The evening world. Newspaper, February 27, 1918, Page 6

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WK F) Were (From Wire—What do you num's honesty? ou. I raid to him the other evening Lats take a wal And he said: ‘All right. Who: take?” the MUSTHAVE INCOME OF $10,000 TOJOIN THIS RATION ‘CLUB: Mrs. F, Gray es Gawd Pledges the Wealthy to Food- Saving Plan. Wage—Well, Ul tell PREACH and practice economy in the home. Begin in the kitchen, Avoid loss of food by making it appe- tizing. Poor flavoring leads to wastefulness, Just try the world’s best @avoring for food. LEA:PERRINS :: SAUCE arn ‘THE ORIGINAL WORCESTERSHIRE If your income is $10,000 and over you can belong to one of the most ex- Your name must be in the Took and the Social Register, ause of social distinction or ou will not OPPENHEIM, GLLINS & © 34th Street, New York MISSES SUL Knowing that no one appre- ciates good looking clothes more than the growing girl, Oppenheim, Collins & Co. have assembled extensive selections of smart but practical Fash- ions for girls who are hovering between girlhood and woman- hood. Misses’ and Junior Suiis have re- ceived their full share of attention in the Spring preparations and the “little lady” who avails herself of the shopping privileges afforded by the Oppenheim, Collins & Co. Misses’ and Junior Department cannot help but find both values and styles suited to her liking. Norfolk—Pony-jacket—Eton— Braid- trimmed and Plain Tailored models. 25.00 to 75.00 It You Contemplate Buying a House or a Farm; Rent a House, Apartment, Office or Factory Read THE WORLD’S Real Estate Farms for Sale—Apartments To Let— Houses To Let Advertisements No other New York newspaper prints as many, lusive organizations in Greater New * a} be om and ur ese wens i SOCIETY WOMAN WHO be among tho missing ; HAS MOBILIZED THE RICH who are unlucky enough ts VOR SAVING IN FOOD © possess the necessury Income and are overburdened with reams of the long been thoroughly mob en have ro. F. Gray Griswold eo Ne 783 Park Avenue, officer of the United States Food Administration, New Y Saving by ork’s Honor Syste Voluntary Rationing, as it rmod, instituted three weeks ago Wi Mrs, Griswold, has made marvel- m for Food lous progress well to do, that ix, those having plenty of money and large households, have been person | ally appealed to, so the Food Admin- }iatration at Washington may rest at secure in the knowledge that the 1 extravagant menage in the is has been reached and ia saving food for the boys in khaki on the firing line There way to reach them, ‘That was through one of thelr set, and Herbert Hoover sent for Mra. Griswold and enlisted her services as the leader of the movement that ‘ tends to bring about wonders in food conservation. Surrounded by every luxury tn her palatial home on Park Avenue, Mrs Griswold told of the work she ts doing to ration New York's wealthy | class, And she is mighty serious about it, for with her corps of secretaries and assistants over 10,000 persons with incomes of $10,000 and then somo have signed pledge cards agrecing to save the necessaries for the army of the United States and her allies, “You see," Mra, Griswold declared, “Mr. Hoover is golng to keep sending the 1 abroad and we have got to conserve it. Our movement reaches only the well to do, and we have esti- ~ mated there are about 60,000 in New was only one 8 2 FSS SOGSSSOSS Pork (the weekly al- pork per person should evence) York and Brooklyn with substantial —lowance of hey: St not exceed half a pound). hey sign the Butter—Half a pound per nme enthusias. 4 Bu nd act as mis- for use in coc the food con- n idea among their friends, HOW THE HONOR SYSTEM 18 cracker du BEGUN AND KEPT UP, 1 t Wheat flo \ is made f Weekly, half “First we send out a letter Inclosing Pp a pledge card for the person to sign tictuding table use and and ret ne SA + SEAWiNe in. ¢ Weekly, three-quar- forth a allp of pasteboard which read =} A faeces a as follows rhaps the most marvellous part is the voluntary part oft tifies the head New York's Honor System for} of |i. Mrs. Griswold ne t ‘i of the household, explaining — the Fesayenyon ey aveurcn necessity for saving food and urges Rationing, the signing “ew have 1 promise the United States} joglected tor at once, RR SaaS “DRYS” HEARD IN BOSTON. | Advocate Pederat val Amenémelf Be- fore Le is pl BOSTON, Feb. mittee on Fe Relations to+ PRUNES are now really stylish, since they are being used to trim hat)" Kave a Liga} oer! ee Gonts-sonetinn Nee eer tits Oe of ratification of the Federal Prokible joning ations. Leather flo s also are being used. Uon Amendment, A number of speak- ay Griswold ant ers representing the Council f e Vanderbilt Jr. Get wnat FOR PLAYING CHECKERS with him, Richburg, }tional Prohibition and other ores uries BB. Au X= are N. Y., man left bachelc nd $5,000 legacy. tions urged immediate action. Oppo~ Mra ete - — will be heard on March 6, «s W HOME LIFE TOO “3 fried mush every day Caumitee oH Rules has ralney . : i ot hdl Forestburg, N, Y, woman alleges in her scparation as the date for consider. Harriman, Miss Mary sult @ bill providing for a special election t Hay, Mrs. J. P. Morgan, Mrs « Key Pendleton, Mrs, Frederic 1. Pratt, Mrs. John D. Rock Mrs, William Douglas, Sloan Willard Straight and Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt. April, at which the ratification would be submitted to the people, FEARING he would be as tall as his 7 foot 3 inch itucky schvolmaster hore has undergone opera- p his rapid growth. uncle, K tion to 8 yin} a} AFTER WORKING sixty-one years continuous! nava atory at Washington, ninety-one-year- clerk has been given a six-months vacation without pay. —_- Notes in Society and Mra, R, Donaldson Brown plewood, J. announce the engagement of their daughter, Mise Lillian Gibbs Brown, to William H. Berg of Orange. The wedding will take place in the spring. Miss Grace Leslie Johnston, daugh- ter of Mrs, William McCarroll of Frooklyn, and Lieut. Albert Musgrave TEFEN is Hyde, son of Mr, and Mrs, A. Fille NUMBER 27 | HIS Is “SKIDDOO. more Hyde of this city, were mar- Paris on Monday. Lieut. If you want to keep your hair in good condition, be careful whe you wash it with, Most soaps and prepared shi contain too much alkali. This dries the scalp, makes the hair brittle, and is very harmful. Just plain mulsified cocoanut oil (which is pure and en« tirely greaseless) is hack betterthan the most expensive soap or anything else you can use for shampooing, ag | this can't possibly injure the hi | WHEN THREE INCH GUN mounted on automobile tion in London street during German alr ratd mistook it for a hurdy-gurdy and asked the Lieutenant please to move on. MISS PATSY REESB, ifornta’s only girl trapper, caught enough wild animals to pay half her college term expenses, STRIP OF CARPET on which she was being lowered trom second story window broke and ended elopement of a Bethlehem, Pa, girl Simply moisten your hair with wae ter and rub it in. One or two tea. spoonfuls will make an abundance of "| rich, creamy lather, and cleansed the hair and scalp thoroughly. The lather rinses out easily and removes along Bushwick Avenue between Gr and DeKalb Avenues. Motorcycle liceman Kaltenback sald his car Po- was in Age 27, Got Mites an Honry| ried , going — twenty-w an hour.|particle of dust, dirt, dandruff Hyde is with the American Expedi-| Ruben ta I | ruben, who Is twenty years ol. lexcessive oil. The hair dries quicl 5 onary Yorcos, Twenty-seven Was brought into the Gates Avenue|and evenly, and it leaves it fine = three as the “skiddoo! |silky, bright, fluffy, and easy to man- Court at twenty-seven minutes after The m eis announced of Mrs. jamin Ruben salesman| thie morning. Magistrate Nash imposed |age. Arm Selleck and Col. Sydney who lives at No. 4 ediker Avenue |q fing of $27, Incidentally, this is| You can get mulsified cocoanut oil ant, Coast Artillery Corps, U.S. A., Brooki He to-day be-| Fey at most any drug store. It is very on Monday evening last at the home cause of his | shake the fatat| y could beat that combina-|cheap, and a few ounces is enough to of the bride's niece, Mrs. H. Beeck. number off his tra suid Ruben as he left the court |last every one in the family fog Ruben was a speeding ad I'm not a centenarlan months.—Advt. man Delatour, No, 78 Eighth Avenue, | Brooklyn. i} Andre Tardieu and M. Guw of the neh Commission are to speak this —_——_— on at the exhibition being held »y the Junior Com of the American Hospital at No. t Avenue. | | Miss Marton eker, ) Mr. and Mrs. William A. Tu i | | been promised the entire receipts of lthe Cohan Revue at the New Am-| sterdam Theatre this afternoon for the free wool fund of the Comforts Committee of the Navy League. | Miss Marjorie Cluett, daughter of Food Administration to ration my$ agreeing to ,.{Mr. and Mrs, Robert Cluett jr. of household according to the regu- ett onan ih "| Rye, N. Y4 will be married to Leu lations set forth in the rations tre i yon Robert Livingston Duane, U, 8. M. “ | $oard. itying to Kee how quickly they re-| on Saturday, at Rye. | s Lad And the ration card is strictly Mrs Griswald is intensely inter- Miss Laura C€ i daughter of Hooverized. If every household in ested in the work that occuples every | qo) and Mrs. John Temple Graves, | minute of her time, When one un- dertakes to reach 60,000 persons and reach them without delay, it 1s no small task. WIVES OF WEALTHY MEN KEEP AN EYE ON KITCHENS. New York's millionaires are mobil- America practised the sugge lined therein the office of F ministrator in Washington would be abolished, This card is of sufficient size that when hung In the kitchen, which is part of the pledge, it can be read at a distance, Some of the more important covenants read: Meat—Beef (fresh, _ salted, ized, that is, their wive ‘These tinned and hashed). Mutton, bave mobilized thelr ng, they b and veal (mutton by pre: h bilized their nts, B. Altman & Ca. Spring & Summer Fashions for Small and Larger Girls are presented in generous assortments in the Department on the Second Floor. MAEIAg efforts have been made to assemble smart, attractive styles the newest and fas materials; while special attention has been given to the modeled in most wh Included in the stock are: om. Tailored Suits ; ° $19.50 to 42.5 Practical and D Colored Washable F or 95.00 5 to 23.50 ress Coats ) to rocks, The Vogue for Sports Satins. will be one of the interesting fashion features | of the approaching Spring and Summer seasons. | A wonderful assortment of these S, revealing many beautiful and artisti | (a number of which have beer | pecially and exclusively for B. A aro mow displayed in THE SILK DEPA | on the First 2TME NYT Floor, Sith Aveme -Madtson Avene Bs ud 35th Streets Nem York will be married to Lieut. Frederick i , i Tomkina, Aviation Section, Signal Every great war inspires some soldier goodbye song Corps, U. 8. A. to-day at the home 1 that lives in history. And if ‘‘Sweet Little Buttercup” continues to grow in popularity at the present rate, it is likely to be remembered for generations as the favorite war song of 1918. Words no less than melody are of genuine beauty, and an exquisite violin obbli- gato is woven into the chorus, A2477—750 of her parents in Washington. Lieut. Tomkins is a son of Calvin Tomkin former Dock Commissioner of N) York, and Mrs, Tomkins. ‘The marriage of Miss Julia May! La Mont, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Stewart Moore La Mont, to Capt. Russell Arnold Fairbairn, Coast Ar- | unery Corps, U. 8. A, will take place to-day at the La Mont home, No. 18 Albemarle Road, Brooklyn The wedding of Miss Marion Wil- son Hendricks, daughter of Mr, and) Mrs, Laurence Hutton Hendricks of | No, 604 Riverside Drive, and Ensign Edward Strong Clark, U. 8. N., took place last evening at the home of the} | bride's parents. Ensign Edwin 8. Kant, a naval) aviator, whose home is in Boston, ob- | tained a license here yesterday to marry Miss Pearl A. Grifith of All- | ston, Mass. j “Over There” Here’s a record that sets the pace for ‘‘Over Mr. and Mre, William J, MacDonald 4 h P ) of New Rocheile 4 ounne: tae Shr There.’’ Arthur Fields, the soldier baritone, has gagement of their daughter, Miss ; i i Helen MacDonald, to Lieut. George sung this famous war song with the snap and Ruseer, U. 8. N. A, stationed at dash of a bayonet charge. On the back, ‘‘Send ‘amp Dix. | — Me a Curl,” A2470—75c | MUST CURB BUILDING. WASHING to Frank W. Ci resentative ne American Lumber- | man, Secretary McAdoo to-day elabor- on his recent statement urging curs tallment of building operations for the juration of the war, The letter says “Lt 1s impossible to lay down a hard | and fast rule as to what every patriotic tizen should do in order to live up to 3 duty In this ocnnection, | wshington rep= If Cleopatra could hear this fantastical fox-trot melody, she’d hop right out of her mummy- case and get into the game. It’s a musical pethings necessary, for whirlwind, played by Prince’s Band and intro- Roenoa te te our ducing ‘‘Silly Sonnets,’’ ‘‘You Stingy Baby,” filtaite staration a and ‘‘When There is Peace on Earth Again.” Hen ne nd al money thet Legh A6017—$1.25 d requires m st urgenuy at this) tim MET’ CONCERTS FOR BOSTON. | Attanta Season of Opera Company | | Cancelled, | BOSTON, Feb. 27,—The Metropolitan | Opera Company will give seven con- certs in this city the week of April 22, the engagement to-day New Columbia Resords on Sale the 10th and 20th of Every Meath Send some records to your eoliler. ‘There ls @ Columbia Gratonola in hie ¥,M.C.A. oF | of Cohumbvue Het. | nual feature there, had be —— ington Pitcher Wede, Marry ©. Harper, @ atar southpaw! pitcher of the Washington Americans, ck, waa married there! }iast night to Miss Bessie Browastor, © | aa of ex-Sheriff George M. | livewater, @ promt rontractor, who j jaided in | building embarkation f camp at Dumont i the Bt de’ Y b, ey if J t Prowbyterian C ‘hureh, Among wae a haniwome remembrance | front Manawer Clark Griffith and his | wits, telegrams of A congratulatory ‘trom fellow mom {R8 1 Ye ane ve the sans, There,

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