The evening world. Newspaper, January 15, 1917, Page 3

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: THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, JANUARY _— 15, 1917. An Efficient Worker NESS W MAN Who Enjoys Her Work THE WOMAN IN. BUSINESS ‘SIN BusiVeSS To GET A KUSBAND A Man Hanter Whose Life Object Is Marriage MEATS JUMP AGAIN; LENT PRICES 10 BE | HIGHEST IN HISTORY Lamb and Pork to Be Advanced Wednesday as a Warning to Consumers. | WOMAN W BUSH Te BUSINESS Woman) LIES HER WR l te. Y ta Pected in the next four or five weeks, ~ fetall butchers on the lower West As a warning of what may be ex- Side, from Fourteenth Street to ) ‘Thirty-fourth, informed customers to- | “hay that lamb and pork will be ad-| ~Mvanced at least 1 cent, probably 1% cents by Wednesday. They sald there a Was no assurance of any decrease in “beet, In spite of the extraordinary eaquantities being stored throughout @!\ the country. Of fifteen retailers interviewed to- {aay by © reporter for The Evening o* World, nine gave it as their opinion SQithat the packers and speculators are filling the warehouses in the hope of ‘ing up the price of meat during lent to the highest point known. A There were no indications this jorning of any further advance in Wholesale prices, though it was ad- mitted beef, lamb and pork probably would hold their own for the day. James J.MManrahan, a wholesale butcher in the West Washington Market section, urged the formation of wholesalers and retailers’ organiza- tion to prevent further increases in meat. “For several days,” he sald, “the big wholesalers who have direct con-| nection with the retailers and know what they are up against have seri-| ously considered the formation of a} protective agency. F ” fe SEAN iz That’s Distinction Drawn Between Two Types by a Trained Business Woman, Mrs. Elizabeth Sears— It’s the Woman in Business Who Considers Her Job an Expedient, a Half-Way House on Road to Altar; She’s a Man Hunter and Stalks : Her Prey Where It Most Abounds. Yersonal londinese 1S a problem _ I€ you have worth and know i& you Can get ‘more money Hare yourself efficrent and poverty wil be temporary By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. There {s the Business Woman, And there is the Woman in Business, and that is something else again. The distinction between the two types is clearly and cleverly drawn by Elizabeth Sears in the current issue of Harper's Maga: | ckers need not} try to comfort us with the story that) We benefit by mutual storage of meat | zine. Mrs, Sears herself tx, emphatically, a business Mera euacation were ts keting woman of the first class. At present she 1s the editor now the last advance to the whole- of Film Fun, and it was in the offices of this publica- salers would be shown to be bide tion, No, 226 Fifth Avenue, that I found her and asked Piuamentune to-day on The Bve-| her to discuss more at length the two variants of the . ning World's showing up of the type of woman worker, the Dr. Jekyll-and-Miss-Hyde | ie extraordinar cumulation of beef, of the downtown world, whom she has studied for, !¢8* Money than she Is worth fre- CRUISER MILWAUKEE pork and »b in Warehous°s q. ahy years. quently ts responsible for her own throughout country and the “Passhat Ak bolt de | predicament, We all know of offices sioner Dillon of the State Food and | CdAIGMSE UA VAD FSUHTALIVE OES HORE TAAAE AASIERE: EPMA which some woman—otten her Markets Department said: 2 pagan te! . employer's secretary--really is re ’ <’ who enjoys her work and is willing to make {t an end “Publicity based on ponsible for the success of the bus- Hope of Floating Stranded Warship ungqus more | in itself, The w in business views her job simply as an expedient, a|iness but gets neither the credit no a pe 4 and more ency to | ; Taal he altar. Sh 10) Uunbiy Bs Bnvespectenty # | inewe but eats /neltier the oredit sol) “Given Up cur Big Guns May on uns ral tendency | halfway house on the road to the altar. She works because she bas to, and | tho money she deserves. She may be artificial processes at the expense of | 8he cherishes a sullen resentment against the world in general and her job| to blame for this situation, She may Be Saved. “Certainty + Wants to do so, ie should marry If she 5 sands only forty-eight hours, she Is With Lieut. say that a girl must be wend their paid a certain abounds. beginning to break up. cation es= he gegen diane nig: eae tedlacied MME woman | w, I’, Newton, commander of the Mil- nd! MARRIAGE, NOT BUSINESS, THE | If she wants more than $6 a week let) make of tet Mary | waukes, an expert engiieee qnade &. up food sup speculative pur.| BE-ALL AND END-ALL OF LIFE, | her study and equip herself to earn a man makes visit to the stranded cruiser and p trated all sections of the vesse two returned with the mess: there was no possibility of getting the \f she decid: | larger salary. that bi ecom: poses will soon ¢ titfon Is the one the hold of the sumers."” 1. Honest compo- | a . a er | ing that can break], “I don : ean nen ® Lasssnpedaih | “It seems to me t nan pros- | packers on the con-| harshly," Mrs. Sears interrupted her- jtitutes herself mentally when she says self to explain, “Lain simply deserib- to have children, her business, for the time being, to the exclusion of other work, a wo But propinquity in his downtown | world overcomes his reluctance. that she should,” Mrs. Sears remarked q. an old home nade remedy that will iis of washing, wending, Kansas City broker's clerk, to sewing | Wells end such a cough easily und quickly, firmly. and darning with which women who | day 1a formal plea of not guilty Get from any druggist “21% ounces “It is the woman in business— | WHERE A GIRL CAN USE GUMP- Tole ay freed trom such friction) in connection with the murder in a of Pinex” (50° cents worth), pour it) with the emphasis on the woman TION TO ADVANTAGE. hotel here lust week of M. Simon , | “A man won't even 1 was bound over to the du into a pint bottle and fill the bottle put the [andi was bound over to th nd jul who is re | and not the busine small salary, Studs in hie shirt if he can get without bond. Bepin?taking it wt once: “Gratuaily | sponsible for the critical eneere CeLUldl Conti that ahh in inva: trannion||. ACURA PRMORGHT cieRCaRE Crane lac WURMTD an ienetisestant aL plant but surely you will notice the phlegin | bestowed on all of us though | i124 oe development and should uso, Pears on hie coat, he sends the | the ove he Je getting ready to throw thin out and then disappear alto-| there is not more than 16 percent. i siicion in making the most of her| ofendina | ¢ merey of the court when ipecee (tit encling song that you of her, She exploits her sex in eine. while studying hard to it! ter, The busine being kept on Wells as it 4# feared he never thought would end, the office. She works cheaper be- herself for scynething bette: earns a good ay attempt sulci =a Pinex is a most valuable concens! gauss she isa woman. She wants ; iy ' perme, > ee 7 ¥ 7 “Ll agree ith you completely o arate apo Ming with puaioagr | the window apntinually up OF /anat point" 1 intervened, wit one in| $e" emake f cnt COMMIT IDA VON CLAUSSEN. End is used by millions of people, downs she hinte for candy of | ior i it seems to me that living In| laundresses ametressre ef | oareneret every year for throat and chest colds flowers and theatre ticket SHA hedsoon, Dea tAnt na pint their right to earn a living.” Canrt the with splendid results. embroils the entire office in petty Fmllle dinineon tan cent beet craw Waut do you considers the most im- ae Yo avoid disappointment, ask your olitics. She is the human fluff." * portant problem confronting the mod- | Justic y ordered Mrs, Anais p ah Oe | a ‘are all simply part of the adventure of ern business woman?” I asked finally. | yaa. o a Atak ti ruggist for ounces of Pinex' “Now let's talk about the business | jir poye, : 7 Lack of companionship with her | ease) ona taken into ith full directions and don't accept | _.0” who doesn’t consider her job| "i Mven now convention denies) iis in one word, loneliness,” re. |cuntody by minterlent f° the Anything else, A auerantee of nbyos | woman wo Govsn’t consider Mer 10% women so myny interesting experie pitt Mra Sears tho Riel wh0 Koes a lute satisfaction or money promptly | simply as i ; ments; I've always yearned to go to to New York or any other city to ieee refunded goes with this preparation, | &rab-bax," I sugwested. “How can she) py rooy on a cattleship, and of course make her own way suffers terribly, at The Pinex Co. Ft. Wayne, Ind.— | achieve success, in your opinion?" A cant Gut a WOMAn? kaw ar from friendlessness. 1 don't Advt. | “First of all,” Mrs, Sears declared,| i), oa Hy ‘ in that she needs a rich lady up- | , can be poor with zest and to nize and pity her, bi | amusement, provided the state doesn't Pee ata koow ween | N A last too long, and even after one suc- BOYS too—of her own age and with | IR | ceeds It soeme to me It lan‘t ry | Slogtata who are trying to rescue the © speak of former struggles with 4, working girl from the white Jcompaamonate tears of welf-pity injslaver whom thelr imaginations see A | one's voice iting her doorstep would try to | ar 2 a ema bea, | Promote slmiple wociability among the | Sears, the thn nail ¢ “mplish thing rth while. In | | ings philosophically, while. pr he mean time the b 4 woman 18 ~~ oneself for something better, Inci fi in her clus her own remedy Lik | 4 N y ‘ o ACS ad ally, When a woman ymes worth | to" her social taoiat © melt- HEN you are pressed fi", 2% s,nomn oeeones sere — Pray ge > ¢ 4 | too proud to ask for it ASKS $15,000 FOR BEATING, ae tort at the noc not liquid sunshi Or time at the NOON Ferenc se eas we woos pte, suid sunshine. . . of Stran 1 hour,takea nutritiousben- GIVE Hy fama tin, reas ot «| ah Flavored wine Ae . Wi | ney tosday brovdht suit in the Supre jouquet of lus- ‘ ay, ‘ > i tl ? THE ) Court for $15,000 damages against the! i eficial beverage with your F pyar, That” aite"atmatr nana Sel QQ cious grapes, I e d ] I TOWN — us the gtr and PR ort Garden Aileging he . ae 4| \ A Chance <> 7 was beuten by employees of the restau: | : : JOHANN Bived im.te P STEN : th; t | k HOFF Martin nileges he was knocked down OSTUM 1s at drink. Pg) te 1 pert i Given With Meals “ Sallors F ‘ led Ship Here, UAN ont oF found articles ads Y | iy Will Help to Keep six men, r American Pre ee ee te Ta A Senstble Cup Thera FullsBlooded som \ Ian ener dlis a . and Strong. Me., which went ast at Amageda ‘ for Sensible People Tarun wisn Kook, Morta Tea, Jan ar ived here | wid helachooner wus. & total loam, The | hoe r sailed f n St. Andrew's Bay Florida, Dec, 11, with lumber for Are », Porto Rico. ——_>—_——— To | Sunday World Wanis Work 9.3, cane | Monday Morning Wonders. ye" 'g'%. ay BO day of tho » fo owing the printing @dveriisement, ‘“There’s a Reason” Ssuature on box, 2c, ~ ; ; ‘i to an employer, ‘You must ¢ me| But marriage alone tere neither | cruiser off. , ing the temperament with which she|tris position because Tam all alone in{ fe@80n nor excuse to a wom, The sea valves are already break- 40910000000000000000000000 Wits Dorn, Marriare ty to her the be- 4 gr reat na need the twonee Phe | {9r giving up the job which has [ing open and other sections of the all and the end-all of life. she fndsl. Sure hphie nees i ed and profited her for jlower hull ure falling away under Knocks Obstinat Sina" ane ; 7 | Only reason Why any woman shouldbe} women |the terrific battering to which the nocks stinate her home too dull to stay in, be-| given any work is her fitness to per-| " ut they | Milwaukee has been subject Coughs in a Hurry 3) the tact ts men do not any| form that work, ‘That 1 the attitule) Baginess nn ue mverfore with | Tt is Tepito ie hundred feet. (0 : longer seek the averago girl tn her) of business, and women may as Well WOMEN SHOULDN'T MIX WOR- | tho cruiser’s deck. Over A Gimple Home-Mede Remedy $% home. The very rich man still mar-| gocept it, The trouble is that many a RIES WITH BUSINESS, guns, ammunition and 0 ‘That Gets ag 20, ries the sheltered society daughter. | gir} of to-day is between the genera-| “The business woman who wants | Lie? Hoard will be brougnt to safety But the energetic youn business | tions; she wants a man’s salary and to succeed inust follow the example Ie there Je:aHINt time, ; an, if he weds at all, chooses, nine | ye : the tenderness, the of the business man in not allowin Thousands of people, normally | ™*" yet she wants e383, i K rn 44 t en, 7 as he day down 0 clouded | healthy in every other respect, are times out of ten, the girl who has] charitable protection accorded to wom- }v" reyaa rnaNe to. be clouded | ARRAIGNED FOR KILLING GIRL annoyed with a persistent hanging-on | Worked near him, More or less von- | en who were content with doles accom permit even the thoughts of her home| Weldon H. Wells Enters. F bronchial cough year after year, dis- sciously he has resolved to avoid! panied by kisses, And sie cannot life to intrude in office hours. And! piea of ay ee af hb turbing their steep and making life) marrioge while he ts getting his start. | have it both Ways; it wouldn't be fair that Is why Lo belleve she should) Gorusmis, o., Jan. ib.-Weldon M. | disagreeable, It's so needless—there’s sh, so far as 18 possible, the petty 4 nae NEAR U.S. BELIEVED TOBE DEUTSCHLAND Due at New London Wednes-| day—British Ship Sights | Her, Is Belief. Capt Williams the British Clematis, which arrived this morning from Ror- deaux, reports having sighted a subs marine last Thursday morning, about 500 miles off Newport This is believed in shipping circles to be the Deutschland, due in New London Wednesday Paul Hinkel, superintendent of the! Eastern Forwarding Company, left for New London to-day, to be on hand for the arrival of the subsea freighter. Hinkel superintended the handling of the Deutachland on her trips to Baltimore and New London. | On the dock at New London ts the return cargo for the submarine, main- ly crude rubber and’ nickel Capt. Williams did not get a very} comprehensive view of the submarine. | He sald he was awakened at 2 o'clock ‘Thursday morning and saw a strange craft a mile alead of him, proceed- | ing in the same direction, The vessel looked like a whaleback, but wasn't high enough out of the water for one. ‘There were no lights showing and the captain could not make out any masts ,He said that he has seen enough war submarines to be satisfied that this | was not one; but he did not propose | lto take any chances. Ho immediately put about and headed back for Hor- deaux, but later umed his course. | As soon as the Clematis had passed Jquarantine Williams — ca |ashore and @ report to th | British Consul, Later he said he had no doubt that the vessel he saw was the Deutsenland. | The Deutschland, from al jis kolng to have difficulty getting Into jport, and if it su in getting | to sea again, It is claimed that Bri ish and French submarines have been | added to the fleet of the Allies, which | at Halifax 1 that aking ready to swoop down bsea tra eph O. of freight steamer pt made accounts, | they on the sul ————_— 81,000 for Oriat y of “Etetle | | Noy |_ CHICAGO, Jan. 1 was made to-day for t |xcript of the Inte I JeLitte Boy A bid of $1,000} p original manus | Kugene Field's poem, which was contib- | Harry K. SUBSEA BOAT SEEN 'SHOOTS AT MAN ABOUT TO Er HN, KILS SEL Uptown Apartment House Su- perintendent Found Dead When Police Arrive. Otto Drescher, forty-seven years old, superintendent of the Melrah Apartments at No, 608-610 West One Hundred and Thirty-ninth Street, shot and killed himself in the base- ment of the apartment house short- ly after 10 o'clock this morning, after he fired a shot at Bernard Grinsky, a representative of the agent, who came to tell him he would have to give up his Job. The bullet pierced the left sleeve of Grinsky's coat, but did not hit him. Drescher had been superintendent the apartment for tho last five years and a few months ago his work became unsatisfactory to the agent, lot | Louts Schlecter, of No. 217 West One Hundred and Tenth Street. Schlecter informed him he would e to leave and the answer of Drescher was that he would go when he was put out Grinsky was sent to the apartment with City Marshal Henry Lazarus this morning and they were prepared to enforces an eviction order and put Drescher out if he refused to go. They were accompanied by Henry Vaughn, who was to take Dreacher's place. Drescher asked to be given some time to get ready, and when Grinsky told him he would have to leave immediately he told them to walt a minute, He started to walk away, but sud- denly turned, drew a revolver from hiv pocket and fired at Grinsky. ‘Tha three men ran from the cellar and outside the house met Patrolman \Casoy of the West One Hundred and Station, When the Twenty-fifth Street Police nsky Was not wounded patrolman entered the basement they found the body of Drescher near tho entrance with the revolver in bis right hand, — > Young Gamp to Sae Thaw for * 1 Damages KANSAS CITY, Mo, Jan, 15.—It was announced to-day that a sult for 0,000 damages will be filed against Thaw for the alleged as- FIFTH AVE. BUS IN CRASH, — and Hee Conductor and Woman A Fifth Avenue side Drive, was st nue and One Hundred and Tenth str to-day by an operat by Frank M Fifth Aves nue, The tform ef the bus non, Mul~ vey of No. oth Street, the conductor, was thrown to the street, ‘A women and her two children were slightly cut by glass from a. broken window, Mulvey was taken to Knieker= bocker ‘Hospital with injuries to bis and right hip and was th a umn charging him ation of the i road. r-A JOY 1 CORE, TIRED FEET Use “Tiz” for aching, burn ing, puffed-up feet and corns or callouses. e “Sure! I use ‘TIZ” every time for any i Good-bye, sore fe swollen feet, tender od-bye corns, ¢ fy Oucming feet, , tired feet. llouses, buaions raw spots. No more shoe t.ght- no more limping with pain or “rik “Tie” draws drawing up your face in ag. is magical, wets right of out all the poisonous exud ations whieh puff up the feet, U st Tis? and wear Tin” and forget Ah! how comfort: aller shoes. r foot mise able your feet feel. 25-cent box of “Tin” now at any geist or department stoee, Don't suffer. Have good feet, glad feet, feet that never never hurt, never yret tired. A year's feot comfort guaranteed or money refunded.— Advt } FACE POWDER. Gives your skin a richly beautiful teltnes. For 30 years Freeman's has the consumer. lin particular because of it, The only ick courage to spean up for herself} EUREKA, Cal, Jan, 15—Hope of |ited to the Allied Hagaar by” Slason ; 4 Faeert pericalag Sromen, Dore sot rob “ ning Wi x : 45! . : we 4 fi § ‘i sault in New York on Freder \. na, og pecthe Evening World has done a \solace sie finds in her Job ts that It |she must accent the fact that she wil #%4 Her rights as a man does, floating the cruiser Milwaukee, The pap intimate frond of the| ery dr. the ninetoen Weare of, Each any ge ot 91 pou. AM puking public official reports on the | affords her a better chance to find &| be paid according to what she has, not| "00 you think that tho business | aground in the surf near Samoa, was |, the Natienal | gchool boy who caused his indictment. | ‘The Freeman Perfume Co. storage of foodstufls hae, |Musband than if she had remained at) according to what she wants or what] {jo should’ matey Tf Inqiiredsat | virtually eosadonea'tonday. a warded at the Entente Ale} ‘The papers will be filed soon after} Ls sit we have plenty of public abat-| home. ho becomes a man-hunter |she needs, It ig an economic fallacy to] S22, DORE { Although the ship has been on the {if haw ie brought back fo New Yarn’ | toirs in this city where Up-State pro-| and stalks her prey where it most ; January Sale of Hemstitched Linen Sheets, } i bed size, $13.50 and up, less 10 xtra long sizes in proportion Is {r Pure Linen Hemstitched Towels, i great abundance; plain huckaback, $4.50 |e! to 12.50 per dozen; Individual Linen ‘Towels, $3.50 to 10.50 per dozen; Be room ‘Towels, $ 24.00 per dozen, all less 10%. Also Kitchen, Glass, Pantry, i] Roller Towel Towels of every kind, Fs 7 : i) Damask Table Linens des all our Vable Cloths and Napkins—the same high ere h have 1 © name “McCutcheon” so well-known in connection } ens as well as Paney Table Linens of all kinds. We still have most | | TAC ING TAQ AG TAU ONO ANG MORGANE Annual Sale at McCutcheon’s HERE still remain two weeks in which to take advantage of the Housekeeping Linens, 10% discount from regular prices is allowed on all goods in these departments. In addition to the uniform 10% discount on all these housekeeping goods there are certain lots purchased many months ago at the lower prices then prevailing, which are offered at marked reductions present-day prices. Fancy Table Linen Irish kins less 2 2 2! 2) 21 2) 7% Bed Linen and Towels Linen Piilow Cases, from $1.60 to $7.50 per pair, less 10%. i » man Sir lesigns, 43.75 per Pp gle-bed size, $10.50 pe rked » some c f Damask Table Linens which we are Less Than Present-Day Values owing to the fact that they were purchased almost a yea Fifth Avenue, 34th & 33d Streets A special purchase of fine stitched Cloths and Nap- design, as illustrated, is of- fered at about one-third 22 x 22 in. Napkins $10.50 doz. air and upward, less 10%. ount of 10% from regular prices, Reg. Trade Mark from Double-Damask Hem- in a popular Stripe than regular prices. x2_ yd. cloths $8.00 x 214 yd. cloths 10,00 4x 249 yd. cloths 12.50 2x3 yards, $15.00 | 2x 314 yards, 17.50 2X4 yards, 20.00 27 in. Napkins 15.75 doz. Hand-Embroidered r pair and up. Double- F i BAB WBW/BY/ AWAY BWA WANG Wb 1/89 BW/AYOWDY, r ago specifically for

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