The evening world. Newspaper, March 22, 1918, Page 16

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

' Sha AS Oa RIE 2 os 1 MOTORCYCLE “cops” Fl lth er to hihi ana he failed to mete| Rn r ompany—Quarterly a t ent. payable Ap to stork f a 22 eyele aquad wer uty Police Com terday for irre summons Park We i9?. ¥ jomes thirty Leo J. Hoy It is eha to compel after he Hoy the Carter’s Little Liver Pills |... You Cannot be A Remedy That ea ae Constipated Makes Life and Happy Worth Living ‘Small Pitt Small ‘Seal Price Compan, able April 10 Q _ r e ‘ompany—Sem ) a share on pre April 1 to stock of IVER PILLS. | Genuine bears slenature a March ARTER’S IRON PILLS]... 1 Company, will greatly help most pale-faced people a tock BSENCE of Iron in the Blood ‘is the reason for many colorless faces but Parents, Not in Two Years Have You Seen a Sale Like This— Boys Spring Suits The Oy “Schoolmate’ 2p known in ten States for highest excellence and = depen ability, on sale to-morrow at the wy Surprise Store, in the latest and most popular Spring models and patterns, at savings of $1.80 to $2.55. Your money hack on request. ‘id Norfolks Norfolks 5 “ oi —" Worth $5. 78 NEW YORK COTTON EXCH Oven. High iid ‘blue | with and- | ets Norfolks “a Worth $8.50 0 30.72 30.6 d stéady oft 3 points 'HENEY TO INVESTIGATE BUTTER AND E86S Trade Commission Counsel Also to ind N f Ik qo rfl | v Worth $9.50 arefully a You'll seo tn suits the same ‘garmentay thi quality F nd same work- 9| Inquire Into Poultry dil-belted, Tr with mar s those others ff buckle In front obby ° styles, offer and a Digger as Canned Goods Market, @ressy and serviceable fortment. Included are | i} Heney, general Some With 2 Pants All WoolSerge; Also | Gomesat A tight n yherd check ¢ nduatry of th expects to of the bi canned | weeds ge big assortment of patterns Aven gray and at and poul * market in New ¥ i th class offered at Surprise foes; it 1s worth your while this showing, so that you will know how to Judge others; izes 6 to Novelty Suits and Reefers i would tow including It will Smart little juvenile suits and top coats in sizes 3 to 8; worth $5, $5.50 & $5.75; on sale here at your t little what Met The Suits;,7) in| Phe Reefers wt She! Ziv, | Direct Rallway Coone Caanaiia nB fancy weaves, a Teer tained earcoat Breer edsat wert hare ane Russian Points and Berli herd check ; r i eee Already Established GT ever: iE i y MOSCOW Press y entablished th ur rise tores cupied and Berlin and a upled towns with German goo Yonkers All Stores | ectally clothing and hosltery Nussians who had ana . Store TH AVENUE D AVENUE Open Kiev, Mohilev, Narva Reval an 34 North BETWEEN wewaconwen || Saturdays fle! io, i oh mn 18th and 16th Streets 83d Street | | Till 10 P.M. |fjins, cnemtcar ana photosras factories, At Reval they are reopening the woollen mills and forcing t sians to work. The ordinary pa: rubles daily, as against from 15 rubles in Petrograd and Mosc eight hours’ work, while the G: At Narva, the er manufacts cents af! sband of Ethel Barrymo Aviation School Dip! ouuanus Mar “Most Striking Things | Saw on 15_ Battle Fronts” By D. THOS. CURTIN War Correspondent Ti; Miteed a8 OND RAGE “Fo Begins Next Monday. In THE EVENING WORLD ne Ci pavable Api 30. Low. 8 unced that the GERMANS FLOOD OCCUPIED TOWNS WITH THER GOODS ed cloth- | RUSSELL COLT U. S. FLYER} THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, MARCH 22, (RIGHT HERE IN NEW YORK | formas uarte to stork ANGE. | HERE ¥ and rk next | etween | in Is, es eavel 1 other | © story supply he Rus- y 19 two to 20 ‘ow for| Jermans re Gets! Among ed 1918, This Is Peanut-lees Year at the Circus, That Is for All Except Babe, the 200-Year-Old Pachyderm| Who, With the Wisdom of Years, Cached a Sack-| ful of the Goobers Last Year When Peanutting| Was Good—and Apropos. of Peanuts, What Has, Happened to the High Hat? . | HIS year's “Peanut-less Year” at the circus, Peanuts have gone up from a jitney to a dime a bas Out at Madison Square Garden, where they're sprink!n’ the | suwdust, the elephants are cussin’ their luck, All but “Babe,” Babe is the big elephant that leads the parade © baby elephant—she's 200 years old, and almost has the longest memory of any elephant in the ring the trainer tells us, have some memories, Here's a yarn, by the way, on Babe's memory tells it, so (t must be true. A Press Agent Up in winter quarters at Bridgeport, where Barnuiu have just halled from, Harry Mooney, the elephant tra string an Elephant Orchestra. Babe was pianist. T iowling success and the fife was a scream. But ) pt pedaled.” Mooney went over to see what was wro: with Bab Babe was weeping tears—bucket-size drops that showed signs of drowning the orchestra. Mooney conferred with Babe, under her aw like ear, and found that the plano made her melancioly—t in the ivories Babe recognized an ancestor—long deceased * That Bress Agent may have been lying. But goodness story—a peanut story—that appeaed. w hit Madison Square Garden last Wednesday night Babe has the same atail every year—the end stall, She is a favorite of Eva Tanguay, Irving Cobb and\ Francis X. Bushman. When these celebrities come to the circus they always look up Bat So she's end girl.” When she hit the hay al he long parade an to paw around her old stall and reminist™ All of a sud ta loud trumpet cAll—and thundered against the wooden sta The rest of the herd took up the dismal note Garden shook. Trajner Mooney rushed out expecting He saw Babe rooting her trunk up among tho rafter air, furiously, Just then her trunk struck something white and m way up on the topmost rafter, She swung it down gleefully, st off the year- old dust and opened it. It was a bag of peanuts—iast year's gift from Fy While the other elephants bemoaned mournfully the advent of Peanuf-less Year, Babe crunched the shells and contentedly crooned a familiar tune. It sounded like “I Don't Care.” HAT’S happened to the High Hat? It's becoming extinct- Bums and William J, Lee, Supervisor of Park the man who knows. staged a Ball for the K. of C. Drive. And he says nobody in New Y Hat but politicians, millionaires undertakers. Lee issued orders for every nin the 8 iu along with owr CHARITY. | pee |!) Ces CHARITY. | Te New York Catholic War Fund Co-operating with All Camp Activities of Y. M. C. A. and Red Cross (Counery of Kaigh T. Coleman “To Help the Government = ' provide himself with a High Hat. Every parishioner ransacked the family uttic but only twelve High Hats forthcame Thén Lee had a Big Idea, He rang up Ed Devlin, famed for his livery turn-outs, ang Ed r 1 out his entire stock of forty-five hats—at $5 a hat. As the parade was ready to start somo one saw William J. Lee—he who ordered high hata—hatless. “Say, Bill," some one yelled, “where's your 1 his head." It felt vacant and vacuous. if I didn't leave It at home,” he sald. ody handed him a hat. It was @ big ha s footman it on. e of glee arose from the t that must have ’ kids who flocked around to feed " one of the kids yelled, “where d'youse get de gallon Lee felt the alr shaft between his head and his hat. Visions of looking dignified at the right hand of Mgr. Mooney fled. ‘Then he smiled, “I dont mind the hat so much as the pint head,” he said. purchase is the knowledge that you receive full value. @In Kellner furniture you are assured the utmost in durability, service and a generous measure of money's worth. Mons of the pleasure derived from any Adam Bedroom Suite, Cir- tums ibd, 4 pee GEOS You are cordially invited to’ see the 25 rooms completely furnished on display here. They are interesting and instructive. CHARITY. CHARITY. Win the War”’ Knights of Columbus Overseas Service and Other War Activities’ March 17th to 25th THE MODERN CRUSADER Help Him in His Fight for God and Mankind ERE in our own beloved country, our people have awakened to a national consciousness; sectional differences, old time bigotries and animosities have been swept aside, please God forever! Catholic and Protestant, Jew and Gentile, North, South, East and West, Americans all. to who shall sacrifice the most and strive the hardest and dare the rivalry now in this hour of stress is Our only furthest in defence of the old Flag that means so much to us,—so much more now than ever before, The object of this campaign may be summarized in the single thought that with the funds which we receive from the generous hearted people of this city, we shall— Make life a little better, brighter and happier for the boys who have gone out from home and loved ones and everything that life holds dear, in order that America and you and I, and all they leave be- hind, may live. , * * * Send along when the Army supply is inadequate, a Chaplain, a Priest, a Soggarth Aroon, to be with the Catholic boy, and the Protestant boy, and the Jewish boy—the boy of any and every and no religious affiliation—to comfort and guide and con- sole when war's grim night is upon him. pa Provide them with little creature comforts here and “somewhere in France.” *” * In a word, cheer the boys as they go, comfort them while they are away, and when the task is done, bring them back again with heads erect, shoulders full square to the winds of heaven, clear of eye, and clean of heart—just as when they went away, From a speech at Hippodrome, March 17, by Hon. WM. P, LARKIN, LL.D, Supreme Director Knights of Columbus $2,500,000 Wa Drive =e

Other pages from this issue: