The evening world. Newspaper, August 9, 1918, Page 8

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{ SPIRIT OF MNTCHEL LIVESIN AMERICAN ARM IN FRANCE geant at Front Pays Tribute to Major—Memorial Fund Growing. Lemon Juice For Freckles Girls! Make beauty totion home for a few cents, Try et Squeeze the juice of two lemons into a bottle containing three ounces of orchard white, shake well, and you have a quarter pint of the best freckle and tan lotion, and complexion beau tifier, at very, very small cost Your grocer has the lemons and any drug store or toilet counter will supply three ounces of orchard white for a few cents. Massage this sweetly fragrant lotion into the face, neck, arms and hands each day and see how freckles and blemishes disappear and how clear, soft and white the skin be- | comes. Yes! It is harmless.—Advt. Se | Another $100 o: small ontribution bring The the Mitchel and $16 World's Memorial 54.76. donations came a soldier in in colle: Fund this morning to $ sums tion for With the letter from rance. was forwarded to The World by Will- GRAND RAPIDS fam H. Matthews, Director of the Department of Family Welfare, and was written by Sergt. Laurence P. FURNITURE Moomau, Battery D, 32ist Field Ar- tillery, a New Yorker, In a tribute to Major Mitchel he says in part: “I cannot help feeling that it was wrong to allow him to take #..3 chances with so valuable a life. It is CREDIT TERMS $3-°° Down on $50- oe « 75: sGip~ LEA Apai ments too bad, and yet his going as ne dit “ 5 Biss scapes aT 100:0°| Furnished | stands for great things. Ho. his o «~ 450-' proven the demo of our army; “ «900 i 1 just os he lived, standing for| with pot changes tre ecu ve things that are best, and some. | 300 how I feel that he will live with us) Alliech 5 over here in France. ae Am “He has perhaps contributed more | 4™ Ho has perhaps contributed more | 4® to our cause than if he had continued 4™ to live. The sacrifice was great, but am |I know he gave it gladly. A million | * |men in overseas service have seen | * his determination to serve, capacity then in another, no mat- | ter w the cost to himself. Can you Joubt it when I say that he has made if not in | on: will be left soft, clear and hairless. NEW YORK COTTON EXCHANGE. | of *1.00 to 1.50, and every thrifty mar take advantage of the opportunity. ent scarcity of woolens is going to make prevail. If you have an idle get a pair of these pants to go witl They are suitable for all purpose Every pair is perfect and guaranteed to fit and giv factory service, Rich qualities, in neat stripes anc tures—and a splendid assortment to choose from. Sizes29 to 42, alllengths. One week only 6GthAven ue 3dAvenue Between 15th & 16th Sts. Che urprise,Sfore TIERS ds! Here is a chance to get a good pair - pants at a saving The pres- men use up their odd coats and vests, rather than pay the sky-high prices for suits that will coat and ve Fine— Fancy Worsteds worth up to $4 $9.50 THE E ‘SHE APPEARS TO-NIGHT IN PARK THEATRE PLAY, “MOTHER'S LIBERTY BOND” CLOSING QUOTATIONS. ma, previc Ligh 1 seen ER PATER AR evn n inestimable contribution to our little music. eaassival | morale ?" band’s list of guests, and she a Raymond Ortelg of No, Mata { ‘ in all the glory of the blue pearl and venue was the contributor o p yesterday. Ernest B. Kaufmann, man. $}4 gown that would have made | facturer of ribbons and silks, No. 19 /¢ *| movie vampire writhe with envy. bere m, i: ean ae *, ai Bile i] Oddly enough, the pearl attracted COLUMBUS AVE Cian ant Blake 'sstathe ‘tek ts von Avenue, and Edgar Boody, No. : leosly ™ Broadway t] plumbing “creation.” It was ¢! BET. 103 & 104"ST “P. A. L.," giving no address, added 1, | inspected by one after another of the = $1 to the fund and wrote regret 8] polite company the moment introduc- that I can not subsctibe $1,000, & ist Teet - 2 + | tions were over, The Russian pianis ‘| became highly emotional as soon as ro Rony AGAINST LATE GZAR leer cage gem 2] cently enough, he started hypnotizing TO BE DISMISSED BY U.S. se] sypin but just as she was getting fh nice and limp the lights went out. I Save Decayed Teeth, Instantly there was a great deal of | & Tighten Loose Teeth and @| Court Asked to Set Aside $117,450 noise, even for 80 noisy a party, and| © Treat Diseased Gums. Judgment Obtained by when the sights rere, Sasha cs SETS OF TEETH, Gold and ai *, again, Sybil's chest was as ba Porcelain Crowns, Bridgework, @ | Transport Co. her back. Someone had stolen her | | ‘ 1 fe polic - ings and, Inlays of Gold, a| shots that sped Nicholas Roma xg | rears, Sinead been called away, wo Silver ‘and Poreclain, carefully gi) not, ex-Cxar of Russia, to his death got back at this interestings moment mM RADLY DECAYED TEETH Mf!" Pkaterinburg © few weks ago were sb] Ena Phtartea ‘right’ in’ to solve the aah fall 3, [faintly re-echoed to-day in the Special | mystery. * 5 oots carefully extracte m of the Supreme Court, Brooklyn *| “He discovered among other things Teeth thoroughly cleaned. BY) edevay. TABAROAL A uaibant %lthat the Hghts could be switched otf Broken plates repaired while when are aH | |by @ person's leaning against a pic- it or if sent by mail. United States District Attorney moved 1} ture on the wall. No one was ‘als td get aside the judgment of $117.45 | lowed to leave the hoom in a scer he tly obtained by the Mart “ “that recalled “The Thirteenth Chair. recently obtained by the Marine Trans | that recalled “The : H port Servi Corporation in a su %] All were questioned and some were DEAT BAYSr. ainst the nsed Russian ruler | searched, the pleasant little party WOR, he late C as legal representa “|didn't break up until the pearl was outs on BAM TO TBM OAY Bii oe th vaumcoeht) Wan 4 | found, Sybil was pained to hear (hat sued for alleged breach of contract. A 1%] it had been stolen from the Khediv« referee appointed by the court here de 4 [of Egypt. And sho had been foolish = 1 | }enough to have her rare gift in cided Nicholas himself would have to lsorbed: “Holly to. Sybil." ‘This . a - atand the bill, dude ¢ sil i$] made the way clear to divorce pro- A Single Application Will | garieee _ slant, B ceeaingn withthe drompent these | “be eat hee, tuabanny for be ae OTTAWA, Ont. Aug. 9.—The names WALL STREET Gossip. any out er when’ he saw Aids to Beauty) of the following Ameri appeared on| United Paperboard Company-Year] the pearl, he said: “Give me some Here is a home treatment for re day's rseas casualty Met: Killed) ended May 25; final surplus after divi- | money and I'll ask no questions.” ‘ 1 at ia in Action--8, Macdonald, Los Angeles, | ends on common and preferred stocks,| Julia Bruns held the centre of the moving hairs that is quick, painless |!" Act! Dled—J. Boyle, eng saa Be *T stage as well as the eye with and and inex; :W Cal. Presumed to Have y! 833; decrease, $717,606 : pensive: With some powdered | New York. City. Wounded—«°, Sabean, | without the pearl. She made Sybil delatone and water make enough 1M Banister, Omaha, | nal Riscult’ Company—Regular| interestingly wicked, though natur- paste to thickly cover the objection § ly dividend of 13-4 per cent. onjally a bit vulgar. George Nash able hairs, apply and after 2 or 3) taf’ yMzauehtin, Hoston ‘ed stock, payable Aug. 31 to] played the police commissioner with minutes rub off, wash the skin and it = oS |stock of record Aug. 17 forceful directness. Orlando Daly This treatment will not mar the skin, Oper Low, Last.| nrown Shoe Company—Regular quar-| Carlyle figured virtuously as the but to avoid disappointment, be care. August 2s 58 fa | terly dividend of $1.60 per share on| more or lesa deceived wife. Annie ful to get rea) delatone.—Advt September 29.28 common stock, payable Sept, 1 to stock | Hughes, Charles Angelo, Yolande Du- ee | Goto 28.40 of record Aug. 20. quette, G. Oliver Smith and J. Palmer - December 28.18 Window ilasa Company--| Colina also did good work ; a 7 Janary 2815 American Window Glass Company—|°epne Tue Peal’ te a well-acte Sunday World “Wants Mn 28.15 Regular quarterly dividend of 31-2 Per] pay that 1s likely to interest worien 4 28.20 2 persue: red stock, payable Sept. | eho have a w ness for jewels, Work Monday Wonders. aavance, "" “'°"* Sto. stook of record: Aum) 24. » will many t. 1 them. sat 1 mix- Open Saturday Until 10 P.M. VeERTY y BOND’ VENING WORLD, F THE NEW PLAYS “The Blue Pearl” eeps Audience Guessing BY CHARLES DARNTON T'S the mystery in “The Blue Pearl" that gives Anne Crawford Flexner’s play its interest. At the Longacre Theatre last night this | So-called comedy-drama kept the | audience guessing—a pastime quite as simple, if not as strenuous, as childhood's button game. | It wouldn't be fair to tell who stole the pearl after Sybil got it in the neck from “Holly” at Atlantic City, but it 1s quite proper to say that this unlucky stone was not a wedding gift. Though married, Sybil and Hol- land didn't happen to be married to each other, They rolled along the boardwalk in a chair on an appa- rently dull night in Atlantic City, for | only one other chair passed by while they were having a jolly week-end quarrel, | But the moment Holland Webb began to talk about jewels, Sybil| Kent became strangely interested. | She grew almost rapturous as she told him of getting up in tne middle of the night and putting on her own | precious gems just to have a good %| look at herself, Then he gave her 2] the pearl—and left us waiting for the @ | plot to thicken, r It was a hopelessly mixed company 1% | that found its way through the door 2 | ot Webb's New York home three days) later. He had planned to play cards with his crowd, while his wife had asked a Russian pianist and the po- commissioner to drop in for @ Sybil was on the hus- ce Mi | made the most of Webb, and Gra LEFT HOME | IN ANGER. Now Soldier Boy In Reported Mins- ing In Ac It was a year ago in June that Leo J. Tuscano, 412 B 18th Street, left home angrily after “some words with his father Antonio, For many months nothing was heard of the boy Then there came one of those familiar merely Arrived posteards | saying field arti War Departme the casualty, Hat cano was reported tion on duly 1 BIG GUN. PLANT IN FRANCE. WII! Compare tn Sine With Krapp missing Works tn Germ y WASHINGTON, Aug. 9.--Approval of plans for a big gun relining plant t be built in France at a cost of from $25,000,000 to $30,000,000 was announced to-day by the War Department It is paid engineering work for the prose which will compare in size to the Krupp | Works at, Essen Germany, were com sted and orders for equipment pieted gaed within thirty days after con ception of the plan by the ordnance of Ehrlich Glasses \ Are Guaranteed Yet Cost No More than ordinary glasses. You RIDAY, AUGUST 9, 1918. GERMAN SPY FURNITURE |""HUMAN FLY" IN CLIMB TO HELP LIBERTY LOAN) GIVES CROWD FREE GHILLS Office Equipment of Bomb Plotter} Crawls Up Hall of Records, Scales and Agent to Go to Cam- Flag Staff and Kisses paign Headquarters Old Glory. A German bomb-plotter and a Ger-| Chills played up and down many man propaganda agent will contribute] thousand human spines in City Hall toward making the fourth Liberty Loan| Park to-day when Harry Gardiner, “The campaign a succe: Human Fly,” hung by his left elbow Office furniture used by these men has| and right heel on the sloping edge of been turned over to the Liberty Loan|4 cornice and made a speech for the Committee of the New York Federal] beneft of the Knights of Columbus Reserve Bank district and will be used] Coney Island week celebration. Gar in the headquarters for the camps diner went up the side of the Hall of which begins Sept. 28. The men who| Records, Chambers and Centre Streets. used the furniture are now held by the| While he climbed, the Battleship Recruit Federal authorities, Band played, girls collected funds and The furniture was pert of a large) ‘owers Of sliver were huries toward ¢ quantity of office equipment sold or] ™@mmoth American flag which served Riven to the Liberty Loan Committee| °¥,{* Collection basket by A. Mitchel Palmer, Allen Property|, Gardiner moved up a fluted column Custodian, for three stories without any visible German’ money also will contribute| ™eans of support. Then he rested and heavily 10. the Liberty Loan, for Mr,| made ® speech that could be heard at the Post Om: Above the sixth story Palmer, who has already invested $42 limber encountered a cornice that 000,000 in Liberty bonds, has several] the millions on deposit for the next bond] extended fully six feet from the face of campaign. the building. After a number of at tempts to negotiate this obstacle he SOLDIERS’ LETTERS POUR IN. was compelled to call for a rope with ——— which he swung himself up. The rest More Than 7,000,000 Received in] of the way to the flagstaff was easy America Since Jaly 29, When reached the top he WASHING’ Aen = Klase » the band played | The seven million letters from A edad? aa awe diers in France have been Atlantic porta since July bi Post Office Department anr 1 to ; day that every one of them was started : for {ts destination within tw four | two days old ‘ hours after its arrival. One 32d Street to-day. An brought 2,823,000 letters and anothe sa Ber y 300,000 on Aug and a ship arriving | Bellevue Hospital ‘Aug. 5 brought 2,031,000, |took charge of the infant and it will Of all this mail 80 ‘per cent. was|be placed in an incubator, Physicians sorted as to railroad routes in this coun-|hejjeve it will live. Detectives are try before it left France. Working on the ca : eT ae > Fleet Corporat Takes Over| isaac Purdy, “Gentleman,” Bank- Hampton Dock Co. rupt. NEWPORT NE Va., Aug. %—It] An involuntary petition in bank- was announced here to~lay that the/ruptey has been filed Emergency Fleet Corporation had taken| United States District Court over the operation of t comb | Isaac Purdy, “by occupation a Shipbuilding and Dock at linat”. Ate. Purey’s address Wan elven Hampton. The company has hand las Purdy Station, Westchester County, hpout twelve contracts fo Gove N.Y, ‘The Hubilities and assets were ernment not given. ~ |AGOUSE TWO POLIGEMEN OF | had been kept over night in the tody of the Children’s Socjety. took i | stand she repudiated the story the licemen had testified to and said when “FRAME-UP” IN FONG CASE, Girl Denies Chinaman Attacked Her | pon ng and gave him @ beating, the irl declared. and Magistrate Reynolds Dis- |* Maristrate’ Reynolds discharged Fong misses Charge Against Him, and ordered the girl restore father Magistrat Reynolds in the Flatbush a Avenue Court, to-day, was #0 Impressed | ANOTHER LEWIS ‘BROADSIDE. by evidence tending to show a police | “frame-up" against @ Chinese chop| attacks P. 8. suey vendor that he directed the altor- ney for the accused Chinaman to lay a| Rad Rineke Bepeerns 7! Attorney Merton EB. Lewis to-day made attack on the complaint before Police Commissioner | Enright against Sergt. Hanrady and 4 Policeman Smaliman of the Flatbush | Public Service Commission and Gov, Avenue Station Whitman who appointed Its members, Harry blaming them for the subway muddle. taurant Particular attention $9 devoted In the s iaeatan jlatest criticism to Commissioner F, a serious |1f. Kracke of Brooklyn, a | political Hobbs 1128 |ieader {n one of the silk’ stocking dis- Flatbush Avenue. they found her In Fong's place they ner into making the charge so | that they “could hang the Chink.” When finally assented the policer Ht jon Again, Commi eneral another of the res- Magistrate on by Edna 0. Fong, proprietor was before the charge preferred fourteen years old, of When the gi who 'tricts of that borough, © help make strong, ke | rience which I have found so Francis Sullivan, formerly physician of B Nuxated Iron often increases the strength and endurance of weak. nervous. ran-dor peovle in two weeks’ time. js now being used by over three million neople anu ally, inclading such men as Hon, Leslie M. Shaw, former Secretary of the Treasury and ex-Governor of Iowa: former United States Senator Richard Kolland Kenney of aware, at present Major of the U. S. Army: General John 1. Clem (Retired). the S. Army when only 12 vears of also United States Judge G. W. Atkinson of the Court of Claims of Washington, others. Nuxated Iron is dispensed by all good druggists everywhere. drummer boy of Shiloh, who was sergeant in We age: A sepia portrait of PRESIDENT WILSON ready for framing President Wilson's portrait is reproduced in the rotogravure section of Pictorial Review for September, together with his stirring tribute to the women of America and with his signa- ture—ready for framing. This same issue al contains two reproductions of wonderful wa> pictures by the famous French artist fase Jonas, vigorously symbolic of America’s p: inthe war. All of these are artistically finished in sepia rotogravure, full page size and ready for framing Atdieie fom Wreatent Wilson to the Women of America 66°F THINK ie whole country has appreciated the way in which women have risen to this great occasion. They have not only done what they have been asked to do, and done it with ardor and efficiency, but they have shown a power to organize for doing things on their own initiative, which is quite a different thing and a very much more diffi- cult thing. I think the whole country has admired the spirit and the capacity and devotion of the women of the United States. It goes without saying that the country depends upon women for a large part of the inspiration of its life. That is obvious. But it is now depending upon the women also for suggestions of service, which have been rendered in abundance and with the distinction of originality.” Vvciori tet A young French’ Wife— at the mercy of the Huns The pretty little wife of the pharmacist—al- ways sheltered and protected from every harsh influence, suddenly left at the mercy of the invaders. Howa mighty strength comes to her in the hour of her trial—what happens to her, fight- ing against tremendous odds— here is a story that will thrill every woman's heart. Dorothy Canfield’s “La Pharmacienne” is one of the finest stories the war has yet produced. also get the service of our registered specialists for the examination of your eyes Correctly Fitted Glass {rom $2.50 k Sons I bili Established 56 Years New York: 184 B’way, at John St. a23 Sixth Av., isth St. a a 350 Sixth Av., aad St, yor Nassau, at Ann St. uA Wee, aad ott Brock! nlton St..cor.Bond St 223 San at open Sat. until 6 P, Through the barrier of Death Did she get his message? “Going West” is the soldier’s expression for passing on into the far country. Basil King’s story, “Going West,” will give you a new con- ception of the After Life. It is an answer to the great query that haunts every one of us who has faced the separation of Death, Are the barriers so strong — is the veil so impenetrable as we are wont to think? Read this power. ful story of the triumph of a great Love—even over Death! AMERICA'S GREATEST WOMAN'S MAGAZINE | For September—out today | ‘The Pictorial Review Company | New York

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