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pat seriously injure i To soften, smoothen, and whiten the uh Besides Goldfarb and Dob Women can make a quarter pint of wonderful lemon thirty-three years old, of No. 306 Rent Avenue, Br who t# In jellev HED IN AUTO SMASH. {tun te ™ rieate| crushed, was caught in the wreckage Forty Minutes to Mxtricate rey released only after the crew of Man From Debrit. Truck 7 and the fire I att mobile owned and driven | from Great Goldfarb, a merchant of No. |forty minut “1 am not sure but that it might be well to provide epecifi- cally for the New York situation i How- CALDER DECLARES FOOD CONTROLS. WAR NECESSITY New York Senator, Leading! Fight for Bill, Says Victory | May Depend Upon It. | in the pending food bill. ever, if enough power is to Federal authorities the situa- tion will be met, but not without 8 and city co-operation and o-ordination, “Local legislation will doubtless be necessary to handle the immediate conditions in a way that will make the Federal act most effective. “Our Government must take con- trel of the food supply of the Nation, Of what value are soldiers and ships and money if there is not a sufficient supply of food to keep our men well fed and nourished to fight our bat- tles?. The President has appointed Herbert C. Hoover as Food Director, There has been much uncertainty at Washington as to what power Mr. Hoover should be given, and I admit I have had some misgivings on the sub ject myself, “Bue we are engaged in the great- est war in history, Allied with us are |a number of European countries, Eng- jand, France and Italy have depended | for years not only upon the foodstufts we could send them, but upon Rou- mania, Russia, Argentina and Aus- tralla, “All markets except those of North America are closed to them, Russia has stopped fighting largely because she has been unable to feed her mon, and unless we help England, France and Italy, who can say how long they ae th Fourth Street, Brookly®. | passengers of | the ing three men, was emashed were Frank Razontl ing and its passengers injured, |No, 105 Grand Street, jously, when caugat between | Joseph Russo, fifty, LP pillar and a northbound Third | Avenuo, Brooklyn, car early to-day at Third in chi and Twenty-third Street. The|Gruley of Matro Dobush, 'Street. No chin thirty ti Brooklyn, of No. 305 The surface Motorman cast r was John Sixty-ninth Whitens Rough, Red Hands |) By Sophie Irene Loeb. (Special Staff Cormeaemdent of The Brening Work.) WASHINGTON, June 21,—Senator Calder of New York, fortified with facts and statistics, will make a | strong fight on} the Senate floor} for food control “If there any place on earth that noedsthis food contro! bill it is New Work, where the graft pos- sibilities of food is the greatest in the coun- he said to-day. || beauty cream for few cents. Nothing so good! lotion will stay sweetly fragrant and fresh for months. Any grocer will | supply the lemons and any druggist or toilet counter will sell you three ounces of orchard white for » few cents. | This is the best lotion you could use. Massage it daily into the face, | neck, arms, and hands and see for yourself. nee remove tan, sallow- | ness, and freckles, and every girl) knows that lemons are used to bleach | and whiten the skin.—Advt, | heck, arms, and particularly the when chafed, red or rough, there ‘ing better than lemon juice, but lemon juice is too highly acid and irritating. A splendid lotion is red in a moment by squeezing juice of two fresh lemons into a zeontaining three ounces of white. sure to strain the Juice byt og @ cloth so no pulp into the bottle, then this creamy Reewta ane one You bet—this cigarette goes further than taste It certainly does. It pleases the taste, sure enough. But that isn’tall. It steps out and delivers to smokers the one thing they’ve always wished a cigarette would deliver— Chesterfields “get across’’, they let you know you are smoking—they “‘Satisfy”! Yet, they're Mild. It’s the new blend of pure, natural Imported and Domestic tobaccos—that’s what gives you this new smoking enjoy- ment. And the blend can’t be copied. Buy a package of Chesterfields and see! Liggett Myers Tabacco Cs 20 forlO¢ Chesterfield CIGARETTES of IMPORTEDand DOMESTIC tobaccos —Blended THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, J can continue? The great problem of the hour Is to feed our own people here in America, our soldiers in the field, and the citizenship as well as the armies of our Allies, “There 1s but one way to do this ap- parent to-day, and that is to so en- courage production and so supervise ur food supply av to muke It suf. fivent for our own people, and with the surplus take care of the nations abroad, | “Do you realize that 16 per cent. of all the foodstuffs sent over veas are destroyed by submarines, France is producing barely 60 por cent. of her normal crops, due to the fxct that Germany holds 19 per cent. of her farming territory, and at lenst +0 per cent, of the farmers of Irance have ciher becn iill-a or ate at the battle front. England {s relatively in the same position, “Indications point to our crops in many lines being larger this ye than in some time past. Our farme are indeed doing their full share, We |are certain to be short of wheat, how- | ever, and wo must so adjust our liv- ing conditions that while having all the essential foods necessary we can avold wa. “We will undoubtedly have a large | crop of vegetables and corn and we inay need to use leas meat and wheat land save some of these to divide with our allies. | “I belleve the fixing of a maximum price either for the farmer or con- sumer would be a great mistake. | | Wherever it has been tried it has |proved a fatlure; it has encouraged | ‘the hoarding of food by speculators so that they might be sure to get the {highest prices. “Lam, however, disposed to favor giving the President the right to fix | minimum price on the most impor- tant food products. This would, more than anything else, stimulate produc- tion, and while ft is too late to be of material value this year the enact- ment of legisiation permitting it at this time would undoubtedly contrib- ute much in the harvests this fall, “Farmers need have no fear about | \their crops bringing a fair price this! year, All the world needs food, and | raise excessively in some lines will have enough to feed the! world even if there is a shortage of | wheat, “And then, again, I am sure that with the authority vested in a food commission, it would be possible for the big producers of the nation, with ; the consent of the Government, to bring about a stabilizing of the im- portant food products, which in the end would assure a price reasonabio both to the producer and the con- sumer. “Congress has given the President the right to levy an embargo upon foodstuffs, ‘This was done so that our exports of the products of the farm might be controlled. Tho effect of this embargo will be to prevent the | starving of our own people If wo should come to a very serious short- age. “It would also prevent a recurrence of the spectacle that we witnessed ently, when the Allies bidding against each other in the market in Chicago for future delivery of wheat were responsible for tne abnormal prices quoted there, This situation brought about a rise in the price of wheat with a corresponding increase in the price of flour. Under the embargo, foreign buyers will be compelled to deal with Mr. Hoover and bis commission. We will let them bave, wheat when we can if they can be spared.” — U. S. MISSION TO JAPAN. Pr t WII Place Distinguished merican at Its Head. WASHINGTON, June 21. — America will send a mission to Japan. President Wilson ts determined ft shall be headed by one of the Nation's most distin- gulshed citizens. It was said here to-day that plans were being made for the Americans to be in Tokio about the same time the Japanese sion, which ts to leave Japan July 2 or 3, reaches here carly in ‘August. § etary Lansing and Ambasyador to are understood to be concerne er German influences worktr. t reports concerning Am ese relation y > FURNITURE | Cash or Credit spare It; if that 18 not available, they | Says Mr. Howard James, late of the Manhattan State Hospital of New York and formerly can have some other of our products | TURING, THE OUTPUT WAS 48 PAIRS A DAY AND 1S WHOLE WORKING FORC! =f W.L.DOUGLAS | “THE SHOE THAT HOLDS ITS SHAPE” $3.00 $3.50 $4.00 $4.50 $5.00 $6.00 $7.00 $8.00 You can Save Money by Wearing W. L. Douglas Shoes. The Best Known Shoes in the World. W L. Douglas name and the retail price is stamped on the bottom of all shoes at the factory. The value is guaranteed and the wearer protected against high prices for inferior shoes. The retail prices are the same everywhere. They cost no more in San Francisco than they do in New York. They are always worth the price paid for them. SiGe quality of W.L.Douglas product is guaranteed by more than 4o years experience in making fine shoes. The smart styles are the leaders in the fash- ion centres of America, They are made in a well- equipped factory at Brockton, Mass., by the highest paid, skilled shoemakers, under thedirectionand supervision of experienced men, all working with an honest determination to make the best shoes for the price that money can buy. For sale by over 9000 shoo dealers and 103 W. L. Douglas stores in the large cities, If not convenient to call at W. L. Douglas st ask your local dealer for W.L. D: sshoes. Ifhe cannotsupply you, take noother make. Write for booklet, showing how to order shoesby mail, |, stamped on the bottom postage free. 210 spark st, Brockton, Nass, LEAKE NOSUBSTITUTE W.|.. Douglas Stores in Greater New York: | 79 Third Av.. bet. 146th d& 147th Sto.) BOYS SHOES Beat in the World $2.50 $2.00 BEWARE OF FRAUD None genuine unless Factory show- ing 30x60 room in which he be- gan manufactu- ring, July 6,1876 93 Nassau Street. 755 Broadway, corner 8th St. 847 Broadway, near 14th St, *1352 way, cor. 36th St. 1495 B ‘leray (Times Square) | *984 Third Avenue. | *1452 Third Avenue, *2202 Third Av., cor. 120th St. | Stores marked with a 7 Kighth Avenue, 250 West 125th Street, BROOKLYN 421 Fulton Street, cor. Pearl. 708-710 Broadway, cor. Thoroton. | #1367 Broadway, cor. Gates Avenu 78 Fifth A ue, cor. 11th Street. carry complete lines of W. L. Douglas Sho tate St., cor. Broad for Women, ‘ Nuxated fron Should Be Used in Every Hospital and Prescribed by Every Physician Assistant Phys ciun Brooklyn State Hospital. It quickly enriches the blood, strengthens the nerves and puts most astonishing youthful power and vigor into the veins of both men and women. It often increases the strength and endurance of delicate, nervous, run-down folks 100 per cent. in two weeks’ time. Dr. A. J. Newman, late Police Surgeon of the City of Chicago and former House geon Jefferson Park Hospital, Chicago, and other physicians who have test- ed Nuxated Iron in their own private practice, Sur- In a very ting and inatructive dis course on the values of plenty of trou in the blood, Dr. Howard James, Inte of the Manhattan State Hoapital of New York and formerly Aesistant Physician Brooktya State Hospital, sald: *A patient of mine remarked to me Ag been on @ elx weeks’ course of Nuxated Iron), that there stuff te lke mngic.? after take itwlity and hie and forme Park Howpital on the value of “Previous to using Nuxated Irony { been prescribing the various mins salts of iron for years, only . complaints of lacolored teeth, lon, tled up, hardened came across nt, Ingenious cturers are to be o fn having given to A long-felt want, at preparation containing which has no destructty prominent ne new #530 VALU Onsict ine ot ott Se A 5-Room Apartment 1. 9205 reniture Tenvte. serme apply AAD be hen derey aud very vy Motor Trucks, Freight # Kallromd Fares ive effect of plying tron in an the teeth—no corrosive effect A igonte ” " onatly the stomach, and which t# readily digeated and assimilated form, & Gssimilated “into the blood and alth pullder in ‘every neniae : Jauickly makes {te next to ; by ine: » be consulted wae FS Dr, Ferdinand King, a New Yor Physician and Medical a who sald AUER) T heartily concur c a Dr, James han satd, only in res) i hi t nau o matter how mM a eat, your food mi that some Rovining he tron of Impoveriat Dr, Howard James, lute of the Man- hattan State Hospital of New York and formerly Assistant Physician Brooklyn State Hospital tells physicians he be- lictee that more Nuzated Tron should be prescribed to mect the gr of iron de symptoms lack of vital rundown cor WARNS AGAINST USE OF ORDINARY MET- ALLIC IRON so commonty taken by mostpeopis. and other dange The real and true cause which ted their diseases Was nothing more ndition brought 4 eat problem attendant nersousness, wet as you nan not or jess than a woakened c bn by & Thousands rary European medioal 1 forma of what het i tnat ught of for two weeks. nd wee much you have galn with N wuch @ valuable + OnKy beautiful, healthy Not long ago a half @ century old him a preiiminary e T was asto! without fron, | @ who was 1 asked me ination for shed to find tt prescribed by every physician tn this country.” br, B, has ety) fclan, who t and great life insurance. n in this coun