The evening world. Newspaper, July 6, 1917, Page 4

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DESLYS SLASHES Over It, and Cuts It From Frame. a remedy for freckles with the of a reliable dealer that it not cost you a penny unless it re- the freckles; while if it does n clear jon the ex- ir triding. pal role occurred outside ply. ‘an ounce of othine—| London County Court to-day. She had double strength--from any druggist |beem sued for 20 guineas, the price of erdict having judgment show | her portrait in oii, and given for the plaintiff, ntered for that amount with Ovtelde the court '& few applications should how easy it is to rid yourself of | bee™ he homet: ‘les and get a beau | view to placing It therein oneounce needed for the worst case. Sy ee gure to ask the druggist for the | imine le strength othine, as this is the | und rushed for the portrait. wore made to restrain her by ing anyt do pretription sold under guarantee of back if it fails to remove treek! Advt. perseer, Harry ing could be di L arti We Connection With Any Other Establishment m the World ; 43 & 45 West 34th Street _ | New Afternoon Dresses ) WORK MONDAY WONDERS | _Open Ali Dey Temorrow _ \ (Sscoms Foor, The \'s'ues Are Most Extraordinary 5 Newest Frocks in New Embroidered Satin Frock, teed Fewest Frocks in eorge mi ee Tricotine, Soiree Silk, Crepe Meteor. Very Speciat é " Newest Frocks in Georgette Crepe tere Meteor. 30. 00 Very Spectat +] ‘Dainty Summer Frocks- (Fourth Floor.) 5.95 Novelty Voiles, Ratine, Gingham and Dimity, smartly tailored models, and embroidered and lace trimmed effects, Specially Priced Final Clearance At Great Reductions 200 Cloth & Silk Coats 115 Cloth & Silk Suits 10°" Selected from regular stock, navy, black and colors; sizes for women and misses. iC a ak eee eee B. Altman & Ca. o>) ALL_ DAY TO-MORROW (SATURDAY) Fifth Avewe - Madison Auenuy BAth and 35th Sirerts | PORTRAIT SHE DISLIKES Borrows Knife, After Losing Suit LONDON, July 6.—A dramatic scene in which Gaby Deslys played the princl- the Went was Gaby'e car tifal com jon, Rarely is more than | and the picture was taken out with « and bor: fe from him opened It Efforts her dan but before the famous of Public Jancer slashed at the offend’ng picture | with the knife, tearing the canvas off Hast ats the frame. SUNDAY WORLD WANTS lastetar, threw the knife down, ex- “Tha THE STORE WILL BE CLOSED New Uork un Side, Prove Financiers in Embryo, Now then, all together! « Three cheers for the rising young fnanctera School No, 14 at No, 26 Twenty-seventh Street, who |cloned the achool term by announe- ling that in the Metropolitan Savings what I think of the picture” frank they have snugly tucked away {a kum of more than $45,000, Back of d stotement Is an interesting nf tow we practical #con- imlea In the public schoola of New York City 14, and Dr. Herman J. Sonnenberg, the svhool bank manager. rit was six years ago,” eald Mr. | to an Evening World re- porter, “that Mr, Hente suggested to me the {dea of a school bank. I must admit that the outlook did not look very encournging. Our ehlidren aro drawn from one of the poorest neigh- borhoods, a0 far as Worldly goods are concerned, in New York, “The organization of the bank took considerable planning, In the first place, there was mnenber the part of some of the parents, who; “appeared to have the Impression that the money deposited by thelr children was to go in some mysterious way to | aid the Board of Education. The is- wonnes of small bankbooks to each Cuild and explanatory elrculara, how- ever, In due course overcame thiv possibly natural assumption, A BANKBOOK AND TALKS ON) THRIFT. | THE EVENI 645,000 IN A BANK | LESSON IN THRIFT Pupils of P, S. No, 14, on East pert in Canning and Preserv: Congratulated. “Mi in the ctrole —hhs country. He : knows that now he a has the opportu. | nity to pay back something for all that ime prejudice on| oth mothers have done for him. It ts this knowledge which makea him proud and lad. “He 49 getting enowoh to eat. His bed is warm and comfortable, He likes his mates. And he ia being a good bo. I know that from the look in hha eves. for 1, too, have a bow in the service, “May I, then, send this word of aym- pathy and congratulation and comrade- shin, in the name of wour bow and mine? We will try-—-will we not?—to be on brave as they are, remembering “Our work was begun on Feb. 20! anoays that ‘if thew lve they die not. 1911, by issuing these Httle books to | and if thew di each child in the school, and the teachers were urged to impress on the pupils the value of learning habits ot thrift early in fe, Short talks were prepared along these ie The fruits of our work soon became parent. Tho teachers began rece| ing deposits every Monday morning And the sum deposited was entered in. tho puplis’ bankbook, Sums ot 1 cent and upward were and still are aecopted, He money thus recetved is de- posited each Monday In the Metro- politan Savings Bank, When a pupt! has saved up & sum amounting to ten dollars or more a bankbook ts {wed by the bank, and it is my experience that the keen competition to get these important looking lonther covered account books and to compare the figures they show has had a lot to do with stimulating the habits of the pupils of School No, 14 “Any pypil may withdraw hin vings at any time it pleases him; but in order more or lesa to safe~ guard them we have a rule that on such occasions the child must be ac- companied by parent or guardian and thelr books must bear the signature of the Principal and the School Bank Manager. “Every deposit of five dollars or more beara interest. It 1s impressed on the children also that School 14's Savings Fund Is in the nature of a mraunal enterprise and that the as of the savings scheme is jatly due to the strict enforce- ment of the rules and regulations governing the practical working of the system. “Tt is not alone in {ts direct effet on the material welfare of the chil- dren that we have found our plan work out so well" continued Dr. Sonnenberg, “but it has ti habits of business thrift tency which are apt to be later in life at too great a cost.” DEPOSITORS NUMBER SEVEN- EIGHTHS OF SCHOOL MEM- BERSHIP. The number of depositors in the |school bank are 2,139. The number of accounts closed during the term |just passed were 158, as aguinst 641 opened, ‘The av sum to the credit of each depositor ta $4.19. The number of pupl!s on the register of | the achool {# 2.711, #o it will be seen {that conalderably more than peven- jelehths of the number have learned the leason of thrift which Principal Hentz and De, Sonnenberg hay n driving home. Durt the past term $5. recetved from the pupils withdrawn period 88.78 were amount was $1475.88 during the Heads of schools in tn elty and in various parts of the untry shown great int in 14's and in foct many have snine plan in more or lees | forms, Next term pupils ing after a bigger record for \t nest-erg fund, and every one lnding The Eve World, xuroly \Joins in wishing thom every success | _ Y HAS A FLOOD. ‘tains ao flooding wing at » and ttery Phankas to Goodrte Work, Director EL PL Ge received from Gby nodrioh yesterday Man w& lotter t gratuliott oes ft Fa] f the New Y ity r nied i dimioutt 1 sald t Director's * emont ta rhable and testifies both to the IS fender #kin.. ‘Ther | jon of & Rood organlaation ana| soreness while applyin Int cage i atterwpres. it to the essential willingness of ta 00 gent od pe ycuttins s 2 pe velar a a el a acta 00 genl* lak ef blood poleoning by cutting population te : ho Jaw The for. Hard corna, soft corns, corns between the toes, also toughened calluses soon jovernor added that the State ‘ty Jogsen and coine off under the remarkable Influence of lee-Mint. 1 r obiigailon tu the Mayor's Come Ne matter wi u have tried or how many times you have been disappointed, you National D 5 ean will vovel in the « hing comfort that Ice Mint bring Sat wlohe te eeaite Tey ul A iat. goa for 9 mal as of Jce-Mint and learn for yourself what eos Na i) If solit four von You'll tike it jmunensely.. for Wis Census they live (tS. JOUN BROWN, somewhere in tho 8. A., need not be surpised If, in the next few weeks or months, sho receives such a letter about her sailor or ‘soldier son from a woman she has never seen. For a ¢ of New York women have begun one of the kindest and tnost womanly of all war reliefs, & “home letter’ #ervice. They are members of the National League for Woman's Service, who have organ- ized the Brooklyn Home Club, a recreational canteen for soldiers and sailors. It is located at No, 176 Nas- fau Streot, Brooklyn, two blocks from the Navy Yard, and is open Wed- nesdays, Thursdays, Saturdays, and Sundays from 4 P, M, to 10.30 P.M. The United Neighborhood Guild has lent its headquarters for the club, and a uniform is the card of admis- sion. The men havo use of billiard tables, a bowling alley, A pla » magazines, games and writing ma- terials, Mut quite the most charming fea- ture is that a group of women have arranged to write friendly letters to the mothers of men who register at the club headquarters, No bad news goes into tue letters, but cordial re- aguurance as to the comfort and well- being of the youngster in khaki por- haps half a continent from home, Several most appreciative replies al- ready have been received from the mothers, The ub was organized by Miss Gertrude BE. Lachlan, Brooklyn chair- man of the National League for Woman's Service, working with Mrs, J. J. Van Heekeren, Mrs. C.N, King, Mrs, Walter Meserole, Mrs, Charles B. Orr, }.+ +. Charles Burr, Miss Ruth Robson, Miss Grace Cotton and other members of the social and welfare department. The actual management of the club Is largely in the hands of boys training in the Brooklyn Navy Yard, and they show a keen appreci- ation of the club privileges HF New York State Woman Suf- frage Party has a canning ox: pert. She is Mrs, Sara M, Kirby, and, not to be #h, the party is sending her through Dutchess County in an utomobile, with all the paraphernalia for setting up a canning school in firehouxe, — schoothoure, or private residence ure some of Mra house" Thes Kirby's rules for preservation of fruit and vegetables, as she gives them to women who wish to avold the wa ful canning means kill- ing—Women Census. Takers Marguerite Mooers Marshall. ¥ Dear Mra, John Brown: This | {a @ letter to tell you that / have seen your aon John the credit of which is due |and that he ts 60 well and 40 happy! to George I. Hentz, Principal of No, |e méases you, of course; 1am eure that he loves you more deeply, more com- préhendingly, than when he waa with- of your arms. But he knowa that he is defending wou and that other mother “meeting | unnecessary waste during NG WORLD, FRIDAY, JULY 6, 1917. Her Boy’s‘‘Home Letters,’’ \(QNGRESS [0 RUSH SCHOOL CHILDREN'S. Written by New York Women, Will Be Mother’s Solace One of the Most Kindly War Reliefs Yet Proposed Is Al- ready in Operation in Brook- lyn, Bringing Comfort to the Woman Who Has Given Up Her Son to the Country— Suffragists Send Out an Ex- ing all bacteria, yeasts and molds in food and can; then sealing it so they cannot get in. In following the cold pack method authorized by the Depart- mont of Agriculture first grade your product and prepare, Then blanch pineapple, rhubarb, sour | cherries, peaches, pears, apples, quinces from three to five minutes in boiling water, according to the size and ripeness of the frult. Dip quickly In and out of cold water and drain, Pack quickly in jar and add Hquid to fill, adjust rub- ber and top and partly fasten, The next step in the process is the hot water bath. Count the time the water bojis, Fruits should remain from fift o thirty min utes In the hot water bath, ac- cording to their size and ripeness. Lima beans, string beans, greens, peas, [ae (out in pieces) should be in the bath ninety min- utes, Corn and succotash should stay in it three hours; tomatoes, twenty-two minutes; ee plant, cooked and mashed pumpkin, mushrooms, baked peppers, alxty minuten, Remove from the bath when time is up, Fasten the top of can, invert to cool and keep in cool, ary place. Vegetables should be blanched from three to ten minutes. The California formula syrup for fruit is as follows: One and onedmlt cups of magsr, ome 2e Ar ML dimived, Ro’ Jonges 1 ttiree minutes’ maken medium chin Tioiled tt to eight minutes makes thick olied, (welve minute makes heary syrup, ony una fo. prewersis 8 Use the fire two syrups for canning se- family taste, hyde, Moyle acid, , benzoate of soda and sul- phur are forbidden by pure food Jawa, Don't use canning powders. RNEST Ff, GOODRICH, director E of the State military census for the city, has sent a letter to New York Suffragists specially con- #ratulating them for their patriotic assistance In the taking @f the census, ‘The New York City Woman Suffrage | Party, of which Miss Mary Garrett Hay is Chairman, took entire charge | of 400 election district booths, furnisb- ing 11,700 workers. Mr, Goodrioh wri “Now that the great the State military census in New York City Is completed, I should like to ex- press to you as Chairman of the New York City Woman Suffrage Party the deep appreciation of myself and my | colleagues for the generous assistance | given by the members of your organ | igation. | “From the four assistant directors | of the census, who gave such unatinted time and energy, down to the thou- sands of registrars who were o0- | tained for the work through your par- | ty, there has run the same spirit of devotion to duty and to the pubis service. The initiative, resourcefus- ness and intelligence displayed by your workers have earned the grat!- tude of the city and the State, “Il congratulate you on the strengih of your organization and on’ the abil- ity of its members. Through you, let me thank them all for their patriots and voluntary participation in arduous and exacting census work." _——— TRIED TO CASH IT, POLICE SAY, ON A FATHER’S GRIEF Youth Accused of Attempt to Pass Check, Claiming Knowledge of Missing Girl, Charged with passing @ worthless check on the father of a missing girl, of whom he'claimed to have knowl- edge, Isidore Levy, nineteen, of No 180 Henry Street, was locked up yea- terday in Police Headquarters, ‘The complainant is Theodore Schwinge, manager for Max Heyne, wholesale cutler, in business at No. 7 Dutch Street The disappearance of Heyne's daughter Vernoice on Jan, 20 was published In @ newspaper at tho time of the finding of Ruth Cruger’s body According to the confession, the po- lice say Lavy made, he selected the Heyne girl's name from the list of missing, then called on the father. He him he had information of the 's whereabouts. Levy gained the confidence of Heyne by describing how he had seen Vernolce in a tenement house on | Ninety-ninth Street near Third Ave- |nue. He then asked Heyne to cash a cheok for him, Schwinge became eus- piclous and asked Levy to return lator, Detectives Mayer and Brown for |hid in the office and say they saw a check for Phenix manager cashed. that be Lovy hand Schwinge 21.14 on the Chatham and Bank, which the {Levy admitted, they assert, had no funds in that bank. rei Ice-Mint Brings Joy To Tired, Aching Feet have given you aching, burning, swollen feet, cornea, or painful calluses, here is the cooling, dewy mint-beds of ol pier tn he ired soothing ingrecients tpt most popular foot remedy in Rub a little Ice-Mint on any tender corn or callus. Shortly the corn or callus will loosen go that it Ean be ilfted out eaally with the fingers. If warm days and modern foot-wear al foot-comfort for you at last, ast a few. weeks have mide ie mieriea. instantly the soreness disappears, and LAWS 10 PROVIDE FORBIG AR AY Almost Sure to Authorize 22,625 Airplanes and Force of 75,000 Men. | WASHINGTON, July 6—Work i# to begin at once on the legisiation to create an aviation service in propor- tion to the armies to be sent to France. Chairman Dent will intro- duce to-day the bill recommended by the War Department for obtaining | the 75,000 men required. , The House Military Affairs Com- mittee will be called to meet Monday morning at 10.30 o'clock to hear offi- | clals of the War Department. Aviation Appropriation Bill ts not to be introduced for a few days, The legislation will be passed with vir-| tually no opposition in either branch | of Congress. The appropriation recommended is greater than the total amount for the milltary and naval establishments and fortifications in the preparedness and maintenance programme enacted fn the summer of 1916 for the fiscal year; ending June #, 1917. It will create an activity greater oven than was re- quired in the Navy or War Depart- mente in normal times, in tho optnton of members of Congress. ‘The department idea will be pressed on the ground that aviation has a fu- ture that demands the dignity that| would be given it if a Cabinet officer | could be had to represent the best in- terests of the service Democrats and Republicans alike are convinced that the legislation must be had without delay. Republi- can leaders will throw nothing In the way of this part of the Adminis- tration’s war programme. SMART NOVELTIES IN HIGH AND LOW BFFECTS WHITE KID PUMPS Lone rem, bigh arch. Louie XV. heel A very movtel ain in Hiack and Py i Hnecial at « eo Vahies uo to $6, Lake Hopatcong Next Sunday and Wallin for ‘nlidren $1.50 Mui Sets 75C. a, W, 234 St. 850; Liberty St, @ A.M. dnckson Av. 7 City, Broad Bt. Next Sun Y, duly ry Mauch Chunk $2.00 fin St: $1.C0 8 to 12 Lv.W. 23d St., 8:20; Liberty t..5:90 A.M, Jackson Av. Ji A. VICTORS and Records for your Summer Home. Phons Vanderbilt 3091 for immediate SERVICE Knabe 5th Av, at 39th St. A Single Application Banishes Every Hair The Modern Beauty) Here is how any woman can easily and quickly remove objectionable, hairy aceite without possible injury | to the skin: Make a paste with some powdered delatone and water, apply to hairy surface and after 2 or 8 mine utes rub off, wash the skin and the hairs are gone. This is @ painless, in- oxpensive method and, excepting where the growth is unusually thick, \ single application fs enough, You hould, hawerer, be careful to get enuine delatone.—Ad: articles AN a 1 or renorted “Lost and Fo! skman, New York, of Brookiyn Of 4100 Main, The! Friendly Suggestion to the Men Who , Solitaire Diamond Engagement rhe Get those rings at Lamberts, whither after urchase for spot cash in Europe they are directly imported so that there is no middleman to pay. Neither is there a cloud- sweeping rent to pay, nor an expensive upkeep that adds to price without adding to value. All diamonds in Solitaire Diamond Engagement Rings ($10.00 to $1,500) Diamond Cluster Ri Diamond Brooches, Dia- mond Lavallieres, Dia- mond Bracelets, are handsomely, strongly stylishly mounted in the Lambert factory on the same premises with our store. | We guarantee that Lam- bert Wedding Rings are solid old and seamless and the igh standard established for them back in the seventies has been sta ifastly kept up. Your pick among ap- proved styles and shapes. 22-kt., $10.50 up 18-ki We engrave wedding rings without charge. 14-k: at ee ub LAMBERT BROTHERS Diamonds—Jewelry—Watch Third Avenue, Cor. 58th Street Store open daily, including Saturday, til 6 och during July, August and Saptamber. — 22-karat, 18-karat, 14-karat, 22-kurat, $7.00 up 18-karat, $5.50 up 14-karat, $4.40 up MAN'S OWN POISON CAUSES — RHEUMATISM, SAYS LONDON DR, Ridicules Idea of Uric Acid and Meat Diet as Causes For Arthritis—Smashes Many Foolish Fallacies. “Man poisons himself by the ab-|the end product of di 0 sorption of certain substances that | one tinteniinost crergill wae wrested should be eliminated — this is the|to it. Experiments have proven that ‘wuse of so much rheumatism; accord-| many people have a tremendous ex- ing to Dr. Lane, a London physician,” | cess of urie acid and never have @ so said W. A. Varney, the discoverer | pain or ache; while rheumatics have inued: no more than the average, according about rheuma-| to exercise, ete. tism of the joints, and I mean chronic! Great harm has been done by the dinary rheumatic medicines in that they not only disturb the stomach, but often fail to relieve the pain, or tain something that relieves the tin for the time being, and the dis- case is as bad if not worse after tak- ing such medicine. | There are hundreds of preparations on the market, but I do not remem- her of ever seeing anything about them taking care of rheumatism of joints after the patient has had ie disease for a few years. Var-ne-sis is the one remedy that most all rheumatics take after they | have tried about everything else. No jclaim is made that a bottle or two will cure the disease, but it removes levery particle of stiffne: twinge of pain, if you kee; I know what Var-n arthritis, have been smashed during! plished where the joints were swollen the past few years, The old idea of| from a chalky deposit—I know what meat causing rheumatism is ridicu-| Var-ne-sis has accomplished for dry lous; think of the large number of| joints 60 that they creaked when go- vegetarians that suffer from rheuma-| ing up or down stairs, I know what tism—these people never eat meat. I| Var-ne-sis has accomplished for act- know quite a number that suffered| yal eripples that were confined to from arthritis and had been on a| wheel chairs. It has made every one meat-free diet for a long time—so|of these people well and ought to do much so that they became weak and|the same for you. did not have sufficient strength to! 1 want every rheumatic in this city fight the disease. Just as soon as|to investigate thoroughly the merits hey began to eat meat once a day|of Var-ne-sis. Write to Me—W. A they began to improve, and with the| Varney, Lynn, Mass., for the story of help of Var-ne-sis, were well in a|Var-ne-sis. This mass of evidence will short time.” astonish you, ‘The old idea of uric acid has been} You can get Var-ne-sis at Lig exploded, as uric acid is perfectiy| g tt's-Riker-Hegeman Drug Stores normal to every human being (it is| and other reliable druggists —Advt — AS Discoverer of Var-ne- FREE AT OUR OFFICE BY MAIL FIVE CENTS 48 Pages of ‘‘Where to Go for Your Vacation” 25 CITY HALL PLACE (Just North of Municipal Building) | The New York World Sets The Pace

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