The evening world. Newspaper, May 7, 1919, Page 16

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With tomate sauce Big Reduction In Price. Nourishment of Meat at one- er ght and Heat Places Than By Zoe Beckley. Tf you are a New York soldier do pair of a job. Go straight to e-employment Bureau of New ‘Sunday | World Wants : Work Monday Wondess not the Carry Yourself Erect BY WEARING | PROFESSOR CHARLES MUNTER’S LACING ¥ CORSET Different From Any Other Corset It gives you the proper poise— and compels deep breathing. No more sunken chest No more hollow necks No more protruding abdomen No More Lacing Just draw the belt and your corset is properly adjusted. On or off in an instant, a marvel of simplicity. Models for every type figure, Boery Nulife Corset guaran- teed to do all we claim for it or money will be cheerfully refundea, corsetieres or—send us pe 1 EY IONIAN SRR? NEW SOLDIERS’ JOB BUREAU FITS ALL UNIFORMED MEN INTO RIGHT KIND OF WORK Merchants’ Association Office Takes Care of All Comers—Many Happy in Better They Asked. York City for Soldiers, Saflors and Marines in the Hallénbeck Building, No. 505 Pearl Street, corner of Park. (Phone Worth 9260.) This is a gen- eral clearing house for jobs and was initiated at the end of April by the Merchants’ Association at the request of the War Department and U. 8. Chamber of Commerce. It co-oper- ates with all the welfare onganiza- tions, employment services and em- ployers’ associations in the city. Here is a heartening sample of re- sults shown in the bureau's first five days of existence: Jobs offo + 5,257 “Gets-It” Peels [My Corns Off! Any Corn or Callus Comes off Peace- « fully, Painlessly. Never Fails. lente to get rid of mn corn to. Tt" way, You spend 9 or % weconde putting on 2 of 3 drops of “Gete-It,"" about aa simple as putting on ‘a almont & lus the (f “Gete-It” eases pain. Your corn shrinks, dies, loosens from the tos. You prel the sorm palntessly, (rom your toe in one Complete piece. That's Nothing Get peace. money-back nly sure way, tet) but Sririfle at any eae store, Mita by Tawronce & Ce. Gnicawer TIl—-Aavi. a EVER before have the American people had such an INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY as Victory Notes. ABSOLUTE SAFETY OF PRINCIPAL — every penny paid back years, Interest—434%, the equiv- alent of over 5% considering tax exemption. in four SE ae See Victory Notes are a good in- vestment for banks and wealth. They are a good investment for YOU. But banks and wealth are given no big amounts until your subscription up t6 $10,000 is satisfied. So subscribe before the books close on May 10th. et a As investment specialists we recommend Victory Notes for present savings and as a foundation on which to build 4 GOVERNMENT LOAN ORGANIZATION Second Federal Reserve District Liberty Loan Committer, 120 Broadway, New York Victory Notes Boyn who have registered Boys pent to jobs Boys who reported back they had got jobs Approximate estimate of boys who got jobs.. 580 This shows the doings at the bu- reau only up to Saturday, May 8. ‘There have been days #ince when the placement in jobs reached 100 per cent. Evety chap who askéd was fitted into a position, The surplas on unfilled places on May 8, including those to which men were sent, but on which the bureau received no mub- sequent report of atocess, is 2,889. More men are needed to fill post- tions of farm hands and gardeners, carpenters, painters and tuilding trade helpers, glass ahd stone work- ers, stenographers and typsits, gar- ment and textile workers, laborers, skilled woodsmen, auto mechanics and garage helpers, machinists, tool and die makers, machine hands and #peicalists, handy men in all trades, printers and-pressmen, feeders and bindery workers, paper box and bag workers, riveters, shippers, calkers, reamers, fitters and other shipbulld- ing hands, chauffeurs and auto truck drtvers, teamsters, stablemen and de- liverymen, bandsmen, shipping and stook clerks, packers, cabinetmakers, furniture finishers, machine wood- wotkers, porters, watchmen and guards. (Mon please apply). Morte opportunities are needed for Pipefitters and plumbers, casual workers, bookkeepers, accountants and cashiers, office clerks and sales- men. (Employers please speak up.) ‘The man who does know what he wants will find fourteen departments, including a “Domestic and Personal” and a “Miscellaneous” section, trom ou peel it] YOU which to choose the most likel¥ one. It sometimes happens that all the openings in a certain line have been filled, as in the case of Jimmie. Jimmie was an electrical welder and seemed to know his business. But the last electrical welder’s job had been grabbed not ten minutes before. “Maybe you can do something else?” suggested the officer, seeing how orestfallen Jimie looked. “Auto mechanician? Dynamo tender? Press operator?” he hopefully mentioned, running a finger down the list of Wanteds, But Jimmie shook a disap- re, pointed head, “Nope,” said he. ,'Guess you haven't 2 anything for me. All I can do outside of welding is play the organ.” “Gee!” ejaculated the officer. ‘If can really play the organ I've got just the place for you.” “Ob, I can play it good, all right,” grinned Jimmie, “but I didn’t like to ‘Eg. | Mention it; it sounds so funny,” The officer got on the telephone future savings. Your purchase will at once serve your country, protect your dependents and benefit yourself. At the same time you will be your present Government in- vestments, and in addition you will protect future prosperity from the blight of taxation. Good sense and pride demand Victory Notes for every bank account. Members of the New York Stock Exchange and their clients subscribed for million of the previous War Loans. We, therefore, can in good faith recommend the pur- chase of Victory Notes as the best Government offering. Opportunity passes on next Saturday. Subscribe Now! This space contributed to Help Finish the Job by NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE insuring excessive patriotic 900 +601, 287 | + 983) MOH HE BI In twelve iminutes Jimmie was on th subway headed for a moving pic- ture theater. In forty-five minutes more the phone on the officer's dak was jingling wi Jimmie’s thanks and to say he was doing fine with the organ and he might decide not to go back to welding even if a job opened up. A fellow came in who had been slightly gassed—not enough for the | ca) ‘Government's vocational re-training, but enough to make a dusty job yn- safe for his wheezy lungs. He had been a weaver. He went out of the Bureau a stock clerk in a dustiess cloth house and he must have made good fot he came in the other day with his weekly wago of $% and a large, toothful smile reaching south by east. Bill was tremendousty buge and husky but didn’t know what he want- 6d as a jifework. He could not read ho write, tecauses he had been “raised” in the mountains above the schoothouse timber line. Finally the officers dug out @ firm whe wanted husky laborers at $6 a day, end as none could deny Bill's huskiness, he was sent with neatness and despatch. He reported back, “I am took,” 80 you see— A contrast to ,Bill in some ways was a postgraduate college man who wanter a berth as @ construction en- gineer. Before luncheon he had signed Henry Jones on the dotted line and was figuring whether to bulld a bungalow or rent one fur- nished. Another man who got his wish in short order was a physicjan in worn the overseas service had planted 4 desire to renounce private practice and treat “big masses of men.” A South American mining company had just sent word they wanted a resi- dent doctor. The soldier was put in touch and now he is on the high seas, headed south. A chance as “contract salesman” for an electrical equipment house came to the Bureau, but before it had got cold. was seized by a returned officer. Satisfaction reported by both contracting parti Mike strolled if, too, the other 1. day. He described himself as having been in the U. 8, Army four years, and was without a relative in the world. He was not over-keen for labor, having jgned hig twenty- dollar-a-month allotment to himself “to keep from spending it”—anyhow that’s how he put it. “You see I got nearly a thousand dollars,” he explained, “but I might consider that $280.0 day job you wero talking about.” He got it, and you my yet hear of him as a famous tallat. ‘here are several good-paying va- cancies now waiting at the Bureau; one for @ technical man at $3,600, and A number at from #45 to $60 a week. Ten-dollar dishwashers are needed. And ad managers at $10,000—of you know how. BAUM, ‘MAKER OF FAIRIES,’ DIES OF HEART DISEASE Author of “Wizard of Oz” and Other Plays and Books, Passes Away at Los Angeles, LOS ANGELES, May 7.—1L. Frank Baum, sometimes called “the maker of fairies,” author of “The Wizard of Os" and many other plays and books, ts dead of heart disease at his home here, He was born in Chittenango, N. Y., F LEMON WUICE FOR FRECKLES Girls! Make beauty lotion for a few cents—Try it! Squeeze the juice of two lemons into a bottle containing three ounces of orchard white, shake well, and you have a quarter pint of the best freckle and tan lotion and ng! gree beau- tifier at very, very small cost. Your grocer has the lemons and any drug store or toilet counter will sup- ply three ounces of orchard white for @ few cents. Massage this sweetly fragrant lotion into the face, neck, arms and hands each day and see how freckles and blemishes disappear and how clear, soft and rosy white the skin becomes, Yes! It is harm- less and never irritates.—Advt. May 15, 1856, and is survived by a widow and four children. lishing ip New York the only chi theatre In the eoun He of “fairylogues’ t year n Theatre. Among hia o The Road to Os, The Man, Ozma of Oz, Queen Zizi The Woggle Bug, Father Goo Master, Kay, The, Enchanted Woodman and The teh of o Is Frank Baum was a Chicago writer |™ hen he became famous with his Winard of Os." He made a trip over the Egyptian and Arabian deserts to get local color for some of his stori and p He had,a peciect in 1908 for estab- B Established 1963 9 * ealiedile Credit Easy Payments Every Article Marked in Plain Figures Foursplece Perigd Bed fteom Bultee in jolden Oak, homany. rang: $95 to 5260 Ten: piece Period Dining in Jacobean, Golden Ow Welnus and ee" $125 t 1350 Temdiees deliveries made by our own motor trucks, joom Suites American ne Listen, New York! Touraine Almond Bars are chock-full of almonds— the freshest, best-grade almonds. ge. The chocolate. is made the real French way—that rich, crispy kind the French are so famous for. Touraine Almond Bars don’t cost you one cent more than the ordinary kind. They come in the Yellow Packages. My automatic mixer, thermo moulder and cooler are all-in-one. With it, &% costs me less to put 50% more almonds in my Touraine Bar than it does the fel- low who s-l-o-w-l-y drops them in. MADE THE REAL J7rench wes ITS IN THE YELLOW PACKAGE ae a F, That machine and the process belong to me. BE If you ever eat one of my Touraine Bars you are my pere manent customer, Harry B. Duane, President # THE TOURAINE COMPANY |

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