The evening world. Newspaper, March 29, 1918, Page 10

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| | re Sawa SS aa rears ——— eee ae ae : as Makes You Look and Feel Fresh Baye a glass of hot water with Phosphate before breakfast keeps liiness away. 70 BE PUT AHEAD WITH CEREMONY ee Physicians the world over recom-| Marcus M. Marks Will Operate | Mend the inside bath, claiming this is - ‘ i ees i © of vastly more importance than out-| | Mechanism in Tower at tide cleanliness, because the skin} 2 A. M. Sunday. pores do not absorb impurities into the blood, causing il! health, while the} pores in the ten yards of bowels do. While, throughout the United Men and women are urged to drink An Inside Bath » MET GLOCK HANDS Bainhart. The park will be Nehted ip by the New York Edison Company The Borough of Manhattan Band of |Musle will also play, and there will be @ drill by Company F, Tist Reg!- ment, at midnight. CAPTURED AS DESERTER; HAD POLIGEMAN'S WATCH Camp Upton Fugitive Seized on Roof Accused of Robbing Man Whose Aid He Asked, McLoughlin, Company H, Infantry, Camp Upton, was ar- rested as a deserter this morning on the roof of his home at No. 222 Berry Street, Williamaburg, after a struggle with Pa. trolman McDermott, When he was scarched a gold wateh was found in his stocking, It was sald to be the prop. erty of Patrolman James Boyan of the Redford Avenue Station. 80 a charge of larceny was added tq that of do- tortor, Ho appeared this morning at Boyan's home, saying he wanted Boyan to intercede for ‘him on the desertion charge. Then Boyan missed his wateh and gave the alarm oe HELD AS WAR GRAFTER, James Fitspatrick Aconsed of C ing Forged Cheok, James Fitzpatrick, of No. 229 West 10let Street, was arrested to-day fol lowing an indlotment for forgery tp the second degree. Fitepatrick M1 @ check for $26 to which the Indorso- ment of Col. Reginald L. Foster, of t former 12th Regiment, N. Y. N. G., was rs each morning, before breakfast, a| States, householders will advance the | | @lase of hot water with @ teaspoonful| hands of their clocks one hour when \ of limestone phosphate in it, as nl they go to bed next Saturday night, | of harmless means of helping to wash |in conformity with the Daylight Sav- © — from the stomach, liver, kidneys and! ing Act, a group of citizens forming sorbed ‘a previous Gays ‘ge abd the Now York Daylight Saving Asso- material, poisons, sour bile and tox-| | J alee ns ing, thus cleansing, sweetening and) lation will ae asiai tauren urifying the entire alimentary canal/44¥ Morning, the omc y Belere putting more food into the,!\w for the uniform change In time, stomach, ! [to witness the pushing ahead of the Those who wake up with bad! ciant hands of the clock tn the Met- breath, coated tongue, nasty taste or ropolitan Tower, in Madison Squgre. Have a dull, aching head, sallow com-|" jfarcug M. Marke, former President plexion, acid stomach, others who "re of the Borough of Manhattan and, ae pits, bod eee ie rel wanna President of the National Daylight ation, should obtain a quarter pound of limestone phosphate at the drug| Saving Association, pioneer in bid store. This will cost very little, but|/ daylight saving movement in this is sufficient to demonstrate the value, country, will manipulate the electrical of inalde hathing.—/ ‘vt mechanism in the directors’ room in | the Metropolitan Building which con- trols the great clock 24@ feet above 4 | the sidewalk and with th stroke of UtiCUTraA SOAP] |. tse"sioce wu borin revinerisn ii the new official time, —and Ointment— Clear the Skin|| ‘The Police Band will play on Sat- urday night at Madison Sqgare. The Community Chorus will also be pres- ent. The conductor will tw Harry 4. It was represented that ‘ha money was to be used for the benefit of dependents of the Twelfth Rey. ment'a members, Fitzpatrick dented the charge. Ho was taken to the Tombs and will bo ned before Judge Mulqueen on arral Monday. We'll Charge Your Spring Suit Hasn't the high things with you’? tions confidential. Men ioned suits, Big Showing Boys’ Suits and Reefers at Attractive Prices much as $15,000 a right in every way. ESTABLISHED 1863 Liberal Credit | 15-99 18.00 99.50 For Business Men, Profes: 464-466 Fulton St., Brooklyn Men’s and Young Men’s New Spring Suits The Smartest Models of the Season tisfaction Guaranteed or Money Refunded Weekly cost of living “sort of crowded Why not open a charge account with us to give yourself a chance to adjust matters to meet the new conditions? quire on our refined club plan are so small you'll not miss the outlay. No fees, no dues, all transac- The payments we re- Pay $1.00 weekly. Greatest Values We Have Yet Been Able to Offer in Men’s Suits ‘20 & §25 ional Men, College and Men of Every Occupation ncluding models with all of the snappy features which most young men desire, Included in our suits at these prices and up to $45 are models that were designed by men receiving as| year. ‘That's why they're exactly Pick yours from this stock. SMe A 53 to 57 West 14th Street, New York, Largest Credit Department Store in New York. Liberal Credit 25-00 TAL [DRESS WELL ON $1.00 A WEEK charged with passing | A great showing, representing real cleverly fash-| American Boys in France |SHIP WORKERS PAYING MORE | Will Come Back Better Men, Firm Belief Despite E Stronger Morally as Well as Physically, Declares British Evangelist, Who Has Seen Them “Over There,” and America Will Be Proud of Them — “Trenches Are a Better School for Religion Than the Churches.” Marguerite Mooers Marshall. 4“ HE boys who come back fre the trenches will come b Temptation Said to n ok or sweetheart, need believe the storles of irresistible temp- tations of army life In France, Even among those who profess no orthodox ‘ religion there are wa. hundreds of thou- sands living straight, clean lives face to face with the awful realities of death and suffering. You Americans will never yield to us British in the pride you feel in your men at the front.” Ipsy” Smith told me so, his black eyes gleaming, his warm, rich votce, husky with the sympathetic emotion, which has swayed thousands during the years of his career as an evange- Ust. Born tn a gypsy tent, brought as he himself has written, to be 1ld as the birds, frolicsome as the lambs and as difficult to catch as the rabbits,” self-taught, he probably was the most widely popular British Preacher before the war and won many friends and admirers in this country, Now he hag returned to us again, this time in khaki, on his arm the Red Triangle of the Y. M. C. Ay | which they translate in France, “You make Christianity attractive.” Gipsy Smith himself has been in France the better part of the last three years. He has been thanked personally by King George for his splendid services to British troops on tho firing line, and just before he sailed he was decorated by the King and made a member of the Order of the British Empire, 467 WAS under fire for months,” he told me simply, “I preached many times with the shells falling around me, You got used to it, you know. I have been through four gas attacks, For a month I stayed in a trench cellar, sleeping in |the mud, eating what the soldiers ate, living as they Hved, 1 have been forty yards from the German lines, | “We had a volunteer army of over 6,000,000 men before conscription | |went into effect, hose men delib- erately 1 themselves to death for the sake of ot You remem- ber that saying in the Bible, ‘Greater love hath no man than this—that he down his life for his friend.’ “The only place to-day for a man who is a man is in France. The only place to-day is in the trenches for @ man who loves freedom, who loves his wife.” “Iy it true,” I asked, “that the ers of the men engaged in war that they suffer morally piritually as well as physteally?” n in the trenches,” Gipsy ers. lay chara deteriorate, and o9e 1 Smith r d, with fervid intensity, ‘are developing the Christian virtues even when they are not recognized as such by the men, What they ad- aire t in ea ther 1s courage, unselfishness, self-sacrifice, chi 1. fulness, And when they are their moth from their ym all they hold dear, when Ww ve yards without t umand to put on hey know that de so close—how an Interest In the helps them to face with a emile, which never al- em to feel alone? 467 AVE come to believe that the! trenches are 4 better school for religion than t urches. On my ot Hngland, after being at the Y 1 k me, ‘Because f the war n played out? oO would ask {f the war was de- My answer . resur on of the old, simph nformal yy thelr motvers ‘Gipsy’ Smith’ t in France They Will Be| t \e o better, stronger, finer men| and exchange addresses with them, than they were when they entered the| “Yet there ts no slacke in the nat i. army. No mother the army,” Gipsy aa 4 ans will not break or father, no wife in their present advance, have | OUR Bol bo NOT WATE THE OeAMAND every MAN SHoved Be W FRANCE ThE GERMAN GOD’ iS GipsyS Devi Smity SAW OM FOUR MEW WTOKICATED IN SIk MONTHS and finding expression in mothers’ prayers. “In one stay of six months at the front, I saw Just four drunken sol- iers, The British Tommies do not The latter have a knife ready for the but I have seen Tommies rettes to German prisoners even hate the Germans. always wld not do It when all the rest of the world was unprepared and they were ready. Surely they cannot do it now. Germany will win only over the dead body of the last Eng- lishman, the last Frenchman, and, | 1 may say, the last American There were only a few of our boys in France when Gipsy Smith left, but he ways those ho saw were fine fol- lows. “You will give a splendid ac- | count of yourselves,” he added, with a confident smile. “I know you. We |all are of the same stock. The Gor- nans call ericans ‘the English pawn.’ ‘We will finish England,’ | they say, ‘and then take care of the English spawn! 40 HE Katsor has a God," Gipsy | Smith conceded, “but his God | is my devil. Would men with a true God have sunk tho Lusitania, have | outraged civilization, have murdered | women and cut off the hands of little children? The rmans call them- | selves ‘the white beasts,’ and that ts what they are. I would not dare | the strong brown hands clenched ana the jaw muscles set savagely—T | would not dare, I could not trust my- | self, to tell audiences of the German crimes and brut 3 I have seen, “We need you,” ho finished simply. {We need your ships, your men, your | your food, And we need sympathy in the hearts of all rican fathers and mothers, wives 1 sweethearts, for tortured Europe. is the message I am bring sg SALTS 1S FINE FOR /Flush the Kidne a at once when Back hurts or Bladder bothers. | No man or woman who eats meat lregularly can make a mistake by flushing the kidneys occasionally, a well-known authority. 8 Meut forms uric acid which clogs the kidney pores |so they sluggishly filter or strain only |part of the waste and poisons from |the blood, then you get sick. Nearly all rheumatism, headaches, liver | trout le, nervousness, constipation, diz sleeplessness, bladder dis »rders come from slu sh kidneys, The moment you feel a dull ache in the kidneys or your back hurts, or if \the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sediment, irregular of passage or at- tended by a sensation of scalding, get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any reliable pharmacy and take a tablespoonful in a class of water be- fore breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This | farnous salts is made from the acid of Jgrapes and lemon juice, combined | with lithia and has been used for gen- erations to flush clogged kidneys and stimulate them to activity, also to neutralize the acids in urine so ‘t no longer causes irritation, thus ending bladder disorders, Jad Salts is inexpensive and cannot injure; makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink which all regular meat eaters should take now and then to keep the kidneys clean and the blood pure, thereby avoiding serious kidney complications.—Advt. Quick, Safe Way to Remove Hairs (Toilet Talks) Keep a little delatone powder on your dressing table and when ugly, hairy growths appear, make a paste with a little of the powder and some water, apply and let remain on the hairy then rub surface for he skir ve hairs have vanished, ‘This treatment is quite harmless and rarely more than one application is r ed, but to avoid disappointment care should be nsed to buy the real delatone,—Advt, KIDNEYS, QUIT MEAT THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, MARCH 29, 1918, "CHAPLAIN A LIEUTENANT. Father MeGrath T Dig Increase tn ing Cost Here ly to Go om a Since War rt. ttleship. WASHINGTON, March 29.—Increases| Rey. Thomas 8. McGrath, Catholic | fn the cost of living in the New York|Chapiain at the United States Naval Shipbuilding district from the begin- ntonment In Pelham Bay Vark, the Bronx ELLS DYSPEPTICS WHAT TO EAT | Avoid Indigestion, Sour Acid Stomach, Heartburn, Gas On Stomach, Ete, ning of the war until December, 1917, returned from Wash this prc are shown In figures announced by the| morning with a commission of Lieuten-| trgigestion and practicniiy all forme of Bureau of Labor Statisties to-day. Por|ant in the United States Navy. Heltomacn troubie. say medical autherttion, eo ases follow: Clothing, 61.4;| Probably will be traneferred to a battle are times out of ten t nt. of incre Loh ‘ furniture and furnishing, 66.47; food, 66; | ship. Jot chiorie acid in the fuel and light, 19.92; housing, 2.6; mis-| Since last summer Father MeGrath | Chronic “acid at cellaneous, 44.68. had been attached to the naval canton- | @4ngerous Mee ou fH ‘ @ or two Average expenditures of each of 608|ment as @ civilian chaplain. Previous| ¢ or two thin ‘ families In 1917 wore $1,948.64. Food| to that he had been a Chaplain at the | ie Alay San moot svelgtne eae took 46 per cent., fuel and light 20 snd| Van Cortlandt Park Military Camp, in| iia) q = with them. that Srritate the housing 12. which capacity his maintenance @n4/ stomach and lend to excess acid spores nn gautpment had been provided for by | tion or they can eat as they please in fear TWO NEW SHIPS FOR U. S. Guile jorosini of Riverdale on the 4 make Tt erection Waa sd a ‘eot of the harmful acid and prevert fon of Ras, sournees of Launch Refrigerating Vernet ana] TO SEIZE HOARDED WHEAT. Jicte tormencation by the tse of & Minesweeper To-Morrow. Paes Difuere, fe probably be. Bettany mei ‘Two vessels for the use of Uncle Sam | Food Chiets Make Example of) more reliable stomach antecid them to be launched at 9 A. M. to-mor- Pro-German Farmers. {9 widely used are to fk | for this purpose, no direct setion row at the yards of the Standard Bhip-| Reports that many pro-German farm. | for [his Purpose, tt Nae pe drew bullding Corporation at Shooter's Isl-|ers in New York 0 been| Hut a teaspoonful of the Set eg | ‘/ and, 8 I. Thoy are a refrigerating ves-| hoarding their wheat National | couple of five rain tablete taken tm @ sel of 7,60 tons, being built for the United States Shipping Board and a mine sweeper of standard specifications dosigned for the navy. ‘This is the first time two vessels have heen ready to take the ways at a local shipyard since the United States en- tored the war. Mrs. Gabrielle Juve, wife of the first Vice President of the shipbuilding concern, 1s to christen the crag! | Food Administration tn Washington to | address to the local Food Board to-day instructions that Deputy Administrators throughout the State be empowered to | seize all such hoarded wheat It la deairable to make an example of such persons,” says the order, Deputies will give hoarders a’ certain time limit for the sale of their wheat before confiscation ja enforced, — In caso of the latter atep, p shall be made on the basis of th vailing slevator prices ful fie little w the ex and prevent its further formation, removes the whole cause and the meal digests naturally and fF with the food will new we acidity which may be ot the ly without need of pevain Dilla op Int Wixestenta “of Ble ie drurelate Aske B. Altman & Cao. i MADISON AVENUE-FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK Thirty-fifth Street Thirty-fourth Street The Women’s Apparel OF THE SIXTH FLOOR offers many advantages to the econom In addition to the many special values $27.50 season, a number of attractive styles in | Ready-to-wear Suits and Dresses I are now on sale at much below current prices. To-morrow (Saturday) a new shipment of | Women’s Wool Jersey Dresses cleverly embroidered in soutache, will be on sale in this Section at the special price of —s Section ical shopper. offered each VNLY -BRONX STORE AUMANN8 14-9 th STREET @ Sra AVENUE Open Every Evening All Goods Marked in Plain Figures 0 Apartments Furnished Ten-piece William and Mary Dining Room Suite in QUAR- TERED OAK, as shown here ea 5 Goods shown in this advertisement will be sold at advertised prices only during this week. 149°Sre3"Ave IT MAKES LITTLE DIFFERENCE WHAT YOU NEED —A WORLD “WANT” AD, WILL GO AND FIND IT ENTRANCE OPEN -OM LAL AS 149 t* STREET EVENING Drawings, Designs and Striking photo- graphs illustrate authoritative and up-to-date articles written by fashion feaure of

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