The evening world. Newspaper, March 27, 1919, Page 6

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7 , Dri CAIRO, Tuesday, ae 25.—Gen. B ihe | B. Allenby, conqueror of Palestine, | A Who has been appointed Military Com- | 1 Ge ‘mander of Egypt, arrived here to-day. | was officially announced that the| ee continues to improve and that | @ppoaiton to the British authorities is! dying out. Ri "| William Said to Pla to Plan Leaving Holland Because of Threat- 2 ening Letters. GENEVA, Switzerland, Wednesday, March 26,—Former Emperor William | ‘of Germany, alarmed by the receipt | of threatening letters, intends to! leave Holland and seck refuge tn Switzerland, according to the news- | paper La Swisse. ed Swiss newspapers are printing |many advertisements inserted by! | members of the German and Austrian nobility who are seeking houses in this country at moderate pricea, Covetiaie*-veaien PARIS-TO-ORIENT RAILROAD TO BE OPENED ON MAY 1 Through Trains Cover New Route | OORLINE. f Brovoiat nave id, Black Kid, phe |. Toe. Black Kid with Tip. font Leather Button, Black Fioth “Top. What Makes | | ba You Tired | When you finish a strenu- 4 ous day without an ounce Without Crossing Soil of the | of energy left, when you Central Empires. | feel as though every nerve PARIS, March 27.—The operation of f and muscle was exhausted | through trains between Paris and the | Orient will begin over part of the line t and yet cannot place your hand on, any one particular part—what is the cause ? Jon April 15 and the whole system will | |be inaugurated by May 1, according |to an official statement issued by the | A strict analysis of a | Commission on the International Re- hundred cases would prob- gime of Port, Waterways and Rail- | , , f ways. ably show that a very large The transportation agreement as- per cent. became tired, not from MUSCULAR fatigue, but from NERVE exhaus- tion. And going further, the sures a route to the Orient without passing through territories of the Cen tra) Empires. A train de luxe, t called the “S'mplon-Qirient xp) ’ will be fun between Paris and. the cause of that nerve debility | Grient via Lausanne, Simplon, Milan, would likely be found inthe | Venice, ‘Trieste, Laibach, Agram and | shocks received from pound-. | Vinkovoe. At Vinkovoe the road will ing the delicate foot nerves divide, one branch connecting with into the hard, unyielding | Bucharest, Constance and nal - ri d the other with Belgrade, Constantinople pavement some thousands abd Athens. | of times a day. The train will connect at Paris with the London-Calais-Paris train and at | Milan with a fame ta train for Rome, cushion the feet against the shocks of walking. ‘FRENGH LEADERS DEFEND De Reed “we. iva.s oF mes | I | | Dr. A. Reed Cushion Shoes Former Premiers and Gen Sarrail Testify at Trial of Social- ist’s Slayer. hid et vaday, Ma Jean Jaures, the who was asaa |, Was loyal to JOHN EBBERTS SHOE Co, SOLD ONLY AT | 1372 Broadway, at 37th St. | | 12 Park Place, Woolworth Bldg.) Panis, i Send for Booklet. ; i SO a reset Te NET na lane ee ip ere ee OBINSONS 25-27 West 42) Street NY. A Lavish Display of Easter Fashions For Women and Misses It has been many seasons since we have shown such a diversity of unique styles, rep- resenting so many elegancies and touches of individual charm as are now featured in our Spring Apparel. UULLUAREUEAEATUEGASTEETTOGO REDON IDEERLSUTILAY nl <== ETS us Special, 29.75 Most Favored Novelties in Dolmans—Capes— Wraps A most distinguished collection of styles which lend themselves admirably to any figure. Masterfully fashioned motifs in Sesge, Velour, Tricotine, Evora, Crystal Silvertone and combinations. 19” to 45” OBINSONS 25-27 West 424 Street NY. the trial | orouptea most of the time to-day of|the defender of Maubeuge and Major to] jerard. | this ai d to show d Ge 1, former Allied REPORT IN GENEVA S ed THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, MAROM 27, 1919. of Raoul vines who ts|Gera demand reparation of $20,000,000,000 = and from Germany. ‘Phe question af rep- hat d in Macedonia, nore . » the patriotism of rmy and the three year mil ice law. It is said that Villains be that he shot Jaures Socialist leader was a ~) BY GERMANY MAY consigeration, it being given prece- cause the . aitor. The transport Mercury arrived here to-day with more than 3,000 troopa of ofthe 30th (Old Hickork) Division aboard, and with Brig, Gen. Lawrence Among tht utd Nadi teatified to oyalty of Ja ibot, former Pret mnlet, P ormer Minister of TF exception of inserting the figure. In the beginning the Allies believed the reparation, or “damages,” should PARIS, March 27.—From what can|he between $25,000,000,000 and learned of the discussions of the | $46,000,000,000, but reports of con- mmanding officer of the antry Brigade, 30th Division, among her passengers be in ra, Gen. Refnault, ead Og Sjt¥ Pegasus—the winged steed— stands as the symbol of the greatest quality of the human mind—Imagination. The mind that lacks imagination, ‘that lacks vision stagnates it- self and clogs the onward movement of the world. Im- agination has endowed mod- “ern civilization with all its treasures—material and mental. The imagination of a Pharaoh towered pyramids to the sky. The imagination of Pygma- lion, the “sculptor, gave us the legend Galatea. The im- agination of Michael Angelo gave us the Sistine Chapel and the heroic statue of Moses. The imagination of Da Vinci painted the Last Supper, that of Benvenuto Cellint wrought exquisite pieces of Artistry, that of Dante conceived La Divina Commedia, that of Cervantes gave us the great generous figure of Don Quix- ote and the imagination of Beethoven gave us his im- mortal symphonies, , Imagination, vision, broad conceptions have been allow- ed full flight in the Bonwit Teller & Co. establishment. ee Peace terms—the sessions’ of the plenipotentiaries now belng heid tn secret—it appearg that the Allies will between ditions i'n Germany, gathered trom experts, catised the conviction that the nation did not have the abi! meet such a figure $30,000,000,000 aration is the prinolpal factor under| progress ix being mude much faster, but ne communiques are being given dence over the discussion of fron- | Ut - tiers. It 8 understood that the repa-| j.500 reot Fall Kills Teo Flyers. ‘ ration clause is completed with the] ARCADIA, Fia., Ma . Burns, of Indianapolis, a of Ithaca, N. ¥., were ki strom Field yesterday plane In which they w from a_ heig’ cutive of the i ty to 1 in —— 222 liky of Magen LZOILW a ‘ITs RELATION and APPLICATION “4 TO WOMAN’S DRESS OF TODAY “Each spurs his jaded Pegasus apace.’’—Byron. Imagination took us to Java to learn from the natives the beautiful process of Batik dye- ing, brought to them centur- ies before by the Buddhist missionary priests from India. It took us, likewise, into the Arctic for silver fox and sable; into Persia for broadtail pelts; into Bolivia for chinchillas; into India for camel’s hair wool; into Egypt for costume decoration; into the sands of Peru for the textiles of the ancient Incas. Imagination takes us into the archives of museums, reads for us docu- ments of bygone splendor; it ‘urges us to stimulate our minds with the architecture of the Cathedral of Milan with its four thousand statues; it leads us to collaborate and create new fashions with the couturiers and modistes of Paris; it forms for us a plastic model so that the lines of a tailored suit may be modeled therefrom in lines of fluency and perfect proportion, Imagination is the touchstone of life, the stimulus for growth, the constructive element of affairs. The power for ex- pressing imagination is the power shat gaprite big in this institutional shop of Women’s Fashions, BONWIT TELLER &,CO. The Specially Shop of Oni FIFTH AVENUE AT 38™ STREET

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