The evening world. Newspaper, August 15, 1918, Page 4

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COP NABS SON AS LOAFER. | | Father Simply Tired of Seeing Boy Prett i Around Houne. sd 4 cemene Faward tavktn, eighteen, of No. 26 WASH & SILK Hoyt Street, Brooklyn, was arrested f yesterday by his father, Policeman DRESSES ed t Trafle 1, charm 1 with vios SALE PRICES |} apa tar 1 he was tired of seeing |well In the Fifth Avenue Court held the n $00 ball for Special Sea- young man \ siona OPEN SATURDAY TILL 1 P.M. omen OF ALL Sizes Slender or Stout-—-34 to 56 Bust Heed the war-time call for economy by tak- ing advantage of the bargains offered at our Final Clearance of Mail Order Stocks fbediryant A BARGAIN BASEMENT Worsted Mohair Is one of the most practical and dressy ma Coolest Place to Shop 23 W. 38th St. Buy W. & S. terials. It is lustrous and dressy, gives good wear at all times and takes the place .o French Serge. The Suit and Dress pictured here are made of this beautiful material in black, navy or gray. Sizes 86 to 56 bust To Close Out $1195 Bargains for Stout Women Coats |SummerDresses| Silk Dresses | CottonDresses ai Pongee iano Voile Habutal Silk Serka, Beach Wor Cloth and 074 ronalt, Gingham, Khaki Krash, $1195 | 495 | 8975 | $995 Bargains for Slender Women, 34 to 42 Bust 88 DRESSES S77..." $1.90 32 VOILE DRESSES $395 atl Orwandie, collars and cuffs, 35 COATS Siytratror®” $].(00/ 200 FROCKS Yor rere $195, 50 WAISTS Grepe doenine, $300] 60 SKIRTS HP pops = $300 Lane Bryant, 23 West 38th St. The SHOOKIDS’ Picnic i | ( ( | HEN Ma and Pa take the “Shookids’’ out for aday’s outing notice the smiles all around. The folks are { glad they bought the Cammeyer ‘‘Shookids’’ and the kids are happy, for they have such comfort in their new shoes. Ma and Pa know that these shoes are so serviceable and so reasonable too. ( \ ( | ( ( ( ( ( ( CHILDREN’S SHOE 10 Bicsouwciesennceces 200108,00 2.00 to 3.25 Sizes 1D Ai ase e .. 3.00 0 5.00 Sizes 8% to 11..—.-......--... 3.50 t0 5,00 Sizes 1134 tO 2.22. asmeveeee., 4.00 10 6.25 BOYS’ SHO S08 9.10 1814 ecceeer cr ee cone woe Oi 10) SH00 e001 00. BIS. .ncresesccessesee ss G:00) 4.00 et Stamped on a Shoe Means Standard of Ment Sizes Sizes 10 8... ccccememances: oeen 34" St. New York ee te ee te a ee ee Beautiful, Guaranteed, “Putnam’ PLAYER PIANOS $445 $250 a Week FREE WITH EVERY PLAYER: 1A be Pegg gy RB rg ; centered on the western front and we MAIL THIS COUPON|™™ | | hi y6 declined to be diverted from to the Store N You one thing. The War Depart- Fr detalis of tile great pale ae has now adopted this as al wily of our used plano |, and it is the policy of the United States that the military pro- | NEW YORK: BROOKIAN As Nc. eda eri one NS RRae Ie I be centred Me renee 53 East 34th St. 55 Flatbush Ave. ‘ nish enough man power to whip the| ——— . Germany from now on, The only JERSEY CITY: NEWARK; way that Germany can be whippet 134 Newark Ave. 903 Broad St. is by America going into this thing with her whole strength.” [rere in order to releaso inon from jthat duty. ] \rourth clase, mm ee ee ee ae we ae eee ee THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, AUGUST 15, 1918. |Girls Who Enlisted to Work for the Marines GIRLS MARCH UP | Ready to Do Their Bit in Various Capacities | PAALGVALIADIDAD AS OFFICE SQUAD =: FOR MARINE CORPS | — | Many Trained to Operate Rapid-Fire Typewriters Without a Single Jam. | A mMatoon of young office Amazons, in massed formation, attacked and captured the outlying oMfices of the Marine Corps Recruiting Headquar- ters, No, 24 Kast Twenty-third Street, | early to-day Then two by two they went over the top against Lieut. George Knoller. Fifty of them survived his drumfire of questions and gained their objec- tive. ‘This afternoon they ma another attack, against Col, A. 8. Me~ Lamore, who came from Washington to-day for this special work. Officers | of the defense say that not more than | & squad of the young women will gain admittance to the corps Those who answered the call sent out by the Marine Corps for an un- Umited number of applicants repre- sented every type. Some were 80 young they could serve in nothing but the infantry, others displayed grim powder stains and some actresses were so airy as to qualify for the fly ing corps. But the majority were capable of playing a rapid fire type writer eight hours per day without a jam. They were the not for the novelty of it, but to relieve marines | Marci replied needed in France, It is up to us to win the war and| , " win it low long it will take | First to app and first to be ac-| Fini depend exactly upon what we do. | | ce pted by Lieut. Kneller was pretty | If we d long with this thing ar jlittle Miss Natalia Manning, who sald) Put a ull force over there we w me playing Germany n ia my |she was willing to do pioneer work fer tent eit ance pogildistd |with a scrubbing brush if there was} of 4 ra under one nothing else the Marines could find we can go for her to turn her ine wherever we hands to. ‘The |Lieutenant, after a searching look |into Natalia's blue eyes, allowed that he could save her from the scrubbing | brush | Practically plained in the ts with all of these young women are employed and had asked '" A hdr ; A de- | red classification from men time off from thelr jobs to enlist.| roi. work without causgg, the report ‘They were from insurance companies, says {drug stores and business offices.| “The provision does not pretend t | Others not working wore anxious to|interfere with the right of any ma 4 to cease labor when any man pleas! \give Uncle Sam their time, One of | to do so, but simply says to him that these was Mra. L. H. Watson of Corn- if he does cease he shall, under such qallconitideos, ihe isthe with 6¢ regulations aa the President foay pre. scribe, subject himself to the draft Capt. Watson of the 61st Infantry, ax though he had not been exempted now at the front, Her brother, Bart-|in the first instance.” ley G. Furey, is a Lieutenant in the pane eee ures, la a pormua'n mace inthe ser-\ ABOUT 15,000 HERE WILL S sures in beaveh Hosptial Me. 1 at REGISTER ON AUG, 24 "The accclsease which the Marine | those Who Have Become Twenty- Recruiting office is enrolling women one Since June 5 Must Sign states they are wanted for all clerical ‘ * Up at Local Boards. There will be a special preliminary period of four | draft registration on Aug. 24 of men They enlist as privates, for a years. They are subject to all regu-|who, since June 5 and on or before | lation of the service, and at any) au oy ny time that thelr work or behavior is;4U8- 24, have reached the age of | unsatisfactory they will be dis-| twenty-one. Registration bours on |charged. They will rfeceive about |that day wii be verween 7 A. M. and $110 per month, will be entitled to|y P.M uniforms gratuitously and have the| It is estimated that there will be anes that are extended to men the service. suey |CALL FOR 12,000 IN DRAFT. UNE, MARC'S PLAN ed for Hinited military se: (Continued From First Page) in jistration in this city. The work will |be carried on by local boards at their | regular headquarters, | vice for N.C." The quota of 1,326 men at Camp Up . rom w York Is fo on and 225 for ew Jersey 650 same time disorganize the industries of the country as little as possible. “The policy of the War Department is to put the maximum number of men in France with the idea of short- ening the war, We found from fig- ures furnished by the Provost Mar- shal General that we could embark on a programme of eighty divisions in France by June 80, 1919, with eightecu divisions at home, These divisions consist of, roughly, 40,000 men to a division, ‘Aftor prolonged study of the avail- | able than power of the United States, the Provost Ma hat It hal General showed necessary to drop to eighteen years of age and go to forty- | five in order to get the men to carry | it through, All the men obtained un- der the proposed change in the Dratt Law—approximately 2,300,000—we ex- in France by June 0, was | pect to have 1919." AS POSSIBLE. Gen, March told the committee that he was unqualifiedly in favor of bh ing the army composed of as many young men as possible, Young men between eighteen and twenty, he said, |not only do not have enany incums brances, but they are betier ft physl- he President, sald Gen. resuming his statement, ‘h announced that the tary policy from March, s finally American mil! this time on ts “Then America has got to put nough men over there to whip Ger-! asked Senator Kirby. ' privileges of allottment and allow-| approximately 15,000 men in the reg- | |} that both x I DERG44 DABDDD —————SS]]>[=>E>E>E>~““_—~~_~_L_ > ~_ > _~>_>—>=EE>E>Eec>se>e>_> >» » » L —_—_—_—_—_—_—_—_—_—_—_—_— MISS DOROTHY BARRETT = SUNK BY U BOAT NEAR CAPE WAY (Continued From First Page) Me., the builde $150,000, She was a vossel of 2 tons gross and was proceeding to a New England port with coal Frederick R. Kellogg, Still flont, May Be Brought to Port. WASHINGTON, Aug. 15. — The American tank steamer Frederick R. | Kellogg, torpedoed Tuesday evening by @ German submarine, Is still afloat sixteen miles off Barnegat, N. J., the Navy Department was advised to-day, and there is a chance that she may be brought tnto port. Seven men of the crew still are| | missing, but the navy has no con- firmation of reports that five men| were killed by the explosion of the | torpedo. | and was valued at | Th Adrift 72 How wit BOSTON, Aug. 15.—Four survivors | of the fishing schooner Progress, sink by a German submarine Saturday, | were brought hore to-day, after being | adrift tn a dory seventy-two without a compass and with water and food. Others of t were landed earlier in the w ood and r. | hours h little | crew | | Heavy Firing ie Carolina * PORTSMOUTH, N. C,, Aug. 15.—| Heavy firing was heard to-day off the! North Carolina coast, in the vicinity | where a German submarine has been operating. Beginning about 8 o'clock | this morning, the booming of two| guns, one of larger calibre than the | other, continued for about forty min- | utes. To thi on shore it seemed) ns were being fired si- | | multaneously until, at last, only the lighter gun was heard. d Of the North Passengers Belleve They Saw Ven- Saving Wheat Eating Corn {i takes ona de- | lightful meaning ans ap-teene ound an when the corn is in the form of Post TOASTIES | nel Attacked by Submarine, Passengers on a French ship ar- BODO. 6-44 that yesterday afternoon when the was entering the new sub- rine danger zone estattished off e AUantic sport vessel Coust a wire told of’the torpedoing and sinking of $000 la ship to the south of them. Later|the trial must end to-day. Confirmation of these reports by | he officers of the hip were lacking. | Delicious, Freshly Roasted t They said the vessel had come a ®|high speed down the New England 2 | Coast and had kept a sharp lookout > | for submarines. ° percent arenes in & Pound Lote i From | WILL RELEASE DUTCH SHIPS. Wholesaler : EEE Direct to You. «| Vessels in at Indian Porta to Not GROUND ¢ ? Carry € t us . + | WASHINGTON, Aum, 16.—Forty Dutch ; ships, totalling approximately 100,000 | » | tons, now idle in the Dutch East Indian ® | ports, are expected to be released to Py + | bring sughr, tin, quinine and other com- ) Washington St. N. Ys * | modities to the United States, as result een Park Place and. Barclay Street, $ |of an informal modus vivendl affected Barclay 9857, Kat, 78 Years ’\|by the War Trade Board th * | Charge d'Affaires de Beaufort, of th ~~ - = | Dutch Legatic | : Tonnage placed at the disposal of the z can Government through — the ent will be sufficient, it is esti- 2 | mated, to import from 50,000 to 100,000 | tons of sugar and also’ much needed + | quantities of tin and quinine, lL Satlor Killed by Third Rall lot wate : Identified. ure Relie? | Hs The sailor killed by the thind rail of Geram Wilpelm, twenty-two years old, FOR INDIGESTION 160 Fifth Avenue. — eonecutor (aniet te Camp, Cane 1»||-==LIBERTY BONDS BOUGHT —; Hurrled. actually im need it ft eed Because’ Thomas J. Cult, prosecutor | PRESIOENT INSTITUTE, 232 E. 68th SUNY. P, M, daily, Sun, & Hold, @ P.M A Collection Rich in Variety The Values Are Most Extraordinary stil PLEDGE ‘O BU wes w.s, s ory 2 SATIN FROCKS in Navy and Black, fringed, embroidered and tai- lored effects. Beaded Navy Georgette 16.50 RINGED AND EMBROIDERED FROCKS of Crepe de Chine or of Satin. Heavily beaded and embroid- ered Frocks of Crepe Georgette. 20.00 RINGED NAVY GEORGETTE FROCKS, handsomely tucked. Beaded and fringed Satin tunic Frocks. Heav- ily beaded Navy Georgette Frocks. 25.00 New Frock of Georgette over Satin, $25.00 ATIN FROCKS beaded in contrasting colors, Navy Georgette tunic Frocks fringed or beaded. Tailored Frocks of Navy Georgette over Satin. 30.00 EW FROCKS of Satin or of Georgette, featuring Beading, Embroidery and Fringe Trimming. 35.00 40.00. 50.00 Navy Serge Frocks In Smart Tailored Effects Also Frocks of Tricotine, Poiret Twill, Duvet de Laine and Velour. 20.00 30.00 50.00 H ' lL H H ks SSA Tee V) New Frock of Georgett over Satin, $0.00 —=——s WI man ere ein MH bb ae A LLL eg WI] ‘ { edie PS AEP MY BE PETTY SPN CONT DakDess . Michael Palsky, on trial In the Federal Court, Brooklyn, on charges of bribery and attempting to defraud the Govern- ment, received a telegram from the War Department to report at Camp Lee, Va., Thursday, Judg Garvin announced that Cuff has + | some of the passengers believed they | Joined the service and will report to an » | saw through a haze the outlines of a | offi J ining camp. Summing up © | sare eutenerite veunel |speeches will be made this afternoon, 2 |the Jerome Avenue subway near the! » | this afte on ied fied as Walte his family Rome being at No. 592 West |¢ — oth Btreet Hie, was stances’ at INV ALIDS’ CHAIRS . xu for th WE MAKE OVER 70 STYLES > |i thew pusinens, under tre name | SARGENT & CO., 12,8 2.t * | of Emil Wilhelm Woollen Company, No. |Southweat Cor, 234 St. & Lexington “Ay.

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