The evening world. Newspaper, August 6, 1918, Page 9

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| i] NE soitchsieamintpeaeatintgnmgladnamasaneacnner nate neeie ha ‘ . HAS N HOUR'S SICKNESS Since He Commenced To Take ‘Frult-a-tives’’ 73 Lees Ave, Ottawa. “Three years ago I began to feel run-down, tired, and suffered very much Liver and Kidney Trouble. Having heard of “Fruit-a tives,” 1 thought 1 would try them ‘The r and from sult was surprising 1 have not had an hour's sickness since I using “Fruit-a tives” or Fruit Liver Tablets, and 1 know now what 1 haven't known for & good many years—the blessing of a healthy body and clear thinking brain” = WALTER J. MARRIOTT. 50c a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 25 At dealers or from FRUIT-A-TIV imited, OGDE. ¥, A Health Builder For commenced and helping to ttt a turer. ‘postpaid, rte HORA TOI Found” artictes World or reported * Room Hat hese lists can ne World's Offic “Lost and Found” advertisemen ean be left at any of The World’ Advertising Agencies, or can be telephoned directly to The World. Cal! 4000 Beokinan, New York, e@ Brooklyn Office, 4100 Main, OT HADAN HOUSTON ST. FERRY . 20 WMATA RE emake OREN REFUSED A SUBSIDY 10 KEEP RUNNING Neither Will the City Pay $200,000 for Its Boats and Real Estate. Reporting to the Sinking Fund Com. mission on the question of discontin- uing the ferry between the foot of Grand Street, Brooklyn, and Fast Houston Street, Manhattan, Comp- troller Craig makes the announcement that since the early part of 1914 “the matter of the Houston Street Ferry franchise appears to have remained dormant and the company has contin- ued to operate without a franchise or agreement of any kind.” The operating concern is known as Lemon Juice For Freckles Girls! Make beauty fotion at home for a few cents. Try it! juice of two lemons aining three ounces shake well, and you have a quarter pint of the best freckle and tan lotion, and complexion beau- | tifler, at very, very small cost. Your grocer has the lemons and Jany drug store or toilet counter will | supply three ounces of orchard | for a few cents. Massage this s fragrant lotion into the face, arms and hands each day and se tly how freckles and blemishes disappear and how clear, comes, Y: oft and white the skin he- ! It is harmless.—Advt. T | Ofty-f white | the Nassau Ferry Company. It was through the petition of the company for financial relief that this condition | of atiairs was brought to light. The extent to which the company's ex- penses have been increased, coupled With the loss of business through the opening of the Williamsburg Bridge, are made the basis for the appeal for aid from the city ‘Two propositions are made to the city, First, it is asked that all assets used in the ferry business, including boats, ferry houses and equipment and other real estate in Brooklyn and Man hattan be sold for the sum of $200,000 second, the granting by the city of subsidy or bonus of $120,000 a y payable in monthly instalments $10,000, in consideration of which the company {s willing to operate the ferry for ten years and maintain its boats and equi nt in first class condition the propositi f ns is favor red by Co ‘oller Craig. nds the rejection of both on will be taken by the Fund Commission at next Monday's meeting DISAPPEARED WITH $4,607. | Man Who Went After Payroll Had Talked of Entisting With Britt Jacob Wamb worked for Shapiro Brothers, dress manufacturers, at No. 514 Broadway for four years. Y. day noon he went to the Citizens’ Na- tional Bank, No. 240 Broadway and got $4,607 for the weekly payroll, His employers thought of the heat and hold-up men, and finally thought of th e, who went Wamb's hom »., 60 "Donaldson Av Rutherford, N. J. Wamb's wife not seen him, but she said he had n worried about the law permitting i the drafting Sritish subjects and that he had been planning to enlist It Js still considered possible that Wamb met with OBITUARY NOTES. Justin Seubert, eighty-one, oul play, ~_—— of Justin Seubert, Inc dead at. his hor iS Montclair a resident of Mont William Walker tate broker of Paters he had lived for fifty i rday in St.’ Mary's Hospital, . after an iilness of three weeks, John R. Rankin, fifty-nine, electrical | uf his home, No. Elizabeth Dr. William H. Lawrence, formerly Sheriff of Union County, N. J., is dead| at his home in Summit y} “villa” (THE NEW PLAYS “Keep Her Smiling” Mildly Diverting. BY CHARLES DARNTON $ O keep any one smiling last night the bravest actor, yet in spite of the sweltering weather, Mr. and Mrs, Sidney Drew held their own against Broadway's first-night shock troops with “Keep Her Smiling” at the Astor Theatre. The devoted stars were happise than the play, a comedy verging on tarce, that John Hunter Booth malo from stories written by Edgar Frank- lin, At the same time "Keep Her Smiling” proved mildly diverting, It started off very well, indeed, with a mild-mannered cashier in a contrac- tor’s office cutting a quaintly humor- cus figure as he battled with his own financial situation. to see Henry shut up in his cags one moment and then breaking out with a modest confession about bis on the Sound, There was something refreshing, too, in watcn ing Henry work the lawn mow when he had got through his work at the office, His pretty Polly hud only to smile and he would give her anything she asked. Her smile threat ened to lure him to financial disaster, for after giving her a self-playing piano he her a “party” wit hampagne tenor, a dancer and pianist who were even more expen- sive, Polly was thoroughly at home in the “vil but quite out of place when she went to the office, where the strangest business men ever seen on land or stage plied thelr curions trade. But after being made treat urer and given @ share of stock at the same old salary, Henry blunder It was amusiog ra along until fortune was thrust upon! THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, AUGUST 6, 1918. STAR WHO'LL BE SEEN IN “THE BLUE PEARL" AT LONGACRE THEATRE GRACE CARIVIE TIN | “THE DUEL PERLE” KONE SCRE, THEATRE, | eam. stent cha along the path of con terization and a performan: by quiet, deft touches Mrs, Drew, young and y, was equally restrained as t siipie wife who knew how to what she v 4, De Witt Jennings y bad manners ¢ business man; Linc er and Maidel Turner represe vulgar rich amusingly, and a lot of other people a tot of other things hot worth mentioning. But from first to last Mr. and Mrs Drew were delightful | aia | “AMERICA’S ANSWER” STIRS | him at The was a decidedly dull . even as such affairs go, but peated’ cup of punch’ M PEOPLE TO PATRIOTISM Henry an amusing fellow Although tinually confronted by the pitfalls of farce he kept steadily | “America's Answer,” the second war picture t \_ — = Cl Makers and friendly ‘Ace’ would drop some Murads around here.” Ong of the Highest Grade Turkish Egyptian Cigarettes wn tie World ed | by the Committee on Public Informa "eh tion to inspire the people who can't Sai go across to do their share here and 3 ake it easier for those who do go across to beat the bo And the film does inspire the man and woman i on this side to get in it over here. | é Half the picture is given over to the THE TURKISH GARETTE \ ve re aag Et Yros United States official showing at the George M. ( sion, shan The and |s atre, is a film with a m fulfifling it well “America’s Answer’ waa prepared enormous task of outfitting, sup) ing and caring for th ri building of hosp’ capacity, the damr make reservoirs for | building of refrigera lants where | 1,000,000 pounds of 8 manufac tured daily, are examples ef the tasks! the country is concerned with every | day | ania “SGREEN “FEDORA” SHOWS | | MISS FREDERICK AT BEST , the "Is the feature » pr week wh 1 Dav | the role | ting, Americans who dis. | t elves at Chateau on Fourth of July om ““BRITAIN'S, FAR. FLUNG BATTLE LINE” AT RIVOLI “Britain's Far Plung Battle Lin » British official pleture, is the fou | ture film of the new Rivoli bill, TY BIG SWIMMING CONTESTS. Hawallan ¢ splons ere at Height an vine I i 1, the " | Helen Wainwright and Aileen Rig- | | the “kid wonders,” will race for| OTonghlin and! of the Ha-| give exhibi-| tone of fancy swimming and diving. Justed to the “H" subway system vs they waited for trains scheduled t@ ate 1 four minute headway. The Public Serv to-day, but that must chief sources of ¢ Commission ar there SUBWAY JAM IS SHIFTED TO WALL ST. STATION NOW are still conditions remedied, One of th complaint now be — traMe between Brooklyn and Manhat . ‘4 | tan stlohe in vesting, Brooklynites, Transferring From|'*tne onty traine going to Brooklyn! at trains “ares run te West Side Lines, Are the Victims. publle is rapidly becoming e east wide | rrifle jam t station, ibway, and this night at the W where passer under way that ad shuttle service The are transte Jaga operation. ——-—— ~ [Here Your Triernone Company Keep tue Lines Open ror War Work | “«CURIOSI 2 * CALLS’ cA Menace | to Good Telephone Service In WAR TIME nerves are naturally at such tension that any unexpected happening like an explosion, a large fire, the tolling of bells, or the blowing of whistles, leads to excited inquiries over the telephone concerning the disturbance. Ar SUCH TIMES there are thousands of purely Curtosity Cats that congest the trunk lines and sometimes seriously delay important calls neces- sary to meet the emergency itself. - The CURIOSITY CALL is a dangerous menace to the city’s service, especially at this time when | the lines must be kept open for the all-important | war work messages. SupscriBERS CAN HELP materially to keep the trunk lines open for necessary war messagcs by avoiding the Curtosrry Catt under all cir- cumstances, NEW YORK TELEPHONE COMPA When Pay Day Comes—, Remember W. S. S. Hep Your Te_epuone Company Keep rue Lines Open ror WAR Work Over The Top And At The Germans—Nuxated Iron Helps _ Give Men The Strength, Power and Courage Ass’t Judge Advocate General Richard R. Kenney, Former U. S. Senator, Says That With the Sustaining Tonic of Nuxated Iron He Has Had No Occasion To Weaken Under the Most Strenuous Army Duties. pinion. lack of tron in Decensarily mea blood. t omen ng on at wetting Deaeflts from ryt Notes Nuxat ed tron, fapove have Increased thelr strengtn and end Val " o ~ Doctor, when you wish to prescribe a true tonic, strength MRECIAL TO PHYSICIANS | coins are tities oneal eee ergy into the veins of try Iron. If you have been using the old forms of metall n complaining of discolored teeth, upset stomachs, hardened, tied-up secretions, etc., {rom the use of metallic iron, again we suggest, try Nuxated Iron, It is highly endorsed by such physicians as Dr, James Francis Sullivan, formerly Phy- sician of Bellevue Hospital (Outdoor Department), New York; Dr. A. J. Newman, late Police Surgeon of the City of Chicago and former House Surgeon Jefferson Perk Hospital, Chicago; Dr. Ferdinand King, New York Physician and Medical Author; Dr. T, Alphonsus Wallace, a physician of many years’ experience in this country and abroad, and others, in most cases physicians duect the use of two five-grain tabiets three times per day afer awals, Nuxated tron with be. furnished by any druggist on an absolute guarantee of success or money refunded. 1 » run-down and aged at success; if you have had pati

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