The evening world. Newspaper, October 3, 1918, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

ee ee ee ate eae: is _ MOS HOLDAP OF PEOPLE (Continued from First t ewelde operator who | PILLS, CALOMEL the coai Give Fruit Laxative when cross, bilious, feverish or ' constipated, “California Syrup of Figs” can’t harm tender stom- ach, liver, bowels. Wook back af your childhood days, | Remember the “dose” mother insisted | on—castor oil, calomel, cathartics. ~ANDCASTOR OIL How you hated them; how you fought Inst taking them! ith our children it's different. Mbthers who cling to the old form of |! Bhysic simply don't realize what they | The children’s revolt is well | Their tender little “in-| ” are injured by them. + f your child's stomach, liver and fz, give only deli- yrup of Figs.” Ite ection is positive but gentle. Millions of mothers keep this harmless “fruit | lsaative” handy; they know children love to take it; that .t never fails to lean the liver and bowels and sweet- fem the stomach, and that « teaspoon- fal given to-day saves a sick child to- Ask your druggist for a bottle of “Californian Syrup of Figs,” which hap full directions for babies, child- reo of all ages and for grown-ups plainly on each bottle. Beware of | counterfeits sold here. See that it | Is 'made by “California Fig Syrup | Company.” saith contempt Refuse any other kind | Advt Best for Boys All Wool 16.50 Dest Fifth Ave. FIVE STYLES— rr ee Le velour, featuring the effective for matror wearers. offered in velour and i Back our Millions with Billions—Buy Liberty Bonds Fifth Ave. at 35th St. Est. 1879 Splendid Knicker Suits | Back Pershing’s Men—Buy Bonds Again Established 1879 Sale Friday Women's Tailored Suits Purchased to sell at 45.00 & 49.50 39.00 trimmed, excellent, in large sizes; sizes 34-36-38 only. A convertible collar velour, Two plain-lailored types for the woman who wears well a trim, faultlessly tailored type— You Never Pay More at CONSERVE SUNBEAMS AND KEEP WARM 1 > charged is 60 @ ton that a lease- The average price r ed hy th t wis 1,000 acy sate holds out for a s keep the vace of pr the other companies. Ri paid to the Gir Dr. Garfield sends the following ircular to The Evening World, which it herewith prints: wet a percentage on r prices, bringing coal as $1.44 royalty per ton ROYALTIES HELP KEEP UP COAL PRICES. In one mine the revenue has yield- DAYLIGHT AND AMMUNITION. Prepared for The New York World by the United States Fuel Administration. H HEY cry to us for arma and . a ammunition, Arms and ° ammunition are made of steel! and steol is made by means of coal, Gas and electricity are made of coal too, If we save them put of 1,000 tons Some of these monthly rental the price to the $12,980 per month. jes paid on the smaller $ there will be more coal with coal, suc buckwheat and pea, have which to make arms and am- been 34 cents and 20 cents respectively. munition, Some of these leases ar for example, If pea coa per ton mined, the le pay 1-5 per cent. of the excess for roy- alty. Therefore, the great attempt is to increase the price of coal per ton outside the mines, ‘Thus, if they in- crease the price at the mine they get more royalty, The lafge corporation, as the dictator. has the leaseholders and going,” in common y. This ix the general con- * Jer which leaseholders ac- Daylight will save gas and electricity, Awnings and screens shut out the daylight and should be taken from our windows at once, Heavy cur- tains at windows eat up the light. By removing them we shall contribute coal to the steel furnaces. It is hard to eetly clean is upon “coming us; shall save day saves coal, which makes am- munition, which is the power of a just peace. Small wonder that, with these high jes, and being compelled to on the railroads whose interests also control the coal, the consumer at the end of it is caught in those close clutches, In other cases leases are not grant- ed, but mere permits, and as a gen- — eral thing cven the leaseholders are not permitted to work the wealth of }, coal that is the mo: accessible and the easiest and quickest to mine, An Instance of this grip on veins of coal is shown in the case of Mra, John H. Davis, who as a legates under her husband's will became owner of the '"Sy0 only other plant near it that Ellsworth Colliery. |could readily mine this coal Is that i operated by James B. Neale of the CAN'T TOUCH RICH DEPOSIT) Operated Oy ame ee Weshinaton, | RIGHT UNDER BREAKER. Testimony was presented before the The breakers were built before ahe Senate Committee | of Washington | acquired the property, and rigne une 108" January showing the consumer derneath is'a mammoth bed forty feet Nas had to pay dearly for these high thick, two veins aggregating -aixty royalties that have been permitto: feet, the greatest depth of which was) Sy iirog, De ite ab ihe hot gver 600 feet. And although the Philddeiphia a Reading Company Federal Trade Commission, who had investigated the subject 8 ques- | has no other operation in that vicinity mated the Sunsecte Was ques tioned as follows: Senator Jones—You get the thought | size, they can get that particu- ly of coal, and although there, t offers for permission to mine coal underneath the| breaker, that vein being owned by the Philadelphia and Reading Company, the latter concern would not lease it were exc that I have been trying to emp you fou any tar; investment is so great as to re itself ma- | terially in the o of the output? Mr. Colver—I presume that the best | example of that would take us to! anthracite, I think the most striking example of that would be the owner- ship of large deposits of anthracite coal now held by the Girard estate, | where the royalties charged have been | steadily advanced until they bave| reached a figure that is most decided- | ly reflected in the price that the con- | sumer has to pay for the coal, and the coal is the same coal that it was when the owner charged a much lower royalty, so that necessarily the price to the consumer bas been sent Up very greatly. ROYALTY .18 Tan stool canoe DALAL RO) & Co, See INCREASED AS ' a) PRICE 1S ADVANCED. | These Girard estate leases require as much as 45 cents a ton. At least one of the panies that I think | of in the anthri fleld, which owns | its coal lands in fee only, set upon ts a ton depletion. purse that was before this era of | serutiny of books and all that| came on, but just the same there is| 4a very wide range there, from 5 to 45. | Senator Lodge—May I ask whether that is the Stephen Girard estate? Mr. Colver The difference be- f tween a Best & Co. / boy's suit and any a; other kind is easily | recognized. All- wool and no substi- i tutes are used. #] Linings and .inter- » linings are carefully its own books 5 ¢ or Senator Lodge—The famous man in Philadelphia whose money all goes| to the support of that school or col- | lege? considered. Experts | Mr, Col Yos. What has hap- : : MT pened there hat as the leases} tailor them in our | have expired the tenunte-ting io etne tor—has found himself with # very large investment which cannot be moved. He has his openings, and he has his bi and he has a y large inv . Not to renew 4° would wipe out his invest. | d to save his investment he for an increase in the roy | ust pay. Vardaman—Do you know bout the extent of that Colver? rl said 1 would give it own sanitary work- rooms. This excel- ; lence of tailoring makes these suits wear longer and look better as long as they last—a real war-time economy. | Stxes 7 to 18 yrs. 16.50 , Senator. ardaman—Very well. I did not hear that question asked. Mr. Colver—So that last June, I ime came fort Girard leases, the Trade ¢ merely in the public interest the trustees of the Girard| having no authority in the matter, but, as I say in the public} interest—and asked that before ang] 8 to be sig consideration be} > the pu interest and to| the fact that the oyalties bad gone to very, very high figures, Senator Jones—Then the anthra- cite fields are in comparatively few and Iver—Yes, Vardaman. by the Much of the Girard estate is & Co, at 35th St. ‘olver—Oh, @ very great deal; A very great deal Senator Jones—Is that ing its coal mined, er—T would think so, I would think that that resource 4 veld out of use, but it is Mt a constantly incre: he public, I ¢ 1am just t ed with your r not we had in- high royalties were and without ques nstance that I in answer to a smart Oxford, braid a voulhful new surplice effect in Mr. Colver, ant or ine of the at done tes—any ily as well as slender States | Da- nnessee rand Juni I.=-I believe it is Grand Jui am quite sure it. is-—m! e, tion al | tricotine. a [think that the United States ‘ + feminine ar about to mine coal in: v Fad ‘That last I am not mee | i | THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, ih OMING from every walk of life, the Ameri- can woman is answering the call for service to new lines of duty. But for these new, war-time tasks she says, ‘‘I must have garments that will meet the changed demands put upon them—coats and suits that are sensible in line, durable in fabric, painstaking in workmanship and upstanding in service. ” Long ago the Wooltex designers foresaw that such coats and suits would be the garments event- ually required. This fall they offer the active, busy woman fashionable coats and suits that will meet her present-time needs at $35, $45, $55, $65 and up Wooltex Coats and Suits are sold exclustvely in this city by Frederick Loeser & Co., Inc. The Store that Sells Wooltex Makers of Young Women's Coats and Suits NEW YORK CLEVELAND na nn : ii HN wih * ih j ‘ A wi Changed duties—different clothes” vl ii i Nh ‘A Wool Leak for this Wooltex label — sewn in the collar —it means assured style plus money's worth. | ih i A

Other pages from this issue: