Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
: ; - ' ; yj f | i 7 3 ey ' oe CX There is one sure, sate way to avoid a blotchy, pimply skin. A good or bad complexion comes from within. If you want « clear complexion, a clean skin—tosy cheeks and good health, your blood must be pure and the pol ter must be carried off. jsonous mat- Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets assist nature to remove all poisonous waste matter in the system. They act ‘on the liver and bowels like calomel have no dangerous after-effects. They are reliable—safe and cannot harm — are used everywhere, Constipation is nearly always the cause of all ailments of women, The intestines must be made to do their work as nature intended—in anormal way. Take one or two tablets night! hf hote the pleasing results, ‘All iste—10c and 25¢, - Adv: by women folks “Save the Pieces” to Broken Glasses.” .We duplicate your lenses “from the pieces” without prescription — accurately — while you wait or in a few hours. Lenses at 50c, 75c, $1.00, ote. Established 54 Years ‘New York: 184 B'way, at John St. 223 Sixth Av., 15th St. 350 Sixth Av., 22d St. 101 Nassau, at Ann St. 17 West 42d Street. Brooklyn: 4 Pay the “ROYAL” Way. Only $1 Weekly BEL WEEN 11912051 people 200 in ten 4 inatance: if it falls 1 expiani 100" FORFEIT fortett | "RE “First Aid || CHICAGO'S LEADING PAPER Tribune, Republican, Repudiates Office of State's Attorney. CHICAGO, Oct. 16—The Chiengo! Tribune, Republican, the leading pa- per of the Mid-West, to-day ed! torially repudiated Harry B, Miller, Republican candidate for State's At- torney of Cook County, Chicago, and advocated the election of William A. Cunnen, candidate of the Socialist party, Cunnea ran for the office four years ago on the Bo- olalist ticket and was po close to election that he went to court, His followers have since claimed he was counted out, Miller's nominathon on the Repub- Mean ticket was advocated by Mayor Thompson and the City Hall follow- ing. The Tribune has opposed Thompso to his election, Four tn Auto KiMed by Train, | OBERLIN, Oct. 16.—John Hughes fr, wealthy etock breeder, bis wite, | one daughter and Mrs. George Hol- Ungsworth were killed Iast evening {]when an Interurban car struck the automobile in which the party waa | |crossing the car tracks In front of the Hughes country hom ‘The on- gine of the automobile failed when the machine on the track. “Ha, Drat You! I'll Get You Now, Old Corn” “watt tM this Pierce's Corn Plaster gete nf~ ter that corn!” 98 Fulton St., cor. Bond St ~ *NUXATED IRON Increases strength of delicate, nervous, run- per ever met @ corn it covidn't conquer—money back quick if it dosen't do the work for you. Pierce's Corn Piastera aren't 11_ others are thin, tight little bia anywhere after a corn a It gives just the right zost to soups, fish, all meats, ores and salads, 1 0c t Grocers and Delicatessen Stores, Made by E. Pritchard, 331 Sgring St., N. Y. No. 0209 (with basting, line and added ATHERED nce) AITS AT SIDES, 24 to 32 walst, ite 1) at THE BYENING WORLD MAY MANTON FASHI BAU, Donald Building, 100 West Thirty > Gimbel Bros.), corner reet, New York, or sent in coin or stamps for each IMPORTANT—Write your address plainly and always specity Fite wanted, = innu uses, If the day ts mild, It can be worn with « fur scarf, as it ts here, and on a cold day it can be worn beneath any top coat. It ts very smart and at- | tractive, simple withal, so that be worn for the morning + and it can be worn to the mutt even to the hotel tea with propriety. Here it is tris Diack velvet and with wh cloth revers to make a very @nd attractive effect, but you could copy the drese in various matertuls, and you could treat it in various ways, Woot crepe makes pretty indoor dresses, and ts of good waight for the @athered blouse, Taffeta S*m & frock as this one serves and trim it with serge to obtain the| costume effect and at the same time | reduce the weight and warmth for indoor wear, The taffeta gown would | be pretty with the collar, cuffs and | belt embroidered with beads or with Party Nominee for Important | containing | Company: HE WOOED WITH HARDTACK. \ in it and tossed tt out of the window, + | hardtack and corres Housewives’ Protective ’ League Lays Plans to Do | Some Watchful Working First It Will Solve the Milk Problem for the Babies of the Poor— Demand Comes From Neighboring State That Branch Leagues Be Established There—-Women’s Letters Prove a Grow- ing and Widespread Interest. By Sophie Irene Loeb. Hundreds of women are joining the Housewives’ Protective League. Application blanks are printed daily in The Evening World, | | No money required, The coin of protection will be sent on receipt | | of the application, This coin is a signal to the dealer that you are a member of the league, which already numbers hundreds of women, backed by The Evening World, Only a few days has thls project been Iaunched—this organization of women who will direct energies to fight the high cost of Iiving and | promote honsehold economies. The great ory of the big problem confronting every family is mani- fested in every communication recefved, | Many of these are from surrounding States and cities, asking whether women outside of Now York’ ® York are eligible; also whether auxiliary leagues may bo formed in various sections of the city and adjoining | districts. The Housewives’ Protective League wil] welcome any housewife who hag the interest of hor household at heart, no matter where she lives, and encourages any group of women of any given vicinity to get together in the interest of promoting the common welfare as outlined in the purpose of the league. Any such group of women will please notify their intentions to this office and the help of the league will be extended; and all interchange of ideas of importance will be printed in these columns. Among the first activities of the league will be to look into the milk question. For three months the prices are to be unchanged, during which time an investigating committee will go over the situation and recommend what the price shall be to the consumer, The housewives are the chief consumers. They are most con- cerned In the results obtained by this investigation committee and arbitration board. ‘THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, OCTOBER Now Jersey and New York, but in to the point where they want to organize, the good results, also to hear what 16, 1916, other States which might Piso get Child Badly Burned at Piny, lgnited. She screamed ne tee - w ted Chriat-| tan for help. Policeman Coffey i. Iam much interested in this, and 1 shall indeed be glad to read mancenndiey in the. yard of her home| kart Hamiign ation ahd fo Phteest * ) and I shall indeed be glad to read | yesterday afternoon the dress of elght-| Wrapped their. coats about the child end you have to say to my above sug- [year-old Jennie Ractisto of No. 1150|put out the flames She: ls in Kings MRS, M. C. JANKE. Sixty-sixth b Hospital badly burned gestion. Very truly yours, Main and Sixth Streets, Woodridge, N. J. To the Housewives’ Protective Leng IT am of the many who are grate Now, to start, in one of your instalments in The Evening World you it Is nearly imposyible for a family of four or five to get along on 08: eful to you for starting this league. The Perfect $25 per week. That may be so for some families to say, but what about people who never see half that per week? Where you have to take rent, gas and other things out of the wage a‘ and the rest is for food and clothing, and if any 1s left, which is not e likely, to put in the bank for a rainy day, I should think you would pi aver Piano base your work on about $12 a week. Now, I and others who are int base your good work so families ea’ and enjoy a little luxury also, and not live like a beast of burden, who has nothing but forage. Yours truly, EMBERSHIP. eee Name... SHOE PRICES JUMP; LEATHER IS SCARCE Advance by Wholesalers of From 50 to 75 Cents a Pair is Announced. PITTSBURGH, Oct. 16, -—~ Wholesale prices on footwear havp been advanced Therefore, the Honsewives’ Protective League will, in the next three months, do some watchful working. It will co-operate with the State committees In finding conditions that make the prices, as well as with the dealers and farmers. Every side of the question will be ex- amined in an effort to conserve the rights of the individual consumer. For the big question of milk is only settled fon three months. In the words of Loton Horton, President of the SheMeld Farms-Slawson-Decker “It all depends upon a trial of the present plan. Tt will take a couple of months to find out whether we can make any money under {t.” And Food Commissioner Dillon said: “That was the understanding when wa reached an agreement, The Committee of Inquiry will make a thorough investigation of the cost to the distributer.” Also the Wicks committee, tnaugurated by the Legislature, will be here again next month to go irito the matter. The Housew!ves’ Protective League, in the vernacular, will be “on the job.” INTEREST IN EVENING WORLD MOVEMENT GROWS. Following are some significant letters from housewives that speak for ; themselves: The Housewtver’ Protective League of The Evening World: I would like to be a member of your league, and I wish to say the first thing the league should do 1s to fight the raise of milk. Why, the bables in this country will have to suffer just as much as in Europe if we don't stop the high prices. How in the world can poor people pay for the milk? Because tho farmer asks for a cent or two cent raise, the publio has to pay, not the firms. They must get their profit. “Of course the people are to be blamed, because we simply pay and don't bother if it costs a few cents more. That {s the reason we get overcharged. We have to stop this high-price business, and the women have to do {t, Tam so glad tho noble women of the Federation of Women’s Clubs are on the co-operative committee, Tam a mem- Hgtle share. Yours truly, ber, and I would like to do my Hf Ne ERROR, No, 448 Bainbridge Street, Brooklyn. League, New York City: + In last Evening’s World I have seen with interest an article on the high cost of living, but I notice that only the women of New York are invited to become members of tho league. Does that mean, I wonder, that women outside the great city have no intefest in their homes, or does it mean that ft 1s not necessary anywhere else to re- cost of living? oS The Evening World organize some such league tn Jer- sey in one of the Important towns, which might {n turn be able to organize in the smaller ones? And instead of this league being one 50 to 75 cents a pair within the last seventy-two hours, and certain lines have been withdrawn entirely from the market owing to a shortage of leat! according to an announcement mi yesterday by officers of the Pennsyl- yanin Shoe Travellers’ Association, ‘The Organisation, which | fe composed of aniesmen from various parts of the United States assigned to this terri- tory, was formed yest lotters were DARKEN GRAY HAIR LOOK YOUNG, PRETTY Sage Tea and Sulphur Dark- ens So Naturally That Nobody Can Tell. 4 from manu ° Hair that loses its color and lustre, or when it fades, turns gray, dull and life-| less, is caused by a lack of sulphur in the hair, Our grandmother made up a mixture of Sage Tea and Sulphur to keep her locks dark and beaut iba, and thousands of women and men who value that even color, that beautiful dark hair which is 60 attractive, use old-time recipe. t this famous mixture } lition of other ingredi- ents by asking at any drug store for a 60- cent bottle of “Wyeth's Sage and Sule poe Compound,” which darkens the wir so naturally, so evenly, that nobody can possibly tell it has been appl ied. You just dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, tak- ing one small nd ata time. By morn- ing the gray hair disappears but what delights the ladies with Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound, is that, besides beau. tifully darkening the hair after a few applications, it also brings back the glass and lustre and gives it an appesrance of abundance. Wyeth's ge and Sulphur Compound is w delightful toilet requisite to impart color en | @ youthful appeatance to the hair. It is mot intended for the cure, mitigation or prevention of discase.— Advt. confined to the City of New York, make it a State league, not only in Open Saturdays Until 10 P.M. We Close Evenings at 6 o'Clock Schultz, of Lindet traintoad of through Ram dsmen who passe , to the border some | (@ months ago, The soldiers were having |f dinner ae they entered Ramsey. He scribbled his name and regiment on plece of paper, wrapped some hardtack | He came to De: Miss Kiimper, an: burst, pastor of the First Methodist Church, bad a Uttle wedding job on| Saturday. silk threads. gown, the mo ean be @rately. The skirt ts for the tailored ¢ with odd wats pretty as taffeta or of ¢ Georgette crepe or of simpler handkerchief lawn and cotton voile _ to be worm over the odd skirt or with @ sult For the medium size the blouse will require 2% yards of material 36 inches Be des serving for the | as wide, 2 yar 44 with % of @ yard 36 inches wide for the collar, cuffs and % yard for the revers; for the skirt will be needed 8% yarde 36, 4% yards 44: tt is 3 yards in width at the lower edge he May Manton pattern of the blouse A ts ont in sizes rm 34 to 44 in a of the skirt > from 24 to 82 inches w Bixth Avenue a: M L—— ' STANDS FOR Mentho Laxene |, Cold, Cough and Catarrh Medicine for Young and Old, .g9. IN AMER _You buy it of any well stocked drug- /i gist in 21% oz, bottles and take it in| @ ten-drop doses, or better yet, mix it with simple sugar syrup, made by dis- solving 44 of @ pound of granulated | sugar in @ half pint of boiling water. |& Tt is so easy to make a whole pint of | [O cold and gough syrup that tens of | thousands of mothers make it every | year for their loved ones All agree that this home-made cough | syrup is free from harmful drugs, and | i that only a few doses are required for| each case, so that « pint last a fam- ily throughout the winte: on, For colds, catarrh, cough and bron. chitis there is nothing superior for Prompt, lasting relief, Guaranteed by | the Blackburn Products Co, Dayton, [ | Ohio, to please or money backa—Advt, 42 inches long long, with tri ror; 4 pieces, size; SI NTI a OT TI eT ay MANN &.BRO 4-PIECE WILLIAM AND MARY PERIOD BEDROOM SUITE, WALNUT With beautifully carved French plate mirrors; consisting of DRESSER 24x30; CHIFFONIER 34 inches long, mirror 16x30; TOILET TABLE 40 inches oleate mir- ED in full 8 illustrated, $115: Our Liberal Credit Terms Apply Also Cut out this coupon, fill out and mail to the Housewives’ Protective League, Evening World, Post Office Box 1354. 1 desire to enroll my name as a member of The Evening World’s Housewives’ Protective League. Inclose 2-cent stamp and membership token will be mailed. erested in this will hope you will ning @ low wage can eat and live Waters-Autola Player Piano is as near MRS. W. QUINN JR. APPLICATION WATER PIANOS for over 70 years have set a standard of quality and durability of tone and construction that {is the last word in pianomaking. Low prices and very easy terms, with no interest, make it convenient for you to buy a Waters now. Write for catalog. Horace Waters & Co. 134 Fifth Avenue, near 18th St. Three Stores Open Evenings 127 W. 42d St., near Broadway 254 W. 125th St., near 8th Ave. 371 E, 149th St., n'r 3rd Ave. Oct. 1916 eer eT eeeee reer ieee e rire) ———— facturers announcing an advance of 37 to 60 cents a pair on upper stock and 8 to 10 cents 4 pound on sole ieather, #. Altman & Co. A Specially Prepared Sale of MEN’S AUTUMN FURNISHINGS will be held to-morrow and Wednesd aisccaninealatateelaenen ed piomeaveceanemet teats It will be an event of more than ordinary interest, affording an opportunity for obtaining new, scason- able merchandise at marked concessions from regular prices. MEN’S NEGLIGEE SHIRTS with soft or stiff cuffs; presenting a great variety of attractive patterns . « 2 6 2 6 - SLIS & 1.35 - . MEN’S FOUR-IN-HAND.SCARFS featuring a variety of effective designs and color effects, at 2. 6 6 6 ow ew lo ew hw ltl BSc. & $1.10 Of unusually rich quality silks . . 1.35 MEN'S PAJAMAS Of fancy cotton materials . . Of outing flannel . «. « 27 per suit $1.20 -_ persuit 1.18 . . . MEN'S NIGHT SHIRTS Of cambric ¢ MEN'S UNDERWEAR Medium-weight Balbriggan Shirts, with long or short sleeves; » and Drawers to match, in regular or short length, each 65c, Medium-weight Union Suits of white ribbed cotton, with long or short sleeves, and in regular or short length, + 53c, ) to Long Island, ws New Jersey and ICAN » Mirror 0O MEN'S HALF-HOSB Of black silk, with cotton soles , . . Of black lisle , persult. . + p+ 85e > per pale 78c, per half-dozen pairs $2.35 MEN'S LINEN HANDKERCHIEFS Initlaled (all white). . + « per dozen $2.30 & 2.50 With colored Inittal . + «© «© « per dozen 2.50 Plain, hemstitched . + por dozen $2.50, 3.00 & 4.10 With corded border . . per dozen'2.45 . . . . (Initials or monograms embroidered to order, Orders for tho initlaling of handkerchiefs for holiday gifts may advantageously be placed now.) Fit Avewue- Madtamt Avene, Nem York Thtrty-fourth Street Chirty-Anh Street e TELEPHONE TOO MURRAY HILL, fect as human brains, experience and work can make it. Its wonderful tone is matchless. per- ESS)