The evening world. Newspaper, October 25, 1917, Page 12

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CARRANZA ASKS POWER TO SQUELCH DISTURBERS Congress Is Discussing Plan to Suspend Certain Constitu- tional Rights. MEXICO CITY, Oct. 25.—Suspension he thirteenth article of the eee | joan Constitution was considered to- day by the House of Representatives at the request @f President Carranza, who | Informed the members that action was | necessary to enable the Government to Goat adequately with offenders against | the public peace and constitutional order. What is purposed to be done corresponds broadly to a suspension of the habeas corpus in the United States. It ts explained that the Government intends to deal more rigorously with members of the Catholic clergy, espect- jally in Guadalajara and Guanajuato, who are accused of inciting rebellion. The, jant!-Government press also will be regu- lated with a heavy hand, and plotting groups in the latwe cities will be prose- cuted if the power asked by the Presi- dent ts granted him. B. Altman & Cn. Men’s Fur-collarOvercoats at $55.00 will constitute an introductory and very special offering on the Sixth Fioor for to-morrow and Saturday These are extremely smart Winter Overcoats, having all the luxurious appearance of a fur- lined coat without its cumbersomeness. They are made of soft-surface coatings in heather mixtures and dark Oxford, finished with a collar of fine-quality beaver, and are part lined with silk. There are two styles from which to select, one a single-breasted form-fitting model,the other double-breasted with box back. Excellently tailored, these coats represent. unusual value for the price. At the same time Men’s Imported Overcoats (winter-weight) made of modish, serviceable woolens, soft and warm; a very desirable outergarment for street or motor wear; will be on sale at the special price of $37.50 BAUMANN & BRO. Open Saturdays Until 10 P. M. SPECIAL FOR THIS WEEK ONLY Four-Piece Quartered Osk Dinin: 9) , Room Suite, golden finish, at...” ‘69 F AXMINSTER RUGS, 8,8x10.6 AT | | O® ee OGOSOOSOSSS Their Bonds—Some of ‘‘How I Am Buying My Liberty Bond’’ ' Definite Saving Schemes Have Enabled Many to Buy the Ideas Which Have Helped Are Presented in the Following Letters to’The Evening World. Laverty Loan Balter, New York Brening World: Thousands of people throughout the country are depositing $1 per week in different banks as members of Chriat- mas funds or thrift clubs without re- celving any Interest on payments. ‘Those clubs usually begin about Deo, 26 In one year and end around Dec. § the following year, covering @ period of fifty weeks, which makes a total of $60. To theae depositors I would suggest | going to thelr nearest bank or to the bank of which they are members and opening a Liberty Loan account for a $60 bond at once. In @o doing they can help to make this loan a success and at the same time receive interest on thelr deposits. It will only be a matter of about ten weeks when these depositors will bo receiving their checks for the money deposited since last year, and they can they repay if necessary the bal- ance that is due on their bond at that time. This is the plan I am pursuing. RRY F. LYNCH. 62 South 11th Ave,, Whitestone, N. ¥. WEEKLY BUDGET BRINGS BOND WITHIN REACH. Literty Loan Editor, New York Evening World: I did not think it would be possible to purchase a Liberty bond, but af- ter a few nights of study I mapped out a “budget” plan whereby I could not only buy my bond but also lay aside money for other necessary ex- penditures. My salary is $20 a week Why Stay Fat? You Can Reduce nwer of most fat people is that it and Di they can be obtained by se re able, nding price direct to the Marmola Co, 864 Woodward Ave., Detro Now that you know this you hay jeune for be- ing too fat, but can two, three or four pounds ® week without fear of had after effects.——Advt, weekly budget: y q car fare, 600.; ed- ucational, $1.50; board, §7; clothing, $2; lodge, 50c.; insurance, 450.; papers, 200.; barber, 25c.; spending money, $3. By economy I have even reduced these expenditures, #o that instead of having woeks I have $13.26, EDWIN L. VINCENT. No, 166 Decatur Street, Brooklyn. SAVE BY CALENDAR TO PAY BOND INSTALMENTS, Lberty Loan Editor, New York Brentng World: Being 4 married man and making @ moderate salary, I wish to show my and this is my Li Loan, bond, Out of the money that I give my wife every week and what I keep for myself we can always manage to put away enough for a Liberty bond. On the first day and continuing throughout the month, we each put away money corresponding to the date of the month, On the first day we each put away one penny; second day, 2 cents; third » 4 nd 90 on till the last day of the month. Counting up the money at the end of the month, we find t we each have #4.65 for thirty days and $4.96 for thirty-one days, thereby having porether at least $9 a month, which can pay my employer, through whom I got the Yond, its ang STEPHEN LEVITZ. No, 679 W. 177th 8t., N, ¥, City. GIVES UP EXCHANGE OF HOLI- DAY PRESENTS. Léeerty Loan Baditor, New York Evening World: I am a working girl lving on a doing their bit and I want to do mine, The following letter which I have sent to my friends will explain itself and tell you how I expect to pay for a part of my Liberty bond: Dear, Friend: 1 belie my bat ies Gal Aside from this way of adding to my savings, I have other schemes. One is to do my own laundry and thus save at loast 50 cents each week, I have also taken a few orders for ay. Presents, Eap"hes re crocheted caps, Each cap when fin- ished will bring me about $1.25 clear, and I can easily make one cap a week Only 2 Days Left to Buy Liberty Bonds OPPENHEIM. CLLINS & 34th Street—New York Exceptional welted soles, two 500 Pairs Women’s Patent Leather High Cut Cloth Top Boots An exceptional model in combination of patent leather and fawn color cloth tops, Prevent Value 8.50 5 O() Offering Unusual Values inch military heel. Georgette Blouses Smart model of superior Georgette Crepe in flesh and white; front and collor trim- med with filet lace and ball buttons, Regular 7.90 ¥ awe 5,90 toward my bond in two ? way of saving $100 for a Liberty modest salary, I have two brothers! _THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1917. MISS CORNELIA WOOLLEY 1S THE BRIDE TO-DAY OF | JOHN HUYLER ACHESON ¥ 0000008 ae BReesee RSS S CORNELIA F * WOoO.EY 944929409 O OOOO 04 OD 0949044 In the chapel of St. George's Churoh, | Stuyvesant Square, this afternoon, takes place the marriage of Miss Cornelia Delite Woolley, daughter of Mrs. Cornell Woolley, to John Huyler Acheson. Only relatives and a fow intimate friends will be present at the ceremony, which will be ° formed by the rector, the Rev. Karl | Reiland, and followed by a small re- jception at the home of the brid ‘mother, No. 850 Park Avenue. M | Marguerite St. George Smith will be |the bride's only attendant. Howard Archibald Acheson will be his broth- jer’s beat man, and the ushers will be W. Acheson Smith, cousin of the bridegroom; Willlam Picken jr. C. ong Mackey and Edward G. Ache- son Jr. Mr. Acheson is the son of Dr. and Mrs. Edward Goodrich Acheson of No. 417 Park Avenue. Miss Woolley's brother is with the American Am- ‘ran | bulaner rps during spare moments. Asbury Park, N. J. TEACHER SAVES FOR BOND BY SELF DENIAL. Liberty Loan Editor, New York Evening Worldt I should like you to know how a teacher can save from his small sal- ary to buy a Liberty bond. Ihave been in the habit of smoking |@ package of 15-cent cigarettes each By cutting it out altogether I , save $54.76 a year. I Intended to join a club this year, but find I can save $17 a year, in- cluding initiation fee, I live about two miles from my school, and have been taking a trol- ley, but now walk twelve times a week and ride six instead of riding eighteen. Thus I save $18 (based on | thirty-six weeks’ school). By omitting my weekly shave at the ,barber’s and shaving myself I save $7.20, after deducting 60 cents | for extra shaving lotion. The extra | soap is nothing, as I use ordinary toilet soap, Instead of buying $7 shoes I bought a pair of slightly damaged but ser- viceable ones for 5. | Also I save $7 by making my last winter's hat do in place of a $5 derby and by wearing an old but servicea- | ble pair of kid gloves. My savings for the year will be over $105.35, | H. L. HAZELTIND, | 828 Gardner Avenuo, Trenton, N, J. eee WORLD COMPOSING ROOM TAKES $5,200 OF BONDS ‘Employees Subscribe After Hearing Capt. Thwaites and Congress- man Hulbert. “Every man and woman who does not put every spare dollar into this Liberty Loan is guilty of murdering our boys who go to the front,” sald Capt. Norman G. Thwaites of the British Army, who was wounded | early in the war, at a Liberty Loan rally in the composing room of The World last night. “Barly in the war the Germans were firing vhells across our lines at the rate of 150 a minute,” he con- M. M. tinued, “and we were firing back }about three or four an hour, That! | must never happen again, but to | prevent it we must subscribe eagerly and fully to this issue,” Congressman Murray Hulbert, who was introduced by the Chairman, Isaac Mailhouse, ag the man who knocked the “hell out of Hell Gate,” said that now he wants to see the eyes knocked out of the Kaiser, He said he thought one of the frst things that Congress would under. take when it convenes would be the passage of an appropriation of §),. 000,000,000.more for our alr service, “It we do,” he said, “that passage, as the recent one, will be due in a large percentage to the persistence ot Ralph Pulitzer, Rodman Wana. maker and Alan R. Hawley, President of the Aero Club of America.” Mrs. Finlay-Stewart sang “The! Stars) gled Banner” and “America, I Love You," and Master Francis ‘Westover sang the Marselliaise, It was announced at the close of| |the meeting that $5,200 of the bonds had been subscribed for in that de. partment of The World, BEAT AND ROB WAR HERO, Three Men H. Tabe—Su Alfred Pass, @ member of the Forty. eighth Highlanders, was attacked this |morning in Exchange Place in tho Hudson tube, badly beaten and robbed of $20 by three men, one of whom wore the uniform of a sailor, another that of a soldier and the third civilian clothes, CATHEDRAL OF VENICE PROTECTED AGAINST RAIDS Face and Sides Enclosed in Sand Bags—Art Works in Strong Room. VENTIC, Oct. 2%.—Measures for the Protection of Mt. Mark's, the most mous monument of Venice, from the en- @my's air bombs have now been com- Dleted. The face and sides of the ca- ‘thedral are now enclosed by an armor of bags of sand held in place by scat- folding which is lined with asbestos as & protection against incendiary bombs such as the one that fell a year ago ‘within a few yards of the main en- trance, The mosaics, both inside and out, are Protected from rusher of air that might result from explosions by canvas stretched beneath them which would serve also to catch all the fragments | y that might fall and preserve them for restoration, All precious objects and works of art that could be taken down, including the four colossal Greek horses on the facade havo been removed to fety in the treasury of the basilica, which has been transformed into a storeroom, stoutly @rmored. Those in the interior that oved have beet: covered stuffed with seaweed @round which are piled buttresses of Found Dead at Feet of Alr Shaft. The body of 173° Amaterd this mornin, al heard @ crash at 2 o'clock this h dress. Tenants remembered having!his. He fell about fifteen feet, ou Can Tell the People Who Have Iron in Their Blood, ~ Strong. Healthy Vigorous Folks Doctor Says Ordinary Nuxated Iron Wilt Make Nervous Rundown People 100% Stronger in Two Weeks’ Time In Many Cases, Droper form. And this, after they baw J doctoring for erit, If ypu are not strong or well you ow Le urself to make the following test e in jets of dinary nuxated from three times per after meals for two wet Thi your strength again Boston phy: y both in this country and in an medical institutions, in & recent discourse, They are thers are in the weak Ieee nights spent ailments, consta' ming drugs stomach, liver or attempts to nd sound, healthy flesh on But you must take tron be over su with habit for: to do you any good, prove worse than usel: NC Dr, ing you you don’t wet th 6 moment lied the multitude of danger- The high altar beneath which Iron ts supplied wer: | a ay. The domes of St. Mark have re. ecolved a thick coating of liquid cement which, hardening, constitutes an armor, while ‘the wooden portions haye been treated with a non-inflammable Hauid. Cy ry sien of dyspepsia, ‘ouble In from ten to four- ad endhiranc ‘simply by taking Iron tn fy" tim In this city by 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 2, W. L. Douglas Shoes. The Best Known Shoes in the World. & arethe same everywhere. Theycost no morein San Francisco than they do in New York. They are always worth the price paid for chem. of W, productis guaranteed ‘more than. ience in making fine deo? Senne atic niet ion centres of America. Th ade aa equipped factory at Brockton, ki igh- i an honest determination to make the best shoes for the price that money can buy. For sale by over 9000 shoe dealers and 105 ‘W. L, Douglas stores in the teres, cities, If not convenie ne of call at W. L, Doug store, ask dealer for W. L. Dou las shoes. If he cannot supply you, take no other make, Theretail prices: BOYS SHOES Works None genuine unless Write for booklet, showing how to order fe Res taderlor tees, shoes by mail, postage free. ud L. Doug! ry 4 CAUTION —Be sure the ao aes ome oe Bhoe Co., 210 8) cyte Vibe Geriglaa Baer Bioline J W. L. Douglas Stores in Greater NewYork: 2779 Third Av., bet. r46th & 147th Sts./*859 Manhattan Avenue, 847 Eighth Avenue, 1779 Pitkin Avenue. 250 West 125th Street, CITY —18 Newark Avenue, BROOKLYN 2 price stamped on the bot- tom has not been erased or raised. Copyright, W. L. Dougtas Shee Co 98 Nassau Street. 155 Broadway, corner 8th St. 847 Broadway, near 14th St, °1342 Broadway, cor. 36th St. 1495 Broad wa; *984 Third A *1452 Third #2202 Third Av., cor, 120th St, ores marked y (Times Square) Ue, NOVELIZED BY WILLIAM A. PAGE BY ARRANGEMENT WITH ELLIOTT, COMSTOCK & GEST girito. THE FAR EAST. While making his complaint in the Greenwich Police Station a man, an of 1d, Ma vin, e name of Fred Gritty ted that he . a ii told. the police that he was one of his as. he tube, thought ¢ sailants iter was Pass was st the fi went into action with ® regiment M800 men of whom only ‘twenty-four came back, lo, 38 | + T= kor

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