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$1.50 eof Outing and play Shoes in tan and pearl. White ) leathers trimmed with tan Orgenianng 664 preparing higher price for multh “ty Aho 8 fo being Piseuseed Ht te protette farm joan benk oy new Rural & Lord & Taylor 3th Street FIFTH AVENUE 39th Street Store Hours in Augurt: 9 A. M. to 5 P.M. WOMEN’S LOW SHOES Reduced for Final Clearance to NoneC.0.D. $1.50 Styles and leathers are unusually varied, in- cluding all broken lines from regular stocks, Sizes are incomplete. No Returns Misses’ & Children's Low Outing Shoes Formerly $2.00& $2.50 Women’s Pumpa & Colonials Formerly $7.00& $8.00 $4.85 Smart styles in Patent Leather, Gun Metal, Pearl Grey, Ivory and Cham- pagne Kidskin, White Can- vas. Also White Buckskin Sport Oxfords. or patent leathers. Kikskin soles, comfortable and very durable. Becond Floor eet eee eee: Oe eRe SRN Ne NeRNC OS 9 S09 Soro 99 — 9 0 1 AT 84ST A SAVE Satarda Gur Liberal Credit Evenings ‘ Ry dersey at 6 o'Clock ors AN ACCOUS Mittra AUGUST FURNITURE SALE 25 TO 50% REDUCTIONS Special This Week—“'93, $m" 16" Alpine AXMIEASTER RUGS, 9x12. . $49.9 49 , or Living Room Suite, massive frames, maho ifully moulded, highly. polished, up hol hack’ and arms in genuine Spanish leath- HIS 1s a very charming little frock. It is made of shep- herd's check, in Nght welght ry wool, and it is trimmed with char- meuse satin in pale green. The color is charming on the black and white background and the frock is a very attractive as well as an essentially practical one. The two-piece skirt fs simply gathered and joined to the belt and the blouse 1s supplied with big patch pockets and with @ roll- ing collar. It can be held by @ sash, as it in here, or by a belt, Shep- herd’s check is always a good ma- terial for growing girls and ts both serviceable and smart, while tt ts of excellent weight for late summer and between seasons wear, but this agstm could be copled Ina variety Of materials, It could be made of Winen or of mulatea or of similar ashable material to be very sim- . OF it could be made of taffeta 10 ‘be more dressy fect, ¢ could be made of serge ah omitted. girls’ dre: would be © trimming of white 5 With rose color. Blue could be treated tn the same A color, but the uly fashionable gingham is ‘way or any pr rose color is os; this season. the he , ‘ adapted to design, and the enc! ginghamea = are beautiful fects, Up prettily, and altogother the A is a most useful one, for the simple frock an: designed for dressy afternoon w _ . _-For the 12-year size will be needed | ° 1% yards of material 27 Inches wide, | 4 ards 36, or 4 yards 44, with one 36 inches wide for ‘the trin { min The pattern No, 9171 ta cut in izes for girls from 8 to 14 years , Cwith of age. No. #174 Gis RUBEIAN Cull at THE EVENING WORLD MAY MANTON F, BUREAU, Donald Bullding, 100 West Thirty-second Street top te posite Gimbel Bros.), corner Sixth Avenue and Thirty-second Street, New York, ~~ - Die WIND’ ' --- ut the Lads Are Equal to the Occasion, as Becomes Bold Warriors. (Bye rom @ Bteff Corre: he Evening World) N Tee Aue ? doean't re in Tee wore the whe hee ved in thie part of the f five or #8 Yee “it } 4 anything else.” eaye the . who baw lived here for five or ok weeks The carpe et MoAlien, Mission and Pharr are drying out to-day, ae did Mount A Jove oerasion Saturday night wae the night of the big wind in thie section of Tex started to blow in Brownaville on Saturday evening and @ burt was unleashed and headed thi The pee way ple of Brownsville are good ne to tighten up tarpaulins, take a reef in the tents and bank the fires in the ok stoves. The hint was acted upon, but even at that @ sleeploas night was spent in the three camps, Tents were blown over in all of them, and F worst of the storm. But all along the line the damage was slight, show- ing how well the soldiers at the bor- lor have been trained to all exigencies of war, At thin place a big tent had heen put up for moving pletures It was crowded with soldiers when word | came of the hurricane, | A non-com, from the Signal Corps brouglit the news ofthe storm, and | sald that while he did not want to break in Charite Chaplin's game, he advined everybody to beat it while the b ng was good, ' ho soldier boys gave the Signal show out. up like @ balloon and collapsed lke Zeppelin struck by a ahell. The Twelfth Regiment, which has the) poorest location in camp, as usual got | tho worst of the deluge. | BOYS ARE TIRED OF DOING NOTHING. | A good many of the boya down here | want to go home. When the writer | was at Camp Whitman they all.want- Jed to go to the border. They in- | velghed against the inaction at Camp | Whitman and they are kicking about the same thing down here. And the men who are most earnest about their home-golng are not “sissies and mollycoddles."" ‘They are men who left business in New York, or good positions, because they deemed that they owed a duty to their country. | ‘They are men whose families have! | been left destitute, | Said one of the business men: “It jisn't fair to keep us down here it} there is nothing to be done, It isn't] |fair that @ handful of men should be | called upon to do all the work. There | was a situation at the border which needed the attention of the people; this country has men and plenty of |them who will always respond to its | call. But there ts a lot of men who want to be protected and then won't do their share. Corporations have promised to pay tho men in their employ during their stay in service. Many of these have already fallen down on their promises, It ian't ask- ing too much of the stay-at-homes to take care of destitute famillea of the men at the front, There 1s only one solution to this situation the an-| swer ia compulsory service.” | ), The rank and file of the New York bunch are good soldiers, They don't kick about conditiona which are the fault of the elements and not of their superiors. The storm on Saturday night was one of the best of the little hurricanes which occasionally sweep | over Southwestern Texas, The) soldiers went out to fight it just like any other enemy and gleefully told of their experiences on the day after. They are a good-natured lot, t fault-finders and professional kickers being in the noisy minority, ALITTLE MONEY WOULD CHEER "EM ALL UP, But there is one big kick on which the soldiers are @ unit. This is the continued absence of the Paymaster. The svldiers haven't been paid for the time they served as national | guardsmen, and they haven't been paid for their services to Uncle Sam. The Paymaster’s wand would work | magic in the three camps. Most of the men who forget their troubles if the ghost would only condescend| to_ walk, Division Headquarters yesterday received an order from Gen, Funston bearing on newspaper correspondents in camp, Any stories sent out re- fiecting upon the service, or upon camp conditions, not borne out by facts, are to be investigated, If blame attcches to an officer or soldier, the r will be disciplined, If the pondent be at fault, then his ‘es shall be withdrawn and his to substitute another r army officers arrived Jay to act as instructors National Guard, » Ideut. Colonel Paul A, Wolff, Majoras G. H. Jamerson and Frank M. Bamford, and Captains H, W. Miller and G, H. Huddleston for the infantry, ut, Col, J, D, L. Hast. man for the cavalry and Capt, P, W. Booker for the fleld artillery. Notwithstanding the lack of pay |days and news of home-going, the boys are not pining for what they can't get. On the contrary, they are full of “pep.” The experience has |done them a lot of good, and their physical conditibn is generally per- And mothers needn't worry t the snakes, the wild rabbits, untamed horned toads and the Gila monsters. When the boys found that such things were here they organized hunting clubs and beat them out of the bush. The horned toads are beat- THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, wot tha] § ie Corps man @ cheer and then saw the a At midnight the tent went p ing it back to Nevada, and the coy- jotes, ith their tails between their AUGUST 7, i916. | atone vot ip the cammp A eontey of cere, in partie and mouw peeicred ‘wet * . “wt * seriry lower le t be compe Il thought pew were my . ( buge' if there io ony et these we Fork hove cant » “ow * They ere not all full Medeed oul lot @ . ‘ Mewicnne . te bring The BIG Opportunity Is Here! Special Cd CS Each Madrasand Crepe Weaves, Coat Style, Soft Cuffs, White Grounds, With the Newest Stripes, in Many Colors Sizes 14 to 18 Sleeve Lengths 34 and 35 in. Ordered last January from one of the oldest and most reputable manufacturers in Amer- ica, who could not duplicate these shirts today at anywhere near the same price. Every garment was cut over a liberal pattern and finished with proper attention to every detail. EXTRA TABLES EXTRA SALESPEOPLE We suggest an early call, as these shirts will be sold quickly. Men who KNOW will buy them in dozen and half dozen lots. Sale Starts Tuesday at 8.30 A. M. Macy's Men's Department, Direct Entrance on Broadway at 35th Street. Storm The Tweety ancond Engineers 8,200 Soft Summer Shirts | AG PLA, The Electric Chafing Dish Because of the facility with which the electric chafing dish can produce any number of delightful dishes, this particular ‘Little Servant’’ has attained great popularity, It ie a highly important factor in table cookery as a result of its handiness and the low cost of ite operation All the standard types of electric chafing dishes, from $10 up, and other household appliances, are on display atour Show Rooms. For demonstrations of their useful- ness, visit any of our offices or our Bureau of Home Economics, 124 West 42nd Street. Attendants always “At Your Service” On sale also at Department Stores and Electrical Supply Shope The New York Edison Company At Your Service Irving Place and 15th Street—Stuyvesant 5600 Branch Office Show Rooms for the Convenience of the Publie 424 Broadway 8pring 9890 151 East 86th Street Lenox 7780 126 Delancey Street Orchard 1960 East 1asth Street Harlem 4020 10 Irving Place Stuyvesant 5600 #362 East 149th Street Melrose 9900 324 West 42d Street Bryant 5262 "Opes vndll mideight Night and Emergency Call; Farragut 3000 Broadway at Ninth, New York Half-Yearly Sale of Sheffield Plated Ware Prices at a third to a halt below today's siandard for copies of fine old Queen Anne, early Colonial and Shef. « field plated silver 4 $5,000 worth offered at $3,000, All quadruple silver-plated on nickel silver or copper Sample pieces, complete sets, and some styles that are not to be repeated, Meat platters, 19 to 28 inches Vegetable dinher steak dishew mn baskets ‘Teapots, odd ones Chop platters 16.60 Candlesticks to “ Serving tray -» $6.00 to $18 $3.76 to G11 ‘Toast racks ‘ % 92.60 Cracker and cheese dishes 75 Coffee pots, odd ones #10 te Compoter 2.00 $1.60 Varo ‘ $16 eo Loving cups $27.00 18 IN WANAMAKERS ing See: More Cotton Frocks for Women at New Low Prices $3.75, were $5 and 5.75 $5, were $7.50 and more Only a few dresses of any articular style. There is a variety of style and all sizes are repre- sented. Pretty voiles in flowered and striped effects; some in combina- tion with white; in- cluded are a few linen dresses. Plain and tunic effects, NEW | Wool Velours YorK Wool-and-Fibre Rugs Now Less | for Fall ° 27 EE" inches... 90 | ‘This new dress fabric) 9§ %®3 inches... 1.15 will be found in smart] 814x1014 feet.:! 6.50 Fall suits. The blocked| ® *1% ‘feet..... 6.26 check pattern is scarcely Reversible Bath visible on a dark back- Rugs—Special ground of 24x 48inches, en Peacock blue, Russian green, FSET sl teecinol Navy blue or Brown 36x72 inches 60 inches wide; $2.65 yd, Scrim Curtains for Very Little 70c Pair is the new cleara price on hemstitched alt cure tains in white and ecru, Every curtain is headed with valance ready to -be hung. 9c Yard for curtain scrim in white, cream and beige. House Dresses and Kimonos—Less House Dresses, $1 Were $1.50—checked cham- bray with gingham strap- pings. Kimonos, 85c Were $1—figured lawn with elastic at waistline. This Smart | Velvet Turban | Copied for $7.50 The most distinguished turban that fashion has | created for the new season. Although it is elongated it slopes all round until it suggests a mushroom—and this charming line is em- phasmed by the velvet which is not. fitted close to | the frame. ‘The newest trimming—tiny ruch- ings of taffeta—are introduced in | the wide band, A cockade of breast gives the necessary height to the | ebupeau, Our reproductions of the new | modes in velvet—at $3.50 to $7.50—are particularly note- worthy. Striped Taffeta in New Patterns The color combinations in- SS Low Shoes for Women, $2.20 Pair All are Wanamaker $3 | and $3.50 shoes which have been lessened in price only for the reason that the | | clude blue with brown, ’ | brown with green, brown! Tange of sizes is sig com- | with blue. Alternating with| Plete in every style, All th is a satin stripe, A) 512°, However: are to be | hairline s-stripe gives found in this collection, the fabric smart plaid! Pumps, Colonials, Oxfords, effect, Dull and Patent Leather, 36 inches wide; $1.85 yd. White Canvas