The evening world. Newspaper, May 3, 1917, Page 10

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; ; EE eee Lea IR is Tete Sache -F oc = AUSED LIKELY NUMAN RAD RETRAIN Superintendent Phil Phillips Thinks SWEETEN THE STOMACH AID DIGESTION Birdseye and Associates Will Appear in Court. — TRY — Bese lick S ch Bitters Nature in surance Phillips, 2% Church Street, to-day. District Attorney Swann spent much of to-day studying the complicated lumber company in North Carolina. Mr. Swann said he is not yet sure there is ground for issuing a warrant here. It is likely that the New York and Pennsylvania authorities will agree as to where the case shall be tried. Superintendent Phillips closed to- day the New York offices of the Pitts- burgh Life Company at No, 145 Broadway, the Buliding. J, B. York agent, and hi shut up their desks and went home. Feilheimer said they had been doing pe aca $100,000, of business every mont a. PREVENT CONSTIPATION Clarence F. Birdseye, who, accor Ing to State Superintendent of In- originated =the scheme of buying the $24,000,000 Pitts- burgh Life and Trust Company with & $120,000 note, was in his office, No. Although warrants have been is- ways! ...4 in Pittsbureh for the arrest of State Superintendent Phillips, “ls to eco what fas be done for the policy- so hee old Washington Incura: argh wie was taken into the Pi and Trust y in 1908. hat will me lone about protect- 000,000 of policies a Kine, urgh Company?” bo ask vay rat, we shall’ see what iets" said Phillips, “It is “too, *eoen yet to may how they shall be reinsured.” A statement iseued at i offices sf the insurance company in Pi this afternoon sald that $22, 000 000. ot the company's assets now appear not to have been touched and that pos- sibly $1,000,000 may be recovered from the group of promoters, The latter assurance was mado on the strength of information indicating that the “bonds” of the Dare Lumber Company, transferred to the Pitts- burgh Life as security for $1,900,000, may have an actual value of $1,000,000 or more, MRS, DE SAULLES T0 LOSE SON IF SHE SEES MOTHER Appeals for Release From Divorce Order Keeping Her From Taking Washington Lite Fellheimer, the New staff of six clorks “My chief business to-day,” said GOODYEAR RAINCOAT CO. Retiring from Business UARTER CENTURY IN RETAIL TRADE |. ates. as sauitos nays sno ts ex. Gases inion Telegraph Co. Has Leased Our Old-Established Store. RAINCOATS FOR MEN, WOMEN, CHILDREN at Close-out Prices! 2° The Most Important Raincoat Sale in Recent Years! Eleven Big Bargain Lots to Insure Immediate Disposal! LOT 1—Men’s $6.50, $7.50, $8.50 values; Double Tex. Raincoats. Guaranteed Waterproof LOT 2—Men’s $10, $12.50, $13.50 values; Cashmeres, Tweeds, Waterproof Raincoats. . .. $15, $16.50, $18 values; Gabardines, Rainproof Tweed and Novelty Rub- LoT s—Men’s berized Coats. . eerdecbece 20, $22.50, $27. ‘50 alien; Chavenitinn, imported materials aod newest style LoT 4¢—Men’s Rea This lot includes many of our finest products.........s.eee.eees08 LOT 5—Women’s $5, $6, $7.50 values; Poplins, Cantons in various colors and styles... LOT 6—Women’s $9, $10, $12.50'values; in Cashmeres, Tweeds and Mixture effects. LOT 7—Women’s $12, $13.50, $15 values; Plaids, Checks and Novelty Mixtures; all colors LOT 8—-Women’s hey $22.50, $25 values; Rubberized Silk Coats in plaids and plain effects, also Cravenettes, large variety of styles ...... 00... .ceceeeeeseeeevenne LOT 9—Women’s Very High Grade Silk Rubberized Raincoats, in assortment of ‘up-to-the. nd colors, minute styles, fabri Some very expensive Coats included i in th this lot. EEE OR. 46ST, 6-8" AVE. Good Furniture at Reasonable Prices On Our LIBERAL CREDIT ARRANGEMENT Our Terma Apply Also to N ALL Goobs 3-PIECE WILLIAM and MARY » York, LAIN FIGURES, WE PAY FRBIGHT, consisting of BUFFET, with mirror; CHINA CLoser, SERVING TABLE. 3 Pieces at $95.00 k= a WE SELL ON CREDIT COLUMBIA GRAFONOLAS From $15.00 Upwards Why Bry F100, Machine, ay Yer 7 Columbia Gratonolne in good condition) for. hig In #0 ee ee § ROM 875 UP ON CREDIT Es ON CREDIT, TRS aT The very best that can be noes Alla! LOT 10—Boys’ $3.50 to $5 Black Rubber Coats and Dauuls Tes. Borbatinen tel er rece 4 LOT 11—Girls’ $3.50 to $5 values; Combination Hat and Coat; all colors; belted models, . 941 Broadway : : ry nies ara ie Yew Jersey, Long Island and Connectiout, dave (it New York World Sets The Pace Boy to Chili During War. Mrs. Blanca Erraruiz de Saulles, the —twenty-two-year-old Chillan heiress and former wife of John Longer de Saulles, football star and rich real estate operator, finds she must either give up her four-year- old son, John Longer jr., or forego visiting her mother in Chill, In an application made to the Su- preme Court, which came to light to- Yi tremely sorry that she signed a stip- ulation at the close of her divorce sult promising not to take her son to Chill until peace had been de- :(200 MORE WANE AS NAVY AVIATORS Many Men 1 Who | Can Man- age Men” Also Are Needed for the Plattsburg Camp. Orders received late this afternoon District of the United States Naval Reserve Force, at No, 26 Cortlandt Street, from Rear Admiral N. R. Usher, Commandant of this district, urged the necessity of enrolling at least 200 aviators at once. These men need not necessarily be experienced airmen, but they must have a knowledge of gasolene engines and general mechanics. From March 8 to date 2,443 men have been enrolled in the Naval Re- serve, which falls far short of the re- quired quota of 10,000 to man the 1,200 boats of all ratings, from sea- going yachts to small, fast motor- boats and deep-water tugs, enrolled by their owners. ‘The complement for a patrol boat of fifty feet (the minimum size) consists of one ensign, one engineer and three seamen, The number of the crew Is raised proportionately up to 250 men or more for the big yachts on duty, This afternoon one of the most clared, In asking the court to re- scind the stipulation she said sho would have hired a special ship, if necessary, for her and her son. She offered also to make the trip by provided she could take her son with Under the stipulation these of- Mrs, de Saulles declared she was exceedingly anxious to seo her mother and feared for her own health if the application was denied. Through some arrangement made out of court Mrs. de Saulles with- drew her application temporarily. meetin PIMLICO ENTRIES. RACE TRACK, PIMLICO, Md., May 3,-- The entries for tomorrow's races are ae (ol FIRST RACE—For colta and ge olde; four” furlongs, Peele: 3-50 5.75 8-75) 10-50 2.75 4:75 6% 10-50 1450 2-05 Powerit Adlington Selling Handicap. for thrre year.alde: ix furlongs. —HHiue Fox, 100; Qlyn G ‘ 4 mung, 108; Swift Fox, 104, 8 107; Visney Atop, 110; XTH RACE niet i Wats 14 “h lm: six furlongs 4 muy; three-year-olds, and Malden Jockeys. —41 seeecrecccces Qumiias tormerly Harlea RAOK—Tho For three-year-olds, and yj felvfanka, 103; eld 100 | Pensacola, famous of American steam yachts, \lmost @s big as an ocean liner and »wned by one of the country’s most spectacular multi-millionatres, has al- ready left. Class 1 of the Naval Reserve is made up of ex-navy officers and men honorably discharged from the navy. Class 2 18 composed of men who have served as officers in the Merchant Marine, the age limit being between twenty-one and thirty-five. Class 3 is assembled from men who own motor-boats and small, swift craft and will guarantee to man euch hoats. Class 4 requires engineers, boller- makers, blacksmiths, riggers, car- penters, rivetters, radio-operators, signalmen, cooks and stewards, Class 5 is the Neval Reserve Flying Corps. Men qualifying for this branch of the service will be sent at once to Fla, and there be as- fleet duty, with hydro- aeroplanes, Class 6 is the Volunteer Naval Reserve, Men enrolling in this arm of the sea-service, are required to serve without pay or uniform gratuity, and, boats suitable for scouting or patrol purposes, to turn them over to the signed to ‘| Government, Men of the intellectual and executive calibre required for the officers’ train- have not been responding to the call for Arthur I. secretary of the Military Training Camps Association, with headquarters at No. 19 West For- ing camp at Plattsburg, N. Y., according to Capt. executive duty, Cosby, ty-fourth Street. While Capt Corner Es at prides 1 Wa Twenty-second Street | _,4»'x8ni"* Unie Tie | Carrell saling (Flatiron ae aoa tn 12; || —Sweoney * Apprentice [) MICHTY OAKS FROM LITTLE Seta areas W. tL. DOUCL noon, qualifications. GROINAT FACTORY AT PRESENT LOCATION ON SPARK l [STREET, BROCKTON. OUTPUT 3600 aL, P aun 2a “THE SHOE Known Shoes in W: L. Douglas name and the retail stam factory. retail prices are the same everywhere. eu quality of W.L. shoes. ion centres of America, equipped factory at Brockton, Mass., by the Supervision of experienced men, shoes for the price that money can buy. For sal our lo dealer for WV. Whe Douglas shoes, If Write for booklet, order shoesbym. postage free. 210 Spark st. Dough W. L. Douglas Stores i ~ bet, 146th 147th Sts. corner 8th St, | noar 14th 8 N cor, Pearl. | Saris cor, Tbarston, |*1367 Broadway, cor. Gates Avenue, 2fhird Av.cor: 120th St. [e478 Fifth Avenue, cor, 11th Street. “Stores marked with a * carry complete lines of W. L. Dou don the bottom of all shoes at the The value is guaranteed and the wearer protected against high prices for inferior shoes. They cost no more in San Francisco than they do in New York, They are always worth the price paid for them. Douglas product is guaranteed by more than 4o years experience in making fine The smart styles are the leaders in the fash- They are made in a well- paid, skilled shoemakers, under thedirection and all working with an honest determination to make the best ver 9000 shoe dealers 1 sin the ttoecall cannotsupply you, takenoother make, showing how to Vb Goriglae nt Hhoe Co. , Brockton, Mass. THAT HOLDS ITS SHAP-: $3.00 $3.50 $4.00 $4.50 $5.00 $6. ” 7. 00 *8. 00 ‘You can Save Money by Wearing W. L. Douglas Shoes. The Best the World. price is The highest Beat in the World $3.00 $2.50 32.00 BEWARE OF FRAUD None genuine unless w. L. al ne Douglas name and the retail price is stamped on the bottom TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE n Greater New Yorks *859 Manhattan Avenue, 1779 Pitkin Avenue, i SEY CITY—18 Newark peton 120 Wash S31 Broad Street. 192 Market Street, tate St., cor, Broad gias Shoes for Women, ‘ if they are owners of Cosby's quarters were crowded with applicants this after- only three of those anxious to enroll to-day as officers approached the Lists will close for tls 8, 1917. city to-morrow night. But, by a spo- cial order from Washington, Capt. TWeGhe Cet cane tans Ona his quota, Capt. Cosby made the fol- lowing statement to The Evening World: “We have had plenty of men, Pn active duty; but possibly less than NTHSDSTROT =e ber cent. of them have been of the and Middle West are | mites ghitey P) the Eastern District. @ good book- | Keeper he does not necessarily make We need men for the | officera training camps who are used !to handling men and not to being Because a man is le g00d officer. | handled themselves.” It developed at Naval Recruiting at headquarters of the Third Naval headquarters at No, 34 East Twenty- third Street to-day that several pros- |" pective recruits have figured that by signifying their willingness to enlist in the navy that they would be ex- empt from the military draft. This is jnot 80, says Lieut. Commander John Grady, in charge of recruiting for the Eastern District. headquarters at No. early caller. rifle of ancient vintage, ble place could be found. was advised to wait. | Capt. new gas-masks. The Marine Corps is issuing cards to rejected applicants which read as follows: “This is to certify that Mr....... has patriotically offered his ser- vices to the United States Marine Corps, but has been rejected for physical disabilities.” thelr head. cheered for spectators. One of the visitors, old wireless operator, aroused par. theular attention. and “Star Spangled Bannei the singing of the anthem of country, 2,665 More Army Recruits Added. WASHINGTON, May 3 to figures announced t army recruiting again showed good results yesterday. men were accepted, brought into the service since Pennsylvant LEXINGTON RAC May 3—The entries The United States Marine Corps | tw %4 East Twenty- third Street did a briek business to- day, enrolling forty recruits, Amos Hitchens of Coxsackie, N. ¥., was an He carried ‘a squirrel which he was willing to demonstrate if a sulta- Inasmuch as Amos is fifty-seven years old, he Bill Beaten tm fi i {worn | MADISON, Wis. The Woman dik tady “ae ! Imp:| suffrage Referendum Bill, which pro- Cenetora 208 N9:| vided for a State-wide vote on woman My and A; Frank BE. Evans was sum- cto moned to the United States marine barracks in the Brooklyn Navy Yard, to give the green marine recruits of the First Battalion a drill with the NFANT MORTALITY is something frightful. of all the children born in civilized countries, twenty-two per cent., or nearly one-quarter, die before the r cent., or more than one-third, before t! ey are fifteen! many of these of these infantile d Drops, tinctures and soothing S7FOP8 sold for children’s beped spats contain more or less opium or morphine. deadly poiso: I to congestio: toria if it bears the signature oe Chas. H. Fletcher as it contains no opiates or narcotics of any hint (0 WAAIZE, Genuine Castoria always bears the signature of During the meeting to-day of the midday recruiting committee at No. |57 Chambers Street, fourteen French sailors marched in with an ensign at They were vociferously fully a minute by 1,000 a@ fifteen-year CIGARETTES of IMPORTED and DOMESTIC tobaccos —Blended ing, 101; siady) 1 ew The “Mars iiiaiae’ the French satlors or hee in According jay regular Chinee in New Sm PITTSBURGH, May 3% ceipts of lemons from Mexico by Q Yuan Long & Co, Chinese merchants, were explained to-day. Revenue Agent Boyd carried out a raid that netted five prisoners, two safes and one trunk filled, with more than $100,000 of opium, money and documents giving clues to the existence of a chain of similar stores throughout the country. The opium was smugéled over the Mexican border In lemon skins neatly sealed with A total of 2,665 making 45,540 April 1 still leads, LEXINGTON ENTRIES. TRACK. Ky. for to-morrow's Two Children Die in Fire; Five Saveds Father Dying; Mother Collapses. BERWICK, Pa. May 3.—In @ fire that destroyed their home at a hams let five miles distant from here this morning, two children—Cora, aged six, and Ray, aged fourteen—of John fee, 118 |Spiner were burned to death, The ifather and five other children were Jeaved by Jumping father is S]the Berwick Hospital suffering fr na from Which he cannot ree her ia tn a state of colle oe { suffrage in 1 beaten in. the eA y It one mile and Save the Babies We can hardly realize that reach one year; thirty-seven ey are five, and one-half before We do not hesitate to say that 0 timely use of Castoria would save recious li either do we he te to say that many narcotic preparations, are jioned by the use They are, in considerable quantities, y Ss eetted they stupefy, Lea circulation and lead = ¢ ger in the use of Cas- There can be no dai “Tf you want more than good taste” HE point about Chestertields is that, in addition to pleasing the taste, as every good cigarette is supposed to do, they go further— Chesterfields hit your smoke - feeling, they let you know you are smoking—they “Satisfy? Yet, theyre MILD! It's all due to the new blend of pure, natural Imported and Domestic tobaccos —a blend that can’t be copied, Get that new ‘*Satis/y"’ tecling, Today, Lggele Myers Sobacco Co,

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