The evening world. Newspaper, June 18, 1917, Page 6

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OY DROWNED FROM RAFT + UNDER BRIDGE FOUND’ th Still On for Body of Vic- tim’s Brother, Who Per- ished With Him. body of three-year-old William of No, 343 East Fifty-fifth was found early to-day in a in a eunken lot under the hs approach of the Queensboro by Sergt. Zink and Policeman n. Search is being made for the ¢. his brother, Charles, nine old. conductor on a shuttle train, “Let Well-to-Do Turn to Cross,” Says Mrs. Kohut, Growalng the bridwe Saturday |“farguerite Mooers Marshall, One thousand New York girls will hich the two boys were drifting |be transferred to industrial war ser- vice to-day by the sub-committee on employment of the Mayor's Commit- iB, looked down just as a raft dover. The boys did not come He reported on reaching Man im, and policemen and firemen < d the thick, muddy water for fe whilo several thousand per- Jooked on. They thought they Sragged every foot and gave up not until late Saturday night je father of the victims report- missing. He is employed in Isiand City, and they went over Saturday to acoompany him tee of Wom National Buste With Fingers! Corns Lift Off It to lift any oorn or callus right off. Try it! for them, Ddecause she can afford tt. For a few cents you can permitted, magic drug freezone cently Cincinnati man, Just ask at any drug store for a small bottle of freetone. Apply a few to eat. ind the corn or callus so loose that you lift it off with the fingers : Just think! Not one bit +H No. of pain before applying |Mr®. Kohut was on self into an industrial clearing surrounding skin. Hard corns, soft corns or corns between the toes, also hardened calluses on bottom of feet, shrivel up and fall off without burting a particle. It Is almost magical. Ladies! on the dresser and never let a ache twice.—Advt. dustry. sies’ In New York,” she told opportunity.” ter of Croesus something to do.” Your Eyes? are too valuable to . Helping them NOW Ehrlich glasses saves serious trouble later 1. ble Eyesight Examination Registered Eye Specialists. Correctly Fitted Glasses From $2.50 mistakes, ber good Intentions £Sons count for something. re 8 Established 55 Yeare will, go into the home of the r Yor B'way, at John St. gag Sixth Av., xsth St. 3s0 ith Av., aad St. 108 Re es Ann St. gad, Street ‘or. Bond (ue short of a catastrophe,” declared Kobut, ent time, pity for her, a certain sympathy | But let her do Red Cross work. her do social service work. | woman to exploit herself.” | |clined to encourage amateurs in industry |insolent, flutteringly energetic, Laer yt 5. A. Hot and Cold Meats are made more appetizing a dash or two of “Eddys” Sauce. At Grocers and Delicatessen Stores. E.Pritchard, Maker, 331 Spring Street, N.Y, teurs, who never in thelr lives to keep their appointments or tempers.’ “There has been too in the Immediate past,” Kohut prices ADVAN CS Monday. July, 2 Sy Now-and SOY. Keep Out of War Industry. And not one of the girls will be a “Bister Susie.” You remember how at the begin- ning of the Kuro- “pean war Sister lyrically sewed shirts for soldiers. The Sister Susie of 1917 pat- rlotically and passionately yearns to sow trousers and knit sweaters for soldiers, to make tents and cartridges to do Government book- keeping and stenography and teleg- raphy, to do anything for nothing— If sho in this well-to-do woman t a small bottle of the| Will innocently cause an economic catastrophe by taking jobs which iscovered by &/other women must havo if they are “There are thousands of ‘Sister Gu- Keep @ tiny |“ocoans of them, ‘They are rich wom- en and the women in comfortable circumstances who have had no work, who evidently have longed to work and who think that they now see an “Somebody remarked to me the other day,” I interrupted, “that at least the war was giving the daugh- “Nevertheless, it will be nothing “if the well-to-do woman tries to invade industry at the pres- “One can't help having « certain her patriotic desire to be of service. Even if she is untrained for it and makes Let her, if she mother who {# forced to make muni- |tlons in the factory and take care of | that mother’s children, But the wom- {an who never has earned her living, who does not need to earn It, has no right to take @ job without pay or | with nominal pay when the lack of that very job may force some other | “I am so giad that you are not tn- the patriotic I observed, "It seems to me that the trouble with ths | average war relief organization is jaimply that it 1s run by amateura— | meaning, avid-for-the-limelight ama- disciplined by the doing of definite work for definite pay and who will not discipline themselves sufficiently | much ama- teurishness, too much hysteria, dilut- ing the patriotic energies of women admitted Mrs. “But I think we are getting Red and on nse. It is this pernicious amateur war service the Mayor's Committee of drops upon a tender, ach-| Women on National Defense will do ing corn or callus and in-|1ts best -to eliminate. I discussed the stantly all soreness disap-| problem with Mrs, Alexander Kohut, ‘ars and shortly you will| Chairman of the sub-committee on employment, which has resulved it- house 6 East Thirty-ninth Street. the Mayor's freezone or afterwards, It|Committes on Unemployment in 1914 doesn't even irritate the |and she ts President of a large group of non-commercial employment bu- reaus, 60 that she brings experience As well as intelligence to bear upon a consideration of women in war in- Mrs. with Let will poor ere their THE EVENING ‘WORLD, MONDAY, JUNE 18, Check Rich ‘Sister Susies’ To Help Those Who Depend | Upon Their Work to Live §:).\ 0" sc<5 yyy PREPARES ATTACK ON TWO BIG CITIES “We have 7,000 employers on en | Cuts Railroads In Advance of As- sault on Chihuahua City and Torreon, EL PASO, Tex., June 18.—Fraticiaco Villa has given orders for all rall- roads connecting Chihuahua City And we have| with the outside world to be cut this ‘ommittes on Classes, to stimulate| week in order to isolate the State a movement already begun by certain| capital and Torreon, preliminary to establishments: the| making training of women side by side with| ant oit men and the gradual, easy substitu-| Vilia's to give one job to a member of the |tion of the former as the latter are! Cortrudis ranch, northwest of Santa » | called into the service of the Govern- Konalla, reported to Villa's agents long as there are unemployed among | "0D! over that. The rich women are re-| tiring to their country homes and do- ing their farming on their lawns, Why shouldn't they get their experience at their own expense? We all know of women who rushed to | inte Farmingdale, at the beginning of the| Women. We movement, and tried to hoe in high-heeled slippers. Most of such women tired in @ week and are now out of the way of the farma-for-women real workers, “Our committee has d to miss one job for one girl, ‘and not unemployed class among the rich #' those who need work.” rmined not | large busin: |We do not erect any Impossible | A standards of perfection, But we feel | bi sical conditions of trade or business, ploit women in the present crisis. “We believe in equal pay for equa: that is, for every | pholding the trade and! siness standards of fair pay. If a! man wants nographers for $8, $9) or $10 a week we shall not furnish | him with women who are worth $18| front | or $25 a week. list at the present time and we have a! special committee that 1s working to st men who need the labor of ¢ another committee form to guard the interests of occupations—such levators or street cars—for there are, as yet, no special ctive regulations. have many other plans, For that we are justified in upholding | just joined the the State laws in regard to sanita-|and tn the future will give to it the |tion, working hours and other phy-| proceeds from Bartlett is arranging for a number of and we shall not help any man to ex- | these concerts, to take place under the auspices of different chapters of the ‘ational Special Aid Soclety. mérican soprano and a former mem- er of the Boston Grand Opera, has aviation committee attack upon these import- a courier who arrived from adquarters at the " Siechen tke af othe attack on erin yn 4 made one thing, we wish to district the city | as soon as two of Villa’s leaders ar- Then Mrs, Kohut told me of the|#o that a girl may go to the employ-|rive from Southeastern Mexico with amoothly organized clearing house |ment bureau neatest her home and | their commands, according to the an- / for war work and War workers whieh |{2u# save time and effort. In train-| nounced plan. she and the members of her commit. tee have in hand, “We represent forty-nine non-com- mercial employment bureaus,” she explained, “including @uch institn. tions as the Girls’ Protective League, | munition factories. the Federal Employment Bureau for | ‘2 PeVolutionize the whole problem of Jowish Girls, the bureau connected | Kohut earnestly School, the Julla Richman School and several other schdols and colleges, the bureaus connected with various churches and settlements, the ¥Y. W. C. A. and several others, “Instead of wasting his time by| No. applying to several of these bureaus | has received the thanks of the navy, in New York who|the Marine Corps, the Naval Militia, wishes women workers to replace any employer men who go to fight hae only to cal up our number, Murray Hill 1977,"| 1am Alexande “We communicate with as many agencies as may be necessary to procure him the help he needs, That is his side of it. On| expecially the other hand we protect all women | funds for the training of a number of she continued, workers placed through us, who appeals to us, of the condi No C, O. D.’s ing and placing girls we plan to fol- w the Jatest vocational principles; to give girls with deft fingers work | in which that asset may be of use; | to assign work suited to their strength to the frail, delicate girl} | workers instead of rushing them into) We may be able the work of women,” concluded Mrs. t two months to the Govern- ment’s war activities by members of the National Special Aid Soctety at 259 Fifth Avenue, The society the Aviation Corps and the Signal Corps for services rendered, It was | founded two years ago by Mrs, Will- and now has chapters in nearly every State in. the Union | MATS and a total membership of 30,000. The Aviation Committee of the tional Special Ald Society has been | nergetic, having raised | young flyers and having practically Mrs. William Allen Another member is Mrs. Eliot the navy. Virginia Pierce, a young Extraordinary and Important Dress Sale OPPENHEIM, GLLINS & 34th Street—New York Will Close Out Tuesday About 375 Women’s and Misses’ Taffeta Silk Dresses Attractive models of chiffon taffeta in combinations of Georgette Crepe Extraordinary value 10.75 No Approvals Clearance of Women's Shoes OPPENHEIM. CLLINS & © 34th Street, New York Extraordinary Shoe Sale Tuesday Women's Hand Turned Pumps, all this season's models of Pearl Gray, Champagne and Black Glace Kidskin, also patent leather; hand turned soles and Louls XV. heels. Positively none sent C. O. D. or on Approval, Matthias F, —<—<—<—— OBITUARY NOTES. Dr. B. Franklin Smith, aged fifty, | writer for medical journals and long associated with the Board of Health, is dead in Richmond Hill, L. George F. Unger, thirty-one years ‘and at the least we | old, lawyer and social ‘worker, is dead with the Washington Irving High|wish to arrange the industrial shifts |at No, 41 West Thirty-seventh Street. High |#nd upheavals of the near future with st possible waste and suf-| broker and a # T ¥ EXTRACT ae dl praia Meals Adds an indescribable flavor to Unies | Xoitpped the army. training camp. at |f0od and builds up the system, wo already know of the employer|finy Shore, Ls 1. D: St E h «| Bartlett is'Chatrman of this commit- | Yrug ores Everywhere ons in whidh his employees work | tee, and the wages he pays, we turn him | Butler Whiting, who has two sons in over to our bureau of’ Investigation, her concerts. Mrs.) Gooderson, insurance tary of the Monon- gahela Democratic Club, is dead at $10,000 has been contributed in| No, 1 st. Nicholas Place, Regular 6.00, 7,00 and 8.00 Values. No Exchanges 600 Pairs Women’s Pumps Incomplete sizes of styles about to be discontinued 4.75 1917. X-SCIENTIST DIES SUDDENLY. 5. ©, Grant ©: @ Setence Santtariam, Samuel Ofant, forty-six, Christian Scientist, chemist and manufacturer, of No. 25 Beaver Street, died suddenly of | SPoplexy jn tho Blackmar Sanitarium, No. 230 West One Hundred and Thirty- sixth Street, yesterday. Mra, B. M. Blackmar of the institution, « rest and Science cure for cases pronounced in- curable Lf Foogls aemreng said an effort was procure medical aid in order to aed, with the law, but M: Grant was dead before a physician ‘could summoned, Dr. David Tovey of No. 240 Rivers! Drive, in which apartment fae aft Grant lived, said he had treated. him two weeks » and had pronounced his tro, wens gp. and had pron Maited ? Milk Wife, who is a Christian Beenticn’@” °| Substitutes Cost YOU Same Price. West 42nd Street | | ‘Lhis season’s latest | Made of model with Two smart models, of line effects, at $4.95 The in Ten Yard Pieces,.. Stern Brothers Open daily from 9 A. M. to5 P. M. Saturdays, 12 Noon An Interesting Sale, Tuesday Women’s Bench-made Pumps white buckskin; also favored combioations of leathers, Also Women’s Spat Pumps atent leather and matt kid; Regent nch heels and turned soles,.......... Made to sell for $7.00 a pair Bathing Suits On_the Second Floor Satin, in straight aod waist Very special at $7.95 Women’s Smart Sweaters Will provide unusual price advantages on the Second Floor. Women’s Shetland Sweaters | Effective Styles in Sweaters In coat and slip-on models, with sailor collar and sash; desirable colorings, Has arranged a very special offering of Satin Taffeta Ribbon: 6!4 inches wide, in white, black and colors at 27c a yard Lingerie Ribbon No.1 1% 2 3 at 24c Swinging Couch Hammocks In White or Khaki Canvas; complete with hanging chains, Red Cedar Storage Chest or Window Box, at $9.75 with side arms, large dimensions; regularly $13.50 An excellent assortment of Hand-blocked English and Persian Printed Bedspreads, Curtains, Couch and Table Covers, for city or country homes, all inexpensively priced. Between 5th and 6th Aves. West 43rd Street $6.85 novelty styles in white kid and Reduced from $9.00 and 10.00 $5.50 Summer Petticoats On the Second Floor Salt Water] | Washable Satin, full model, finished with tucks and hemstitching, in flesh and white, Very special at $3.95 Of Fibre Silk and other wanted materials in plain and striped at $9.75 Ribbon Department Dresden, Striped & Plaid Ribbon palate ele <chedlieeetetlMacnetetiohd 5% to 634 inches wide; at 35c a yard 32c In white, pink and blue. 40c at $8.75 Formerly $10.50 to 12.50 Fu (‘s.aetmet nes] : The New War Song Sf Italy Words _BY WeELCON JOHNSON * The young Wario or” Music BY H.T. sg AS SUNG BY MISS GRACE LA RUP IN “HITOHY KOO.” PUBLISHED BY SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT WITH G.RICORDI (0, OWNERS Of Ihe COPYRIGHT. £ Wonnss Aus) CATT Sei oe -

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