The evening world. Newspaper, December 1, 1916, Page 17

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Star Casino, Park Avenue and One and Beventh Street. Maurits Veng was Chairman of the day. ‘ ‘were about 3,000 members 7 ~-SAGE TEA BEAUTIFIES AND DARKENS HAIR ‘Don’t Stay Gray! It Darkens So Naturally That No- body Can Tell. You can turn gray, faded hair beau- Uifully dark and lustrous almost over tif you'll get a 60-cent bottle of yeth's Sage and Sulphur Com- id” at any drug store. Millions of of this old famous Sage Tea improved by the addition of gredients, are sold annually, known druggist here, be- the halr so naturally no one can tell it has a 3 ‘Those whose hair is turning gray or ig faded have a strprise await- them, because after one or two tions the prey hair vanishes your locks become luxuriantly ‘@erk and beautiful. <This is the age of youth. Gray- haired, unattractive ‘folks aren't wanted around, so get busy with ‘Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound to-night and you'll be delighted with your dark, handsome hair and your oe appearance within a few i jis preparation is a toilet requisite and is not intended for the cure, > eal or prevention of disease. — Advi If Your Eyes Trouble You In Any Way our registered eye specialists will examine them and tell you ~frunkly if glasses will help you. Examinations without charge by Registered Eye Specialists. y Batablished 54 Years flew York: 184 B'way, at John St. a3 Sixth Av. rgth 8t.| 350 Sixth Av., aad St. ror Nassi t Ann St. = 4 Wes ad Street, eeekiyn: 498 Fulton St,cor,Bond $t } interest. And raw materials, duction is io help comes obvious that this work must be raw materials, To a true knowledge of the situation, it is neces- Sary to first realize that Armour is not a producer of Armour's sole interest in such prd- oR RRNA eo en te A LAWYER’S BRIDE WHEN MISS M’ ALPIN WEDS ANDREW SHILAND HARRIET ‘ ce MSALPUN. gr3.c8%eunumm Announcement has Just been made of the engagement of Miss Harriette Louise McAlpin, daughter of Mr, and| Mrs. William Willet McAlpin of No.| 11 East Nineteenth Street, to Andrew) R. Shiland, son of the late Andrew land {s a graduate of Will- ; , and of the! a junior] nd & » date of the wedding has not) been set + beginning just heard that that said 1 have no au- nd 1 want her to 1 have rightly so. the farmer make it greater. The real work of Armour is to scientifically pre- pare and efficiently market the national yield. Rightly done, the result spells true economy to every American family. On even the most superficial consideration, it be- the cost to Armour of doing practically without change. And his is so. True, certain factors, such as reduced production, higher labor costs, etc., do affect these preparation and marketing charges somewhat, but never in proportion to the fluctuating market prices caused by varying production, How small is the profit that Armour receives for performing this valuable necessary work may be real- ized when you consider that the amount retained by this organization is three cents on every doilar’s worth of business done during the year! approximately but And this profit has_not_ increased with the increased price of foods! The actual fact of the matter is that, since Armour in no way produces or contro's production of Armour cannot Prices are the direct result of the inexorable Law of Supply and Demand. influence prices, | Anns pelle,” and returning to Sherry’ d Mrs. Shiland of this citys! | Mam Who +— ( Notes in Society Mr, and Mrs, Thomas Farrell of No, 768 West End Avenue announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Helen Gertrude Farrel, to Dr. H. MacDonald Peggs of No, 924 West Bnd Avenue, Mr. and Mrs, Edward Everett ¥fall of No, 636 Fifth Avenue gave a large dance last night in Sherry's for their debutante daughter, Condit Hall, Mrs. Henry W. Kalt of No, 124 East Sixty-fourth Street gave a dinner last night at Sherry’s for her daugh- ter, Miss Marguerite T, Kalt, and Miss Geraldine Hall, afterward tak ing her guests to “Good Gracto: for Mrs, Hall's dance, The first of scription dances for juniors, or} ized by Mrs, Daniel F. Kellogg an others, was given last night at the Plaza. The succeeding dances will be beld on Jan. 1, Feb. 17 and April 9, Miss Frances Taylor, daughter of i Mr. and Mrs, James L. Taylor of No. 225 West End Avenue, was married yesterday afternoon in the Church of the Holy Cross to Rowland A. Pat- terson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Rowlaud Alexander Patterson of this city, Mrs; Frederick H. Allen will give dance in Sherry's to-night for the sses Barbara and Joan Allen. Be- ‘ore the dance a dinner will be given ‘or the debutantes by Mrs, Joseph Sampson Stevens. Mrs. Willtam M, Dudgeon will give @ reception this afternoon at Ng. 964 Park Avenue for her daughter, Miss Helen L. Dudgeon. Mrs. John W. Dennis will ertertain similarly at No 875 Park Avenue for her debutante daughter, Miss Evangeline Brewste: Johnson, Miss Edith Myrtle Scherrer, daugh- ter of Mr, and Mrs, Franklin J. Scherrer of Tarrytown, was married last night to Harold Teed Frost, The Rev, J. J. Henry of Asbury M. E. Chureh offictated. Jw IS A WOODEN LEG A LEG? Sues Under One Employe DANVILLE, ML, Dec, *.—Can a man s for Injuries to a $110 ed to the full 1 fees and p ree wel anew limb. The courts will be © whether the Em- ty Act of Iilinols applies 8 while working on a road n by an automobile, which amashed his wooden leg. In Face of High Cost of Living ARMOUR Keeps Faith With Consumers! DAY, with the cost of livin most of us have ever known it, the pe of a concern of Armour’s importance in the food world becomes a matter of national It is expedient, therefore, that to judge with true American fairness, people should know the facts about what Armour is doing for them. Too often, heretofore, hus judgment been passed on a basis of only half-truths, Today's beef prices prove it. Armour’s selling prices on dressed beef cartasses are, today, LESS than they were two years aga. For our fiscal year 1913-14, Armour’s average selling price of beef per hundredweight was $11.98; for our fiscal year 1915-16, i¢ is but $11.80. The reason is that beef production during this period has kept pace with demand. And here it is highly significant to note that, for many years, the prices paid b: ducer for every kind of meat ously even relation to the prices charged by Armour for the meat after it has been between the two figures has hardly varied. When the farmers cost of producing meat has gone down, Armour's prices likewise have dropped. And never, unless farmers’ prices Rave increased, have Armour’s prices gone up. Yet, even when produc Armour's prices do not always advance in propor- Right at the present time, Armour is paying tion, over 27'0 more for hog than in 1914. selling price for pork oins (a barometer on other cuts of pork), shows an a‘vanc of less then 10%, Such instances, of course, utilization of by-products —another means by which Armour helps keep food prices at true-value levels for you, ARMOUR “*> COMPANY | CHICAGO t Miss Geraldine | higher than This is not a statement of theory. MISS ARMOUR A DEBUTANTE. Hetress, Famous as Patient of Dr. Lorena, Enters Society, | CHICAGO, Dec. 1.—Miss Lolita Ar- mour, the “Incubator baby” of twenty years ago, only heir of the J. Ogden Ar- mour millions, was presented to society last night. Miss Armour ts @ plump, | charming brunette and shows but a alight trace of congenital lameness, which Dr, Lorenz, the noted Vienna ex- pert, made two trips here to cure. ( She recently, wore khaki for a month in the women's training camp of the, National Naval Lea Miss Armour was Colonel of the n's corps: IF FOOD DISAGREES When food ies Ike lead in the stomach and vou havethat uncomfortable, distended feeling, tt 18 because of tnsufficient blood supply to the stomach, combined with acid [and food fermentation, In euch eases try the plan now followed in maay hospitals | and ad by many emines phys normal proc o find It inconvent hot water and tra ko hasty |storation of y meals poorly prepared, 6! two or three five-grain ¢ Magnesia after meals to pr nd neutralize the acid In thelr om= | DRINK HOT WATER FURNISH HER A HOME at'l or, tn other words, on the "ROYAL" Easy Payment n, and you will perier '59" Two Big Stores. Open Evenings. No Extra Charge for It. Advertisements for The World may be left at any American District Messenger office tm the city unt © P.M. It is a FACT, y Armour to the pro- have borne a continu- prepared. The ratio tion costs advance, But Armour's are due to scientific 4-101) (THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1916. FOR MOTOR CLOTHES FOR MOTOR CLOTHE: y \ (1) GO TO BRILL BROTHERS “GET THE HABIT.” FOR MOTOR CLOTHES Winter Suits re $ 1 5° regimental stripes, Dublin greens, Browns, gunmetal grays, blue, gray, brown and green flan- nels, blue serges, pencil and pin stripes, overplaids, checks, two-tone grays and browns, fancy cassi- meres, silk mixtures and worsteds. Boys’ Overcoats Suits and Mackinaws at $7.95 Overcoats— Belted and pinch- back models, gray and brown mixtures—sizes 11 to 18, Other overcoats, sizes 3 to 8, in chin- chilla and fancy mixtures, warm- ly lined Norfolk Suits--In mixed cheviots and blue serges, sizes @ to 19 Mackinaws Sizes 10 to 18, with bi warm shawl collars, in an as sortment of red, gray und brown \ Neckwear at 65c A wonderful — assort- ment of splendid quality Four-in-Hands for men and young men, in rich flowered effects, neat fig- ures and smart stripes, Shirts at $1.50 Woven mercerized fab- rics in a wide assortmen of neat designs; guaran teed fast colors; and won derful value at $1.50. O TO BRILL BROTHERS G HAE ‘GET THE 44 East 14th Street 2 Flatbush Avenue, Brooklyn 47 Cortlandt Street 279 Broadway These 5 Brill Stores Open Saturday evenings: “GET THE HABIT.” GO TO BRILL BROTHERS GO TO BRILL BROTHERS ar®2( Wonderfully smart, well tailored and finely finished Suits for young men, and neat, consetva- tive, dignified designs and models for men of more moderate taste and temperament, many of them silk lined, value at $20.00. 1192 Main Street, Bridgeport 791 Broad Street, Newark Mth Street—125th Street GET THE HABIT” Every Element of Good ‘Clothes Making Is presented to you in Brill Clothes at each and every price, to a greater extent than you will find them in any other clothing similarly priced anywhere—and we direct special attention to these Overcoats for Men $15 Scotch mixtures, heather mixtures, plaid-back gray meltons, black kerseys, neat gray, brown, tan and dark green mixtures. Ulsters, Ulsterettes, double- breasted Overcoats, Scotch Balmaroons, Box Coats, Belted Coats, Form-Fittin Coats and Chesterfield Coats, well made ind extremely serviceable. Overcoats at $20.00 Big, warm ulsters in grays, browns, plaids, overplaids and fancy mixtures; double- breasted and single-breasted; most of them with satin yokes and satin sleeve linings and hundreds of wonderfully smart blacks and Oxfords in form-fitting and Chesterfield models, Special all of them wonderfully good Velour Hats Special at $2.65 Rarely indeed is it possible to buy Velour Hats at so low a price as this — particularly when they are hats of this quality--get one; green, brown or black. 125th Street at 3rd Ave. Open Evenings until 9 Brooklyn—Newark—Bridgeport POR MOTOR CLOTHES SUNDAY WORLD'S “TO LET” ADS. Simplify Home-seeking by Saving Time, Temper and SHUHLOID YUOLON YO «LIGVH AHL Lad, SUAHLOUE THU OL OD SAHLOTO YOLON YOd «wLIVH AHL Lad, 1 THUd OL OO SHYAHLOU

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