The evening world. Newspaper, March 27, 1917, Page 8

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rr ee ee ee eee re a ee a aestaitinintita THE EVENING WORLD, TU SDAY MARCH 27 17. | ui mena an sven a} aca tenance] 3 Too “Comme cialized” ; =" SECTIONS IS HALTED £OCH & C. ehildren in arms, broke up a meeting | Sith. senpe wert The oly. ee, ie ike a a t Established 1800. of the Council Judiciary Committee the business of retalling foodstutts By @ riotous demonstration In protest] other household necessities at co CLEANSES YOUR KIDNEYS PURIFIES YOUR BLOOD e sediment, or ‘“briok- unhealthy condition. Mrs. Frederic Esler Quits the Tripod Because Mr. Pennock, Reputed Angel of The Chron- For centuries all over the world GOLD | or MEDAL Haarlem O!1 has afforded reltef | 44 im thousands upon thousands of cases of | aches wrt Jame back, lumbago, sciatica, rheum: tism, el and all affec- mach, biad- acts quickly, It Cleanses your kid- the blood, Tt wakes @ Rew man, a new woman, of you. It fre- ‘quently wards off attacks of the dread on of the kidneys, It the |, distrecatn ay, a Clothing Firm’), Insisted on Writing on “What Men Should Wear” and Mrs. Esler Couldn’t Stand for That. airticulty your druggist at imported GOLD MEDAL inflammation which te the cause of your trouble, Your druggist will cheerfully res ur money if you are not satiatied few days’ une. Ac- cept only the pure, original GOL® MBDAL Haarlem Oi) Capsules. —Advt. Stern Brothers West 42nd Street Between 5th and 6th Avenues West 43rd Street completely Marguerite Mooers Marshall. ‘Trade—crass, crude, vulgar tradeo— diseases of th With the bladd A Sale of Discontinued Patterns and Odd Lots of Table Cloths, Napkins, Sheets, Ete., To-morrow, will provide very material reductions Satin Damask Table Cloths, at $2.75, 3.75, 4.95 to 7.50 Napkins, doz., $3.75, 4.25 and 4.95 Dresser & Buffet Scarfs, Linen Sheets, lace trimmed, each 90c to 1.25 hemstitched, pair $9.50 to 13.50 : ‘ mt Linen Pillow Cases, Ted calpelateed, ae9540-| banba gar’ 1.28, 1.96, 2.80 ; Huck Towels, Pe pepen Sete, hemmed, doz. 1.95, 2.50, 3.25 embroidered, - Bedspreads, good quality, srined/ eeetst, vase 1iG0,to 2.25 $3.65 set hemstitched, “ 4.50 Turkish Towels, hemmed, doz. 2.75, 3.50, -75, 4.90, 5.50 Rugs for Summer Homes In new effects, at moderate prices. Woot Art Rugs, ‘chintz border from 3 by 6 feet to 9 by 12 feet, $7.75 to 39.75 Homespun Rugs, dainty effects from 30 by 60 ins. to 9 by 12 ft., from 2 by 3 feet to 9 by 12 feet, $1.65 to 37.50 $1.25 to 19.75 Also a large assortment of Wilton, Axminster, Smyrna and other weaves, at interesting prices. Grass Rugs in novelty designs from 27 by 54 ins. to 12 by 15 ft., $1.00 to 15.00 Japanese Oval Porch Rugs, The Upholstery Sections Will offer, To-morrow, on the Fourth Floor An opportune purchase of Chinese and Japanese Embroideries, Prints, ete., including Skirts, Coats, Lambrequins, Scarfs, Covers, Panels and Odd Pieces for decorative purposes. And in addition, very desirable Cretonnes in chintz effects at 22c For Slip Covers, Draping and Faney Work. Formerly 35¢c to 45c a yard, yard March Sale of China and Lamps The last week of this annual event will provide these decided values; Thin American Porcelain | Limoges China Dinner Sets, Limoges China Dinner Sets, Dinner Sets, 107 pieces; | 107 pieces, gold lines; 107 pes.; encrusted acid formerly $18.00, | formerly %39.00, gold band; reg. #120, a [- Qr $14.50 | $35.00 | $100.00 English Porcelain Dinner Sets, 107 pieces, | Ginori China Dinner Sets, 107 pieces, gold wide blue border or colored spray design, | Special $22.00 and 32.50 Table and Floor Boudoir Lamps in antique gold or mahogany, 10 inch silk shade with fringe: formerly $4.00, at Antique Gol& or Mahogany Table Lamps, 15 in. flat Empire handles and knobs; reg. $120.00 to 175.00, 100.00 to 140.00 Electric Lamps | Mahogany Table Lamps,12 inch painted parchment paper shade; formerly $5.50 watt $2.95 | $3.95 Black Lacquer Floor Lamps,Jap- anese design, 22 inch Mandarin | 7.95 | shade’ (siinined with gold [aoe shade, silk and bullion fringe: 99 5 and silk fringe; formerly 10,00, two lights; formerly $33.00, “at 22:00 Floor Lamps, in mahogany, gold or black and white, two lights. @79 « pull chain sockets, #4 inoh allie shade, lined: silk fringe: special PLO*O0 icle (“Who Used to Travel for | }and w Loses Managing Editor has intruded upon Mrs, the Chronicle. Frederic Esler is no longer its ed- itor. Lest you for get—reading of the Russian Rev. olution, war with Germany and That ts why ters—I may re- mind you that / the Chronicle 1s \é BEEN the monthly azine de luxe “ot Society, by So- ety, for “Society” (three upper case 8's, please); the cerebration of Fifth Avenue's little group of serious think- ers thrown off at throw. Among the contributors to the Chronicle were Mrs, Harry Payne Whitney, Jay Gould, Miss Elisabeth Marbury, Mrs, Benjamin Guinness, Mrs, William Astor Chanler, Francis Roch M r, the originator and—un- t!l Saturday—the managing editor of the intellectual fire-escape of the Four Hundred, has been a close friend of Mrs, French Vanderbilt and of other well known women. “An ex- seription of the Chronicle, just before the appearance of its first number, Reading that number I felt that in- deed New York society had been greatly maligned; that, far from seeking tho festive fox-trottery, the seductive skating rink, the real goal of Society was nothing less than the true, the good, the beautiful. AND THEN THE RUDE AWAKEN- ING. And yesterday I read the following announcement: “Mrs, Frederic Esler wishes to state that she is no longer connected with the magazine known as the Chronicle, nor is she any longer responsible for the policy and management of that magazine,” Was the candelabra of American culture to be extinguished, leaving us once more in a Styglan darkness of Indiana best sellers? I hurried to the apartments of the statuesque Mrs. Esler, at No. 19 West Thirty-first Street. She told me ALL. “For a long time I have believed that we should have a magazine written by intelligent persons who are not professional writers,” she ox- plained with light graciousness, (But guiltily I realized that I could not possibly claim amateur standing in lterature.) A’ mumber of others agreed with me, and so the maga- zine was started, I induced several of my friends to contribute to the first number, There was to be noth- [ing commercial about it. We were not even to take advertisements, “And then I found that I could not | possibly lend my name to the Chron- licle, that I could not ask men and | women of society whom I knew to jappear in Its pages, Mr, Pennock— he used to travel for a clothing firm |—wished to write an article for the |second number of the magazine, to be signed with his name, on ‘What Men Should Wear'! AND SHE DREW THE LINE ON THE SARTORIAL PENNOCK, “IT consider that the time in which we are living is altogether too serl- ous for such an article to appear in such @ magazine, Imagine the theme placed between an article by Mr. Frederic Coudert and one by Mr. Whitney Warren! When I left the Chronicle office I unfortunately had to leave in the desk contributions from both these gentlemen and one from Mrs. Borden Harriman, “Besides, does the fact that a man has been in the wholesale clothing business in Buffalo qualify him to appear in a magazine written by me: n of Society? De Mrs. Es Feobly, 1 pass | social eligibil Dully’s Is Good A Old People Pure Malt Whiskey is invaluable for the aged and sun down bec everyday experience shows that a good tonic-stimulant r ised will do much to keep old people healthy, A tablespoon ful of Duffy's before meals on retiring gently stimulates and invigorates the system, ‘The wi ole vess, purity and rich malty of Duffy's Pure Malt Whi» sit it to be retained by s most delicate stomachs when other foods a rejected. “Get Duffy’s and Keep Well” \ amily alec cents and grocers, If they supply lsef i} sehold booklet free most wine stores can't Malt Whiakey Co., Hocnester, N.Y other trivial mat- | one dollar per| quisite little publication” was her de- | | Mes. FREDERIC ESLER... travelled the first one hundred cents’ worth of | for a wholesale clothing house—I wish you'd make a point of \it. It is perfectly true, although he doesn’t do it now. He publishes the | Chronicle.” “Ho puis up the money for it? I slated, Yes,” she admitted, “He Is a worthy and respectable man.” (Even 40 does the English duchess speak of the first assistant gamek er, when she speaks of him at all.) “But I feel now that wishes to make our ven- JMterary. tr nnock's article commerctal, since he 1s not now In the clothing business?" DOES PENNOCK LOSE HIS AMA- TEUR STANDING, “He 4s atill interested in clothing,” she replied. “He thinks a great deal about tt, He thinks American men do not know how to dress. Of course they do not care how many buttons they have on their coat sleeve. They dé not order a dress sult every few months because the shape of the lapel changes. But Mr, Pennock wants to show them how to dress as they should—make a point of that. “I disliked the editorials in the first number. I called them ‘cheap.’ There were absurd misspellings in the ar- ticles. But Mr. Pennock likes the proofreader and editorial writer, Mr. tcher. He does—what do you cali the setting up of the magazine.” You know what happened to truth crushed to earth, And Mrs. Esler al- ready ‘9 planning to erect another monument to society's mentality. Her new magazine is as yet unnamed and un-angel'd, but she hopes to repair both defects speedily. “I feel like apolog’ whom I tried to Interest in the Chron- fele.” she sighed. They ‘e dear about writing, although I had to work awfully hard to induce them to get their manuscripts ready on time, I can’t send notes to them all, and so I'm explaining myself to the news- papers. Besides, I have a strong sense of humor, and I think there is a great ‘Joke’ in the affair.” T think 0, too. Sn a SHONTS OFFERS $100,000 TO END A TRACK NUISANCE He Favors Slicing a Strip Off East Sidewalk Along Central Park West. After a conference in the office of Borough President Marks yesterday, ‘Theodore P. Shonts, on behalf of the ing to every one traction interests, oifered $100,000 as a contribution toward settling the Central Park West track been problem, which has before the city authorities for plans discussed was that which »iates allowing the tracks to re- » they are, cutting a large valle and thus tide of the nough to » of two lines of vehi cl out of this plan re. quires the tment of some pa features, and te removal of the tree With the necessary drainage ch work, it is estimated, will cost 200,000, Another plan, necessitating the a relocation of one of tho trolley t was talked of, but the conferees favored |the first plan: A majority of them be lieve a sidewalk 10 feet wide on. the the roadway will be Park Department offi- reed to this. Pansat ARCTIC CLUB IN NEW YORK, ok, Shovel }men who have lived In Alaska 1 and now live in New York and has found the number 640, With this data in hand he 8 nized the Areuc Club, At a meeting held at the temporary headquarters, at, The Rex Ro Willard Mack, Ki ‘ HW White, Jack H “emblem of the ong and gold pan. club will soon be formed in every elty bales LONG DEAD; AWARDED CROSS fon for Com- land Battle, LONDON Mareh 17 (Correspondence elated Dus brave the ba thumous V Warded Commander ).—Vor “me conspic nd. devotion Loftu full ned: in makin that “ur which accoun bestowing th long delay in Chauffeur Loses His Life Trying to Avold Dow. NWICHL March old a dog near the B GRE try ini Kinmb Conn In kR Turn ck last sidence, at M4 M at hi Uses sual Robinson children, BY LABORERS’ STRIKE Men on Fourteenth Street Link Want More Wages—Trouble Likely to Spread. The Public Service Commission be- gan an effort to-day to settle a strike of about 450 men tn two sections of |the new Fourteenth Street subway, which js to extend from Manhattan | to Williamsburg. The work, recently i begun, 1s on a contract calling for an expediture of $3,184,124, It is probably the first of a series of strikes on the new subways. It | was learned to-day that conditions ail over the city on subway work are far | from satisfactory Contractors say they are unable to get enough labor, the work is pro- gressing slowly and the laborers are dissatisfied with their wages. The contractors are reluctant to pay |more because the price of each piece of work is fixed and they already have to contend with the increased cost of materials. Three hundred of the strikers are laborers who have been getting $2.25 }a day and want $2.60, The others are | timber men and the timber men get $3; their helpers get and demand $2.75, The contractors on the two sections are Mason & Hangar and McArthur Bros., Inc. SHE OFFERS 100 ACRES FOR USE OF THE NATION Mrs. "Watkins Also Enrolls at Suf- frage Headquarters for Mrs, John Humphrey Watkins, who enrolled for national service at the headquarters of the Wo Suffrage Party, Nos, 48-50 East Thirty-fourth Street, has offered 100) acres of farm land on her country | estate, near Mount Kisco, to the Government “in case of need.” She said the land would serve equally well for encampment or agricultural purposes. Mrs. Theodore C, Hall ‘offered her Place, Brook Farm, at Sparknill, twenty-four miles from New York City, as a home for convalescents, A good sized house and barn and five acres of land compose the ‘property. Miss Ethel Stebbins, No. 38 Kast Ninth Street, tendered her house for Red Cross use and meetings. An- other who enrolled was Miss Dana Elizabeth Is who has charge of the commissary department of a clothing factory, where she caters to 600 girls. In off hours she will give the same service to the Government {f called upon, The 600 factory girls, she said, are anxious to serve the country. (liad i et ———————————————— Gray Hair and Safety Mary T. Goldman's Gray Hair Color Restoreris the original preparation for safely and quickly restoring the natural color to gray, faded and bleached hair in afew days, Leaves the hair clean, fluffy and natural. Free Trial Package and special comb, Test it on a lock of hair, This test will prove more than anything we could say in an advertisement. Write now and be sure to tell the original color before it turned gray, Was it black, dark brown, medium brown or light brown? Regtilar $1.00 size at your druggist's or I will fill your order direct, Clever imitators, not being able to imitate the preparation itself, have Copled our labels Almost word for word, le and sure, remember the name, MARY T. GOLDMAN | There is real common sense in just noticing whether the hair is well kept to |judge of a woman's n taste. If you are one of the few who try | | | atness or good to make the most of your hair, remem. ber that it is not advisable to wash the hair with any ¢ anser made for all pur. | poses, but always use some good prepa ration made expressly for shampooing You can enjoy the very best by some canthrox from y solv. etting our druggist, dis. & teaspoonful in a cup of hot This makes a full cup of sham. poo liquid, enough so it is easy to apply it to all the hair instead of just the top of the head. Dandruff, excess oil and dirt are dissolved and entirely disappear Your hair will be so fluffy that it will | look much heavier than itis. Its lustre and softness will also delight you, while the stimulated scalp gains the health Advt | which insures hair growth. Slip Covers No matter how large. 3, ; “ helstered | AAA STAR UPHOLSTERY CO. 9 W. Lath St. Wten’s Ne 6 Ode) 125th Street, West ¢ Most Exceptional Values Obtainable Anywhere Semi-Tailored and Dressy Suits at $15.98 Smart wool poplin suits, full pleated models, single or double belt, some with three rows of self or white chain stitching, Persian lining, overlay collars of white faille silk; sizes 36 to 42. The New “‘Eileen’’ Boot | FOR EASTER $7.50 Voile oer, Exclusive Koch Spring Model | cloth tops, and grey suede, high arch and Louis XV. heels. WOMEN'S Five new models, many with dainty frills, beautifully embfoidered, PUMPS finished with Havana | Val. lace “or brown, | Picot edge; grey kid, collar to white nu- match, buck, Other bronze models with embroidered and patent leather, Louis | fits. fine tucks, XV. heels, hand * $4. 95 | finished soles. . BAUME OR. 46° ST. 6&8" AV Good Furniture at Reasonable Prices On Our LIBERAL CREDIT ARRANGEMENT Our Terms Apply Also to New York, New Jersey, Long Island and Connecticut. ALL GOODS “MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. WE PAY FREIGHT. 4-Piece Post Colonial trimmed with pretty laces at collar and down the front. *115 06 trated) From $15.00 Upwards With MP Mutchines a1 Worth of Columbia Gratonolas py food foe ditic higher py Ce ee or aan Renee A nee APARTMENTS TRNIEHED FROM $75 UP ON CREDIT, WING MACHINES ON CREDIT, rey HOND ANSE SATURDAYS USI TOP, 0 days (it ta WTiALEN BROS Grand Street | Smith Street Cor. Driggs Ave. _ BROOKLYN __ Cor. Wyckoff St. No Deposit, 50¢ Weekly $125 Worth of Furniture nsaNew ClothingAccount} No Deposit $1 Weekly in Come lun ‘Bargain | Offered nly One to a Customer| Vu

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