The evening world. Newspaper, April 11, 1917, Page 10

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PROVIDDNCE, R. 1, April 1L— Gov. Boeckman sent a message to the Legislature § to-day recommending ‘that $50,000 be set aside as a special fund from which farmers could ob- tain loans to increase crop produc- tion. ‘SOAKING THE CITY" BROKEN DOWN IN. HEALTH AMONG UP-STATERS Woman Tells How $5 Worth | of Pinkham’s Compound Made Her Well. poses Unfairness in Taxa- tion of Water Lands. friends came to! Joueph Kelly, who ts the pansado: eee me and oveph Kelly, who ts the Amba ador | she} am report favorably his billa providing | that any land acquired by the City of | New York for water supply purposes should be amseased at the same rate as other lands in the vicinity, and that | State lands located on forest |serves should be exempt “This is another indicatiqn,” said | Mr. Kelly, “that the Up-State Repub- Heang are not in sympathy with any attempt that may be made by the New York City representatives in the Legisiature to lessen the purde the taxpayers of tho city, The Up- State counties in which the forest preserve is located are only too will- ing to have New York City pay sev- enty per cent. of the tax on such lands, but at the samo time our city does not get one penny from taxes on ‘4 advised me to| Extraordinary and Minister Pienipo- | t commence taking|t@ntiary from Tammany Leader ) Lydia E. Pink-|Cbaries F. Murphy's re went to : “we ham's Vegetable| day after the Committes on Taxa | Compound and to| tion for refusing to remove two dis- | use Lydia FE./oriminations against the City of N ive Geen York that cost the town folk real 4 began taking your|™0ney. The Committes refused to remedies and took $5.00 worth and in two months was a well woman after three doctors said I never would stand up straight again I was a midwife for seven years and I recommended the Vegetable © pound to every woman to take before birth and afterwards, and they all got along so nicely that it surely is « god- send to suffering women. If women wish to write to me I will be delighted to answer them.”—Mri IE MOYER, 342 F Ohio. Women who suffer from displace- ments, weakness, irregularities, ner- vousness, backache, or bearing-down pains, need the tonic properties of the roots and herbs contained in Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. —Advt. North IS STILL THE RULE’: Tammany > neeitigean Ex.) |retary of the Municipal = (Special Proms Ktatt Comeenondent of The | I was all broken down in health Exening World.) | from a displacement. One of my lady| ALBANY, April 11.—-Assemblyman pre- | THE EVENING WORLD, the various State institutions located within ite boundaries. I had hoped tbat our Republican friends would re- | port favorably on these measures and by thelr action demonstrate to the citizens of New York that they are cognizant of the Gleerisninations | gainst the taxpayers, but the com- lene 6 action dispels any such thought | | from my mind.” will take something more power- han Tammany to pry the U [Sanne law manufacturer away from the notion that New York City was expressly created to be soaked by the | brethren from the bigh graes, Cie 8 Benjamin C. Marsh, Executive Sec- Ownership wague, waded into the Capitol to- ner's bill, which provides for the ac- quisition and operation of bublio/ ty concerns in New York City. | The vill gives the Board of Estimate the right to determine that munteipal n is necessary and authorizes struction or acquisition of When 2 per cent. of rs petition the Board of to do so, it must get from the Public Service Commission an estimate of the cost of the taking over and If the plan is approved by @ referendum vote the Board of Eatimgte has to proceed to take over tho utfiity in question, T » State Tax Cen tatastoey, tn_ ite} quarterly report, #hows that the Cor- | poration Tax Bureau {nereaged its collections for the quarter by $1,007, 736 over last year, It also shows an| 460 In the franchise he cities in Northern Reorganization the New York City Board of Health ts sought in a new till by Senator Lockwood. The bill calls for a commissioner for Man- hattan, the Bronx and Richmond, one for Brooklyn and Queens and the ad- dition of the Police Commissioner to the newly established board. The present commissioner is retained by the bill and the other one ts to be named by the Mayor. eee Mr. Lawson has «a new measure that directs that all pistols and re- vers taken by the Police Depart- nt of New York shall be turned to the Department, the HH. nse Leaeie or the military forces the State. . es The Committee on Agriculture has formally introduced the new food and markets law which was fully reported in The Evening World when it came from the committee after a recent hearing, It is the Wicks bill, so altered by Senator Brown that the best friend of the old measure would not know It tf {t came forth bearing a letter of introduction, It provides for @ State Food Counctl named by the Governor and subse- quently elected by tho Legislature after the fashion of the Regents, A jasioner of agriculturo and aj| commi@ioner of foods and markets are to be appointed by the Council, and the power of direct action on food | conditions is apparently entirely di- vorced from the new body, It is not regarded by the advocates of the old CT geo on eye » to Pisa | law as affording the relief that they sought, TWO WAYS to OVER-EAT Whether it’s out of a lunch pail or from the table of a Delmonico, the result is the same—indigestion, constipation and the lowered physical and mental vital- ity which constipation causes, As Nujol is not take. . Pease i; The Standard Constipation, if neglected, may casily lead to serious disablement, particularly if you dose yourself with a hap-hazard assortment of pills and laxative waters. Nujol, the internal lubricant, has none of these habit-forming dangers of the drug remedies. It is not a bowel stimulant, and is not absorbed by the sgstem. It acts as a mechanical lubricant, keeps the contents of the intestines soft and so facilitates normal movements, tation is behind STANDARD OIL. COMPANY New Serer) Rayonne aw corer Jersey) has used sources in producing Nujol and its repu- New Jersey a physic but a lubricant, it does not gripe or upset the system. Being tasteless, it is not unpleasant to Oil Company (New its world-wide re- the product. Nujol is the only remedy for constipation we manufacture. pint bottles bearing Nujol trade-mark, All bottles filled at our Nujol plant, absolutely modern and sanitary, Write today for an instructive beoklet on Nujol and its uses. The genuine sold oniy in ny with @ fight for Senator Wag- | to be first | Women Begin a Campaign For a Liquorless Canteen A, Pélson will be Honorary Secretary of this auxiliary, Classes In first afd, surgical dressing, dietetics and home care of the wounded are to be given at this new Red Cross teaching centre, | Two other Read Cross auxiliaries | were organized to-day, one by the women of the Century Theatre Club, of which Miss Busan French, No, 7 Went Thirty-second Street, Is Secri tary, and one by women and nurses connected with the Woman's Hospital, at No. 141 West One Hundred and Ninth Street, | National Special Al Aid Society Would Give Them Clean Comfort. \A BIG RECRUITING DAY. Service League Will Have an | Auto and Woman on | Every Street Corner. ‘That tt 19 an important and patel. |—————— otle but not necessarily an arduous duty which The Evening World sug- ta to the girls of New York and vicinity when it asks them to fill out Marguerite Mooers Marshall. A campaign for the canteen is in full swing at the headquarters of the National Special Ald Society, No. 249 the “Ready to Enlist” coupons with the names and addresscs of five g men who will enter either the Fifth Avenue. To| “ or the navy Is evidenced by a hs eve tr. hort, and spley note received from) J e ev }o-patrt-) two Paterson, N.J., boys. Here it is: | old, otic young man] “bear Hdltor; We are ready any suddenly trans. ported from New York City, with the movies every ee and a dance time our country needs us, We cou not wait until some girl dug us up. And they inclose names and ad- dreases. From A. Chester, who sent in two names three days ago, has just been received another coupon fully filled| i b oa once Wout with the following names: John! .¢ » to a train- Canal Street; See wh camp “some- i HW pty, No. Canal t where in New Joseph Kinsen, No. 375 Canal, ‘OP York” (State), hn Wilkinson, No. 41 Van- t; Dick Hesenblatt, N Recruiting “rep ° rare cordia life may be more than a‘bit dreary So the National Special Aid Society plans to establish at the various training camps the most popular in- the combtnation ef funch ‘and club (0 wit soln the navy, Here club| boys who will Join the navy. Here room known as the “canteen,” they are: Albert Prima, . 260 The canteen is guaranteed to give|Mourth, Avenue, Brooklyn; | Milton “first aid” to the young soldier phy- sically, mentally and morally, In form it {8 @ big portable but. But tt 4s warm in winter, cool in summer and spotlessly clean. It offers the soldier @ chance to provide himself |” ‘no better wa with tea, coffee, sandwiches, cakes! true-biue patriotism of the Dove 0) and buns, soft drinks, tobacco, cigar-| know than to ask them to promise to ettes and many other little comforts. + i Onene e e It helps him to find rest and recre- ation in congenial society after long hours of drilling. ‘It adds greatly to his happiness as well as to bis ma- terial comfort. ‘This is the call that the society has issued to American men and women who wish to do their bit for the can- teen, the club for the boys in khaki: ‘The crisis has come. War ta real. Our men are called to be made into soldiers, Camps are selected for their |training grounds. ‘The ground ts still bare, but will soon be covered with tents, The tents will be the only homes for our boys during the long | and laborious drilling of men into sol- jdiers, When the strained muscles re sore, the body tired, the mind weary, the tent becomes a most un- paign for more soldiers and sailor Miss Adelaide Henck of No. Dies, No. Cline, Ni Burk (who pretore the army, by the way), No. 360 Seventh Street. How many girls will join The Eve World's Loyal Legion ee day? need. a GREAT YEAR FOR SCENTS, $0 THE DOLLARS PILED IN American Perfume Makers Found 1916 the Most Prosperous Twelve- month They Ever Had. ‘That last year was the most prosner- ous one American perfume makers ever ad was announced yesterday by A. M. Splehler, President of the Manufactur- ing Perfumers’ Association, at tie open- ing of its annual convention in the Hotel Biltmore, The use of scented waters is becoming more general, even among men. After saying the American products equal those of Europe, Mr. Spienier | jcomfortable house, with weather | warned the 160 delegates that if they do | | changes, cold, heat, wot mud, ‘Where | Not keep thelr eyes open Prohib| | i slation ruin their business. Pro- shall the men go for distraction, COM- | 11 it1on ne prophesied, will be sought in fort, to dry out, to warm up, to Cool] a) states, and he urged that the mova- off? We plan to help them; to help ment be watched, with a view to pre- | them physically, mentally, morally.” | venting “hasty or ill-advised legislation, To add to its national defense fund | not designed to restrict the operation of for training aviators—for which it al- | our trade, but Possibly having such an ‘ready has raised more than $2,000 In a} VME effect in practical operation.” 's, Last night the members saw “Oh, year—the National Special Aid’ So-| yew at the Princess Theatre and they clety will hold Aviation Day in the| had a supper dance at the Biltmo: tea room at the exhibit of the So- clety of Independent Artists, the Grand Central Palace, next Saturday. Cosmo Hamilton, Ruth Law, Admiral Peary and Henry A, Wise Wood will | be the speakers. “I am eager to help | lin this crisis,” explained Miss Law Corns Peel Right Off With ‘‘Gets- It” jto-day, “and ‘one of the best things |that wom can do 1s to help ratse | money tot n the 2,000 aviato: that! e « | Admiral Peary says are needed at 2 Drops, and the Corn is a Goner!" once | wen you've got to walk on tho sides | ‘The Aviation Committee tn charge! ef your shoe to get away from those }1s made up of the following members; @Wful corn-pains, there's only one com- {tman. Mrs. William. Allen Bart-| @0n-sense thing to do, Put 2 oF 8 drops ett; Vice Chairman, Mrs, Henry a. | Wise Wood, Mrs. James M. Beck: Mr 'Robert Oliphaat, Mrs, Frank Ha eyen, Mrs. Percy Stuart, Mra, Whi-] bur Matthews, Mrs, Cosmo Hamilton, | Mary Lena Hayden, Mrs. George | Mrs, C. L, Baldwin, Miss Glidden, Mi. , Martia ‘Leon- jard, Mrs. Percival Rosseau, Miss C. A MoCilntic, Miss Isabelle Hardie, Miss | Ruth Law, Mra, Robert R. Peary, |Mrs. Willam McAdoo, Miss Ninu enrique, Miss Marle Coddington and t | Miss Kreltler, “An automobile and a woman on every street corner in the State of New York" for April 19, Natlon, Recruiting Day, is the newest sloga } | 8) i} of the National League for Woa Service, Miss Gertrude Robinson Smith, Chairman of the New York Won't Water, Besides, They'lh Loose: Peel on} on the corn right away, 4 inflammation will disappear, the Il begin to shrivel from t hn division of the league, has sounded the call from her headquarters at No. 38 West Thirty-ninth Street, and has ef offered the services of the league members for Recruiting Day to the ayor’s Committee on National De- | who have motor All women world t Uke “Gets It," are urged to lend them for the dlscovery hi : in corn-removers anniversary of the bagtles of Lex- since “Gote-It* was born, Don't forget ington and Concord: that fact, “Gets-It* does away forever fatriows’ Dé husetts With the ase of salves that irritate, ban- as it still is ca che a wide @aaea thet make @ bundle of your toe, 00 TAS & ire ndou er plasters That halt do the. work, knives fo many women have volunteered monmore dissing or cuttings vee” their serv the taking of the Gots-It ts sold everywhe 250 « military it is estimated went on receipt of price by Ey the work c completed in ot & 0o., Chicago, U,—adwt, week Instead of two as was planne An earnest of thg patriotism of er ployers of labor aid of labor itself 1s found in the announcement to-day 22-KARAT GOLD CROWNS, by the New York Red Cross that by tet NG" maeutactcring snesree | 96 UP are coming forward with offers of assistance and material, Oth are | SOLID GOLD ring rest is and loft space to be used for Red Cross workrooms to make bandages and hospital gar- ments, Pledges for service during the war have been signed by more than 500 BRIDGE WORK Giver Filliuge es of Kops Brothers, Irving and Sixteenth Str The company has offered the free use of its machines, and the work make Red Cross supplies during the lunch hour and at other times the rooms ployeea will work on Red Cro plies in short-time shifts, extending over the whole day, in rooms pro- vided by the company. Four doctors and four nurses will be in charge of a new Red Cross auxillary to be opened at the offices of the Edison Company, No, 124 West Forty-second Btreet, Mra, Thomas Name WEDNESDAY, APRIL 11, 1917. WANT For I New York’s Soldiers Name, OBITUARY NOTES, | Henry Schoonmaker, one, Secretary of the American Bridge Company, {s dead in the Hotel Bt. George, Brooklyn Rhea, forty-seven ye: President of the Trans-Missi. sipp! Golf Association, Ww. 8. Memphis, Tenn, ‘The Rev, Dr. Bernard Pick, paster in America nearly sixty year: Charles W. Comstock, aged fifty- nine, formerly Chairman of the Dem- ratle State Central Committee, is) dead in Uncasville, Conn, 44 East 14th St. 279 Broadway 47 Cortlandt St. Address . aged sixty- One thousand pat Address . The Flavor of — | : m | is doad in of St. John's Lutheran Church, New- ark, 1a dead in that city. tle was seventy-four years old and had lived} Representative Henry T, Helgosen ‘h Dakota, Member of Con- ince 1911, 1s dead in Washing- SEALED PACKETS ONLY. | Send for rls edn booklet. Name ...ccdeccccccccccscce Address .. RECRUITING AGENT TEA is incomparably Gefiotons..; Conyright 1917, The House cl upprodelaes War or NoWa The Brill Stores have never been so well prepared to give men real values as they are today. Ordinary clothes were never so ordinary nor so expensive as to- day—while the real goodness and worth of clothes of the kind that are made by the great House of Kuppenheimer have never stood out so prominently, nor have they ever merited the considera- tion of men who appreciate good clothes value, more than they do to-day. ‘To the man who has never worn them, Kuppenheimer style, Kuppenheimer quality and Kuppenheimer service will prove a revelation. Only in the Brill Stores will you find Kuppenheimer Suits and T opcoats, °20 to *40 In the Wide Pee of U td - to - the - Minute Styles, Models and Special Sizes for Which They Are Famous. Clothes made by the most progressive and most efficient tailoring organization in the world for men of discrimination in every walk of life and of every age, taste, temperament aud size. Brill Suits & Topcoats, Special at *15°° Including pe every desi! able model and pattern displayed this season that is possible of production at this pric » Many, in fact, which canuot be had anywhere but in a Brill Store. Exclusiee Kuppenheimer Dealers in Now York, Brooklyn and Newark Broadway at 49th St. 1456 B’way at 42d St. 125th St. at Third Ave. Stores at 1456 Broadway and 125th Street at $d Avenue Open Evenings. Come In, or Write for the New Kuppenheimer Spring Style Book, 791 Broad St., Newark young women who will en- Seovor to cbala live peoreln ooh he army or navy. Mail this coupon when filled out to The Evening W: READY TO ENLIST Name ...ccsccccvsccvccsecs 10%, 18° & 35* SALADA, 10@ Hudson St., New York, 2 Flatbush Ave., B’klyn 1192 Main St., Bridgeport WL Wy LY YY Yy Wh YY) Yy Yl

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