The evening world. Newspaper, March 22, 1918, Page 21

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IF HAIR 1S TURNING GRAY, USE SAGE TEA If Mixed with Sulphur it Darkene 40 Naturally Nobody can Tell. Why suffer the handicap of looking old? Gray hair, however handsome, denotes advancing age. We all know the advantages of a youthful appear ance. When the hatr fades, turns gray and looks dry, wispy and scraggly 4 JuRt @ few applications of Sage and Sulphur enhances its appearance ® hundred-fold. Rither prepare the tonfe at home or get from any drug store a large Vyeth's Sage and Sulphur| Compound,” ready to use; but listten, Preparations put up by drug-| as they usually use too much bottle of ol salphur, which makes the hai sticky. Get “Wyeth’'s,” which can always be depended upon to darken beautifully and is the best thing known. By using Wyeth's Sage and Sul- possibly tell that you been sitting in the offices of Franalin naturally and evenly—you moisten a K. Lano, Secretary of the Intertor, phur no one ean carkened your hair. sponge or soft brush, drawing th through the hair, taking one sm str w moments. Do this at nigh and by morning the gray hair disap- Pears; after another apnlication or two its natural color is restored and lumbla it becomes glossy and lustrous and | 8. Willcox, who resigned from the Ke- This | publican National ready-to-use preparation is a delight-| take the highly responsible position. tal toilet requisite and not a medis cine. It is not intended for the cure, mitigation or prevention of disease. you appear years vounger. —Advt. —_—_—_—__ “L SUFFERED SEVEN YEARS? Was Eventually Cured by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound. “ “1 suffered for seven long year: with a lame back, irregularities and one pain. I had physician afte at a time, which requires but | Chord, member of the Interstate Com- another but they did me no good, I read about Lydia FE. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound and gave it atria and in a short |] time I felt bene- THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, MARCH 22, 1918, 1999389 RAL MEN GET RAE O $350,000 00 YEAR Wage Commission Expects Director McAdoo to Ap- prove Its Figures. WASHINGTON, March 22.—Uneto! Sam ts to raise the wages of his 1,939,899 rafiroad employees about | $350,000,000 a year. This stupendous increase, a world record for @ country that does things | in @ big way, and the greatest single | scale revision in the history of the wage system, is to be recommended within a few days by the recently | appointed Raflway Wage Commis- | sion. The report is not quite com- pleted, and of course has not been accepted by the Director General of | But it can be said on| high authority that the recommenda- tions will be as stated, and that they | will be approved by Mr. McAdoo, For eight weeks the commission has . | Ratlroads, who wos made Chairman. To bis ability was added that of GC C. Mo- t merce Commission; J. Harry Coving- ton, Judgo of the District of Co- Supreme Rench, and William Chairmanship to W. A. Ryan ts the secretary. The commission, on its regularity of ses- sions, their unusual length and the | great amount of business handled, ha ~| been a model to the many now hav. ing their seat in Washington. BIGGEST SINGLE SCALE REVIS- 1ON IN LABOR'S HISTORY. About 100 witnesses were exam~- ined, but every hour of the days fol- mission by Mr. McAdoo special In- vestigators of the body were gather- | ing the data on which the commission | is basing its startling figures. | Recently it was announced in press despatches from Washington that | | there was a suggestion that the raises | to be advised would approximate | about $80,000,000, That sum repre | T| sented merely the advance to be ac- | corded one class of employees, The figures now given, more than 400 per cent. greater, are the ones that will be urged upon the Director General and through him the President. 1] The belief that the new wage acale will make impossible a return to pri- vate ownershép !s based upon the! lowing the appointment of the com- | - any way cutting into the money that is to go ino the pay envelopes. PRIVATE OWNERSHIP COULDN'T ENOURE THE BURDEN, 4 Three hundred and fifty million dollars is about 87 per cent. of the $045,000,000 guaranteed by the Gov- ernment as an anowal net income for all the roads during the term of their Governmontal operation. Obviously the companies could not go back to pri ownership and expect to earn the me net return no matter how enormously they expanded their busi- ness. For the percentage of profit yield would not be great enough to enable them stich an enormously heavy in- crease in their fixed charges, The ac- cepted formula ts for each $100,000,000 increase in total earnings there is a 1 per cent, increase in net earnings. ‘The Government, in having guar- anteed the owners of the railroads al- most §1,000,000,000 for bond interest and dividend payment, fa now to guar. antes the workers on the roads a larger share in the prosperity. They will get rather more than one-third the amount that tho capitalistic inter- ests are to receive. The recognition of the equal rights of both classes expressed in such concrete terms {8 viewed as a first and long step toward the soc ganization that will follow the war, To th rogramme Presi- dont Wilson is giving muoh personal tention, and it is by no means un- kely that he will have a plan to an- nounce soon—one that will be in con- sonance with the world democracy he is preaching, but applied to domestio circumstances. The Wage Commiasion is hopeful that its report will be in shape with- in two weeks, Outside of the Postal employees, 240,800 men and women will be af- fected by a flat raise that has been iven them of $120 a year, the total Being about $29,000,000. In the Postal service there are 277,000 people, and they are > the sliding percen scale, ‘These figures, added to the ratlroad increase, will bulk more than $400,- 000,000. ' Statisticians in Washington believe that if the vast inoreaxe in 1 forme of in- gan the figure y more than $1,000,000,000. Students of social conditions say that this 1s only tho beginning. G Notes in Society Brig. Gen, William 8. Pierce and Mrs. Pierce, formerly of Springfield, Mass, announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Marjorie Pierce, to Capt, Edward Floyd-Jones Thorn, Ordnance Dopartment, U. 8. N. Aw son of Mr, and Mra. Conde Raguet Thorn of No, $10 Weat 77th Street. Miss Cecelia Beaux will entertain the mambers of the National Associ- ation of Women Painters and Sculp- tors this afternoon at her studio, No. 182 East 19th Street. Among those who will aas'st in receiving are Mrs. John W. Alexander, Mrs, H. Van Buren MacGonigie, Mra, Charles Lamb, Mra, Bruce Crane and Mra. Henry Watrous. Mrs, Henry Mottet ja President of the association. Miss Frances Wilson Dunham, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Russell H. Dunham of Wilmington, Del. will be- come the bride, at her home to-day, of Lieut. Arthur Collins Ketcham, U. 8. R, of No, 175 West 68th Street. Mr. and Mra, Charles C, West of Montclair announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Helen C, West, to John Chapman Jr. U. 8. N, R, of Montclair. Mr. and Mrs. Elbert H. Gary, who are guests of the Brazilian Ambassa- dor and Mme. Domicio de Gama in Washington, will go to Atiantlo City for Easter. The marriage of Miss Kathleen Raymond Shepherd, daughter of Mrs, Frank L. Shepherd, to Lieut. John J. Fitzgerald, Aviation Section, Signal Reserve Corps, of this oity, will take place in Baltimore on March 27. Miss Annie McKay Brown, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Mil- ton Brown of Portland, Ore, and Charles W. MoHoee of this city and North Branch, N. J., were married yesterday afternoon in St. Agnes’s Church. Mies Catherine Fowler Clarke, who Mra. Theodore F. Whitmarsh of this! city and Washington, to-morrow, gave ® luncheon for twenty guests yeater- day. The marriage ceremony will take place at the urch of the Holy Trinity on Brooklyn Heights. Mins Helon Mae Jackson, daughter of Joseph Jackson of No. 2804 New- kirk Avenus, Hrooklyn, was married to Lieut. Charies Auer, Medical Re- serve Corps, at the home of her father yesterday SAYS HOT WATER WASHES POISONS Bveryone should drink hot water with phosphate In It, before breakfast. To feel as fine as the proverbial fiddle, we must keep the liver washed clean, almost every Laas to pre- vent ite sponge-like pores from clog: | ing with indigestible m ile and poisonous toxins, sa} Physician, f you get headach: If you catch cold easily, Ifyou wake up witl furred tongue, nasty bri ach becomes rancid, It’s llow skin, muddy it's your liver, ur liver. | your liver, complexion, eye denote liver uncleanli- Your liver fs the most impor- tant, also the most abused and neg- lected, organ of the body. Pew know its function or how to release thi dammed-up body waste, bile and tox ins. very man or woman, sick or | || well, should drink each morning be-| fore fast a pines of hot water, ith a teaspoonful of Imestone phos- hate in it, to wash from the liver and wels the previous day's ba vsalre| material, the poisons, sour bile ani Raton tas Mleansiay fe @weete: and freshening the entiré alimenta: canal before putting more food inte the stomach, | Limestone phosphate is inexpensive, | pound, which ts sufficient for a dem-| onstration of how hot water and lime stone phosphate cleans, stimulatet | is to become the bride of Lieut. Karl Russell Whitmarsh, son of Mr, and and freshens the liver, Lee Sly ‘ow feeling fit day In and day out.—Advt. | BROOKLYN OPPENHEIM, GLLINS & © Fulton Street, Brooklyn Attention is Invited to an Fecceptional Showing of FROM THE LIVER}! | any pharmacist will sell you @ quarter) |) Other Spring Suits $17.00 to $30.00 Hat is! act accordingly. Stetson, too, as well as the style. i f; THE WEATHER FORECA Store Opens 9 A. M.. Closes 6 P. M. Daily. The Al Hoyt Street is conveniently reached by all I. R. Ready Saturday for Busy Easter Shoppers | ; Men’s Spring Suits | \— That It Is Sound Business Sense to Buy yy at $22.75 Twenty-five dollars is a good average price for men to pay for Suits of a grade of material and making that will give satisfactory service. Now, the reason why we emphasize these Suits of ours | at $22.75 is that we know, from careful comparison, that they cannot be regularly sold for less than $25.00 in other men’s clothing stores. Consequently, they are a splendid business investment for men who want to get the most value for their money. | Excellent Spring styles, that are staid or youthful in cut, as a man prefers. Blues, grays, stripes, silk mixtures. All-wool! All sizes in the collection. And mighty good values, all of them! New Stetsons for Spring What a good top to a Spring outfit a Stetson ell-dressed men know this, and They like the SERVICE they get out of a All the new blocks—derbies and soft Hats. Come in and try yours on. $4.50 to $7.00. Our own Abrast Hats are splendid at $3.50. Silk Hats for Easter, $6.00 and $7.00. And @ special lot of Soft Hats and Derbies at $2.50. ‘Btevet Noor, Hoyt strest, Easter Gloves for Mr. Man New Gloves are an Easter essential. Tan TAG RATAN ula ep A igs UE A ) Sin ala I ‘Tomorrow: Fair. am & Straus Private Subway Entrance at T. Brooklyn Express Trains. Silk Socks—Good Kinds For Sunday wear, at least, men like silk in each of these three kinds: At 79 made, with pill issepdi waka eibervtos woo bs Fl At 98¢ and lisle soles; .50 pair. | ; and colors, plain, or with embroid- |} ered clocks. Excellent quality of pure silk. iH] ; At $1.48 ure silk of fine quality, in black ! colors; oan clocks. bi i Street floor, Hort strest, — |} Men’s Easter Scarfs Thousands of them in a brilliant collection, |) notable throughout for its good value. | irls’ Charming Easter Appare | and cape and gray mocha are, as usual, favor- fited and am now! fact that the income of the railroads qe ra d Crocheted Scarfs, in plain colors, that so bveseraa * : , : many well-dressed men are wearing—$1.95. ferling fine, and] would scarcely be mufficient to pay ae ce i Hedi el aba ee Ste men in khaki, Plain and fancy Scarts almost without end in variety; y without weakness! tng advance and at the same time An Exclusive Daintiness is carefully depicted in our assortment We pies a American, at 980 and $1.48; rich Bwise weaves, $1: NII] CF. Pain. | Many of | eve a qumelently wide margin tor : || Adler's make; tan capo; last at the old price—$2,00 | to $3.45. Hl j i Miho taken eave | distribution to stockholders as divi- of Frocks, Coats and Bonnets for Children. Wer ranean iene na eon And a special group that’s a “snap” at 65e, / Uf E, Pinkham’s Men; | deneh on from the incr Meyer's buck cape, in tan and gray, $2.50 and $2.75 New Fibre Silk Shirts etable Compound | business, w an accompa: A e and been helped by it."—Mrs, Mar-| ereaso in income, the only way that Attractive Spring Coats ||| Grav mocha, $2.50 ani $2.97 pair. Wood silk, that is, on a firm basis of cotton. garet Ness, 1846 E, Hazzard § the proposed wage raise could be || Heavy olive drab suede, with strap wrists, correct mili- . . rf : Ph ladelphia, Pa. Sax SR Cate Ge Wald Daly a: AAt Coe tary style, $3.50 pair. t Exceedingly lustrous—g lustre that will LAST. |! Women who suffer from displace-| ward revision of freight rates and Sizes ranging from 4 to 10 and 10 to 16 yrs || Fownes’ gray, black or white silk, $1.25 pair. Good colors—both in stripes and plain effecte—very ments, irregularities, inflammation, | * eT oo. Gray or taupe silk, special 00 n pair, smart. $3.48 and $3.98 each. ulcera backache, sideache, head-|“"¥ 0” 80 big a ecale : is ee, ; i Gtreet floor, East Building, . Street flew, East Buikting. aches he blues” should not rest | Ut of the question. Delightful models for kiddies, in until they have given this famous| Within the month the roads have 7 : 7 ; 3 root and herb remedy, Lydia E,| been granted approximately a 15 per | Gabardine, Velour Checks, Silvertone, Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, a|cent. increase that will net about i trial. If complications ele eins $55,000,000. ‘The raise 1s just about Bevlors a — en S art E tt A | f W e Lydia FE, Pinkham Medicine Co.|suMcient to take care of the in- variety of beautiful designs, mn as er ppare or om n -ynn, Mass., for special suggestions, | creased cost of operation without in 185 Includin mand Qui 81 to 87 Court, Cor. a on Eat, Ov ) Years, OPEN PRICES That Shoald Com- $5 Monthly $ Until Paid Stool, Cover, Cartage, 25 Sheets of Music with These Beautiful Upright Pianos BIG BARGAINS IN USED PLAYER PIANOS GOETZ & CO. Rorough Hall Subway Btatlon $10 Monthly Until Paid ick Response 385 Livingston St., Brooklyn EVENINGS, Phone Main 4952 9.75 » 35.00 Winsome Spring Frocks Taffeta and Georgette Crepe, cleverly fashioned in the newest style ideas, 2.00 15.00 Direct Attention to a Complete Assortment of Suits for Misses and Little Women distinctively trimmed with and fluffy feather fancies, 3.95 1 12.00 ribbons, flowers Tweed Suits, $22.50 Women of unquestioned good taste are mokiog the Suit of tweed the vogue for the woman wit! many interests. A capital farhion! She will be uncommonly well-dressed for whatever occasion the day may bring. "These models at $22.50 are in well-bred grey and brown mixt hree distinctive tailored models; with the 1918 notes everywhere—pleat, Beound floor, Central Building, Dainty Nightgowns, $1.94 Pink batiste, mind you, with of hem- stitched and tucked lle © i chine; rosebud, And envelope Chem in the very same style, with lace-edged skirt, at the same price, $1.94, “Billie Burke’ Pajamas at $1.46 Flesh color batiste with a blue fold hematitched on the edge of narrow lace" \wfully”’ pretty fecond Moor, Kast Bulldlog. black. Lisle tops and soles; all full-fashioned. Black silk Stockings, extra weight, $1.39 pair. Finely woven black ingrain Silk Stockings, $1.65 pair; A. & S. special, with extra elastic lisle garter tops and lisle soles. Biren Moor, Central Building, Spring Overcoats \ $19.75 to $30.00 Socks; and there’s quality mixed with economy } 3 Sizes ranging from 4 to 10 and 10 to 16 yrs | peplum, pocket. Finely tailored) throughout— | P®4$ Sor | waste aad ae eas ; ; | peau de cygne lined a serge is made with unstitched pleats, big, smoked A splendid array of pretty frocks in | A Group of Remarkable New Tailor- | pear! buttons, an over-collar of satia ined sills PIANO Chambray, Linen, Crepe de Chine Mades in Both Silk and Serge, at $18.75 | "Others are of velours, gubardines. There is @ New Coats, $22.95 & $34.95 ‘Twenty-two interesting styles in just these two ss ices alone! Each « “picked” style from all that Spring fashion has to offer. Stunning Coats in beige and in navy tricotine. t $34.95, one model in particular is smartly made pleated, buckle-trimmed back; alot- seam eta; revers collar, double faille sille over. Lined throughout with excellent color choice of navy, black, tan, Copenhagen, dark green. GBeomd Floor, Central Building, Sport Skirts, $9.75 Full-pleated plaids of all-wool velour in a delight- ful gold-predominating color-scheme. Or in wor ateds, str ‘and white aod black and white, ‘The very best-looking spotts akirt models tor Spring Summer wear, with the new jackets or sleeveless e All made with the wide, tailored-button belts that are new this season. Sizes 25 to 32-inch waist- band: is a wonder-value at this price. $290 Goet C $445 P A most distinctive collection, featuring all of the M b Cc i S 1 Second Noor, Central Building, 30ctz & Co. SB Mirena! ease $12 QMentnty newest fashion ideas for Spring developed in arabou Capes; ale 385 Lohman, new 10 (war'ttial 450 Goetz & Co. 12 chen, Serge, Mixtures, Jersey, Tricotine and Poiret T'will, A Sale, becaure the price is $4.25 instead of Glove Silk Underwear USED UPRIGHT BARGAINS FOR BIG 3ALE | considerably more, which it would be if it were uot teceee Pri hie fortunate. purchase at These Low Prices $50 Vygen $3 entity $145 Barmore $5 cantntr, 25.00 29.75 35.00 39.75 s1 ee ee ticcdya of aucalent matabon fesiher | Bick ct iee fatacine aume hea ease co la erie 60 Billings aun 150 Livingston Monenty’ ag with full tail finish. Black or natural, with silk | gince we bought it—and we cannot duplicate these 65 Manhattan 3) 150 Milton Se eae ani RE, Maing and ribbon te a, conti Detline offerings when they are exhausted. Each style in 2 75Geo.Woods 3, 155 Meister Kt $1189, Vests, handsomely embroidered. 06 Sonuman f pon i 138 nee jis Pique Vests, 98c and $1.25 At $1.59, looters extra reinforced where needed, 105 Conservatory 4a | 165 Huntington An Especially Magnificent Assortment of | Arent new, tz]e of fine poset pique, without At 39, Sante heavy quality, band top, elaborate 110 Marshall & Co. ia) 170 Arion | 8 PAE net 8 ate pai bap Sela g A At $2.69, Bloomers, serviceable weight, reinforced. 125 H. Waters&Co. | 175 Sterling Fasci ti Eas | baiaasd sa 9 : ster Bonnets 135 E. Gabler | 175 Weber cinating Eas = : ki 79c Pai 190 Soh Silk Stockings, 79c Pair Pretty Collar-and-Cuff So mer f : Ra trttres ne cline ects tainty alanest eo Mtiaas For Easter—000 pairs, of which 860 pairs are per- Ss a for Children $3 Monthly Up Rents a Beautiful Upright Piano , a sian, feckncrlteca (ormenly Gio palti Lua tees ore Clursate e ' Ilemps, Faney Straws and Crepe combinations, lars” of better grades. Colors, white and a few To set off and add a Springlike touch to the new coat. Many dainty styles. Plain pique, 49e. Hand-embroidered, eyelet and solid—on pique, $1.75 to $2.25. With colored stitching, 98¢. , ‘Tadored Neckwear Store,

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