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RAED Neen . a en re ame omen wc a —_ 8 THE EVENING WORLD, WEONESDAY, JULY 24, 1918. woe veins “ene.¢s|MITTCHEL MEMORIAL FUND sia "| CONTRIBUTORS AND GIFTS and public life.” A $50 check was received from Wallace Reid. decree for Mrs. Atwell. BANKER YOUNG'S DAUGHTER |" .%.!°7. a mee IS SUING FOR DIVORGE) 3." store Meat Fe MANY OFFER AID —DNIMITCHEL PLAN; be erected {n Mitehel's memory, that | 704 Purroy Mitchel received today and contributions of amounts of the qualifications for which he so |#/00 or more theretofore received appear below, Further contributions will 1 eminently stood be emblazoned there. | be acknowledged from day to day: — on—Courage, Patriotiam, Indepand- | Name of Contrib, Amoat.) Name of Contributer, P Mg The Word ... et and F h- + wt and Faith: | the N.Y, Ti The Sun and & x S Memorial to Major Mitchel, U.S. R., Late Mayor of the ity of NewYork t in Noven- | ber inst by George W. Young, banger, Roy Atwell’s Wife and Her Father |Pvfh'n? Se ca ae eee | eg his daughter, Mrs. Atwell. When Young ME: Matha, wrTtegy fen Arverne, | Got “Evidence” in a Midnight gained admitt to the apartment hi ; Mid ved admittance to the apa e Ll, ly guggested “that & monument Contributions to the popular subscription for a memorial to Major Raid. . found there Atwell in his pajamas and a young woman in negligee. The World suggests « great popular subscription for a The fact that + divorce action has fi itabl rs fal Justice Ottinger se the report of the suitable, worthy memor' to Major John Purroy been instituted by Mrs, Dorothy Young | referee back because it did not show 1, U. S. R., Aviation Corps, for four years Mayor Atwell against John Le Roy Atwell,|that the evidence hal been obtained York City, by which the city, honori hero, playwright and actor, better known as| Without connivance between the couple. i will also honor itself. To this end The World subscribes ‘Atwell, is revealed in a report flied |The Atwells were marriec after an $1,000, the refe who recommended @|elopement in February, 1913 The World, both morning and evening editions, will gladly receive and acknowledge contributions of any sum for 50 this purpose, All contributions should be addressed to the Mitchel enes, Civic Pride, Ho: Boy Contributor Suggests a} fe Devotion to Public Duty." | | . This came from another: i, © Friek. Playground for Children “fnelowed you will find check for | Jultus Rovenw. as Memorial. lartin J. Dwyerse.s Williams, No, 117 eulng Sun Reid. , arnes Je $%, a contr n from Edward and | Joho D. Hocke Joseph Kobnstam, who offer thetr| ire staniey, MoCormich dest wishes for the succeasful collec-| Adolph Lewisohn. ‘With chooks and cash that put The | tion of funda required.” Han A. Lewisohao. New York Times Company for. BUY WAR: SAVING: STAMPS BEAUTIFUL, NEW “PUTNAM 2 ions Lasers See TS World’s Mitchel Memorial Fund past ne per bi ;| Simon 25 Memorial Fund, The World, No, 63 Park Row, New the $20,000 mark to-day, offers to co a $10 contritution fecelved! J. Horace Harding 6 York, N.Y. Contributions will be acknowledged in the PL E P NO Friedveraer Dt ie So egg Hi mae 25 columns of The World and The Evening World from day operate with the Organization Com divin KE. Arner of Allentown, an|MaJor August Hedmont ve ne fy i . Henry P, Davison... ratttee came in every mail. ‘The fund nt this fetter: | William “G. "Wiloox: at noon stood at $20,146.15, nearly 4% | “As one who, in @ @mall way, has/b. H. Outerbridge Raving been received in the morning |been connected with the administra- | Henry Bruere Dittenhoefer, eo to day. FULLY GUARANTEED °445 MAE: ivi. 1 rie W. F. Burns, No. 66 Pine $28 | Walter W. “Dwyer, No. 16 hours. Yesterday the total was|tion of affairs in this city, and there | William Hamlin Childe... I u yriedbergers se: ee: $19,878.40. fore realizes the value of a man of| samuel, Untermyer. ve tal ner, A a. 10 fy TRAIN BUMPS BUMPERS: of the terminus, Brooklyn Bridge, at ON SPECIAL TERMS OF Tuesday's contributions ran from|the type of ex-Mayor Mitchel, I can-|Frauk V, Storrs $n | Betis 4, Boris, Mo, 8 Oe econ ee $2.50 a Week $100 to % cents, the latter from a|not refrain from sending a amall con. | Mary I. Crock $3 | "Parkway, Brooklyn.......... 6 THREE PASSENGERS HURT The injured are Miss Fdna Held- : fey who asked that a playground for |trilution toward a momorial Dice Be kee, $23 | John A. Connolly, No. i601 W. |mater, sixteen, of No. 677 East 136th BPulaver muse, TA beauutel olaver 150! ist St 5) Street; Mra. Jennie Weiser, twenty-five, | P¢nc “But will the time ever come when} : No 61 B | ehildren be built. There were numer ous $1 and 60-cent subscriptions too. the citizenship shall demand that nt ” nburg, "Thi %. & Bache pent a $100 check and| such a man be continued in office” | Madenbure, Thalmasn & Co, ended his letter with the statement “He dared to be true and loyal In| Otto T. Bann, ha: oper: h| ever ct” “Friends of Mayor t, No. oes te gine 0 en if T, MAYOR | Gav. Carlo Harsottl, Il Progress your eammittae in any Way. Mitchel” wrote and inclosed $2. AtalonAterioahe” sss Arthur Willia:ns, already noted as| Frances Roze Schneider of Brook-| William Guggenheim . 00 cont tor, id: lyn did not mention her age in her | Alfred B Marling at ritvutor, aaid n mention a n ber | oe a Warburae Hundreds Shaken Up When Bronx! of No. 614 Bast 136th Street, and Mrs. Express on Third Avenue Falls | Fierence Shortell, thirty-nine, of No. ting detaiis of) thle about “42d 5 5 ; , $| to Stop at Bridge Terminus. 199 Murray Street, Flushing, L. 1 They ‘and also learn 1 | were taken to the office of the despatch- bal ee eee Hundreds of passengers were shaken! er and later sent to their homes, ains, up and three suffered contusions of the| Motorman Haddon was allowed to . head when a Bronx express train, on| take his train out again, Whether the! 134 Newark Ave. “ | brakes failed to work or whether it was Slev: the Third Avenue Elevated system, 18| gue te aasaldabnecs 61 tae. te toeinal |charge of Motorman ©. Haddon, failed! wit) be determined when the train is in- |to stop when it reached the bumpers’ spected at Bronx Park to-day. Friends of Mayor Mitchel, 100) W. H., New York...... 100] W. 11. Sniffin, White 903 Broad St.Ci!y Mal! \ “What you are doing wi be a| letter, but evidently sho is not old|gtiyvesant Fish ———— oJ, GIASSBERGs SHORT VAMP . enough to vote yet. She wishes The| Beat & Co World to “please accept a very amall| Joseph M. ering of 60 cents to the fund.” cpoihrolah ahi Lied » Auchinclogs, son-in-law of| J, 8 Bache.. Col M. House, sent a $25 check| The Kev, Dr, Willian from Washington, The Colonel sent & check for $100 some time ago. Perey|New Yorker Herold. R Pyne, Third Assistant Director of |Adrian Ivelin .... the Counell of ynal Defense at |2ohn, 1. Stanchfield. Washington, sent ) yesterday. Cornelius J, Sulliva ‘The names ot many loyal, fighting | Soorte McAneny . Irish-Americans have ben conspicu- tetera te Walatan ous in the list of contributors, John . Purroy Mitchel was Iriat and, as an| 79 Rev. Dr. W. Halnsford, an said in a recent] walter Scott, No. 49 rish loved and revered | John Lynn, No, 48 Bond st 1. M. House, Magnolia, M. ). St. Mrs. KB. A. Hill, No. 966 Trin 100) "Ave. Bronx Charles F. 18 19th St 100 | R. J. Osborn B.C 400| Pauline Ritterman, No, 26 400} Leonard St.... +s 100 | Patrick O'Connell : 400 | Konald Whitehorne, Brookiyn. 400| Paul Kelerchian, No. 336 W. SHOE Ip ali shades in Nid and Suedes, Oxfords and High Boots, A shoe that combines gracefuiness Of line, supreme comfort and a email- in one, Sizes As evidence of this esteem, an|*Withold My Nam 250 rom 1 to 9%. {rishman came to The World last | Oppenheim, Collings & Co, 100 - for catalog W. Masi orders fitted. evening and presented a brief, self) Ogden Reid, N. Y. Tribune. 100 | ‘Total eoccocccs $17,612.75 S11 6th Ave., near 3ist. St. expla statement. It bo Wats Os, Be HRS | Buses ieee tnamaien b 58 3d Ave., near 10th St. itchel Irish League, Leng, No, 42 Broadway.. 100] ously acknowledge: 2,532.40 it, a sub-head reading, “To Aid|Frank Tilford se 100 Polisi srg Grand total.......eeeeee $20,146.15, Mitchel Memorial Fund." The state- ment follows: , at ao ng, @p- r will ald a committee wh! w York World in raising by popular subscription a fund for a memorial to John Purroy Mitchel. Subscriptions will be received by Jobn McKee, Treasurer, or W. C. Secretary, at No. 624 Mad- ee invites McGreg! ison Avenue, The com the co-operation and as: ance of all Irish societies, Contributions will be acknowledged in ‘The World.” ‘Those selected on the committee were: Stephen McFarland, Dr. Joseph| PE W, Garrow Fisher, Mrs. ivan, Mrs. C Fresh Beef Travels on a Rapid Schedule Fresh beef for domestic markets goes from stockyards to retail stores within 8. John P. David I. K Collins, Ed O'Flaherty. Mary A. Fox, P, J. Mullen and Mary ees TEE: ARTHUR WILLIAMS IN HIGH PRAISE OF FUND In sending hia check for $100 to The World yesterday for the hel Memorial Fund, Arthur Williams, Federal Food Adminis- Women surgeons operate on men. —E — a period of about two weeks. Although chilled, this meat is not frozen; hence it cannot be stored for a rise in price. A steer is dressed usually within twenty-four hours after purchase by the packer. The beef is held in a cooler at the packing house, at a temperature a little above freezing, for about three days. It is then loaded into a refrigerator car, where a similar temperature is maintained, and is in transit to market on an average of about six days. Upon arrival at the branch distrib- uting house, it is unloaded into a “cooler”, and placed on sale, Swift & Company requires all beef to be sold during the week of arrival, and the average of sales is within five days. Any delay along the above journey means deterioration in the meat and loss to the packer. Swift & Company, U. S. A. trator for New York City, wrote: Having been frequently in contact with Mr. Mitchel dur- ing the last year of his Admin- istration, in planning the com- pletion of the Catskill Aque- duct, I was better able to ap- preciate, in @ personal way, the qualities which so deeply impressed and endeared him to the people of our city. I then learned something also of the esteem with which he held your great paper, which made it seom especially fitting that you should be the one to un- dertake the erection of tbia tribute to his memory and service, What you are doing will be a lasting inspiration to the men and women of our city striv- ing toward the highest deals in the private and public life Wishing you every success in this undertaking. Sincerely yours, ARTHUR WILLIAMS. U. S. RUSSIAN PLANS READY. Wilson Awa Reply July 24,—Presidont 1 his pronounce ans of the United n the expedi- ment as to the States for part tion to give mi poorly DR. WERNET’S POWDER For False Teeth Fist applicetion gives reliet—sets like magic to sore gums i soothes, heals, aed cleans ALL FIRSTCLASS DRUG STORES Twe sizes, 606 and $1.25 ing through her hands in four days! Six hundred operations—and not a patient lost! Hats off to ghis little wisp of a French woman, charming and dainty—with such bright curling hair escaping from under her surgeon's cap! For seventeen months her hospital at Verdun was under fire. For six weeks she worked without once taking her cloth- ing off. And when a piece of shell struck her face, she had only time to stanch the flow of blood with her handkerchief. Awoman surgeon for the French Army! No wonder the médecin-en-chef threw up his hands in dismay when little Dr. icole Gerard-Mangin reported at the Vosges front with her surgeon's kit and her Government’s command, And yet, there at his feet were a thou- sand wounded soldiers — and only five doctors, So the brave little doctor was allowed to take her hat off and put her swift, skilful hands to the grim task of saving men’s lives, Fi testis thousand wounded pass- It is happening on every battle front Just listen tothe record of what women surgeons are doing on every battle front! eley they are devoting their energies to remodeling faces shattered by the In Serbia, in Roumania, in Russia, in Italy —wherever the distress is greatest, there the woman doctors arrive. Ten hospitals in Europe are staffed en- tirely by women. Seven great London hos pitals have women resident physicians in charge. Endel Street Hospital, the great London war hospital, is staffed entirely by women, Our own American Red Cross has been asked by both France and Serbia for hospitals staffed entirely by women. Indeed, the word goes round among the soldiers that “the place to get to when you are wounded is the Women’s Hospital.” To men [this is a revelation, They “never knew women were like that. But women knew it. Theosan the cen- turies, they have been reaching out, France, for the first time in history, # weman’s volos bas boos to plead betore « military court. Bussane Grinbe How Pictorial Review’s growth has kept pace with women’s widening interests Since the war 100,000 more families read Pictorial Review every month, In ten years Pictorial Review's 200,000 to 1,500,000, Today, Pictorial Largest 20-cent circulation in the World—1,500,000 Copies Monthly wer $2,500,000 Advertising Revenue—Only one other Magasine has as much fedge, of maha tion has grown from Review ie read by one family in every ax having an income of $1000 and more per year. Business men spend $2,500,000 yearly to advertise their products to Pictorial Review readers, struggling for this broader, bigger serv- ice to mankind. One magazine has been awake to this awakening of women When Pictorial Review sent a woman abroad to record for its readers the changes that were being wrought in wo man’s life, they knew that this was the biggest thing they could tell to the vi orous, alert type of women who r their magazine. This stirring story of the call for women in practically every profession, and their instant amazing response, ap- red in Pictorial Review months ago, it is only an instance of the kind of articles that have made Pictorial Review known among women as “the magazine of women’s wider interests.” Years ago Pictorial Review set out to edit a magazine that would interest the of women who were not being reached by the conventional “women’s magazines.” It was to support, to stimu late, even to lead this type of women. The welcome this magazine received from American women is itself a r of the void there was before, ~.;- PICTORIAL REVIEW __._ The Pictorial Review Company, New York 20 conte the copy