The evening world. Newspaper, January 7, 1919, Page 10

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| | *, FOR CONSTIPATION erence ene nee ten eeeneeannanmnansnn i _THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, JANUARY 7, 1919, ore of pastors, 4 many PASTORS DERDE § <°" HOLMES PLAN OF ==. |risive cha rabbis of congregation: and other embracing as} | Jenominations, to whom ques all but four declined { at all on the subject, of them privately ex of @ more or less de- Is used by entire families because it) is purely vegetable, does the work and costs very little. tor. | Dr, Holmes last Sanday told his i congregation that he expected acon |to withdraw bis name from the official | tarian pa en Whr pay bh prices for Liver and un clergymen and enter tof Ur o larger fellowship’ which, “that thas Dr, ¢ into is purely it F oe he said, he #o longed to ahare—a home, and «| Refuse to Take Seriously Latest church wich should be undenomina- long time? |tional, having aa its primary interest [and aim “tie ite commur le will teil you Thourands of old king it for years, and | rvics ft 0 | they have been dri ice of ttfe people of to the subordination of Proposed Religious fn'fise condition in w few eave by 6 be- | Movement. nnectiona with persons of vari- fore bed tim th niy an occa tered communities which sion mary to keep | ———— have No other bond of union than that one of a sing denominational inherit People ip of Dr. Carter's; An attempt made by The Fvening Of 4, ie - heri xpréssed the hope that a B. Ts A) oie nm: | World to obtain opinions of the lead-|many membors 208, le coneragation iva good for | ing cle - would go out with him. After the eer. y thon. are] De cleraymen of the eity wpon the) 7 Ty new members joined the ueeinta have been |non-denominational movement whieh | church Z ute |the Rev. Dr. John Haynes Holmes of] "We have no interest in one t + . oral vamos (Of Man or his movements,” said one |the Chureh of the Mersiah purpones | Or e or le chotle lender, and. with soon to begin, resulted in more laugh-| 4 gmile, added: “I fancy there will be ter than serious consideration. Of ala few Catholic churches left in the Our American Workmen A country worth fighting for is worth working for! The man who drove rivets in a ship or a tank was backing up the boys at the front. It iy not on the battlefields} alone that this war was fought. It was waged be and BH, Tea once tn a while world even after Dr, Holmes has quit the Uniterian organization.” A well known rabbi laughed frank ly at the idea after being axsured tha he would not be publicly {dentitic “Tt looks to me,” he said, “lke a very foolish attempt to overthrow a cond tion of things which has existed fo thousands of yeurs and bas vonstantl grown in usefulness," The Itev. Dr. J. Percival Huge pastor of the ‘Tompkins Avenue ( eregational Church, Brooklyn, seriously: “I don't know what Ir Holmes hae in mind, whether his pur boxe Is a social or @ religious ont After giving respectful attents one of the published reporta o Holmes's Sunday remarks, Dr. Hug’ seid: “My own experience is that the local church is in nowise hampered by. {ts denominational connecuon Indeed, I have found that through de nominational aMiiations it is per mitted to perform much better ser vies. As a Congregational pastor I an sure I can say that auch affiliations 11 no way Limit freedom, but rath serve as an atd to broader helpfulner by reason of its fellowship.” Reader William R. Best of the Firs Church of Christ Scientist said Dr. Holmea's pur Get Rid of That (rong, with Kokman ond up-bullder of om, 800. slats, or from | Fe Hertings theired+bl sod | @atters of the Soth £. | ‘one, cronpes Ne Fee ne Brigade are coming home on the | : : : 7 igi coming Persistent Cough corpuscles are Incking, Build up the blood with an iron-tonic tab-| yuntington, One-third of the 1.701 Btop that weakening, perstatent cough |let, called ‘“Irontic,” first discovered and made by Dr. Pierce. After ra and KG n of sree Sopa ! £ cold, threatening throat or tung atte: |taking this tonic tablet you have good red blood and an active liver, | Ni “Yor National Guard. gales the von, { tnd you can face the enemy « ssfully—whether it is the germs| Aboard the St, Louis is the aceth years succensful bh ear ¥ . | Field t omprisix 45 officer nnd 81.60 tories trom drug. {Of RFip, common cold or spring fever. America needs its strong) Pield Arullery, comprising 43 often: men, and American men need to be strong. Then there is that) wil pe wis, Wash WCKMAN LABORATORY, Philadelphia. | blood-maker and herbal tonic which has borne the recommenda-| \ngton. for demobilization. | | “UN OOTY “8210 UK:NOOAR 20 “IO MON “UNLINCDT GOOF 11%. “PHOM #L eq uw 40 Spd0M ONL F rn hind the lines, in the factory, | in the workshop, on the farm | and in the home as truly as] in the trenches. ‘The pale-| cheeked woman at home as 69 uned and Lenlio | | Due Here | red blood should bring. Per- haps he or she ls had an attack of the Influenza, in consequence the blood lacks 2.000 troops. TI tions of many thousands of people during the past fifty years, It} is called Doctor Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, and ean be had in tablet form at almost all drug stores at 60 cents a vial, It has the right combination of herbal extracts to bring “pe vim, vitality and vigor to you. When you have taken Dr. Pierce's Golden Machine Aircraft T7th * Anoesip if ri ‘sual through veins and arteries, and you will be surprised to find how easy it is to tackle every “job,” every undertaking calling for re- sponsibility or efficiency. The man who takes this tonic tablet has) ical detach iron nerves for hardships, and an interest in “the drive” grips him. | Be sure and ask for Dr. Pierce's. Advt. pany 206. well as the workman in the Going to shop feels that lack of! WasHINGTON, “snap” and energy which) cruisers Huntington and St sailed from Brest on Jan. due at New York J Coast Artillery Corp’ pro Construction ‘ompany 206, and the 7 | whip Virginia, due at Newport Medical Discovery Tablets you will feel the red blood coursing | (he sumo day, with the 7th Anti- | craft Bector, composed of Sist, 62d, Jan. 145—Two Others Virginia. Jan. th Art and the } Other naval vessels announced to ay as returning with troops ar battleship Rhode Island, due at port News Jan, 12, with the Sth Anti Gun Squadron and Marine Casual Com 1—Th mu 2, and a n. 15 with about Coast Artilier ry 53d, S4th and 65th Anti-Aircraft Ba:- | |{ teries, headquarters, supply and med- | |) ents, 106th Trench Mor ' tar Battery, 484th Aero Construction ||} MONDAY’S MILK SUPPLY 1,311,806 Quarts The New York Health Department esiimated yesterday's milk receipts at 1,311,806 quarts, or 75% of the City’s normal requirements. This means that within less than one week New York has actually established a new milk supply. It also demonstrates, what the distributers have repeatedly said, that there is a large surplus in territories where the price is even lower than that offered in New York. For the next five months this surplus will increase daily. This milk strike is not a distributers’ fight. The dealers could have accepted the League price and passed it on to the public, but it is the people's fight. It is a revolt against the arbitrary methods of the League officers, who, claiming a following of 60,000 dairy farmers, have demanded that the people of New York accept the output of these producers, surplus as well as actual needs, at a price higher than that paid during the darkest hours of the war. Much has been said by representatives of the Producers’ League about the gross profit per quart taken by the distributers, Whatever this margin may be, there is one thing the consumer may be sure of. The milk distributers keep books. They can produce records, accurately kept, that show the consumer just how every dollar, every cent, the consumer pays is disbursed. Their records show what the money is spent for and why it is spent, and they can show that during three months past it has cost more to put a bottle of milk in the consumer's home than the con- sumer was asked to pay for it. One might fairly raise the question of efficiency in the man- agement of the distributing companies. No human institution is 100% efficient, but it is true that in all the investigations that have been made into the industry no one to date has been able to show the distributer how he could get a bottle of milk to the consumer at a material saving under the prices charged. The Commissioner of Health took occasion yesterday to ex- press himself as to the character and quality of New York's pres- ent milk supply. The Commissioner assured the people that none but pure, wholesome milk was coming into the City, and he knows. There is no reason or need to bring inferior milk into this market, for good milk is plentiful and further supplies are availabl as arrangements can be made for transportation, NEW YORK MILK CONFERENCE BOARD, Inc. , — =-fen fineomeiratiioowns NORTON IN SANITARIUM sit i Morr son, asking that the armics of opets ‘4 seat al Feurasla be THe BY TRICK, 1S MSEnTES FOR PARTICULARS DENIED REAL TEST OF WILSON aie ee tabeas Corpus Motion eals|Lawyer Blames Un Sam for|Says the President Will Be D: Laas ree peery eae That Czech c Is | Failure of Indicted Col. Hirsch credited if Its People Are Pape reuden " pesca! Under Re | to Appear in Court. Not Freed. eae Cn EMiot 8. Norton of 408 River-| Federal Judge Garvin in Brookiyn A meeting in honor of the Irish Re « is to be conspracy case. cial backers of te Czecho-Slovak| When the name of Col. Harry Jean | Central Opera House, 67th Street and cyyogant voles movement in this try and was | Hirach, indicted for fraud in the xame| Third Avenue, last night, The Rev » heard the personal friend of President Mas-{caxe, was called yesterday to fix «| Peter Macgennis was Chairman | will never pers ryk of that republic in Fivercrest | trial date, Lawyer Stephen Baldwin| A resolution was drafte id a copy mit : anttarium at A scoording to|*ald hin client waseabsent because he a 7 formation &) ipreme|had been sent out of town “by the . : tout corpus writ! Cok Hirsch was indicted for alleged wat Philip fn /Araft through improper inspection of att In t goods went to the Quartermaster’s De- | A S I S “od Mr, Norton ito eo|bartnent. ‘The court expremed eur to the * i be yee | Prise at his absen | is ot 'y Ns)" "Tt reminds me of an_tneldent of | rother, c ®|my boyhood,” sald ent to ® corner of don’t quite grasp na to. Ather sent me to the poat office | pose, I do not care to express © pr, W 1 letter.” | N be Th and opinion until T have more knowleds ivercrest arvin smiled and ordered | um r ous s of tt and have thought It ow an &) \ be take eae unite Bois The Rev. W. Montague Geer, Vica® (ned by 1 Teh oe MRL fof ’ Homers of St. Paul's Chapel, use '\89! Bini ‘ 1, Harwood) the ae 88! YouCan’t Be Too Careful lf You Havea Cold almost je same worda. fler proy 3 AY 1} s. ‘The Rev. Dr. Charles ©. Jefferson. sald Mr > Treat It Promptly With Father John s Medici pastor of the Broadway Taberna< onditl | (Congregational), was quoted by bis perative, | were NEW JUSTICES INSTALLED. | The public should realize the truth) drives out impurities; its stren necretary os having “nothing to #0 peste oF ) nd sl itencued ® oa ely Pirate Concerning the grip epidemic. It is| giving elements rebuild wasted tig ee go ng SRE WAS Wale WOT Vee Sibson, adjourned . elle bi ¥ os oh Makeh again raging violently and the number] Because of the fact that i ing that their answers be publishe!.| motion to to-d . Pre eear ee om curt, Justices, | Of cases reported shows that its vic- d absolftely free from alcoh fhe wemminder made tight of the en sai |nobert Fo Warner and Richard BP, Ly. | tims number thousands, We have lost} ar 18 narcotic drugs in tive Bee DottiOe. AIn & : and Bichard P12" | more people through this disease than Father John's M NE ES aa CONVENTION TO AID MOONEY, | on, took tho bench yesterday. “Mem-| Giving the struggle with ne taken with safety by bers of ig) bar extended hearty Fé) While we drove it back for « nber of the family, Mothers e 600 EX-GUARDSMEN Bourke Cockran to Oven Labor /cevtions to Poth. | lit has returned with full vigor and in] cially should watch the health of a eetine, tn: Chet ene so neith many, florat |S0me Places is even worse than dur-|children at this time, because it COMING ON CRUISER w tt Fee ee Matic, wens Re Tl notable that the present grip epider Sooney 1 jordon Battle, rep-| If you become weak or run down,|is spreading more violently — ‘ was ares Shines you are in danger from the germ| children than the former epidemic. ‘ tus. With 3.000 Men ° Taylor, Phillips. | which is everywhere present. If you] Health authorities agree that avo Two Warships, With 3,000 Me in Be Wa aioe Member, of Justice | catch cold, your danger is even| ance of crowds, plenty of fresh y Dav a cordial gree kavels wero ae A 8-5 nN ae TR Se TE "ROSENWASSER MOTION er as a punishment ioner Murray Hul- i k made his first appear- xX. Former ate ient ADE ~ reper sana sposideat Wits | of It has been sent to T GOLDEN CALLS IRELAND the Irish Progressive League, at the ¢ ‘men of ihe Tain oy | Epidemic Comes Back and Victim nator James A. | greater, because colds quickly develop into grip or pneumonia, i | __In this time of danger Father John's ‘on and a| Medicine should be kept on hand in jends were in/every home. The pure food ingredi- ents of this old fashioned medicine Aenetane | build new strength to fight off the id Welch extended | disease. It is the logical, safe remedy ting on behalf of ; its soothing elements heal presented to botn| the irritated lining of the breathing |passages; its gentle laxative effect proper nourishment and rest, all which, combined with a proper to maintain resisting power, are common-sense methods of fighting the epidemic, The danger is one which cannot overlooked. To guard against it every way possible is a duty in wh! every one must help. Get a bottle her John's Medicine to-day an keep it in the house all the time.--Adi nis “of the 34th Street—New York ©ependable ‘ oer Offering Exceptional Values—to Close Out Tuesda 650.00 Hudson £91 is : .27.50 Hudson Seal Mufis.... .. 9,50 Skunk S¢ see's ocee 1 ONO0 Skunk cee ee eee 35,00 Kolinslys i . . 68.00 Kolinsk) re . 55.00 Beaver S« FOLEY . 35.00 Beaver Mutts een RCHES Brora: vay (1) Mole Scarfs........scc00000+ 55000 Mole Muffs. se eeeeeeeeees 02050 Hudson S ee \iufis and Scarfs Greatly Reduced Fur Coats and Furs Presenting a choice collection of supertor Fur Coats and the smaller Furs which are so essentially a part of the fashionable Winter Costume. Developed from carefully selected pelts, in the season's newest styles, featuring exquisite workmanship. ~ Women’s Fur Coats Austrafian Seal Coats (dyed coney), 45 inches 9 long. Shawl self collar and cuffs. Reduced to 8.00 “tudson Seal (dyed muskrat) Coats, 30 inches, self or Nutria collar and cuffs. Reduced to 175.00 Genuine Mole Coats, 30 inches long, with large shawl collar and cuffs. Reduced to } 195.00 Natural Nutria Coats, 45 inches long; shawl 9 collar, belted model. Reduced to 195.00 Trimmed Hudson Seal Coats (dyed muskrat), 45 in. long; collar, cuffs and 12-inch border 250. 00 of dyed skunk. Reduced to . Trimmed Hudson Seal Coats (dyed muskrat), 45 inches long; collar and cuffs of Beaver or Skunk. Reduced to 295.00 model. Taupe Fox Shawl collar, cuffs and border. Reduced to 325.00 Trimmed Hudson Seal Coats, 45 inches. Collar, cuffs and border of Natural Skunk. Reduced to 395.00 - Genuine Mole Coats, 45 inches long; belted | to 110.00 Nutria Scarfs..............+.-20.00 to 48.00 to 35.00 Nutria Muffs...............-.10.75 to 25.00 to 175.00 Fox Scarfs..........++000+++.-45.00 to 125,00 to 85.00 Fox Muffs.............+++++.-39.75 to 85.00 to 225.00 Mink Scarfs. ...........+.++++.05,00 to 325.00 to 75.00 MMU ag acsis aa se -..55.00 to 75.00 to 58.00 Squirrel Scarfs................29.50 to 75,00 to 55.00 Squirrel Muffs................25.00 to 29.75 to 195.00 | Lynx Scarfs........ sereee 16,50 to 75.00 to 72.50 Lynx Muffs......... 10.50 to 55.00 Natural Nutria Muffs Special 10,75 Dyed Skunk Muffs Special 1 2.50

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