The evening world. Newspaper, January 31, 1918, Page 5

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THE to tell you the ber the ‘will do, from their ex; Sy A Message to Mothers Fletcher's Castoria is nothing new. bf an experiment. buying Fletcher's, Your physician will tell you this, as he knows there are a num- of imitations on the market, and he is particularly interested in welfare of your baby. that Fletcher's Castoria ‘perience and their love for children, We just want to impress upon you the importance jas done, is doing and We are not asking you to lem, Barthquake “Somewhere tn U. &. | reportea that the selsmograph records Registered at € a. | show earthquake tretpors pi ly local “ * Afternoon. He eati- | CLEVELAND, 0., Jan. ther! mater the. ¥ lone occurred within | Hm Odendach of st. Ignatiu® College y¥|000 miles of Cleveland | Fiatimate Boi URGED FOR TASK OF bers, incluc the Muyor and Comp-| ex-officio; two members of the Y° know the real human doctors right around in your neighborhood : RIVERSIDE PROIECT Bub ° rear re Col ator the doctors made of flesh and blood just like you: the doctors with : ib dy teeing . ae aii ike ite souls and hearts : those men who are responding to your call in the aka the ait ; dead of night as readily as in the broad daylight; they are ready en Ahh AOE LI A ge palet had ite Report to Whitman Calls for two of whom must live in New York Board of Seven, Five to Be Named by Governor, The commission appointed by Gov. Whitman to find a solution of West Side-New York Central prob-| which was taken out of hands of the Mitchel Board of Esti- EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, JANUARY 31, 1918, mare Lew is recommended tt donor the Public vice Commission be pernvitted to set- tle the West Side difficulty, but that the matter be entirely in the hands of a cominission of se placed ven mem: | ‘sto be appointed by the Governor, City and one of whom shall be desig- nated by the Governor. Thus it will be seon that the Gov- ‘ernor by virtue of appointive powers would contro! commis- sion The new commission, whose decl- sion would be final and hot subject to either the approval of the Gover- hor or the Legislature, would have the right to effect any of the follow- ing plans: “First: The construction of a mu- nicipal termina: system by the city in agreement with the various rail- his care of The Evening World, the " possible for undernourished school children to receive Butritious lunches. No money ts made tn any way. Everything is furnished at cost, No child ia pauperized, Every cose investigated by school autaorities, the the ‘Superintendent of Bureau of Welfare of School Children 1 you help? aware" 56,000 Manhattan Children Victims of Malnutrition Need the Penny Lunches ee RS PTE EGE POST a How to Send Money Contributions | ferment owner To Evening World School Lunch Fund | *:*":," Send your contributions to the “School Children’s Lunch Fund,” Every contribution received, no matter how small, will make it These children, so aided, are mostly crippled and tubercular, OTTAWA, © wartime will bly on | are systems, One of these will be owned and : erated by the Government while WheiesoM®, | other will be operated tn co-ordination with the Governm: war and the imi period, The Gove | be a, will cor [rtat, the Transe Northern, ¢ i Trunk Pact ed with th ship Broadway at Ninth WANAMAKER’S Tomorrow, Friday---in New York and Philadelphia FEBRUARY FURNITURE SALE Opens Officially at Wanamaker’s A Two-Million Dollar Furniture Service with February Prices Reduced 10 to 50 Per Cent. “You're talking in big figures these days,” a friend reminded us. at 5 samples of the reat volume of furniture we now have ready. Yes, we're talking about a big thing. The February Sale of Furniture is the big- gest thing of its kind in the world. See for yourself! You can’t begin to com- prehend what a million dollars of furniture means until your eyes actually begin to see it to see the samples—one of a kind—and to see on the reverse side of the February tags the stock back of these samples. “But you've gone up from one million to two millions.” Yes, because now we are speaking of the furniture stock of our two Stores, New York and Philadelphia—more than a million dollars in each. You cannot comprehend what this February Sale means to YOU— if you need furniture—until you come and see the furniture itself and the prices, And these combined stocks two million dollars’ worth more than form the buying power which makes the Wanamaker Fcb- ruary Sale of Furniture without serious com- petition. Tonight we send this message -to all home-makers, to brides who expect to become home-makers, to brides of long ago whose children have now grown up to better furniture, to managers of hotels, fur- nished apartments, boarding houses, to those who do purchasing for clubs and institutions, to artists and lovers of all that's beautiful and refinedin the material settings of life, to sensible people generally February is the best winter month for buying furniture be- cause prices are now lowered 10 to | 50 per cent.; To be exact—for this New York store alone we have prepared for the February Sale one million, one hundred and thirty eight thousand, three hundred and forty- | eight dollars ($1,138,348) of furniture—all | to be offered during February at 10 to | 50 per cent. under our normal prices. Every piece of home furniture on our floors is included in the Sale. Nothing is reserved. ~© course, we cannot show at one time a million dollars of furniture. But practically the entire stock is represented by samples on our display floors—-with reserve stock in our warerooms and on the way from the factories The display floors are large. The aisles are’ narrow--gind we are sorry for this. In some places tables are piled one on top of the | other. The furniture is ‘‘packed in” as tight as we can pack it and still show it -and among it all, with possibly a half dozen ex- ceptions, you will find no two pieces nor two suites alike. Wanamaker’s is the best place to buy furniture because the larg- est variety of good furniture and the best values in all grades are to be found here. Fifth, Sixth and Eighth Galleries, New Building We have sacrificed everything--artistic | set-ups, methodical display, even the House Palatial (where the rooms are also crowded with furniture), so that we might exhibit | 25 Hartman Wardrobe | Trunks, $26 Our regular price $32.50; two sizes, 22x40 and 19x40 inches; three-ply veneered buss- wood, fibre-covered; Yale snap lock, padded lift top; four drawers—bottom drawer can be ed into a woman's hat box; shoe sand laundry box, th Gallery, New Building 50 Framed Pictures— $5 to $18 | Wool Scarves at $4 $8.75 to $37.50 grades—colored facsimiles;| 28; were $6; of fine, soft wool; made in some printed in limited editions; suitably | Scotland; exquisite high colors; for men or framed according to subject—wood or gilt. | women. Eighth Gallory, New Building Burlington Arcade floor, New Building February’s First Big Coup In Men’s Really Good Shirts 3,600 at $1.45 | 3,600 at $1.15 NEW--made of fine woven madras (not printed); | — NEW—woven corded madras with printed pat- good enough for custom shirts; stripes copied from | terns, percales and mercerized materials; fast colors silk shirtings; light and dark blues, savenders, tans, | ood’ patterns—and a variety of them; soft. an greens, pinks, grays, also black; soft cuffs; sizes | stiff cuffs, negligee; sizes 14 to 17, (DAYTIGHT-USING SALES Imported Corduroy, 68c yd. $1 grade of a beautiful quality of soft velvety corduroy on enchanting shades of rose, violet, Delft, salmon, pink, white, royal blue, ivory, American Beauty, etc. Four- teen color: For summer skirts, negligees, little summer coats, home gowns and chil- |dren’s wear. 27 inches wide. Main Aisle, Old Building 8. BEAUTIFUL SHIRTS-—such as we would sell, Up-up—UP are going shirt prices. 15 per ] & if bought in regular course of business, at $2 and Brig increase since December, Get YOUR ehare 2,50, of these, Friday— Burlington Arcade floor, New Building Store Closes| | roads; or "Second—The arrangement of & unified joint terminal system on the west side of Manhattan by agree- ment with the New York Central Railroad and other railroad and transportation companies concerned; or the construction of such terminal system by a private terminal com- pany; or “Third—By imposing, If necessary, compulsion upon the rail. roads to require them to construct and operate all necessary terminal facilities, or if such facilities have | been constructed.” | ‘The Act which would create the tes a body “amply equipped with powers to se- cure tha necessary terminal facilities and the removal of tracks from the surface of streets and parks in New York City, either by contract or com- It also provides various | new Commission contemp! pulsion.” "1A freight terminal system along the west aside | beginning at 60th Street and contin- subway or elevated uing south as far as tram mediate to be used by all railroads delivering freight on the west side of Manhat- may with inter- yone stations; this system require, | 3. A tunnel or tunnels under the lHudson River to handle New Yor connecting classification with the ter- n, | City frei | yards in New Je | minal sys! in Manha "3. Through Riverside oft New York Central should not Ibe extended east of the present right of way, should be covered and de- | pressed to a depth determined upon |by engineers as feasible in view of |the waterfront operating con- | ditions. All Improvem riverfront from 72d Street to |Duyvil should be a leonsiderations of pp | dent al requirements. | 4, Any enlargement of the | and ka and. resi- ackage | the Bronx, and local and suburban passer | vice on the west side 7. All railroad tracks Side of Manhattan and avenucs snould be removed f street level 8. The city’s policy of owning 1 waterfront should be « ed made for siieeta to heeus requ Consideration of plan fo store-duor delivery by 1 i to work In harmony with nal s terminal "IL. Prov to and ment of t cover other sections to fit in with any gencral plan of the port hensive any un ' action involving te + fr ties of the New York Contial | road should be In harmony W he foregoing features, “If authority i# vested la a coma | sion, as proposed in th authorities “Th FIERO OUT OF ‘CHANGE. Broker Dapelled for Violation of below Canal Street | na |S tracks ts along the Spuyten | ngel with full] ' DON'T FEEL RIGHT "| flush Education of the Children of the Poor—Financial Aid Is | Needed at Once. | Over $6,000 children in Manhattan mal- are to-day suffering from nutrition Edward § who, as Super lintendent of the Bureay of Welfare of Schoo! Children of the Association Brown for Improving the Condition of the Poor, co-operated with The Evening World when {t extended the penny lunch system tn the schools and cre- itchen feeding 25,000 children, explains the situation as fol- ated a central low | © Mainutritio \"" the quality or preparation of the food The majority of cases at may arise either from k of food or from the defects iv |present, however, is due to lack of \food, wince the high cost of living has | mad difficult in many homes to sdovteoding Javoid 1 | “w evic jing ontrat a fit | proceus ver the tix onty too that the oh from malnutrit d who is suffer on cannot not study, ts cons the mind. subject fo | not the “Hence arises the necessity for aup |piving wholesome food within the choo! building in Ineighborhoods, ‘The our congested nny lunches Ai this w the prese: However, the |fund js to re children who pee no pennies with which to bay as far 4 possible with aim of the present and who a so undernourished that ja morning service of milk and crack= era must be provided to sustain th || BEGIN HOT WATER Says Lack of Food Retards| _“ 5th Avenue | 5, ‘The Manhattanville yards! Saye glass of hot water with should be located east of the tain pho e before breakfast | line tracks. w out poisons, 6, Steam as a motive power in pai wae York City should be eliminated | Tf you wake up with a bad ¢ 5 had breath and ton ates if sour headpis dull or if what und seid const hing: urs and forms gu you eat» in stomach, or you are bilien pated, ne feeling just ri ing. Drink he at real hot wa re ound cant get hegin inside bath Wrewhtust a glans cr with w leaspoonful of limestone phosphate init, This will toxins from and bowels the poisons and stomach, liver, kidneys and cleanse, sweeten wnd purify the Do your ine} entire alimentary tract side bathing immediately 1 ing in the morning to wash the system all the previous duy's poison ous waste, gases and sour bile b putting more food into the ston To feel like youn you felt before vor aris fore h folks feel; tik tmuscles became loaded with body inv quarter pound of limestone phosphate which is inexpensive and almost taste less, cacent for a sourih twinge which jis tot unpleasant Men and women who are usually cor sipated, bilious, headuchy or have un stomach disorder sheuld begin this bathing before breakfast TODAY'S BEAUTY TALK You can enjoy a delightful share wo with very little effort and for trifling instead of ue shalnpao is nd fi “pao Is ne hair 9 anvel every bit ot excess ol and dirt. After envier than it and takes o arranging it 4 pleasure an immediate disposal. New Spring Patterns 2,400 “McCreery Shirts” $1 .65 each Hent quality Madras in various models Made of ¢ 3,400 “McCreery Scarfs” ‘CANADA PLANS PARTIAL “—RULROMD OWNERSHP "FBG Lines Probably Will Be Grouped Into Two Great Systems Under Government Control. 1 problem ed by partial ent system di rediate reco Canada’s prob ao Although the Rail now considering the problem has not yet submitted any solution to the Cabi Drevalling acntiment ts that the Cana- dian roads will be grouped Into two op: | in every way ing the uetion i FELT LIKE A NEW After Taking Only One Box of “‘Fruit-a-tives’’ Gast Ship Harbour, N. 8. “It ts with great pleasure that I write to tell you of the wonderful ] benefits I have received from taking |‘Frultatives.” For years [ was @ dreadful sufferer from Constipation and Headaches, and I was mii Nothing in the wag medicines seemed to help me. 1 finally tried ‘Fruita-tives’ ‘and the effect was splendid. After taking one box, | feel like @ new person, to have the roment syatem, itt] nprise the Intercolo-|tellet from those sickening Head ‘ontinental, Canadien | aches.” Trunk and Grand Mrs. MARTHA DEWOLFS, Meanwhile the Canadian Pacific will ae it ie with Its operation vo ayaten Governmar James MeCreery & Co. Unprecedented Sale MEN’S SHIRTS & SCARFS 95c Entirely new silk MEN'S FURNISHINGS DEP"T—MAIN FLOOR Four-in-Hand MeCreery & Co.; bold and conservative patterns; correct shapes. searfs SOc, a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 23¢. At all dealers or sent postpaid by Fruitatives Limited, Ogdensburg, N. Y.—Advt 34th Street designed for James Exceptional Value BOYS’ GRADUATION SUITS Special $10.50 Smart Suits developed in an excellent quality all wool Blue Serge; plaited- back model; coats alpaca lined; full-cut knickerbocker trousers lined throughout; sizes 7 to 18 years. Other Graduation Suits - $12.75, 15.00, 18.00 Pronounced Reductions B YS’ WINTER OVERCOATS $8.75 formerly 10.50, 12.75, 15,00 Entire stock of Boys’ Winter Overcoats reduced to one price to effect The assortment consists of smart button-to-the-neck styles or convertible collar models; belt in back or all around; warmly lined; per+ fectly tailored; size 214 to 8 years BOYS’ CLOTHING DEPARTMENT—FIFTH FLOOR \

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