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= fi i] TRE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1917. " ENCOURAGE BOY SAILORS. Marine Laseee tntoree Santee Baral Reserve Tretntng tretom. Oficers of the National Marine THE NEW PLAYS “Odds and Ends of 1917” Entertaining Musical Revue BY CHARLES DARNTON, | merchant feet now buliding President Pr oH OW Rowe wee hort Mpeakers were Comareseman J 1 Piteqerait, Fore M Wartore, 1 A Wiemere cory A Comme, ’ Fw ot. mann * The oreanisatio: ‘chummy rewne ia y a wtp, lmore than 00 b: and thie peon taken by FOR MORE SWEATERS Nowe porated oat Ry. day thet the ’ novent pur y mane the trainir wun “06m Rational in eonpe, vf wn careloanty was aan of the Hijow Theatre | Krk, and Knit “Quickly, Says Message to the Women of One Box of Cuticura } eorme te America | armory. sor a not Ointment and 2 Cakes industrindet orn Crone headquarters fay tt wee fow of the! rdue eclared that wenters are uti Soa Hi led | te you « « y Inch | needed for the goidiera than have been cura p ea Morworth, who, like Raymond Hitoh- | supplied | 5 oom in “Hitchy-Koo,” does hie ut-| “It Is Imperative,” anid @ Ned Crose Hard Red Pimples mest to make you feel perfectly at! statement, “that all of the eweaters, home. In fact, you feel aa though a wristlets and eocks that can possibly coy damsel may prance down the ainie| i made by the women of the country of walk off the atago and plump her- | *hould be turned im to the aupply de self in your jap. Nothing could he partment at the earliest possible date. ‘1 wae a victim of hard red pimples for a year and ahalf. These innumer able eraptions were scattered all over my face and forehead caus “ehummier” then thia entertaining! With the cold weather coming on, the especially bas ity of all our! musical revue Jemand fo sto aup jX musio by James Byrney We have forwarded promptly all) and ple Will sound better than it did-yester-| Knitted articles received from the} ing me embarrassment in day afternoon, perhaps, when Mr.) chapters and liave in addition been company. Byrnes succeeds in keeping the or-| compelled to buy in the market 660,000| ‘Then Cuticura Soap and Ointment chestra from playing off tho key. sweaters, of which about 260,000 have | wererecommended. Withthefirst appli- | A note on the programme is quite) been delivered. cation I found the corruption was drawn | as funny as anything in the “book.”| “We are buying ail the yarn we are | out, and 1am glad to say that one box “ of Cuticura Ointment with two cakes of | Assurance ts given that “No member | able to sscure that ts suitable for| CF oer CO tr re mon of this company uses the word cam-| knitters and sending It out to the | chtte93 Vernon Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y., | oufiage.” The young women of the|chapters as fast as we can get de | January 11, 1917. | | chorus seem disposed at times to get | very of It. We have received from |” You may think that because Cuticura | the chapters about 200,000 sweaters, ok tees } along without anything of the sort-! ai of which have been delivered to a acaling werera it ing andl warning One of them, at any rate, is ‘4/the men In the camps and training | 200 DESINE terete ae edte the gentle in @ bathtub, is, with the exception of a few | eczema iP gent yuna toh Wo have bad xc seng | uses of the toilet. On the contrary, t france Mee ne unto eneliaeea | that is where it is most effect We call Upon the women to give us | venting these serious skin troubles ure, DY thelr very best efforts trom now until| For Free Sample Each by Return ut Jan. 1, that we may be able to| Mall address post-card: “*Cuticura, the top in fleshin great deal of inge ton the gifts of Dame > clothing herself with a b sponge and other trifies that a y nish our own men with these com-! Dept. H, Boston.'’ Sold everywhere. girl might overlook on a dull morn-| forts and have some to apare for Soap 25c. Ointment 25 and S0c ing. Oh, yes, thia little revue is quite “chummy!” = Harry Watson is genuinely funny | as an Inglorious prize-fighter, repeat BROOKLYN ing the hit he made in Zlegf "8 ee “Follies” some years ago. He is thoroughly arausing as n fond hus- OPPENHEIM CLUNS & e band loaded down with bundles who le equeezes into a telephon s i es desperate efforts to talk Jack Norworth sings an Fulton Street, Brooklyn familiar way, but his met to make the pace of the a bit slow. However, it Is In the second part of the s Announce Extraordinary Shoe Sale fan Lorraine, looking as gor handsome as ever, in Ol4 Bronx,” “Tho Sister Susie Glide, in which she knits and dances at the same time, and an Irish song She and Mr. Norworth also win favor with “Fancy You Fancying Me.” the song that Mra. ad Vernon or | was @ pup. Then, too, Mr. Norworth gives @ humorous turn to a soldier from the Bowery who does his best to understand an attractive girl in the French trenches, Laura Hamilton, J and Jack Edwards ph Herbert fr. rly, ind | Friday and Saturday (Only) 1500 Pairs of Boots Exclusive with Oppenheim, Collins & Co. ne Sn WARNS WHITE SLAVERS SNEAKING BACK TO CITY District Attorney Notifies Vice Ring He Will Ask for De- tective Squad. Information re Attorney's off election me ring had been prepared to re Patent Vamp and Black Kidskin_ Top All, Black Kidskin or ‘Tan Calfskin ‘Patent Vamp with Gray or Sand Cloth Top All Have Welt Soles and Leather Louis XV or New Military Heels In all sizes and widths for Women and Misses. Mr. Swann to acUvity agaings wh! ers. | Tho evidenco obtained by Assistant 5 00 District Attorney Smith included the Sale Price e names of two women and @ man, two of them formor partners of “Dago" | Frank, one of the murderers of Hers All Sales Must Be Final | 219, 221, 228, 2235, 227 164, 166, 168 and 170 Grand Street Smith Street Cor. Driggs Ave, BROOKLYN Cor. Wyckoff St, | GOODS DELIVERED ANYWHERE IN GREATER NEW YORK |! Clothing for Your Whole Family on Easy Terms ||| Bring This Advertisement With You and Get Your TEN Per Cent, Dscount Ol Your Credit Purchase When Opening a New Account BUOFFETDS China Closets || SS Se 3 and women of this commur ary at i ic HE HALTS FILM REELS. B, J. Such Has Contrivance ‘That Permits Oral Explanations of Pietares. 500 Weekly. Yoo will be sur. prised at the low i prices om fine * 50¢ WEEKLY prices om OPEN MONDAY AND SATURDAY EVENINGS, 00 Weekly, | Huffets. We. hi at @ projection room Candler Building yesterday. ia the ~ The Brewers to the Public Our Federal Laws, now for the first time in our history, abso- lutely prohibit the distillation of ardent spirits—such as whiskey, brandy, gin and the like. In so doing they make a clear distinction between distilled spirituous liquors and mild beverages—such as beer and light wines. This distinction sets a precedent in our national treatment of the question of Intemperance. It is in line with the teachings of history and of science. It is in harmony with the experience of other countries now at war. It is through such a distinction that the real solution of this vital problem will be found. Inasmuch as the brewers have reduced the alcoholic content of beer until it is today only frac- tionally in excess of 3 per cent. they have earned the right to call their product a True Temperance Dri Yet, in general popular opinion, it is still associated with ardent spirits. The true relationship of beer is with light wines and soft drinks—not with hard liquors. For this false mental association the brewers are largely responsib.e. Keen competition in the early days of the brewing industry, before the perfection of modern bottling methods, led the brewers as individuals to encourage the establishment of saloons, which were at that time the only agencies through which their product could be lawfully sold. This unwise individual action on the part of many led to an undue multipli- cation of the saloon—a form of retail distribution which dealt not only in malt beverages but also in intoxi- cating liquors, and established a business affiliation that has since created the false mental association. Thus our product has been unjustly and improperly linked with those influences—over which we have had no control—that have actually promoted Intemperance. For years we have hoped, with the wine growers, that some factor might intervene which would enable us to sever, once and for all, the shackles that bound our wholesome products—light wines and beer, the hand- maidens to True Temperance—to ardent spirits in popular mental association and actual business prac- tise. The Federal enactment prohibiting the distillation of spirituous liquors has broken those chains at lest. Freed now to speak for the great moral truth of temperance that we have long realized was ours—heartened by the action of Con- gress and the President—we welcome the opportunity that is thus afforded us to promote True Temperance. Further, we pledge ourselves to co-operate with the spirit of the law by adding our utmost efforts to dissociate beer from distilled liquors in every way, in popular thought and in the saloon. Thus will the Federal laws and our practise operate to eliminate the evils of Intemperance and to place our country upon a basis of ‘Temperance—REAL Temperance, which means sobriety and mod- eration: not Prohibition, which has proved a fallacy and a failure. The United States Brewers’ Association, SS