The evening world. Newspaper, May 14, 1917, Page 4

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"S34 BOMB FOUND } dds an indescribable flavor to! d and builds up the system. ug Stores Everywhere chine was discovered recently in She Phon It's fine lines, its longer reflect the the atelier. er RINE TE ees =n mirror to nature itself. Natural and instrumental—come from it, i i i} |i H i oi i i Moy a | | | | 4 i 1 No musical instrument ever made has met 1 | with such immediate and unbounded suc i ott cess as the Acolian-Vocalion. The public i 4 and the musical world were waiting for ; Hi just such a phonograph—nearer to nature | Hj in its reproductions, les dency in it 1 tone, more real beauty in its looks. And ; something else, which had not been antic: | | al | Terms } AEOLIAN HALL i In BROOKLYN | at Flatbush Avenue [INKASER'SPALAGE SAYSPARS REPORT PARIS, May 14—An infernal ma- ographof Coday E phonograph of today is a beautiful instrument—beautiful to look at and beautiful to hear. portions, its rich case-woods, no art of the cabinet designer. Instead, it is the unmistakable production of the artist and Its tone is no longer typical of the phono- graph. Gone is the effect of stridency hitherto apparently inseparable from that instrument. ‘ Instead, this great, new phonograph holds a | GAEOLIAN - VOCALION The AEOLIAN COMPANY ONDAY, MAY 14, 1917. : THE EV Bellevue Palace in the Tiergarten in Berlin, where the Imperial German family is now residing, according to who sends German news to L’Humanite, The mdeonine, says, contained enough dynamite jo wreck the palace and the adjoin. ing buildings. “It ia probable the German Govern. ment will declare this news ‘a pure invention’,” says the correspondent, ‘evertheléss I ean affirm that my formation is accurate.” . eaiee Vee, M PARALYSIS’ SPREAD LAID AT DOOR OF HEALTH OFFICIALS & correspondent Prominent physicians and’ clergy- the} ti LV A NTANT ae ee te i deep and strong, now soft and sweet and in- finitely delicate. And above all, the phonograph of today is no longer simply a machine of stereotyped per- formance. Instead, it has become an instrument of personal musical expression. Playing auto- matically like other phonographs when desired, it offers in addition, the priceless privilege of self-expression in music which only those who play, or sing, have hitherto enjoyed. The home of the “Phonograph of Today”, : which is now available to everyone, is at Aeolian Hall. Its name, already famous throughout the entire country, is delicate pro- conventional tones—vocal now rich and its magnificent Art Styles cost more than phonographs ever have before — because there never have been phonographs like them before—prices of Aeolian-Vocalions in regular or conventional. cases, are the same as phonographs of other make. Priced from $35 to $350. ($35 to $75 without Graduola.) Art Styles to $2000. pated, a phonograph which could be used when desired, as a real musical instrument for the expression of one’s instinctive musical emotions. Let no one think that the Aeolian-Vo calion, because of its distinguished supe- riority, costs more than other phonographs of relatively comparable styles, For while may be as low as $5 monthly AEOLIAN HALL: In THE BRONX 367 East i4oth Street AEOLIAN HALL: In MANHATTAN . 2g West 42nd Street "|So, you see, the malady raged for | during ® hearing to-day in City Hall | be supervised by 2 separate Comimis- was sunk, Mr. Norton said, were tho that last year’s infantile paralysis sioner, opidemic, which had is origin in that waar be the third momber of the borough and later swept the entire city, would have been checked before it gained headway if the Health De- partment had begun ite fight sooner. The Brooklynites want the Mayor to sign a bill passed by both Houses of the Legisiiture which provides that the city Health Department shall be so reorganized that Brooklyn and | Queens will have ‘a Health Commis- sioner of their own, and that Many men of Brooklyn told Mayor Mitchel | nattan, the Bronx and Richmond will Police Commissioner Woods crews of the Spl end British vessels teh pedoed off the coast of Portugal. Dr. J, Richard Keviny who is Sur-/J, A. Nye, American Vivo Consul |geon Major in the Twonty-third Ceylon, and Capt. Henry ichmo Rogiment; Dr, Amos Judd, President Rio at Molendo, Pe ot the Médical Society of Kings turning eon svat to (County with a membership of 1,000; ‘Dr. J. J. Kindred, President of the Queens and Nassau Medical Society; the Rev. Dr. 8. Parkes Cadman, pas- tor of the Central Congregational \Church; the Rev. John L. Belford, rector of the Church of the Nativity, and Dr, Samuel Mills were the prin- cipal speakers in favor of a separate Health Commissioner for Brooklyn. Dr, Kevin said: “If the first cases of infantile paralysis that broke out In Brooklyn had been promptly reported last summer I doubt whether the dis- ease Would have become epidemic. Had there been a separate health division in Brooklyn, with a responsible head, ® commissioner, more inspectors would have been employed and the cases could have been isolated.” Mayor Mitchel asked Dr. Kevin to state specifically how the Health De- partment had failed to make good. Dr. Mille announced that he would an- ewer the question. “It happens that I had eight pa- ; Palysta co among the first discov- ‘ ered,” he sald, “My cases, Mr. May- OF, Wore reported the latter part of last May and around the first part of June. Do you know, sir, that the Sreat Health Department of New York did not get busy untfl July 17 ‘SAW BRITISH GHUISER of Thrilling Fight and Strategic Moves Off JrisifCoast. strategy between a swift cruiser and a German submarine, from the liner when her guns bega wait for an enemy ship due alon that way. torpedo at her. streaked out cruiser her guns were si Siadnole, Month before attempts were Sheiis toward the submarine. made to check it. God knows how {far it travelied in that time, I gon- tend that if Brooklyn had a separate Health Commissioner, who would be . held responsible for conditions there, the fight against poliomyelitus would have been antedated just thirty days.” Health Commissioner Emerson, re- plying to 1 were 115 ported in May and June, not through any laxity on the part of Health De- partment officials or inspectors, but because the physicians im attendance were unable to recognize cases when they saw them. Out of the 129 first nm were reported to the Health Department.” Dr. Emers: opposed the splittin, of the Health Department. He sai it would entail an extra expense of $100,000 a year to the taxpayers, Other opponents of the bill were the Citi-/ zens’ Union, City Club, New Lots| Board of Trade and the Academy of Medicine. TWO LINERS SUNK DUTSIDE PLYMOUTH, TRAVELLERREPORTS Passengers arriving to-day from port in Great Britain declared that while the British Government has been fairly frank in anfhouncing losses to shipping inflicted by German sub- marines, there has been a suppression of detail for the purpose of hiding disquieting facts from the people, | Recently, the returning travellers || said, German U boats have practi- | cally gone into Channel porte and accomplished terrific destruction, W. N. Norton, a machinery salesman of Cleveland, O,, returning from a) trip around the world, said that the} Germans, while they were able to keep | | ships afloat, sowed mines in the main roadsteads all through the Far East, and that there Is reason to be- eve submarine mine layers are op- erating in those waters to-day. Mr. Norton brought back word of the loss of four ships -not officially |reported by the British Government, |among them two passenger jiners which were sunk off Plymouth Har- bor, One of them was sent down en April 28. This was the P, &, O, liner Medina, | 12,350 tons, from the East Indies with a big passenger list, Mr, Norton was & passenger on the Medina from Col- ‘ombo, Ceylon, to Marseilles, where he | left the ship to go to England through | France, The Medina steamed slowly | on her way to her home port and was | sunk practically in port. “There has been no official an- |nouncement by the Admiralty of the! sinking of the Medina,” said Mr. Nor- ton, “but the fc.t that she was sunk is. generally known and I am told that a great London newspaper, a few days ago, sured the Admiralty for withholding the news of the sin} we still maintain full sale a most attractive 2 4&2 akon 2% yds, 6.75 each. Breakfast Sizes, $2.00, 2. Dinner Sizes, $3.75, 4.50, In thie way you are » Merchan: Widest than at any time in your life. pedoed and sunk off Plymouth. So far as L know the Admiralty has not reported this disaster, although it is known in British shipping cricles, 1 understand that there was some loss of lite,” While Mr. Norton escaped experi- ences with German submarines oft the English coast, he felt the long arm of German ruthlessness in the far off Indian Ocean, On Mareh 16 he was a passenger on the big Bibby liner Worchester, bound from Co- tombo, Ceylon, to Australia, Off ‘the south coast of Ceylon the Worchester struck a mine, She re- mained afloat forty-eight hours and passengers and crew were saved, A freighter, the Perseus, of the Ocean Navigation Company, was sunk by as illustrated, at & mine with @ loss of four lives a few miles away from where the Wor~ chester met gisaster and at about the same time, On board the Mafiina when she Zambest, had been tor- Other passengers on the liner wore R. Grace whe is re- AND U BOAT IN DUEL Passengers on Incoming Liner Tell Passengers on @ British liner Which reached port to-day had a thrilling experience off a point on the coast of Ireland a week ago. They witnessed & combination fight and game of British ‘The cruiser was about three miles to bark. The passengers and officers of the merchant ship could see that the cruiser was firing at a submarine | GoLp which had apparently been lying in The submarine sank out of sight, only to reappear about fitteen min- utes later on a route designed by her commander to enable him to get close enough to the liner to fire a But the liner had in @ due northerly course and was more than four miles away when the submarine came up. The last the passengers saw of the 1 hurling Special Prices for Table Linen at “The Linen Store” Although Linen is scarce and will be scarcer, we offer a special lot embracing some seventy-, ' five good designs at reduced prices. In addition, we have saved for this month’s Scotch Linens which we contracted for a year ago at the lower figures then prevailing. We are consequently able to offer these now at the following moderate retail prices: a. Table Cloths yds.) $3.00, 3.50, 4.00, 4.75, 5-75 up. 2% 24% yds., $3.85, 4.25, 5.75, 6.25, 7.00 up. 214 x2 yds., $4.78, 6.00, 6.75, 8.50, 8.75 up. 254 7-00, 7-50, 8.75, SO up. Longer lengths if edch width at proportionate prices. Bungalow Clothe (Cream Napkins James McCutcheon & Co. Fifth Ave., 34th &.33d Streets BEFORE the happy day, Mies June Bride, at our store—AFTERWARDS, in your cosy home. of these thi ERAL CREDIT. ”'and ali when they m ‘ome in and add sands of Happy Homes we have furnished in SIXTY. desired. in SIX ; PLAIN FIGURE TAGS ON EVERYTHING h / Wii eI ing of a British passengor ship with | [eae a I i i mwvior| Ih ; MAY n | heavy loss of life, | - = = BA IN! % | | “L don’t know if there was loss of 3 3 i \h |life on the Medina, but I do know Ha ‘ I = officially from the P, & O. Line that = (Mle ; & | “3 : jall my baggage was lost, and I was X = = i | |informed that the ship had gone to ey ys DINING a) Le é the bottom. I think the newspaper - ROOM t z WAS | criticlam referred to the Medina, JACOBEAN “The day before or the day after Tey: OAK the sinking of the Medina a passen- —— ger steamship of the Orient Line, if ’ 4 ca — called the Omrab, 8,180 tons, was tor- * i" WACon” WvenlS"Sr HIGHLANDS HOTEL BURNED. ‘The Victoria Destroyed but Other Hostelrien Ave Saved With t DiMeoity. HIGHLANDS, N. J, May 14.—Fire destroyed the Victoria Hotel here to- day witty a lone estimated at $15,000, ‘The binge was prevented from acd (oe, to une 3 Yiptal and n= Martin y work the ioca} ae ted oy firemen “eed ‘Sen it, Atlantic ty eg soldiers railroad ADAGGER * IN THE BACK —_—- ‘That's the wom dread when she wakes ap in the morning to start the day's work. “Oh, how my back aches!” GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Otf Capsnies taken to- day ease the backache Of to-morrow— ty ay e ack ey Don't delay, What's the ane of #dt- Begin taking GOLD MEDAL Maar- M1 Capoules to-day and be Fetleved mm os to-morrow, Take three or four every dey ‘and be permanently free from wrenching, be sure Py ¢ GOLD MED- fhe National ‘medy of Holland, the Government of the | Netecianas having jed @ special obar- ter authorising ite pre tion and sale. Dhe housewife of Holla ould almost as goon be without bread would with but her “Real Dutch Drops,” as she quaint- is GOLD 1 on This is the one reason wi; nd the women and ohilarem o¢ Hgt- eo sturdy and robust. ja GOLD MEDAL Mo Ly Me |) Capsules im por aye {oa in Haarlem, Motiand. But M Look for by, reliabh t GOLD MEDAL. 1 help you. ‘Au others are imitations. fee. Trade Mark stocks and during May fresh supply of Irish and Color), $4.00, 5.50, 6.50, \ 85, 3.25, 3-50, 4.00 up 4:35, 5-25, 6.00 up. OWE A ee TY est Prices, Quality ime-Saving, and, if TY-

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