The evening world. Newspaper, August 6, 1917, Page 3

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4 nd THE EVENING WORLD, MONDs~ - $$ time fer compromion end lnvestion Coratnty Ghouls ony pert of Prove of Aetrtmen: Bee deprty ation of neces Brown meee Denounced fo Ne in pene & he peeps there te the Lagiatature @0Fh eumprenne omer medity oF eummen! Ne a +4 tare prev ieion any etpality te Hints mae. te cane of fam tion 91 mon Head of Largest Woman's Club emorgonre in New Vouk, the Thentre As ™ sembly, Mas Become « Scien. “Red Tape" Features—Real oN Mond “y tithe Farmer, With Five Re Control Demanded bar * but o- sulte—She Ploughed Up Her not such powe , Beautiful and Expensive lawn Democrat wre of the Lowe ei on Lake Onesde and Now Has letere © one the Hrown food ® Pong ae Ferm Thet le « Country eamtent + Kepub ‘ ’ Show Place — Mrs. Marks ron me ' ' , ; Finds Farming for Women wil bey ‘ . - Healthful, Fascinating and Wrteme vie . Satisfying. ‘ om Marguerite Mooers Marshal! Wagne . t Mees ad ihe Marthe ' . ! t bite will be x MINORITY REPORT PREPARED r Asneenbly Satnieg and strongly resent! rm BY SENATOR COTILLO n maga gt co the Brown I tains many ne ee, eee 7 words, but ‘ vet sure tack Rive boo ” ' wy P 4 of the Btate Pood Com " ; — Ist bora giniation Oneida @0 much red tape and any re-|& atrictions tha ng ef e can tr nies provide @ UL ORORE, Hover ein } arkate ; veut, a large cre “Nomin municipalities are suine ead corn and other ve t Mr empowered to buy and rell food, | F011" #\ an oe ‘ , Mark's hollday home, Pleasant View but in reality the people would |... lt!) ig i, ta Wert Vienna, N. ¥,, on the shores be starving before al! the qualify- " " 4 Of Oneida Lake, The potetocs are d rod tape methods & Interests of this com- rowing in what was @ beautiful 1 green 1 loping from the hous patience with ( of beauty sometimes is a waste,” Mrs demand someth Marks explains succinctly, fe ein 1 " This w lishment is one wo- - four Importa me , man's con answer tu the Nation's must go in a food bill » d for more food. Sot Mrs. Marks actually reduce ec f , an exceedingly busy person; her have been well stated by The Evening : be ring present check for World - ; aniel Frohmamy Mrasidoat “1, Strict storage supervision, s' Fund of America, in “2. Terminal markets. un : ' oak an e fact that so many women “3, Municipal milk depots ft and pray pr turning to agriculture, 1 “4, Power of Commission to means of distribution to the consu Would be Interesting to buy and sell commen necessities | should the emergency ariae Mrs. Marks found uu ‘Th commisston hould have dd skill for he | « f of life. vei dang a) 1 assed her about it. THE BROWN BILL. work } “In the Brown b that can be exercised on the farm ter,” she throug | CITES RED TAPE FEATURE OF \ N there ds ¥ at any cr the winter { time except after securing cons jenta)order to relieve the puid get a little ti fof other officials, which would mea an |W shall see that the producer is not between club meetings and social I <éndless delay and continuous hard- | ¢ eared ie ifs Cee mare ents, I was busy studying how to 7 eel that the commercia M1 get most out of idle acreu | ship to the people, this country 4s vast enough, and that| ou. Quins eels agree |}. “The high cost of food has grown | the real necessities of life should not baad home. 1 am very pa- intolerable, We are sick to death be the subject of speculdtion, andthe] {iotic and much interested in the Hoinvestiga n ower only | State Should act ax agent, If neces-| made up my mind to take “Bisbbeabalebe UAB G DOME! IY | sary, in order to give its people the | . On the tama, WH with a string attachment—a string of | protection they deserve.” red tape. MEASURE CRITICIZED BY MAY-| “What we want is « sure and del | ORS FOOD AID COMMITTEE. my work In | r exnite hold of the situ This nhacdiood “Ald Gomimitthe of the LR He avery tala elas war measure which requires expe ‘s Food Committe met to-day |the same time that 1 was mapaging yy and freedom of jon of prar City Hall to discuss the Brown! some of the largest dances and e eutke erts given in Hote erly constituted It Is no Astor last season Miss Sophie Irene Loeb of The Eve-|{ was buying phosphate, seeds, é&c ning World staff, who organized the, by the ton. : Housewives’ Protective Assoctation, carefully the | the coun- | spoke on the food situa She said 1 food bill would not pro against the plots of food 1 criticized the Brown bill v6, Becatise It appiled » famine conditions and vith too much red tape om May 1 to the far . to spend and with the Sh urged | one day # | my Ste Winters committees to demand more effee- | yuperinten out where | amplesion Wate legislatior potate beans, | ea r George W who presided, buckwhe When | advocated competition between the | 1 grdere lope of green city and the food privateers in. the! on the sn the lake ploughed aud | of food during times like the made red ntatues, It is need- nmand to break up | ed thet the Brown bill iawn was met with | than the former Wicks gy but orders wer he the three acres of hand women who attended | jy. of every 1 greed to go to Al out doubt ‘o-morrow and back up Gov. Whi 3 potato land will not only serve | man in his food legistation Mae once efit for food, tit but will net a expenses great scaretty 1 price paid per | s above Take 2 or 3 Bell-ans before ee anes Ha meals for a week Uahanchinar Wake cox inumin and see what a lotof real Pep, Snap Sta: and fine Feeling good digestion give PARIS, Ang A w be rahi put you. It’s pleasant andharmless, 25¢ pkg erected in mem of Alan Seeger k mone eitiae oh ELL -AN the ‘young American poet who w afeae| killed on July 4, 1916, while Mxhting Hent | yr isvance With the Foreign Legion, condith FOR INDIGESTION 1: is announced by the Figaro buckwheat, 1 have a uid family Fifth Avenue at Thirty-Fifth Street Here Are the Final Hi Astonishing Prices 1 and Misses’ Dresses, Coats and Suits Wi) 15.00 20.00 25.00 4 29,50 to 95.00 Women’s Criginally | There are about 145 pieces altogether, and the styles are not the | best of the season, but there are wonderful bargains here for up- {Il | | | \ ward 100 customers who don't mind the fact that these garments are a little shopworn or mussed—especially as the savings are from 15,00 to 60,00 per garment. It will pay you to look over the whole lot carefully and to come early, 2 Floor None on approval—None credited—None C. O. D. MILI You Never Pay More at Best’s’’(\!)), Ji) f r bands o* | drove a motor car toward Holdenvill \farmes class, wit! AUGUST ‘Making Summer Home Work for Country Is a City Woman’s Patriotic Way of Adding to the Nation's Food Suppl 7] seereneee Cr eeererereerees 04004000000 0000S 00> < soe eeee cececceoesossooeseoestes oreo eeeerrre fe rr + MRS 66 2444544668 @ Oeseees euty of torato plants) grov 1 a few had been and the piwducts will) ina sli ia mens ti canned at our neighboring caaning F ee ry for dur winter supply Was announced from tl® base of op ‘he cultivation of our land has] erations t Sasakawa Keminole n work for the season to six of] County, that, with the € tion of seven gf with families whu ti " F \ wo bar ne comparatively str oun ntry place, [olaays pay th vary Saturday night, | it was believed the section had beon the if they wer leared of organizations of the mal | & business trouble in Ke My husband has congratu on everything that I have u nder- nes with much pride my management of the farr “a house. | ha conten ‘Three men tn all have been ki the four days of guerilla warfare in which hundreds of armed men have} ulked eact through the rough | © you think farming Is a do-| and timbered country. Wallace Car- sirable occupation for wom-| yi, an aged leader of tho "tasked, $ Killed Friday Farming is one of the easiest HOLDUNVILLIS din m othe bjecturs, | en wv Okla, A and pleasuntest occupations for ag a woman, provided che takes i | band of twenty-six men, alleged mem. up scientifically,” replied Mrs. | bers of the working class union, a dra Marks. “She will be sure to fail resisters’ organization, were reported coe ar eln te eee surrounded by officers in the brush oats and the same planting evory | eight miles youth of here to-day | year, Keep up-to-date, It is your business to know what the country needs most before putting nd what will be Don't plant a lit- Posse men arrived this mornin kawa, bringing with then twenty | prisoners nthe same old place Will Ask Death Penaliy for the and in the same old way—simply te cause generations have done 60 fiuskoa Okla, Aug. 6 efore you. Specialize, Decide (i nited States District Attorney W what to raise each year, and then = 1, yi, A ig don't be satisfied to plant until eGinnis announced this after you have studied how to care for noon that the men arrested on) the crop, so as to bring forth charges of resisting the draft in con the greatest production. nection with the Okjshoma uprising “In farming, the woman must be wij) pe tried for treason and that the | the same ‘good sport’ that she ts ath penalty will be asked by the housekeeping, When her cake fils. Government, | ae bakes Anostar When the « ows “District Attomey MeGinnia hay pull the corn, she must not get dis- 4. PH Abenube A ttomnesi the couraged and give up, but hustle ang *°Mt two Deputy Attorneys to plant it over; then Nt precau- infested districts of the Stato to i hen it Sather evidence | day and — | Washes ou farmers 1000 Paddlers Qalt Work on Ved- ather in the village store, put their eral War Contra |reet on the stove READING, Pa, Asking an hey find fault with from $9.7 50 In the wy it's too late ¢ more than puddiera em. | to plant r farmer nw to put In the ine as Soon as the weat “T find farming most, he elnating and, abov ended Mrs, Ma THO MORERLLED IN THE UPRING AGANSTTHEDRAFT 2 pe es Shot Before Midnight, Another a Few Hours Later oyed by the Reading Ir remained ‘on Company ‘al war * The dain tiest, lightest, most appe One LiZing an imagine Made accordi at Holdenville, Okla. Pee Scone fo ans pannel vho have spe " OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla, Ang. ¢ perfecting and 1 the objectors to Draft spread which for nearly a week - HOLLAND RUSK — terror through four ce southern Oklahoma counties, to-day from Seminole County Hughes Count hore two men we lughes nty, where two men w Ww @ large, circular killed and two were Injured last ‘ toasted toa light ¢ fea wn Shortly before midnight Ed x Made of the finest flour an ob{ector, was shot to des \ and sweet cream — It is cri Holdenville and two members of t tlaky, delicious and nourishing posse which his band encounte wounded. Later J. F. Moose of Oker th shot and killed ed we sutter, butter and Laten witht ugar or served in many com inations with fresh fruit 100d for every meal and every member of the fam once was as he ( aste you'll eat it always He an Hane th ently was unawa. » of cond ened cleans Sold by Best Grocers and ing thrown a Delicatessen Dealers the town. He was killed when h NTE Mady unly by not heed or hear an order to st NEW LARGE Holland Kus« wa, f More than 200 members of th ih | PACKARE ” Halland, bileh ny Of famous Wind: Lignitially spicy WOdt unusual flavor ous bands—mostly of the poor ter @ number of a 6, ieii RUSSIAN ASKERENSKY WINS c ms is Cabine al Crisis Has " tly Passed ave red tor bat the ated London) ve Dneteter and he War Off With pow Over ever today @ ane @ . Numan belt, Pre herenehy » Premier and virtay + deciared, ino mani t withdrawing ve rena " t when the country * Vit oh ee ram. te 26 more Hot Irons be fa ctllnes§ ahead “No, Sir! NO, Sir! No more hot irons can Lay a to setain prese my trousers that scorching heat ple eres oy tas shrivels the life out of the cloth, while © Workmen's and Sol the damp steam rots the fabric. . it t tie, wh» Here aa Valet that lives my wet presence om voted, 14 ‘ patinned confiden« users |) the heatless method Free of Charge ind by the ‘Duma, Coentaittes., LEAHEY’S the ecinny 4 to be ached HEATLESS Trousers Press presses your trousers by automatic be knees, smoothes away wrinkles and nife-like A Presser, a Creaser, a Stretcher and a Hanger that tected from ditt and moths, all combined in one, No Operating Expense—First Cost the Last Cost $1.00 now pays for pressing saving and labor-saving inven- billy all your life. It is the — tion for men since the advent greatest money-saving, tin of the safety razor A Personal Valet Service for 1 Cent a Month HEATLESS TROU PRESS. You will be surprised less method that removes bag by crease fr them ract! onstitutional | agreed to participate members who will] has arda ve tw Hot ¢ (he candidates are absent tro} re the nam Gives you that prosper- f War ous look, No more hot irons Kerensk and Minister of]! 110 shorten the life of your at the effect on others and whi Ny ener Attaire Ka wae oes on yourself, Remember the trousers by burning the life out shoddy man gets the shod- of the fabric if you use Leahey’s dy job. (NOTION DEPARTMENT) James McCreary & Co. Terestohonk Minister of Interior, M (Boot evolutionary, lately from penitentiary) Akasentleft released Minister of Publle Instruction, M Olleaburg (Constitutional Democrat member of the Acad y of Minister of Labor, M, Skobeleff, Mintat Trade and Industry, M Prokopoviteh Minister Soclal Tutolage, M 5th Avenue 34th Street Astroff (Mayor of Moscow, Conatitu James McCreery & Co. 5th Avenue ON TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY 34th Street Special Sale WOMEN’S SILK GLOVES 50c pair Two clasp Silk Gloves with double finger tips; all White or Black, also White or Black with contrasting color embroidery. Clearance Sale SILK AND KNIT UNDERWEAR . 3.50 --1,95 Women’s Glove Silk Envelope Chemises; plain or lace trimmed. regularly 4.25 Women’s Glove Silk Envelope Chemises with lace trimmed yokes. regularly 2.95 Women’s Ribbed Lisle Vests,—low neck and sleeveless; regular and 35c¢ extra sizes. regularly 50¢ Women’s Ribbed Cotton Union Suits,—sleeveless; knee length; plain regularly 65¢ 50c or lace trimmed. Unusual Offering 1200 BOYS’ WASHABLE SUITS 1.45 and 1,95 A special purchase of a sam- ple line of high grade Washable Suits, Every Suit new this sea- son; made of durable materials that are guaranteed absolutely fast color; a large assortment of combinations and pretty plain colors, also all White; long and short sleeves; size 246 to 7 years. ' iat Se Te

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