDESTRUCTIONOF KITCHENER CRUISER ees All Hope That War Minister Escaped in Boat Is \ Abandoned. June 7—Hope that Bari Kitchener of Khartoum, British Sec- retary of State for War, might have escaped from the wrecked cruiser Hampshire on one of the four boats that were seen putting away from the doomed vessel after she struck a mine hor was d by a submarine off Orkney Islands and reached some snely spot ashore was practically di pelied to-day by the announcem in the Datly Express that the body of torpede ‘has been washed ashore. American woman, educated in England, presented to There seems no doubt that I"hz- me for the first time my ideal of a grande dame. gerald would have remained at the Which is, perhaps, an involved way of saying that. “!!0 of his chief, and if he lost his life the Comtesse de Perigny, aead of the nursing staf of aay practically sure Kitchener is the French army, who has Just arrived in New Vork.! xo irace hae been found of any of is one of the most perfect thoroughbreds | have ever |), four. boats seen by observers dol tshore to put off from the doomed armored cruiser, and it Is believed all were swamped by the high seas that were running, Not aman of Kitchen- er's party or of the 655 men on board the vessel survived, ue, , still being carried on by the Ger-[o'« years olf, who had heen mission mans. a week from North Petham, @here The text of the statement follows: | l@ owned « dru ¢, was found In the west of Soistons two Ger.) {le He One Me man i bathala, which were endeavoring |), ; ih ‘ities aie to cross tae river she, were dis par ment be Wiekha Recently persed at a point ne oy. The bin on « wile ond daughter to fire of our artillery destroyed several | ' M + father, Rob- observatories of nemy east of] ‘ t * N.Y. of @ Nouvrons “In the Argonne district, a Fille Morte, we caused the explosion With success of three mines. “On the left bank of the river Mouse there has been artillery fight: 4 ing in the sector of Hill No, 304 | | tal ) heard from In the sector of the Caurottes Wood “On the right bank of the river a strong German attack yesterday ave- ning, at upon Fe Vaux was broken by the fire of our} machine guna. The enemy was driven } back in disorder, isaving numerous dead on the field of battle. ‘The Ger- man artillery responded with energy, about § lock, and the bombardment of Fort Vaux . and the region iinmediately sur! nding it ues Hi 5 In the Vosges there has been ant VY ea intense vardment of our first! lo ~ ete line positions at Hartmansweiler | eS Kopf.” > | ot LAY Kb: WOMEN AND A RING. | For June we present « striking series of Mid-Summer . Datler sa Me aae Sold tt and Kept the Money. Modes—chapeaux that are de- Mra. Adetine Hong, fifty years old signed daily to show style’s lat- William H. Hoag est caprices. Refreshingly new sina ie es ee tp + at a time when most shops are Hiortaw 6f the BITHORA content to show only what re- vey's offlee, after indicument. b mains of their Spring Stocks. Grand Jury for grand Invceny. Judg | Crain in General Sessions committed Mra. Hoag to the Tombs in default of | $1,000 bail to await trial The first model, illustrated above, isan all-white eccentric crowned sailor in genuine Panne celeet, Mre. Julia Butler of Piatisbure, who; faced with Milan Hemp, wom brought about the indietinent of My derfully chic and wonderfully in- Hong, told the Grand Jury that in Jan-| expensice. Alvo developed in wary, tou Mra. Hoag w Intrusted tw oll black with Lisere we dia 4 in unusually rich pro- inones ' Boas (33. 25s $5. peated demand return of the lent alr Made better and priced lower because we are the foremost boa makers of the industry. Don't think of buying one any place but Boa Headquarters Kinin Sather ring butw ith no succe Hoag denied she iad stolen. th For several months We widow and rela pated all of It _>--— YAQUIS AGAIN RAIDING. piety Brookiyn st Neue . tad nue Near airaeaniesammarnnnmaasiicaiiae ipa cear GUAYMAS, Mexico, dune 7 Gv radio, AOL to San Diego) The Yauu Idan ol — reported to-day to be active again in > southern Sonora, in the vicinity of the) settleny onthe Yaqui report said a hand killed yen we raid near Bs weee no foreigner are read 3 Roasted Be ean i Bar | with Mr. Perkins the Idaho Senator] BY TWO FLEPHANTS St. Regis, and she told me with that absence of drama, which invariably Retr id tt of Datrol boats and admitted that he “was better satis-| GERMAN ONSLAUGHT WINS 1) | characterizes the dramatic, the story of the women of France. Hee AGEs aly fled” with the pr $ for harmony | “Tam French from the top of my 4 “4 ae y p since} ” he already have been recovered. than he had been at any time ' TRENCHES FROM BRITISH head to the tip of my heels,” said the (pital suggested that we the des-| Whether the vessel was hit by a he arrived in Chicago ! | Comtesse and her red hair flashed |perately wounded men and let the: 4 4 art ; ater Mr, Perkins | a ¢ old France| lie ull day with their wounds exposed Wine or torpedo will probably never be Some time later London Admits Occupati f Fi like the orifamme © to the sun's rays, We k known, since she went down in water emerged from « conference with sen-; London Admits Occupation of First which the early Perignys defended. |{?,{he sun's rss, We kept the wounds | HOU ike te ator Henry Cabot Lodge of Mass Line Defenses Near Hooge | JI have never talked for anewspaper.|hnealed under three woeks of that te however, a wild ete that German setts suid that the outlook for fantr “| " ‘ fan , tory of the | treatment that three ed every ory a Peer at a FST Naa SACO After Infantry Attack. | Parade in Chicago and Carry leacen ep eases Pont ake Seana | closing under osinnrs eemioatae 18 | spies in London learned of Kitoheners tions wa ighter.” | LONDON, June 7.—-Admission that Votes for Women” ail that America believes French women | ae ate PL te spomtesse wane ety to bbl cats aay Fhese incidents were followed by | the Germans by an infantry attack, to the Republi are discouraged, yet to-day France 18) was the most interesting of all, This | Cem Which had poate lying | the announvement that Mr. Perkins, following the explosion of mines, oc- o the Repubdhican: \the strongest of the allies, the most|Was in Paris, at Val de Grace, once a | “ait for the Hampshire had vetucd the Progressive plan to| cupied a section of British first line removed from the thought of an in- coaveor, taunted by Louis XIV, ang; As if to give basis to this rumor, print full page trenches north of the village of Hooge| CHICAGO, June 7.—To urge an equal! conciusive peace. If 1 tell what T Thee German oie day a bospital., the British Government has Issued @ throughout the count Uinich sthtement of the British Was |Suftrare plank in the Republican| have done it is only to make known | miles of Pari within eleven vigid order that no person will be Col. Roosevelt, Wi Otlice to-ds Platform, 25,000 women marched down | wnat every French woman has done. ,,Hicven miles!” | repeated Incredu- | Permitted to land io the Orkney Is- hat abandonment of advertising, German attacks on the line between | Michigan Boulevard to the Coliseum, | 5, rR lands in future without a military 1 H 1 the Ypres-Comines Canal! | For to-day there is not a woman of) wi vitainiy,” the Countess replied, t. va n had been ordered came tho | Hoos a aie Mey ue s-Co! at where the convention opened to-day. the beau monde—of the noblesse—|matter-of- Misuse “they got a great pda , h rr ) that the two conventions foliar : From every voting unit in the Unit | who ig not working for France, We/duai nearer Paris than has ever been | It ts eee ves shen the Frene to-day w m name con gs ed States women got in line and urged A admitted officially, They were go, CToss-chanuel steamer Sussex was wre all nursing or making bandages r Ferenee committees “to arrange for JAPAN STANDS PAT ON CHINA. | tne sumrage plank or tanipbbia) or sheetal oe, shirianior | Who, we por sunnah rem eee | torpedoed by a submarine, the state- harmonious wetion” hetween the two) =| two classes of women marched—the | engaged in caring for indigent wom- each’ ed Teady’ to slide. onto a move.| ment was semi-officiaily made that enth ns “tree” women, those who ulready have | ences roryce and with a blanket underneath the | the Germans violated thelr pledges to was forth ventions to Cagse Any CHORES ef Fe) the vote and the women from the pring #0 It could be wrapped around | America and almost brought about a Ge ‘ TOKIO, Japan, June 7.—A specially, The Comtesse was @ volunteer nurse |the wounded man in half a minute, | diplomatic break only because of their ee llanea tle, derikadaitaad we the Cabines was summoned tes Where equal suffrage has not lin the Boer War. She has studied |The commandant of the hospital |ievormation that Kitchener wae on SIDI RD te USYRIS BEd BONY Fossa une to consider the situation in| *ét been granted medicine, She is a woman of the|called the nurses before him. There | {mformation th neenen er friction ‘0 4 minimum and prevent} vving sesulting from the death of| Rain and muddy streets did moti word, And we were half way | Gorse ene Use He sald: | ae cue Lord Kitoh h dual nomibation nS oak) ae a ae are eleven miles away. 1 ossor to itchener has ual nominat ; dent Yuan Shi-kai, At the con-|dampen the ardor of the marchers. |inrough our interview before ahe| will probably take the city, ‘ie they b eho RG “4 the names of TALK OF ROOSEVELT ON QUICK joiu-ion of the meciing the Foreign! At the head of the procession Miss! mentioned, quite accidentally, thatjdo, there is everything to fear, Let| Oren Chowen, thou! 3 TRIP TO CHICAGO oe tad decided Hot to make| Portia Willis, pretty New York suf-|wnen she was presiding over the|® ¥ nurse who wishes to leave atep aye var Serra ohh boa The plan, if materialized, then will \ny pew political move im regard tol fragist, ¢ i arelhy out from the line.’ Not # nurse) nitions: the Larl o vs be presented to the two conventions! hina : fragist, drove two huge elephants that) “cjearing house of the wounded”! moved, ‘I am proud of you, my chil-| charge. of Kitchener's recruiting Hi % NL) Yuan Hung has succeeded yo] carried a heavy plank with the word) pack or the lines at Vitry-le-Francois, dren,’ he aatd. That was all. Then! pian, and Earl Milner are mentioned for ratification, and there were men} ,),°) \ in accordance to the| “Suffrage” painted in large letters} her husband, the Count de Perigny,| Paris was saved—saved by 8,000 suil- | DAP 4 on the ground to-day who already bad [Chines Con-ttution, Japan has decided | yon 41 OF SORE oe) ewe B0Y+) Gora brought the day before from | However, it Is more than likely that Mla eed cae hale GMty aadiatnoLTON NOE auly new political move in| UPR : ; ‘i ik was brought in among the wounded—| foyion” | Gan. Bir Willa Hobert Ropartsc, at least—a spectacular reunion of the |), ajar will adh tO 1a BAe A slatingtion was made in ha P&-| so badly wounded, indeed, that at] “I thought it was Gen. Gallient’s| Chief of Staff, will be chosen, Rob- the PY aaaine Ina ‘come, to] Pade becween the twelve “free” States) arg, nis own wife did not recognize} taxicab army of 100,000 that saved | ertyon, however, cannot serve unless HE aaasetne oily i ltnvinn cand . Pct £91 (the eleven with full suffrage and Mli-| him Paris.” 1 objccted. | Tee aed to the Peerage #0 ha can n this connection it was sul © and orde Ore: : me, de Perigny shrugged her | he House of Lords, or secure and ord vis a res ve 7 7 the hy some that the arrival here ye remier Count Okuina presided at to Pee oe ae anal dealt ‘Comte de Perigny knew he waS/ American shoulders very xallicaily. | 4 tection to the House of Commons terday of George B, Cortelyou-direct | day's meeting of suffrage), “and the thirty-six States) coming to me, and I knew vaguely| "Those territoriala were good for po-| in a by- election, j dion: 6) Hi e natant arene which have not yet granted equal vot) thet he was fighting somewhere in| licing Paris, thee wae all,” she said. — Om | Oye eh = any BRO MESS 5 to wome 4 th 8,000 sailo; PiCErANGR GE DUAN RA VRNERREEAT. t,| SUMMONED FOR CONEY FETE! ins priviteges to women Champagne when he was brought in| ott. j7ae ihowe 8000 satlors shoved al hose coming: may seer Twelve pretty girls bearing th®! in an automobile with five other of-Jagainst the Germans. It was those | Roosevelt. whi names of the twelve “tree” States) qeers, | did not expect to see him,| Sailors that set fire ea ~ gf edeeod of | were dressed in white, Thee were} and for a moment I did not recognise | Carnpiesne and burn ane “f g violation of the! followed by thirty-six girls dressed ny} him. He was badly wounded jn the ASK YOUR GROCER FOR] sindis inw in connection with the|» inore sombre hue and bearing the| Shoulder with shrapnel; he had had| HER COACHMAN EXEMPLIFIES, VeAmeciean Liberty Day" of two horses shot under him, and with SPIRIT OF FRANCE, lebration at| name the thirty-six States mot] tin, Nichols E Co.Inc. | Spe : : the second horse he, too, was Injured.| There was a brief pause. Mme f y last Sun pn een New York | : lang | beving equal suffrage | But when he came in he was sitting| Perigny thrust a slender right hand, | ihe, | parade was given under the: up in the car, Otherwise, [ think, }{ punctuated with a great. peurl,| ‘ the! auspices of the National American | Should have cried out or wept, but J] through her russet hair, “I could | ti Thonipacn wnged | wom un Suffrage Association, Mra, 2M happy to say I have not wept) talk and talk and talk and talk, and Michael darobsy| K M Brown, President of | eset rar teen: not make America understand the that pandie Harrison Monro Brown, President 0! ‘And when your husband was| wonderful spirit of France,” she said. : a 4 s , sackinan, programme Ulinois Equal Suffrage Associa- brought in, what did you do?” Lasked|*I have kept all my servants since (Continued From Viret Page.) Flood, ticket takers! tion, was arade committee chair. , tis slender, supple creature with the| the war began—that is, I have paid | Of Snead way, | toil WAP SHO DETRCR CORLDIOP ON AIES | seal of mthals them when at the front, and [ #aid to) young and it in believed by military PURE FOODS ees: which were) man, “Why, [ put him to bed and nursed|them when they went away: ‘If you| "ours, and i “ ‘ eed eee! Six hundred women school teach-| him back to health, as T had thou-|are wounded, your home ts alwayw|men here that the veteran troops who The World’s Best. Murphy: f, letrate said) ers maretied, ‘They had as their | sands arniuetee wpthe, Comtesse an. | open tO ots, Coens Bake My o96chs had been witeeremn AIDS ERE took the. action, with th sais ed simply, “He is well now, ex-|man had his orn open with] sian front to take part in the Italian Everything for your table put up 7be matter, will come wp, in| Mascot A goat. »,| cept for enteritis, which wil the deep|ehrapnel. He came home with | ofrensive have been burried 11ck under the *'Sunbeam” label. Is. when the cases of the| “We have so often been the goat,”| wounded get, perhaps from shock| three months' leave, but at the end of a plan hora La thee (Pa gat ore sal nal fwith Dineking the Sabbath) 4 one of the schoolmarms, “that and the utter demoralization of} three weeks he returned. ‘My com. | toward the Bessarabian border. Order by name=—"SUNBEAM.” so ud. “Phest waxes! q gout is the most appropriate em.(|Rerves which comes with a deep|rades die at the front,’ he told me.| Vienna officially adiits that the Insist on the genuine ned to-day \ on we aan aha | wound, ‘Can | stay here, idle and safe?’ So | Austrians have been forced to with- ne “pape cunt F AMERICAN NURSES IN FRANCE returned, Six months | N draw before the Slavs from thei: Phe “Rovers,” garved in specially ARE MARVELLOUS. were frozen, He was | - ea tailoved suits, formed one of the nat- |. , me back to me, But to-day he | lines north of Okna to “positions pre- a Nh Th y é mobilized with the French frst) takes iy carriage and goes to the| viously prepared @ little more than | re t groups in lint ey were the army,” the Comtesse continued, “and| hospitals to ask the wounded to g0| three miles to the south.” This means | adjutants of the parade, They were!1 think | may now that France! for a drive. He carrics them tobacco t sttecti nave f th Mrs, John A, Carpenter, Mrs, Charles |4id not have twelve competent nurses that the first effective impress of the W. Kayser, Miss Edith Wyatt, Mise moet, che War began. The French an aunt," Mme. de Perigny | Russian drive has been made at the All.the- Way-by- Water lei i vatt, MiSs) Red Cross 1s all very well, but In time|added. "she had five sons at the} tactteally and politically vital point Grace Abb Miss Agnes Forman | of peace you can get its certificate|front. ‘Three of them have been! at the front under attack just north PE scary a encehire -ddiibeskcoalsy; by serving four months at a dispen- | Killed has not shed a tear, ‘1 At ' Rs Mate he Superb Steamships Ghiet of Ho Charles C. Healey |Sa"Y) While five months! service wins] gave iny sons to France,’ she saya of he Busan) Bessarabian bor Ry Alrite & Be you a diploma, Now when you have] Na 'woinan weeps in France, Every | the Russian successes are Massachusetts and Bunker Hill fj aud jf imeunted squad “headed the !{hiy ‘diploma you may’ be competent] eignt monty trains pass tiroveh the | fellewed ups Czernowite, the of the Metropolitan Line Hi Fairbank, grand mar. Sa tcMa sR Lut oot tte na aes i rt oodles kta Bukowina capital, is once more are now using the And Yellows followed. lending ete | for shrapnel wounds or tetanus or gi Tt is wo} seriously threatened, and an in- PRA A Ine Onin Mt etaae poisoning, So in the beginning most! to the stations just to se vasion of the Galician crownland Rbroast Hor chief aides were kien (Of OUF Work consisted in even if you have no loved ome, no| weuld go far toward bringing Joseph T, Bowen, Mrs. Mary H, Wil. |DePses to the gront and h friend on them. ‘The trains coming | Roumania into the war on the warth, Mise Mary M Dowell, Miss | ° back from the front are filled with sorrow- de a tha aiitel {]] Katherine B, Davis, Mrs, Julive Ro. |ainted at sik ful, dejected, discouraged men, The| side of the ‘ senwald and Mr: erine Waugh | Std, war nuraing ts pract trains Koing back are The Russians seem determined to bs ae Hane. eh, ant to say nen latching, singing. break through at any cost and are On their daily trips between | s of the National Board of | pervien ine Ans work af (he womee of France hurling massen of nion upon the Ause Thus offering to the Travelling Public Miss Jane Addams of Hull House |Beatest problem. Fou aed laughs with amuses him, Despite their successes, the Rus- one of the most Fascinating All - the - Was unable ta walk and rode in an | they were ahunted into. al DIE Te StS ae erate ak sians are permitung no details of Way -by- Water routes in the World. “Aithough the parade was in charge of |Pices, Including stables gotta ppt Roce back | their offensive to leak out, though a ng ay the National \Weman Associas |fVCr there is @ horse to the front a new soldier for France, | 16M ge | from Vienna, by, may ot : My sola anus germ, ¢ cally out words of encouragement | Amsterdam, declares the battle Is in- Always in Sight ¢ of Land J} one the Congressional Tnion of Wome Pai He calle out wordy ot re comene ment! creasing in fury all along the front, a GURTagS FAPICIDRIOG, | to-day ev om t on tho Rubifians throwing wave attel CHANGE IN LEAVING HOUR FRO OIRO CURR ORRCAeL Ue mba (RR tay Mie RD} Gur waren give oF themselves: | Rave Of ta ES the > ane @ Coli- im give up th usbands and r apparent on, The Massachusetts and Bunker Hill now depart from New || ead of the parade and into lh 1 ; oe Ae oe eae tons mit L have given |#iving the Toutonic defenders no re- York and Boston Week Days and Sundays al 6 o'clock in- | Ue oe Orne Oe Un AReR mov my husband and inyself. 1 served be Whatey ; stead of § o'clock in the evening, as heretofore, and are Adtaihnte te: Bie vont ihe inkentinn ce vim: seventeen months Then my health The Russian trops are countless,” scheduled to reach Boston at 7:30 the following morning, the a Suffrage plank in the Republican nua tell EMt broke down. My ayes falted.. Tapent | the message says run of the Steamers thus being fixed at 1]] platform: will bo made by the National se Deaianitie ce tho tame Che erent inva Berk room, & month tA sj 1314 Hours Between the Two Cities | Asasoletion Gepesea to Woman Suf- st. Die, in the Vosges. i eee a aertogth Hutt am, GERMAN LOSSES HEAV) 4 rage, which has appointed a committee tached to a hosptal behind ¢ " vt ‘ O MACK "AU Instead of 15 hours when the route around Cape Cod {s used. Nevaiy noalnt’ the ingradueeons OF | ienens hospital behind going back in Ju he Comtess IN ATTACK AT VAUX, the fase before the convention, ar ended FRENC rt 1 _>_ — REPULSED BY RENCH Distance via the New Route 260 Miles cording to Mrs, Arthur Dodge of New piso i ATEEL From New York, Leave Pier 18 North River toot of Murray St ° f dhraham Sen 1 3 @ repuise of a From Boston, Leave North Side India Wharf i by Stepping Ps ie Wectacna oA ar Inside Rooms with Electric Fans, $4 } Lina f No. 61 Madison bless fously Ww US: ay ? on tne Verdun line, watt FARE $4 outside Rooms, § |: A nalpten working on ALalmnal | USNS LPR U SOME nO te) Gaara ong returned it foo firm of iemaat aetna alt iskavae ia >) Tiokets and Information at Pier, also af all Tourtet and rver the New Haven taliroad ors, ‘The wounded filled ali the Frond Street brokers. They were | ooioced in an official statement New York Transfer Co. Offices. | eond Miresr and witlow Avenue, the Is in Nice, ‘There we undertook so grateful they gave him a mcd by the War Office to-day alt alt : Trans, to-day atepped on an clectrg for the first time the sunlight trea ante ; at of ta =) feed Wire and was shocked (o death, ment, The commandant of the hos- sled wer Violent bombardment of Sor = AAA UAAL AAA at our Fitth Ave, Showrsomel | ‘This beautiful Crepe | de Chine Dress at $9.25 \s but one cxainp'e of the radical reductions | we are moking in | Silk Dresses Sport & Beach Coats s $3.75 (a wide variety at $7 cacl) | This 19 4 good oppurtunity for you to see our splendi | New Stock of Palm Beoch Su and Wash Dr BE CURIOUS! Vist Our Showevoms, Vou will not by atte bey he The HAMILTON tinea" GARMENT Co. Combination «fet ‘ Now 9.25 307 FIFTH AV.,21 VADAD ALATA AL WAL Wwata Readers of The Evening World buy approximately $40,000,000 of Housefurnishings, Utensils, Carpets, Rugs, Furniture, Draperies, Upholsteries, etc., in a year. Ky = $s Na = The World is the logical medium PSB through which to tell them what you have to sell, A Special Service Bureau for the preparation of copy, illustrati and lay-outs, and to suggest merchandis methods at your commend, Without Charge RARAARARAGRANAIR d)

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