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——————— ee ee ee a ee ' ¢here may be none at all for the aver- i h t ¥ due to come to the market es frest killed. Even eoldiers in the front line are | w, to have turkey this year. More than 1,000,000 pounds were bought this FIGHTING MEN ONLY Uncle Sam Buys Up the “Bird” Supply and Public Must ‘ake Other Fowl. HOT SPRINGS, Va., Oct. 1 t all for the pub- ill have to take cold storage turke: le, and consume' thelr chance getting fresh killed birds when they appear about a week be- Purkey will be scarce this Thanksgtv-| fore Thankegiving. It is likely the Ing and Christmas for all except soldiers | Government will fix the price to balk ‘and sailors, Reports to-day Indicated the fiteers, tis su falling over an embankment. He has been here a_ week, every afternoon. ed asa patriots duty Loe f 4 to forego turkey” an: age tome table, for Uncle Sam has! {hn cine our men in uniform, and turkeys| gine on ‘chickens, duck and gees in- which are Yetoad. who r d in @ creek. ona Shoe Means Standard of Merit A R 34m St. New York Women’s Fall and Winter | Low and High Shoes At Prices to Fit Any Size Purse ought all the cold ‘and the greater part of th “Cammeyer Stamped on a Shoe Means Standard of Merit”, OW well this slogan has been lived up to for over 55 years! Our success H has been brought about by trying to please everybody. It is a certainty that after a person leaves our shop with a pair of new shoes that we can place her. permanently on our list of customers—because we know “they come back.” PUMPS OXFORDS . §.50 to 10.00 | 6.00 to 9.50 Our Hosiery Departmen features a fine quality Silk Hose in all shades. Special 1.55 BOOTS 6.00 to 12.00 Last 2 Days to BUY LIBERTY BONDS Last 2 Days to BUY LIBERTY BONDS SPATS—In All the Newest Styles and Latest Shades—$2.00 to $5.00 HENRY W. SAVAGE HURT. for the navy alone. There will be nolqw, gavage, New York theatrical man- ager, 1s Inid up at the Commi House with a badly cut forehead a fractured rib, the result of his horse His in- juries aro anid not to be serious. Yesterday on the ad, four miles up, his horse embankment, throw- to ‘the, bot~ The horse BRONX 1S SHORT , 900,000 TONS OF Under Figures Set by Fuel Administrator. coal. With a maximum delivery of | 2,600 tons @ day during what the Puet | | Administration had set aside as “Coal | | Week,” the Bronx looks forward to a| shivery winter, worse by far than the last, and @ probable deficit of 500,000 tons in actual requirements, | “Throughout the summer months,” said John 8S, Bush, a Bronx coal dealer, “we wero advised to sit tight and wait. We were told that the New England States where huge quanti- ties of munitions were being manu- factured needed the coal. “Karly this month ‘al SAGE TEA BEAUTIFIES AND DARKENS ‘HAIR Don't Stay Gray! It Darkens Naturally That No- body Can Tell. You can turn gray, faded hair beaw- tifully dark and lustrous almost over night if you'll get a bottle of “Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Compound” at any drug store. Millions of bottles of this old famous Sage Tea Recipe, improved by the addition of other ingredients, are sold annually, says @ well-known druggist here, because it darkens the hair so naturally and evenly that no one can tell it has been applied. Those whose hair is turning gray or shipments | becoming faded have a surprise await- ing them, because after one or two applications the gray hair vanishes and your locks become Iwxuriantly dark and beautifal. This is the age of youth. Gray- haired, unattractive folks aren't wanted around, so get busy with Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound to-night and you'll be delighted with your dark, handsome hair and your youthfal appearance within a few days. This preparation ts a toflet requisite and is not intended for the cure, miti- gation or prevention of disease.— Advt. -OMLFORWINTER = Will Be Even 125,000 Tons} The Bronx is in a sad plight for| oi) were supposed to have been directed |to New York and the Administration if to 19 as ‘Coal Week. et aside Oct | We were told there would be an ava- |lanche of coal, we were to be simply swamped in fuel. Em |I've received oniy one boat , some- |thing like 400 tons, and I have on hand orders fo 00 tons, which I cannot ng World reporter made mong the biggest of the e coal dealers in the jay. In not one plac Nn expression ave appealed to the ‘Trade, which will pro- “The fucl heads,” said Albert Gold- man, Chairman of <he Board of Trade Committeg, “granted the Bronx 850,000 tons of coal for use up to March, 1919, This was based upon the amount aised in 1916, Since then the county has grown practically 150,000 in pop- ulation, to say nothing of the new manufactories and industries which have located here, Our actual needs as estimated by the coal dealers here ar 28,000 tons. ‘© have thus far received only .000 tons of coal in the Bronx. That aves us & shortage, under the esti- mate of the fuel heads, of 600,000 tons. If thoy maintain the maximum capacity which has been in effect dur- ing this ‘coal week’—something like 2,500 tons a day—they will only suc- ceed in shipping 375,000 tons into the Bronx by March of next year. “That will be 125,000 tons under their estimate of our needs as fixed by the fuel heads and 603,000 tons under our actual requirements. Thess facts, taken into consideration with The Evening World's recent exposure of conditions at the mines, show clear- ly that there is something wrong. There must be specdy action if the Bronx is to be saved from another winter of nuffering.” bal a ROEBLING LEFT $40,000,000. Bulk of Hage Vetate In Bequethed to Two Daughters, TRENTON, N. J., Oct. 18.—Mra. Richard McCall Cadwalader Jr. and Mrs. Sargeant Tyson Jr., both of Philadel- phia, aru left approximately the entire estate of $40,000,000 of their father, Charles G. Roebling, of the John A. Roebling Sons Company, whose will was admitted to probate here. He left $20,000 each to his daughter's husbands and $10,000 to be distributed among the Roebling household servants. He explained he left no charitable be- quests because he contributed gener- ously during his life. eee een TOD SLOAN ROBBED IN HOTEL Colored Boy Is Said to Confe.» Theft of Ex-Jockey’s Watch. Tod Sloan, for many years leading Jockey on the American and Lnglish turf, reported to the West 30th Street Folice Station last night that he had W. Cooke, State Fuel | been robbed of @ valuable watch and chain }W treet Murray and Sullivan ar- ter You Cannot be a oman and Happy “eagles, | Killed as @ BLOOMIN' t. 18.—Con- | gressman John A. Sterling of this city was killed in an autom 5 more were Bloomington to Pontiac the accident happened, Mrs. Whitmore was driving and in making a }turn ran off an embankment six or seven feet deep. The car turned over and struck Mr, Sterling on the head, killing him. m | When SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK MONDAY MORNING WONDERS | | B. Altman & Cn. MADISON AVENUE « FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK Thirty-fourth Street Thirty-fifth Street Men’s Laced Calfskin Shoes (in black, mahogany and tan) Sera -é cht are now om sale Me at the specially reduced price of $7.50 per pair These Shoes are genuinely all-leather throughout, and have heretofore been good sellers in regular stock, marked at much higher prices. The Sale is being held in the Men’s Shoe Department, on the Sixth Floor. The shortage in our operating force due to SPANISH INFLUENZA is even more . ft was yesterday, ~ calls that cannot be avoided. Don’t —- _ Unless It Telephone , | Is Absolutely Necessary A serious than To meet the emergency we must again ask you to refrain from using the telephone except for You helped relieve the situation in scme degree by your response to our appeals Wednesday and Thursday. : The emergency has not passed. Cards are being sent to every telephone subscriber urging the voluntary restriction of calls. Please put ‘ one of these cards near your telephone and do not allow any call to be made if it cari possibly be avoided Will you please make this a personal matter for yourself, your family, and your employees, and DO NOT TELEPHONE UNLESS IT IS ABSOLUTELY NECESSARY