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Serviceable in Fabric _ Stylish in Workmanship Satisfactory in Price Our Wash Fabrics are shrunk before they are tailored. Our woolens are all wool. The work- manship is conscientiously done and due consid- eration given to style and fit. Prices are based on the value of the merchandise and usually run lower than. elsewhere. Boys” Washable Norfolk Suits That You Can Depend On ti at $3.50 A tion Norfolk Model in tan or white duck. 7 to 18 years. | kha! Boys’ “Cool Cloth” Suits Two Pair of Knickerbockers a at $6.75 Washable, about half and half wool and cotton, in gray, tan or heather mixtures. Boys’ Wool Norfolk Suits i Two Pair of Knickerbockers at 98.75 A full Norfolk Model, interdetachable belt, in gray, brown, and heather cheviot mixtures. 7 to 18 years. Fifth Avenue, 37th and 38th Sts. Boys’ Summer Clothes And Finally ° All our Boys’ Shops are together on the Fifth Floor, and you can equip your son from straw hat toshoes,; without shoppingifrom floor to tloor. 7 to 18 years. tweed or ; FRANKLIN SIMON & CO.’S Shoes for Boys at the customary prices No Increase Yet! Black Calf Shoes, high or low 3.50 and 4,00 Tan Calf Shoes, high or tow Ko-Ko-Calf High Shoes 4.50 and 5,00 White Buckskin Oxfords Mahogany Calf Oxfords Munson Army Shoes Boys’ Scout Shoes Boys’ Clothing 4.00 and 4.50 5.00 5.00 4.00 and 4,50 3.00 and 3.50 Boys’ Apparel Shop—Fifth Floor Furnishings Mats Shoes GRrawp Rapips} FURNITURE APARTMENTS FURNISHED COMPLETE FROM $50 TO $500 Open Saturday Evenings 164 ST. L STATION AT CORNER FISHER BROS COLUMBUS AVE. BET. 103 &104 ST WORLD WANTS WORK WONDERS (Boudoir Secrets) No toilet table is complete without ® small package of delatone, for with ft hair or fuzz can be quickly ban- ished from the skin. 'To remove hairs you merely mix into @ paste enough of the powder and water to cover the This should be left on the skin about two minutes, | then rubbed off and the skin washed, when it will be found free from hair Be sure you get genuine objectionable hairs. or blemish delatone.—Advt, m your vaca- tion this Summer have your favorite paper mailed to you every day, Evening World, 12c per week Daily World, 12c per week Sunday World, 6¢ per Sunday on cap qutwcribe now for 4 week or length of time you wish, and we. wi Snange Your Addrem as often as yeu de sZt! ZOU" seeuler newsdealer where you SHAG HES MRT met ahd be wilh eran | To Free Your Skin of Hair or Fuzz || cereal France Would Lend §435,000,4100 PARIS, June T—France has thu far advanced to her allies or friendly | States $750,000,000, A bill was intro-\ duced In the Chamber to-day by ene} Minister of Finance, with the ap- proval of President Poincare, asking | for authority to loan to France's al- You have no idea, unless you have actually seen its work, how speed, and dependable Poslam is and how if will justify, time and again, all the confidence you place in it—to make your skin heathier, more sightly, Eczema ‘breaks out, disfig- Pimples, Rash or any erup- tonal troubles, drive them away and fur- e safe, Poslam does so much and ey) so far. Sold everywhere. For FREE SAM- PLE write to Emergency Labora- Urge you brighter, better, through the dai use of Poslam Poslam.—Adrt. i fra Varia te mall it to you, oe | iow York eat rou tance dict to Cashier, orld, Pulitase Butiding, New York City i THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, JU friends additional sums Hopkins Poslam should efficient treatment. 5 West 47th St., New York. | physicians jane of ‘kere in niversity, Dr. Smith Ely Jelliffe, as Proved by Forty-five Medical Units, Twenty to Twenty-five American Physicians in Each, | Already on the Battle Front.| FRESHER, CLEARER, By Nixola Greeley-Smith. | HEALTHIER SKIN A the ph | | States | Joseph Colt Bloodgood of Johns Major in the Medical Reserve Corps and Chairman the United wer? Dr. of the Committee on Medical clation, of 20,000 try and American Association conven- tion yesterday that | Prepared- ness of the Houth- ern Medical Asso- told the Medical doctors neded for thie coun- | the Allies immediately only} skin to become clearer, | #000 are now avatlable, and that the | Government, in his opinion, will be medicated with compelled to resort to conscription of Conscription Not Needed To Get Surgeons for Army;\| They’re First in the Field amounting to $436,000,000. ‘This would! Physicians Are Patriots, Says ®s° to obtain the necessary medical bring the total advances by France| up to more than $1,100,000,000, POSLAM. MEANS — quota, Speaking before the same assem- blage, Col. T. H. Goodwin of the Royal Army Medical Corps, who came to this country as a member of the Balfour commission, eald that 60,000 doctors have been killed in the war, adding: “The men over in France are work- |ing day and night, They work until they are hardly able to stand. They the front by the th Tor. Tenngse them!" ‘ rofessi v ¥ N ad na House of Dete-| Profession for the Government, medical forces of the United States |oli bloody | bi yesterday afternoon Dr. Frank set, At present the Surgeon Gen- e 's office has not sufficient author- Billings‘ of Chicago declared that noyity io deal witit the situation, and |‘ Proper mobilization of the medjcal/ the: |4 forees of this country can take ged untif the profession of medicine fa < youn mecasonte te bt represented tn the Cabinet. than ours?) When © young man en- | Dr. Smith Ely Jeliiffe, distinguished | lists a physician is needed to exam- neurologist and editor of the New/ine him, To keep his health while York Medical Journal, told me yes-| On duty a doctor ts needed to super- terday afternoon in di! Dr.| vise the sanitary conditions surround- Bloodgood's statement that he is\ing him, When he is wounded a| atronaly in favor of Dr. Billings’s de-| doctor cares for him; when he dics mand for medical fepresentation in} @ doctor must certify the cause of | 3 : ath, OE the ‘present thne there te no| "Mobilization of the Medical Sec- | lack of preparation and no lack of|tion of the Committee on National | trtotism in the medical profession,” | Defense was completed too recently Or, Jelliffe said. “The fact that the|for results to produce definite results, medical units were the first to be!| Under the plan adopted, leading phy- sent to France shows what section of | siclans all over the country will bring the forees of the country were most| their personal influence to bear on the ssion is more concerned ri gates of the Medical Association! should of course be under a physi- | were turned by ‘uncared ot Gengrenes with — ‘on | Confederate Vets Vintt ‘when, they /the Army, Food and Dnippiae is. | WASHINGTON, June &—The . Imagine the think of the same thing happening to | There should be some one empowered |federate Veterans went to organize and control the medical |to-day to unveil a The |Gen. Robert B. Lae o visit the ttlgfleld where they by Union arms & he last are working their very souls out, Where will we get more doctors? We haven't got them, ‘That's what jt comes to, t is nothing to to 80,000 wounded in twenty-four hours, You have them lying there. they He? u must get them back, ” ufferings of these inen them, 4 prepared, from twenty to twenty-|arce, Human endurance has ite limitations, | Rumboring re in each unit, have left | unteered at the outbreak of the war | Pinink ‘that is eumi-|have never received a reply to thelr clent answer to critics of the unpre-| offer of their doctors. Rave trom 20,000 | Paretnes® of ‘has made #0 good a|of impulse, of patriotic ardor, showing? Are you going to leave them where “y this country. clans,” Dr. think It will be easy to obtain the first quota of 20,000 physi-|not put R. 8. V Jellifte Forty-five medical units,|young physicians of thelr acquaint- Many young doctors who vol- to their country. | volunteer is an act When @ young man offers his life to hts Gov. ernment, puts his training and skill at the service of his country, he does | P. on his application, added.| Perhaps, but you know as well as i| do that he is chilled to the soul if What other} You know now, HARP: $75 to $1,800 PIANOS $150 to $700 y sald to me, ‘Tat them “Conscription will not be necessary |i, ages not get a reply, It is not the | lie there!’ I cannot all, there are the friends and relatives of the men, There is a feeling of confidence among the civil population that if thelr sons and fathe: brothers are wounded they will brought home. Or, if they are sufte! tng horribly, they will be given an otto and ‘un care. Suppose left them there; think of the ef- the war! under fifty-five years of reinforcements, they see men dying at state posi 8,000 physic! foreign ‘st of /to obtain this number. rvice. “This delay should From letters} fault of the Surgeon General's office that have reached the office of the|if such things have happened, for | New York Medical Journal, I can] there is not a sufficient cl ely that many tans have volunte And their tions are still unanswered in Wash- ington owing to the fact that the Surgeon General's office has not a on the population in carrying on|sufficient appropriation to employ Then when you bring up| clerks to answer them. | 1 force to handle tho application: Congress appropriates here won't be any. “It seems to me, though, that de- | spite these handicaps the medical profession has made a better showing of preparedness than any other. At any rate, it was the first to get its men in the field.” $5 to $175 Store Open THIS Saturday until 6 P. M. Fifth Avenue, 37th and 38th Sts. Misses’, Juniors’ and Girls’ Misses’ Summer New Models—At Special Prices Misses’ Gingham Dresses Dresses In red, tan or blue colorings, trimmed with Chinese embroidered medallions organdie. 14 to 20 years. Misses’ Voile Dresses on white In Copen, rose, corn or white voile; waist and skirt trimmed with pleated ruffles and cluster pin tucks; ruffled pouch pockets, ribbon sash. 14 to 20 years. Misses’ White Voile Dresses New summer models trimmed with various width tucks or pleated ruffles, large square collar, ribbon girdles. Misses’ Summer Serge Suits Two new models of navy blue coats with shirred back 14 to 20 years, pleated back, patch skirts with detachable belts. 19 15 14 to 20 years. meteor or foulard silk, in navy, French 14 to 20 years. serge, belted pockets; Summer Dresses, Suits ana Coats 9.75 16.75 18.50 MISSES’ SUMMER SUITS and COATS Exclusive New Models—At Spocial Prices Girls’ Dimity Dresses colored grounds. 6 to 12 years. Girls’ Chambray Dresses French knots. 10 to 14 years, Girls’ White Dresses fichus or hand embroidered and various laces; ribbon sashes. Misses’ Silk Dresses New Summer Models—At a Special Price Of taffeta silk, cre blue, taupe, flesh, white or black. Misses’ Wool Velour Coats Made of balance of imported Girls’ Summer Dresses nklin Simon & Co. A Store of Individual Shops New Models—At Special Prices Hand smocked Empire models of dimity with tiny flowers in pink or blue on white or Hand smocked; of green, blue, pink or tan chambray; pleated skirt attached to white batiste waist, collar and cuffs trimmed with White Net or Voile Dresses with lace edged trimmed with 6 to 12 years. 18.50 Unuaual Value and domestic wool velours from our workroom, including silver wool velour—a new coat fabric wanted colors. 14 to 20 years, An Unusual Special Sale Misses’ Wool Jersey Suits Three new models made from the balance of highest grade wool Jersey 14 to 20 years. Belted models in this season’s most wanted colors, also Chinese blue, Salmon pink, rookie or white; sash or tailored belted coat, shirred back skirt with pockets. 18.50 Values $29.50 to $39.50 Will Close Out Saturday Misses’ High-Class Coats Dross, Street or Travel Coate—14 to 20 years Of wool velour, serge, burella cloth or wool Jersey, ma- jority silk lined, Also a number of high-class silk coats, 18.50 Heretofore $29.50 to $45.00 7.95 9.75 a the. 20/50 SUMMER CONCERTS SOON. Eww The Civic Orchestra Will Play tn St. HAWAIIAN UKULELES summer in Madison Square ‘earten, wilt Tindale Music Cabinets open its second season of popular con- $12 to $85 certs in St. Nicholas Rink June 20 at Music and Music Booxs 815 P, M. The rink ts now in the hands of decorators, who are planning | | co las trimmed with wistaria and , fountains and tables, where re- ments will be served. ‘The orchestra will consist of compa- tent musicians conducted by Plerre Monteaux from the staff of conductors of the Metropolitan Opera House, Prom|- nent soloists will appear at the concerts, and on the opening night addresses on patriotism will be made by well known men. A reerulting office will be sta- tioned in the building. Franklin Simon g Co.| A Store of Individual Shops ’ Fifth Avenue, 37th and 38ti Sts. 3 ABOVE, OUR STOCK Im. ‘Telephone Murray Hill 4144, Chas. H. Ditson & Co. 8-10-14 East 34th St. Misses’ and Girls’ White Summer Shoes Misses’ White Laced Boos Of highest quality white rheinskin cloth. Made on an exclusive low heel last with light welted soles. Sizes 214 to 714. Widths AA to D. 6.00 Misses’ White Oxfords or Punps Of highest quality white rheinskin cloth. Made on a new smart last, ||| with light welted soles and low heels. Sizes 214 to 714. Widths AA to D, 450 Girls’ White Pumps or Oxfores | Ankle strap pumps, also oxfords of highest quality white rheinskin cloth, made on correct orthopedic lasts. Sizes 11 to 2, Widths B to E. 330 Misses’ and Girls’ Shoe Shop—Third Floo; 219, 221, 228, 225, 227 | 164, 166, 168 and Grand Street Smith Stree; Gar oe ROOKL || _coons DELWERED ANY WHERE IN CHEATER SH Sty onc ]__ No Deposit, 50¢ Weekly | $125 Worth of Furnitur |] LOpens a New Clothing Account | No Deposit—st Weekly | Bring This Advertisement With You and Get Your TEN Per Cent, Discount Olt Your Credit Purchase When Opening a New Account |Spring Clothing for All |UbraryTabe | <- MEN'S & YOUNG MEN'S | i= | “~ Spring 98 i | 3) Suits 15; f BestStyles. Well Made. WOMEN'S & MISSES’ Smart 1 98 Suits up Newest Fabrics & Colorings Handsomely Trimmed & Tailored] Davenette Bed Boys’ 98 Spring Suits up Durable ith, Strongly Made. Girls’ 98 N Spring Dresses Mabowan: and : He Weekly ou will Up] Devenette me : mar ti : Stylishly and Carefully Made.t terns at ie arate MONDAY AND SATURDAY EVENING