The evening world. Newspaper, January 11, 1917, Page 11

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Dy pagent NRO Nea” Mh phe THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, JANUARY encourage or shame citizens into tak- ing hold of the situation directly. It also is educating the ignorant as to the actual danger to health and life that hides in rubbish.” The league hopes to enroll 60,000 school children during 1917 as “Block Captains,” whose duty it will be to soe that their block is kept clean. To stimulate an interest among school children the league is offering $50 in cash prizes for the best essays on lit- ter, WOMAN FEARS FOR LIFE. William Whitman, @ horse owner and trainer, whose home ts in Boston, was arerted yesterday in the lobby of the St. Francis Hotel, No, 126 West Forty- seventh Street, charged with having threatened the Iife of Miss Marion Winstone, @ guest of the hotel. Detective Devaney ays the horse- man, who recently became acquainted with Miss Winstone, entered her reom on Christmas Eve and threatened her ) With @ revolver, Such @ weapon was ‘ound yeste fective” a ‘50,000 WHITE WINOLETS , NEEDED TO CLEAN CITY WAnti-Litter League Wants Enroll Children in a Block Captain Corps. The Anti-Litter Learue hold its an- Meeting at the City Hull yester- Qnd discussed plans for the year Mad methods of getting public sup- It also elected John C, Eames jont, to succeed Clarkson Cowl, GAA Fe-slected the other officers. Beveral representatives of city of- Were present. In opening the Mr. Cowl said in part: ~ “The league is trying to keep parks ‘Gnd streets an free from trash as they ‘@fe just after the municipal cleaners have Anished with their work. It Understands that most of the dirty sala of streets and recreation is due to thoughtiossnes: “The league is an organiza Women Should Patronize Honest Weight Dealers; to Housewives Realizing the Need of Numbers to Make ment—Short Walk in Marketing Is Often Big Money-Saver. By Sophte Irene Loeb. Housewlves are urging members mot to by bread from grocery stores that do not give full weight, They aro urging a further study of Riverside Drive for terminal market’ facilities. Women all over the city are collecting application blanks to increase the membership and ask to conduct pubiic meetings. These are tho principal features of the day's mail relative to the development of the Housewives’ Pro- tective Association. | A number of letters set forth the fact that tn va- rious groceries in the city the loaf of bread is shrink- | Honest Advertising fs @ topic we all hear now-a-days because 60 many people are in- Nat) “ee y, ing in size to gain the penny, clined to exaggerate. Yet has any Lastforntneche'i you that we claimed Cents Roe tee This ts piney artificial. There is no legitimate Unreasonable remedial properties for Fletcher's Castoria? Just ask |reason for it. Tho public spirited housewifo {s urged to take or send We won't answer it ourselves, we know what the answer will be. the small loaf to the Bureau of Weights and Measures, as the member ‘That it has all the virtues to-day that was claimed for it in its early days | mentioned below has done. to be found inits increased use, the recommendationby prominent physicians, | If every woman would take an ac-) | our assurance that its standard will be maintained. tive interest in rooting out these evils, | eh aa oeaterdae TOL a: habia Imitations are to be found in some stores and only because of the Case | sho would reduce tho p bilities of eiiber oP the Lavtacey Board of 6 ‘toria that Mr. Fletcher created. But it is not the genuine Castoriathat Mr. fraud not only for her own sake but | New York Terminal Commission held Honestly advertised, Honestly placed before the public, and from for hundreds of mothers with little | that the city would lose the posstbill- | he Honestly expects to receive his reward, children who can't take the time to | ties for future terminal markets un- do 60. loss such facilities were definitely in- The Housewivos’ cluded in the forthcoming contracta, elation ts Riverside Suffico it to say that tho interest of Protective Asso- studying the Look for the | f S at the club smoker can make a Cut out this coupon, fill out and mail to the Housewives’ package. | hit by offering Luden’s to his “neighbors.’’ Luden’s sweeten the breath after smoking. Have many other uses. , LUDEN'S taney COUGH DROPS Protective Association, Evening World, Post Office Box 1354. 1916 Name .....2-cccccccecccenccsonsses nmscseccce coceee Address ..-. weverccccecce I desire to enroll my name as amember of The Evening World’s Housewives’ Protective Association. Inclose 2-cent stamp and membership token will be mailed. Doctor Says Crying Need Of The \/oman Of Today ‘ Is More Iron in Her Blood TO PUT STRENGTH IN HER NERVES AND COLOR IN HER CHEEKS, ere eecoccore the housewife must be conserved in this gigantic scheme. Various members have expressed the opinion that every possible ave- nue for market facilities should be left open on the river front. Close attention will be given to this matter, Another vital issue is Increas- ing the membership. Every woman who will volunteer to be captain of her district is Invited to secure members, Upon request @ number of ap- plication blanks will be sent to the captain, who can attach a two-cent stamp to each which she has secured from the housewife. There are no dues or fees of any kind, The two-cent mp ia merely the means of mailing the coin of. protection \v each house- wife. As stated in these columns, one woman would have little or no effect in the is involved, One hundred women would mall impression. But thousands of women, 100,000 women in com: bined energy, can demand and get Justice in the direction of home economics, The organization already numbers | linto the thousands, but a hundred |thousand members can present such + Any Woman Who Tires Easily, Is Nervous or Irritable, or Looks Pale, Haggard and Worn Should Have Her Blood mined for Iron Deficiency. | ' Administration of Nuxated fron In Cliica! Tests Gives Most Astonishing Youthful Strengti and Makes Women Look Years Younger. rosy-cheeked 4 other troubles in from teu to fourteen days’ imply by taking tron in the proper form, And er they had in some caves been doctoring for months without obtaihing any . But don't take the old forms of reduced tro ate, or tincture of tron, simply to The tron do- manded by Mother 4 coloring matter in the blood of bh not that kind of Bread Loaf Is Shrinking 33 Pees 8 Protective Association Effective Push Enrol- \\O Sun *eousanas ot athorenta {dons and show, as indicated in the circular, that it 1a only through @ very heavy enrolment we will be able to accomplish our object—the | creation of terminal markets and a etter Food Commission—which Is going to bo of great benefit to us all. It may bo a good idea to hold a I attended, The entire subject could then be discussed before the house. wives of the Bronx In a direct and plain manner, and with the use of in the Bron. Tire housewives could then enroll and take the coins at the meeting, Tho women aro willing to Join, but they esy the method of pro- cedure ig @ little too long. Kindly send me @ few circulars such as the incloged, | With best ge gid bye and) thanking you for your kind efforts. No, 886 Fast One Hundred and Fifty. | fifth Street. | —-—>__—_ | AMELIA BINGHAM DEFIANT. | Will Not Leave House Pledged to Brokers or Pay Rent. — | Thomas M. McKee & Co., brokers, yesterday asked Supreme Court Jus- tice Cohalan to order Amelia Bing- | ham, the actress, to vacate her home at No, 103 Riverside Drive, The bro- 6 are foreciosing @ $25,000 mort- which they assert the actress | gave to secure her stock account. | Receiver Henry Keale said Mise Ringham has refused oither to leave the house or pay $250 monthly rent for it, say ehe had lived in the house and atill retains an equity tn it — CHILD GETS SICK, (CROSS, FEVERS | IF GONSTIPAED Look at tongue! ‘Then give | fruit laxative for stomach, | liver, bowels. | \ | “California Syrup of Figs,” | can’t harm children and they love it. A laxative to-day saves a sick child to-morrow. Children simply will not tuke the time from play to empty their bowels, which become clogged up with waste, liver gets sluggish; stomach sour. | Look at the tongue, mother! If coated, or your child is listless, cross, feverish, breath bad, restless, doesn't eat heartily, full of cold or has sore | throat or any other children’s ailment, give @ teaspoonful of “California Syrup of Figs,” then don't worry, be- cause it is perfectly harmless, and in a few hours all this constipation pol- son, sour bile and fermenting waste! will gently move out of the bowels, and you have a well, playful child again. A thorough “inside cleansing” fs ofttimes all that is necessary. It should be the first treatment given in any sickness. Beware of counterfelt fig syrups, Ask your druggist for a 50-cent bot- tle of “California Syrup of Figs,"| which has full directions for babies, children of all ages and for grown-ups plainly printed on the bottle. Look carefully and see that it is made by the noaliternis Fig Syrup Company.” —Advt. (HOLZWASSER| 1617-1423 THIRD AVENUE \ § FURNITURE! Cash orCredit| OPEN EVENINGS TILL 9 O’CLOUA ; XY | irony, Fou must tike fron in a form that |@ strong front as to procure legisia- can be and assimilated | thei ‘m: o wereatthe tact that to"ao'y Rerrines it aray | on One SNeC AON OF Soule ent ized the fact that prove w : desired, The wisdom of this must foctors ‘a ‘It have taeg ‘@ Iron widely in| be evident to each member, my wn practica in mosi| mhe jettors follow: condi: | or thet *| CAPTURES A SHRINKING LOAF ° thelr nervous, run- patients. | FOR MR. HARTIGAN. ‘The skin - 0 ‘Te che Editor of The Evening World | mente NG tain "regard | Tincloso ten applications for mem- Great power as | bership in the association, and I sent you fifteen members before, “| have all got the They “coin,” and I sh Ny. ‘Plood of Ww pplioy go from thelr chi applications, Not many women have stamps on dQ and prefer that I get stamps, and mall the applications my- Yo insure their membership I lad to do this, Thousands of women will not walk mply two blocks if they can help it, I pur- posely bought @ rye loaf of bread to- at 4 sinall store in a very modest n (it measures not quite nine ae a and 18 about the sizo of the 4ge man's wrist around), at 6 Brave tron | t r i on wpherefors, if you wish to preserve : Youthful vim ai ‘exe, you must m1 jeney in your food by w of ofRanic [rc 3. I looked so astonished that the man sald: “Do you want the 5+ fv" I replied: “No, for that only @ few inches." some for you would wu: enough gait, sioner Hartigan, This is & grocery etore noted for harging more than others. Why, in common sense, will wives buy such loaves of bread for thetr hard-work- >} ing husbands ead hungry, growing children? ‘ergento tro Sihength builders. If people would only Dr, Ferdinand King, New York physician and author, tells physicians that they should pre- scribe more organic iron—Nuaated Iron—for Hons and take simp! wed iron, am that the lives of ho " 4 i asada, : It {ts a erlme when, within two fom, Papua their patients—Says anaemia—iron deficiency there aro three fine family Teart , —is the greatest curse to the health, strength, Miata bcaniatsittaalt aeuanen vitality and beauty of the modern American olls, doughnuts, fancy bread rolls, 3 th: be W d. : that grocers charge 1 cent aplece weakened condition ‘oman—Sounds warning and even 2 cents for, Middleman's ton by tho lack of tron in the TF aogingt use of metallic iron | erat fend of mino got six mall po- ‘| tatoos for a 15-cent quart, My ves- ne | « ae man gives nine and ten of good wa | size, “| ‘Thank heaven, I haven't the cor- ner store “rut” and can walk, * MRS, VIRGINIA WILKINS, | No. 207 West Fourteenth Street, 3, | SUGGESTS MASS MEETING TO ENROLL BRONX WOMEN, To the Exiitor of The Bvening World I received your circular, read ft “On account of the pecullar natyre of and great drain placed upon m at certain petidds, she requires oh more than maa tv help make which may injure the teeth, corrode the stomach and do far more harm than good; ad- vises use of only nuxated iron. ated Tron, which 19 preserib pended by phyoicinas an y of ‘absolutely necessary to en- into livt aay ih two five-grain tabdletg of Nuzated Iron 4 for Ber three times per day after meals for two nt woeks, then teat your strength again ang ce how much you have gained. I bave oe Y Geen doxene of nervous, run-down people 1 i ry make the ‘following who were ailing gl) the while double their ormnt oe 1) refuud your | carefully and went to work at once 2 me: strepgth and endurance and entirely rid dow vot as logat doibie wou wate | to try to add to our membership, 1 ke oF ho re you Tink becoming lined’ West tebe themeslves of-ell eymptoms of he al goed trnantite. Aarne re: lad if you'll send mo more mem- | nding the loaf to Commis- | am doing my best to spread your! m Apartment $275 | | (AN lost or found articles ade ¥ertised in The World will be Usted at The World's Informae ton Bureau, Pullteer Building Arcade, Park Kows World's Uptown Office, northwest core h bt. and irondway, Harlem Office, 16: Vorid’a Bor : World's ‘West 125th St, and Brooklyn Office, 202 Washing= fon St., Brooklyn, for 3O daya of ie, following th: Revises eo printing 11, 1917, Subway at Da) | Astor Place New Y 3,600 Pairs More Fine High-Cut Shoes for Women, $4.40, $4.65 There is a constant influx of these fine shoes into the Down-Stairs Store. These Pekan J 8,600 pairs arrived here within the past three days. A large manu- ‘acturer is working to capacity filling a se a contract order placed with him many months back before costs of leather began to rise. Sixteen Styles with 8-inch Tops; Variety of Leathers Fashionable Colors and Combinations Bports shoes of dark tan leather. $4.40 pair. Black kid with gray kid top; plain toe, Louis heels, All white nubuck. $4.40 pair, (Pictured.) $4.40 pair. = Pearl gray nubuck, Dark tan leather with fain toe, Louis heel. 4.40 pair, py suede top; medium . i heel, imitation tip. All tan leather with 40 pair. {imitation tip. $4.40 Dull leather with pair, (Pictured.) suede top; medium low Pag a aa ara eared White nubuck with Iml- All tan leather with me- bes tif an apna age nies lew Ree, tmiva son flat heel, imitation ‘wir oP ver pair. Ple- tip. $4.40 pair. ie, fe 0 , imitation wi ‘All bieck Hid, Loule boots, ieation tip, 908 | cin'eaUMoninre ON a Deel Imitation YRS pair. Dark brown kid, Louis heels, plain toes, $4.65 All dull leather, Louis heels, imitation tip. $4.65 | pair. (Pictured.) pair. Black kid with white kid top. $4.65 pair. Owing to the unsettled conditions in the raw material market we cannot quarantec that we shall be able to get any more of these shoes than the number already contracted for. This is sufficient reason for you to take immediate advantage of this unusual offering. Friday and Saturday in the newly enlarged Down-Stairs Shoe Store. HAND BAGS, $2 —A Sale With leather costs up as high as they are and silks and velvets expensive, this sale of perfect bags at $2 is most exceptional. They are bags of our $2.50 to $5 grades—morocco, seal, suede; black and colored vel- black and colored silk the velvets and silks Sectional Bookcases for the Home--Prices Reduced We have taken 15 per cent. off our regular prices, in order to make a quick stock-adjustment before inventory. Examples of the range of prices— Standard Styles Art Mission Styles aille; H Golden oak, five sections. $18.60 | Fumed oak, five sections... $18.58 mostly embroidered and tas-] fumed oak, aix sections... $20.25 | Mahogany, five sections...» $2: seled with beads. Mahogany, five sections, with Oak, five sections...... . $16.70 Mahogany, five sections. $21.40 PORES Pee eee ae ‘ Imitation mahogany, 5 sec- Chippendale Period tions (including desk). .$29.60 | Mahogany, six sections..... $35.25 Office Furniture Store, Second Gallery, New Building. Some are samples, some are desk small lots the maker found in his stockroom. All are new—ready to wear with Spring costumes. Main floor, Old Building. The building of a man in the likeness of man with qualities of man te beyond the power of man. But what man DOES, man can duplicate—can place it in a thousand places at one time—can endow it with a life that will long outlast the man who did it. Mascagni one day played his incomparable “Intermezzo” on the piano. As he payed it, a record of his playing was taken—every note being recorded as he pressed each key, the record showing every manner of tone and tempo of his playing—like one takes a photograph of a scene. He played it wonderfully. He was in the mood for playing it—perfectly. Mascagni today is in Italy. But if you have in your home an Ampico Reproducing . Piano you may hear Mascagni play for you this evening, you may see the keys sink as if his fingers pressed them—just as his fingers did press them; you may hear the music he played—just as he played it. Miracle-Music? Even if Mascagni were here, and if he was coming to your home this evening—he might not be in the mood to play as he played that day. And yet wherever he is you may hear his immortal ‘‘Intermezzo,” perfectly played, whenever you want it, as often as you want it, in your home—-if you have an AMPICO REPRODUCING PIANO, man’s most marvelous accomplishment in the field of music. Or you may hear any one of a thousand piano classics played by any one of a hundred of the greatest living masters of the piano, AMPICO REPRODUCING PIANOS Ampice Upright Piano (foot pump), $585 Ampico Upright Piano (with motor), $750 Knabe Ampico Upright Piano (motor), $1,100 and $1,200 Knabe Ampico Grand Piano (motor), $1,800 and $1,950 TERMS to suit each purchaser, in reason, Used pianos taken in exchange, Piano Salons, First Gallery, New Building. Vine te ote CaS oe

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