The evening world. Newspaper, March 28, 1918, Page 10

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. Lemon Juice is Skin Beautifier, Also a Whitener Many women use just the Juice of ns to bleach or whiten the skin. pure lemon juice is acid, there fore irritating, and should be mixed|,\,... . , ee | ehard white, | Will Consist of Men With Cur- with orchard white. At the cost of a small jar of ordinary cold cream one can prepare @ full quarter pint of the most won derful lemon skin softener and com- exon beautificr, by squeezing the juice of two fresh lemons into a bot containing three ounces of orchard white. Care should be taken to strair the juice through a fine cloth so ne Jemon pulp gets in, then this lot will keep fresh for months. ‘woman knows that lemon Juice {s used to bleach and remove such Dlemishes as freckles, sallow anc tan, and is the ideal skin softener, | amoothener and benutifier, Just try it! Get three ounces of orchard white at anv pharmacy and two lemons from the grocer and make} up « quarter pint of this sweetly fra ant lemon lotion and massage it jaily into the face, neck, arms and hands. It should naturally help to bring back to any skin the whiteness, the sweet freshness and flexibility « which it has been robbed by careless- ness or trying atmospheric conditio 1s. wm Advt. Chi ncaa GHOUND jo Family (A) 10 Fee Bae coftee, lls NSS? Sir Whoiesaier bireet t ing on! fare Mocha end Ja he it, The prod few broken beans of Batisfaction or mone) Bip tre in reater New _ Remittance with onier out of town. Gillies ¢C otfee Co. . 73-239 Washington St..N.¥ “are Gartuniry ES hi 7 SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK MONDAY WONDERS ace, style and quality Pate feather vamp, with Pearl Gra: Fawn, or Buff Kid Tops Pumps. The dainty feminine pumps alwa; here now in all col Speci Patent leather or Gun Metal, Hosie of Queen add to the fashionable dress or suit a touch of style and simplicity, NEW DRAFT CLASS ~ TOTAKEIN MANY ONE REJECTED able Ailments, and Uncle Sam Will Cure Them. Local draft boards tn thie y have a new class in the draft has been ere ated—men made fit for military duty after having been cured of curable jallments, This will mean the addition of several hundred thousands to the new draft quota and ult in the of other hundreds of thon- sands of phyaically incapacitated men who Were rejected in the first draft When the old draft was put into effect there were only two classes~ | thone fit for first line trench duty and those rejected altogethor: Then came the questionnaire by which the draft directors hope to divide the drafted men according to their fitness. ‘This questionnaire in- troduces into the now draft a class of mon who will be taken over for the industrial neods of the war. legged or one-armed men may be Jtaken fn this class, The theory ts that a man who cannot give two-arm jservice to his country should at least give one-arm service, And this ap- piles to lews as well Tho brand new fourth class goes into an entirely new field of draft activity, ‘The new classification will | be divided something lke this: A, full | military service; B, full military serv- lice after remedy of physical de |C, limited service, including those in |the war industries; D, unfit for any | kind of service recalling One- pets; | Ono of the most prevalent causes |for rejection during the first draft was the ailment known as flat feet Many thousands of young men who |nad regarded themselves as physically | perfect and who were cager and will- ing to serve their country were shocked to learn that flat feet ren- dered them unfit for military duty | Hernia came second on the list as a | reason for rejection, Like the victims of flat feet, hundreds of thou the draf wren't aware of rupture had been turned down for the Na tional Army. When the machinery of the new \araft begins working it will first of Queen Quality Easter and Spring Showing Dress Boot, A Queen Quality model of unusual Smart distinctive oxf nt in ta bit different. Ko Ke 0.50 Reuhchee Ss = 7.50 Calf. Dress Oxford. ye 5.00 Patent leather or — We have hosiery that match perfectly all shades ality shoes, including the very latest patterns. Queen Quality Boot Shop 82 West 34th Street recetved word from Washington that | Walking Oxford. Such delightful oxfords, They fit rfectly at the ankle and arch. he heel and toe are just right. Colors a little more costly. THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, MAROH 28, 1918. “Over Here” by Walt McDougall THAT YOU SAID SERGEANT WICKS |= COULD NOT DRILL | ie | UNDERSTAND | | | GUESSING CLOSE rn oe ae YES SIR BUT | WAS {WRONG, SIR | | HE COULDN'T | | DRILL WAN | | those who, under the new array ment, may be made physteally Then, after the physically fit and th ndustrially fit have been assigned to thelr respective tasks, the Sursgeon neral will be ready for the big job of making flehting men out of those orlyinally re 1 If a man has been rejected because of bad tecth Uncle Sam has no ob- jection to his having the work of re pair done while walting for the sec- |bad examination. But if the rejected man thinks he Is goine to escape by | permitting his teeth to remain in bad | shape he is mistaken, Uncle Sam will 0 perfectly willing to foot the den- tist bill, but he will get his money's worth in service | The same rule applies to other all- ments. The United States Army ts already setting aside hospitals all over the country where minor opera- tions by the thousands will be per- formed on flat feet, nasal and throat obstructions and to remove growths. If a prospective soldier has a blood ffection he will be treated to the t where he will cease to be a Hoart murmur has been the cause of many thousands of rejections. In future it will not bar a man, unless, in the opinion of surgeons, the break Correct Spring Fashions Women’s Foremost Smart Footwear jords for walke Gun Metal 7.00 $1.35 to $5.00 all separate the physically ft from | is serious and the heart muscles are not In a condition to be built up. Ac- cording to draft officers there are a number of eminent medical men who | believe that violent exercise is bene- | jfictal in certain forms of heart urmur. cenit, |NEW BROWNING GUN HERE TO AID WAR STAMP SALE Will Be Exhibited In Tent In Front of the Public Library To-Morrow. Brown!ng gun, adopted by the Govern- ment, will take place Saturday in front of the Public Library, at the opening of the War Savings Stamps campaign of the Mayor's Committee of Women on National Defense, Tho gun will be operated tn a huge tent and those who wish to get a glimpse of the new machine gun which will be used by our men in France tn action may do so by purchasing War Savini Stamps. During the campaign other implements of war will be on exhibition, and the operation of hand grenades, gas bombs and other war devices will be shown, A military band will provide muste. Mrs. Bourke Cockran, who has charge of the campaign, will be assisted by many prominent soclety women, Mrs. |Cockran 1s also directing the campaign of the Mayor's Committee of Women on 'Nattonal De to secure 2,000 recruits for the 27th Division to war strength, A recruiting station will be opened at {Columbus Circle on Monday when Bourke Cockran will make an address. teal sas abla WILL PRAY FOR SOLDIERS. New York Clubwomen Arrange Ser- vice for Good Friday Afternoon, A mass meeting of New York club- women will be held at 3 o'clock to- morrow afternoon in the grand ball- room of the Waldorf-Astoria for an hour's Invocation for the spiritual bene- fit of the boys at the front. Clergymen of various denominations will offer prayers and make patriotic addresses. All women are welcome, regardless of religious creed, ‘The meeting ts being organized by Madame Marie Cross-Newhouse and Mra. Herman Baruch, and will be participated in by the following club presidents: Mrs. John Francis Yawger, New York City Federation; Mra. Velle de Rivera, » York Theatre Club; Mrs. Howard MacNutt, Minerva; Mrs, mas J, Vivian, Congress of States . Mrs, Ralph ‘Trautman, House Protective League; William R. Chapman, Rubenatein and other a LIMIT FOR RAIL OFFICIALS, McAdoo Won't Cut Pay to Nomi: Sum, Howe WASHINGTON, Ma Director General McAdoo soon will fix @ limit for high salaries of railroad officials, and require the railroads which wish to ex- ceed it to make up the difference out of their own pockets. Thore is no disposl- tion, it is said, to reduce their pay to merely nominal sums, however. etree General McAdoo aise te go- road advertising bi to the. summa |Magazine and feature advertising will be discontinued by mid-summer, and the public at thelr own AMO basis Mrs. Club, DOCTORS WERE HER PREY. Caught Pawning Overcoat, Wom Through the arreat of a woman the police have cleared up a series of mys+ terlous thefts from doctors’ offices, The prisoner, who says who is Mra, Anna |Norstrom, @ piano teacher, of No. 113 |East 128th Street, was held in $1,000 |bait on a charge of grand larceny to- day by Magistrate Marsh in the Harlem Court. Detectives Sommer Inge! Ja woman leave a pawushap at Sith Street and Third Aven: sterday and tear Up @ pawn ticket. She had pawned overcoat that bore the name of Dr ward Freidiman of No, 74 East 9isi Brreet, Mrs, Norstrom confessed. aa Burne to Death to Ald Stock, || LENOX, Mass, March 28,—Herbert Bmith jr, twenty-eight, lost his life turlay while trying to save stock frome burning barn on the Edward Bedgwick estate. Three horses and twenty-two Ue als al Herbert Smith ar. was a Clnsemare et reaideat Wilson at Princeton. ‘Tho frst public exhibition of the new| burueg ‘HOME GUARDS ON DUTY AFTER KANSAS CITY RIOTS | Called Following Strike Outbreaks in Which Men Are Shot and Laundries Attacked. | KANSAS CITY, March 28.~The down town district of Kansas patrolled by members of the Regiment, Missourl National < | Gtome Guarda), to-day, to prevent a repetition of the rioting and wrecking | of business establishments that marked the first day and night of the general |strike of union workmen, called In sym- pathy with atriking laundry workers, Guards also were stationed in some of the outlying districts. Following a day of disorder in which crowds attacked nine large laundry plants, the atrike sympathizers made @ night raid on the downtown district. Many restaurants that had not closed in accordance with the atrike com- mittee’s edict were visited and the em- ployees driven out, and one of the places partly wrecked. Threo alleged strikers were shot, one probably fatally, in the attacks on laundry plants yesterday. There were numerous reports of minor Injuries, as in some of the fights pol'cemen used their night eticks freely. —_——>—_ — ACKER MORRIS __ESCAPES DRAFT Becomes Dollar-a-Year Man—Final Action on Exemption Claim Deferred. CHICAGO, March 28.—Nelson Mor- ris, Chairman of the Board of Morris & Co, “has accepted a position in| Washington in the Quartermaster Corps of the army and left for Wash- ington last evening,” {tt was an-/| nounced at the company’s office here) to-day. The announcement was made | in connection with a special mecting of stockholders and directors of the company Monday, at which George HK Collett of Kansas City was elected a Vice President and director of the corporation, Mr. Morris is twenty-six years old and unmarried. Hoe filed an industria! claim with the Exemption Board ask- ing to be placed in Class 4 of Be lective draft, but final action has not been taken by the District Board. —___—<——_—— SAW “DEATH” AND JUMPED. Poeamonta P t Before Expir- ing, Tells of Leap. During the brief absence of a nurs in the pneumonia ward of Lincoln Hos- pital last night, Samuel Seber, thirty- four, a painter, of No. 1290 Webster Avenue, the Bronx, @ patient, got out of his bed and, sealing a six foot raii- ing on the balcony, Jumped from the fourth floor to the ‘courtyard. Screams of other ents attracted doctors, who found Seber suffering from internal in- juries. He was brought into the emergency room and when asked bis reason for Jumping said: iT pawoke suddenly and, thinking I saw GENO'RYANORDERS VETERANS TOSMILE ON S00 RECRUITS Hospitality Bespoken for Men) Filling In Skeletonized | Regiments. | \ (Special to The Evening World.) SPARTANBURG, S.C. March 28. | —The 1,500 selected men now coming in to fill the regiments and battalions in the Pro- vistonal Depot for Corps and Army | Troops are being given a cordial re- | ception, Major Gen, O'Ryan, com. | manding the 27th Division, expressed thé sentimen(s of his entire command | yesterday when he addressed a letter to the enlisted men of the division in| which he said: i “The division commander takes thts | means of informing the officers and enlisted men of the division that de- | tachments of drafted men will arrive | various skel from time to time to increase} the strength of certain organiza-| tions stationed at this camp. It! {9 the desire of the division com- mander that every enlisted man of the 27th Division co-operate with the } officers to the fullest extent in make | ing these drafted men feel at home| with us and that they have the réspect and regard of the soldiers of | the 27th Division ordinary, | commonplace sense of hospitallty would prompt ‘an soldiers | to make happy the lot of newcomers.” Major Gen. William H, Carter and Brig. Gen, W. A. Mann, who have been here for sever ys as mem- bera of a board to examine officers, | completed their work yesterday at | ternoon and le for Washington. | The faree comedy put on by the Theatrical Association of the 27th{ Division is playing nightly in a local | theatre to crowded houses, The show | has been a success from the minute | after the curtain went up on the first performance. The show will probably be taken to Broadway by the present cast if the division re- | mains here much longer. First Lieut, Archer Harman Of. cers’ Reserve Corps, attached to the Sist Pioneer Infantry, is ordered to proceed to Del Rio, ‘Tex. for duty with the 315th Cavairy, EX-WIFE OF BAUCHLE GETS $32,912 VERDICT Head of Partridge Club Must Pay on Verbal Agreement Made Prior to Divorce. Yesterday's experience in the Supreme Court cost George Young Bauchle, Prosident of the Partridge Club, $22,912, A verdict for this amount was delivered to Justice Gaveran by a fury this morning. } ‘The winner was Mra, Florence Fyles | Bauchle, and the amount represents the sum necessary for the purchase from an | insurance company of a Iife annuity | yielding her $150 a month, She sued | for $67,000, basing her claim on a verbal | agreement she made with her husband | before leaving New York for Reno, | Nev., May 1, 1913. The lawyer agreed give her $400 @ month for life or un- | she remarried provided she left the | question of alimony out of her apoll- | cation for divorce, If unabe to pay $400 a month, he promised never to cut the| amount below $150. | On application of Bauchle's counsel, | Justice Gavegan granted a ten-day stay | of execution. | iianiialmaiatiai | COUNCIL OUSTS SOCIALISTS. Accused of Disloyalty leveland Expelled. CLEVELAND, ©., March 28,—Noah | Mandelkorn and John G, Willert, So- st Councilmen, were expelled from the elty council at a special meeting | hearing charges of disloyalty, disorderly | Two in © conduct and violation of council rules, | The ative votes were cast by} the d s The charges grew out of the refusal Mandelkorn and Wilert vote favor y on a resolution pledsing the sup- | ort of the members te e work of the | Cuyahoga County War Service League. It 8 also alleged they subscribed to the Soclalist platfor in the last election, ii Sasa Resume Reerniting, WASHINGTON, March 28.—Officers In charge of Marine Corps recruitiny stations have been ordered to resumo recruiting April 1, A limit of 2,000 new recruits per month will be main tained until additional training facil death coming, I tried to get away from ‘tere died @ half hour afterward. listless and run-down when thelr real trouble was lack of Iron in the bleod— how te tell. FF you were to make an actual blood teat on all people who are til vou would probably be ereatly amonished at the exceedingly laree number who lack. tron tnd who are lll for no other reason than the Inck of tron. The moment tron is wup- pited @ multitude of dan motor Maappear. Without tron ood at ono into living ou eat door hy neth out of 4 Merely Das#es through vour [Csi f corn through a mill with the mittee so Wide apart that eerind. & result of this c Kripiierve starvation. neon! mr t |Sdive kin ic Se OCTOR SAYS NUXATED IRON WILL CREASE STRENGTH of DELICATE ities became available through the transfer of organizatiuns for forelgn service. i In many instances, save City Phyaleian, bowers for the moment. maybe gt the ex. persons have ouffered for years withe [hee of your life lator on. | No ranter it knowing what made them feel tired, oven vou owe it to ont iq ollawing text gan work or ne tired beeor r L'the won but when you come down to hard t «like a tacts gond old iron to put tron teeth, un at milated. and £ rm quently th the a oie Dleasunt to take, does not int cot and ia almost Ininediately benerielal, MANTPACTURPRS' NOTE: Nuxated Tren which La recommended abore, i not @ secret Jy, but one which is. wel raga like the older na uni lated A GB. Altman & Cao. Misses’ Suits, Dresses and Coats in every new and fashionable mode for Spring, are assembled for selection in the spacious Department reserved for the appareling of misses and young women. The scale of prices is sufficiently large to meet everyone’s requirements. A Sale now being held offers: Misses’ Tailored Suits, $34.00 & 39.00 . at 32.00 j at 29.50 & 39.00 (Misses’ Department, Second Floor) ‘ Misses’ Dresses . Misses’ Coats Exceptional Values are offered in the Department for Catalogue Merchandise, on the Sixth Floor, in Easter Millinery featuring smart, attractive styles (including models for women and misses), all very specially priced. TAILORED HATS > $2.75, 3.90 & 4.75 TRIMMED HATS at $5.50, 6.00, 6.75, 7.50 & 8.50 b Women’s Separate Skirts OF SUPERIOR QUALITY are offered at money-saving prices in the Women’s Apparel Section of the ' Sixth Floor, Among the special values aret > at $3.85 Serge Skirts, in navy, white or black, 7.75 Black Satin Skirts « at 10.50 Black Taffeta Skirts at 11.50 Corduroy Sports Skirts . - ° wierve Madiom Aveme - Fifth Aven Mem Pork Mth und 35th Streets. CHARITY. ie biel ES d | RED CROSS Yamonds | Clothes Collection Week | buy To Lar ~_8 rrontHs 70 hey im | DON'T STORE YOUR CLOTHES} CONFIDENTIAL Credit 7 a | GIVE THEM Wo EMpun ees Benin A | To the Destitute of Belgium PERION REFERENCE + hy , | Cais OE Unite FOR LE CATR OB 0 4h Riptienane, Cats REBAR | and Northern France ) | THEIR NEED IS DESPERATE | Leave Suits, Underwear, Stockings 170 Bway. 9? Floor, DIAMONDS ON CKEDIY fi ties Blankets, Shoes, ete, ) ATEN Lenk. “Phone Gort. O96t, set. cale| at one of the following collection pest CALCE Go fa an centress 35 atin km wy “Hg Ar, ea rap CLOT % Weniay Sulu MARTIN €0. Diamonds Bought an aah only, BENNETT. 175 Ubatalre. if hase Am INTEREST & DIVIDEND NOTICES. aed March 2¢en. 1018, | 4 SMa eet Seng UNITED STATES | TT Ss a STEAMSHIP COMPANY | 6030 )s0c/03 T2085; 5 A regular dividend of one por cent. and| 4" Th Mommintllt eet ath an extra dividend of one 0 Momingside Avy, ents hae heen. a Nout r at Any Laundry chic of en Saath | (Churet—ail others stores) close of bus! N RUMMAGE SALE | Benefit Auxillary 2, Stony Wold; \ be held at 138 E. 54th St, April and 3d, Great Barg at and Found" articlea rtised in The World or reported ‘ound Bureau.” 108, World Building, wil for ihirty days. 1 f The World's "ound" advertisements t at any of The Worl ising Agencies, or can b® Eelephoned directly to ‘The Worlds Call 4000 Beckman, Now Yor, OFA Brookiyn Office, 4100 Main, C HELP WANTED—FEMALE, | WANTED ee on, Stratfield Hote an , zl etmady; good bey, fee We EL

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