The evening world. Newspaper, October 1, 1918, Page 13

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THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, @CTUSER 1, 1918. HAS BEEN ANNOUNCED embarrassed husband, already loaded with bundies, be compelled to ait hours while his wife studies and cum- pares and matches rolls and bolts of silk of every hue in an effort to find “something serviceable and prescy.”| Next spring she will find just seven| nts that chn be obta ican dyes and that are well by fabric ong the silk colors all but the league blue are on the standard color The league biue is to be * — For Indigestion, Gas and Acidity Great stuff! S) fine! When your meals sour and COLORS OF SPRING STYLES IN WAISTS ROMANCE OF BAKER, AND NIN Soon Fresh Every Day! | Drink a giase of real hot water before breakfast to wash Stomach feels poilu bi ‘Look and Feel Clean, Sweet and hich to choose, called admirably ada ‘ Ps ‘ t poli COO ete TK, and seven otters|#ik&. ‘The bisque is a very light tan, turn into acid and gases; when ow fet isons. if she wants cotton, There wiil be| like slightly browned icing; the silver a & Brhy O08 the unser i Mare your food lays like lead refusing silks a the waist leftovers from dinette Engagement of Athlete-Aviator Only Seven Selections Each in Life is not wereiy to live, but to ready made up, but the hues namod| rose. T tton colors are described to digest—then you realize the d / i above will be THE ones. Word ‘ias| by thelr na and all bear the pre- . 3, " puny elt fat fice et oy and Young Social Leader Cotton and Silk, Decree | stove wilt Png ayerm the manutes:|fix “league” to show. thelr origia magic of Pape's Diapepsin. orious condition to attain, and yet Announced Here. of Manufacturers. turers, the button and thread maker y are the Arst colors that have | and ail the ailled concerns that sup-|been adopted by cotton manufac. Relief is instant! No waiting! t Ow very eusy it is if on ‘i é ply this, that and the other for tne! (urers. . adopt the morning inside bath, “ WAR TIME WAIST, COLORS, | woma' rdrobe. The committee that chose the ailk Sick, sour, upset stomachs are i. Folks who are accustomed to feel| The war, coloring as it does every In Silk. In_ Cotton, The new colors wore announced to- | colors was composed of Eugene Solo- t in order at once. Truly! vo 1 when they phabe of ite has’ changed: the plain, ivery. Burt. day by M. Mosessobn, executive di-|mon, J. Sherr, Samuel A. Lerner, A | yaa : LAs stuffy from a ¢o i Flesh Orchid, rector of the United Waist League of fF Ramsey, Alfred Stern, Alfred Beer, Cc little—Any di breath, acid everyday, five-year friendship of Miss Bisque Lavender, America, af association of manufac: | }tenry Froehlich and Larry J. Margu- oes 80 . 7 7 can, el an fresh @ ‘ 7 Nive Blue. turers which is endeavoring to con-|}ies, ‘The Cotton Color Committee war store. See Uuening the slaices of tee Mimi Scott, society patent it ay Fines. Flesh. gerve all along the line, from, manu: | Arthur Rosenthal, Lous Adier, § pur ening the sluices of the system | young tender, and “Hobey” Baker, Savy. Green. acturer to consumer, The standard | fornatein, Monroe Froehlich," Sol P. 9 Di i ba | ae 'of the interne! polseeens euge] Aigrionn ‘Avintse and teimnét: college ‘Leaguc blue. Ivory. white, “color ‘card used by a, great, many | Gross, Leo Well and J. Wechsler. Al UPSET? apes apepsin ‘ashion, accustomed to 1 it matter, Everyone, hould, Dame athlete, into a sparkling romance. ‘The announcement of their engage: | ment waa made by Miss Scott's grandmother, Mrs. George 8. Scott of |, New York and Newport, after she re- ceived a letter from her granddaugh- ter Saturday. The marriage, the let- ter will not take place until after the war, and will be held in| Nuss whether ailing, otek or each morning, before ase OF real hot ith a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it to wash from the Stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels the | previo. day's indigestible waste, four bie and poisonous toxida, The action of hot water and limestone phosphate on an empty stomach is wonderfully invigorating. If cleans| America. In the meanwhile Miss) MIM e out all the sour fermentatiods, gases,| scott will continuo nursing in a| 267% waste and acidity and gives 0n€ &| French hospital jlendid appetite for breakfast. ‘ The millones oF people whe: ‘The romance began, and continu bothered with constipation, bilions| 1" gthe short recesses that the war spells, stomach trouble, rheumatism;| pofmits, in the Parts home of Capt, e others who have sallow skins, blood| J. T. McGrew, U. 8. N, Capt. Me- Aisorders and sickly complexions are Purged to get a quarter pound of lime- Satone phosphate from the drug store which will cost very little, but sufficient to make anyone «@ nounced crank on the subject Pin: Rarnal sanitation.—Adet Grew is an uncle of Miss Scott, and on her first rest poriod after arriving in France last fall sho visited at his home, Thera she renowed her fficnd- ship with Lieut. Baker, Baker, while always pictured with! @ hockey stick or a football in his “| hand, comes of the socially elect, and his time in New York was spent in| that sot. Miss Scott met him five years ago, when she was a debutante. They became good friends, but no one {imagined a romance was developing Baker, when Miss Scott mot him In France, was officially credited with having destroyed two German planes lid was a very handsome and a very daring warrior, Theroafter the couple spent all their furloughs at Capt. Me- Grow's home, and the furloughs hap- pened to come at the same time Mise Sevtt sailed for France November to Join Mrs, Noe Daly's Some facts about tt and how to prevent its spread {Expert Dentistry PANISH”’ INFLUENZA is a serious matter, and something of a mystery. It probably origi- nated in the ranks of the German Army and in prison camps. It no doubt spread from there southward through Spain and northward into Holland, France, England and the Scandinavian countries. America was free from it until August 12th, when a Norwegian steamer arrived at an Atlantic port, having had over 200 cases on the voyage. Whether this miarks the entry of the epidemic or not, the fact remains that ‘‘Spanish’’ Influenza is here and is a serious menace, much Why Suffer with decayed, unsightly teeth? 1 can festore your mouth to a healthy and nermal con- portion at small cost. a Special in Extraction I extracted absolutely Painless aching, and Comtesse do he Comte of PD son of Alfred He was gra and ted a be t . 0 Princeton in ter he haa become . ra thetic or thy Hospital Unit after she had taken a pnius as i fee ee ease Tike the familiar Grippe. Supesor crown and bridge work, | {Ve month's course in nursing at the the American Aviation Service soon {Plates thet fit. Fillings that last. Women's Hosp Mrs. Daly's bos- after the outbreak of the war and has pital is under the Wrench Governrient) been in 8 The disease is not alarming in itself if proper precautions are taken. But without care, the high fever and the likelihood of pneumonia to follow make it extremely dangerous. The Surgeon-General of the Army recently issued the following rules by which the public may guard against the spread of this subtle enemy: Guaranteed Work. N ocerate Prices) 4 is situated near the battle line, : | Miss Scott 1s ono of the most pop- |ular members of the social set, Sh ow jy only twenty-two years old, pretty id acce yhed. She is an “out- DEN KES 1 and accomplished. door’ girl and is an expert satior, lawimmer and horsewoman, She hy 115 Flatbush Ave., cor, Hanson PL, Opp, Ath Aves 16 FAMILIES ROUTED BY A TENEMENT BLAZE Police and Firemen Aid Escape When Fire Bars Them From Stairways. fled down fire es- capes this morning when cut off by @ blaze In the five story tenement at No, 302 East Elghty-elghth Michael Keeney, eighty-four years old, whose weight Is close to 200 pound: was carried from the top floor by Pa. ij 1D i] Ta Sure to Get the Bklyn. ation, alms been active In patriotic work since | the beginning of the war. | Two years ago sho was said to | Ihave buen engaxed to William Wie a wealthy English stock broker, although she denied knowledge of it Miss Scott is the only child of the late Mr. and Mrs. orge Isham Beott Her father died suddenly October, 1915, In his rooms in tho do ‘Club at Tuxedo, Her mother | was Misy Joatine de Gauville, daugh- 39 to U8, tight Place. Rules to Avoid Respiratory Diseases (By the Surgeon General of the U. S. Army) Avoid needless crowding—influemza is a crowd disease. Smother your cough and sneezes—others do not want the germs which you would throw away. . Your nose, not your mouth, was made to breathe throwgh—get the habit. Sixteen fam \Sunday World “Wants” Work Monday Wonders. Iceman Henry Mehl. ‘The soliceman, Remember the three C’s—a clean mouth, clean shin, and clean clothes. ho a 1 the fire, w. ble ty A | get up the at \ iA Bikes ae ane Try to keep cool when you walk and warm when you ride and sleep. | of the building, let down ihe tower fire Open the windows—always at home at night; at the office when practicable. « lade nd gave the al t " Praeaars H Reece Ne the tenania Sr We baila” teachan Food will win the war if you give it a chance—help by choosing and ns saved his fox terrier that had chewing your food well. Yes, cut down to the point ts best to w nd his wife A Your fate may be in your own hands—wash your hands before eating. \ by barking, ‘They 1 the warning x 5 eae i where they create a sensation. § unti Ment arriv teas x . Don't let the waste products of digestion accumulate—drink a glass or We are forced to unload quickly ders aided In getting the tenants out. two of water on getting up. vy had beer at aout 3 fire star jas $10,000, NEWS | BREVITIES, t tanks that helped ice were told @ strange man een going Into the hatlway 0 o'clock, shortly befora the Don’t use a napkin, towel, spoon, fork, glass, er cup which has been used by another person and not washed. Avoid tight clothes, tight shoes, tight gloves—seek to make nature your ally not your prisoner. When the air is pure breathe all of it you can—breathe deeply. before the new war tax of $8 a yallon on every gallon in our it- mense stock of WINES | One of the whip to look into business and social con- ditions of Americ ar time, ‘They ‘of the Committee on Public LIQUORS ———c | Remember the Three C’s must be paid in cash. This is the public's great opportunity, Act before the tax triples the cost of all liquors, Act before Act before the stock is cleared BIG SAVINGS BRANDIES Yhureh 18 busy on a Including the raise d, which rules : Clean Clothes which are given in these Clean Skins bone dry Prohibition is a fact out. Act and WiTll BUY EO\DS ‘ue HIGH GRADE WHISKIES Ga nmittee to in the Univers}, ry H sity Place chape The Rev. Dudley Oliver Osterhold of empie, Manhattan Avenue Knocked Clean Mouths Pi arrived, A petition for settlement of the estate i formerly United t Rio de} Rranay, hor Ap: Ginger & Brandy “ilo For 1 Years We Have Guaranteed Hellsfaction or Refande) Money, rieht to Imit quantities, ree Delivery on #10 an 820 dere if not paid ta advance, und returned. ““"*"°* ATORE OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 8 P.M Hl. 25 Sa ESTABLISHED SINCE 1887 108 Eighth Ave. at 15th St. Out of the bigh rent distriét, but easily reached by subway, surface or L lines, ‘Telephone Chelsen 2468-2400, al 1 «a passenger on the | r Cyclops and me has been notified officlaily of his death, Port Rush, he 1 rt vice prestdent of the| A an Tobacco Company, has re- gned as director of the Department | of Foreign Red Cross to| jotor t serv Albert H, ¢ Upper Mont » named to succeed him in Keg’ Cross work Hin, orge W SPECIAL BARGAINS BABY ©. ARRIAGES CRANDALL'S at factory in Man 4 ©an be left at any of Advertising Axenc directly to, The World, Not simply the usual matter-of-fact brushing of the teeth, but thorough cleanliress. Gargle the throat with warm water and salt, or a little Colgate’s Ribbon Dental Cream dissolved in water. Brush the teeth, gums, and tongue care- fully morning, noon and night with Ribbon Dental Cream. It is not a cure-all—but it is a safe, sane, efficient dentifrice and will help pre- vent infection by keeping your mouth clean The present crisis emphasizes the good sense of a recent action by the National Dental Association who wrote to the War Industries Board as follows: “In this day of recognition of the value of preven. tive medicine, it is accepted by dentistry, medi- cine, amd boards of health, that a clean mouth is one of the essentials to prevent the carrying of con- tagious disease. To preserve a proper sanitary con- dition of the mouth, the use of a suitable brush and dentifrice is required. * See that your mouth is clean, Clean, CLEAN. And that means more than your usual habit in these days of epidemic. A thorough bath once a day is the least you should take, Use warm water if possible, and plenty of soap. Colgate’s Coleo Soap serves the purpose splendidly—a soap that is made entirely of vegetable oils. It lathers freely in hard or soft, hot or cold water and cleans thoroughly. If you haven't Coleo, until you can get it, use any good soap —and once again, use plenty of it. Soap costs less than medicine, as As astill further precaution place a litle Euca- lyptol Vaseline in each nostril, morning, noon, and night, and rub the bridge of the nose with it when you go to bed, A clean body throws off infection better than one less clean—see that yours is super-clean. Schoo! Principals, Teachers, and Employers of Labor may secur enlarged py thus Health None Not only neat, tidy and brushed—but CLEAN. Change your underwear as often as possible, It may mean more laundry bills for a while but it may be the means of preventing infection, Have your outer garments brushed and aired thoroughly every day. Change them, too; wear old clothes if necessary so that the same suit, coat or dress is not worn every day. This some trouble but it may prevent the carrying o! the infection into your home or to other people. And along with clean clothes, clean shims, clean mouths for yourself and your family, observe the other simple rules given above. Start practicing these rules before you begin te ‘feel back-achy,"’ to sneeze, to yay to feel generally run down, The ounce of prevention is still worth the pound of cure. But if you do suspect that the germ has got into you, do not rely on these measures. Go to bed at of and call your Doctor to avoid a bad fever possible pneumonia.

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