The evening world. Newspaper, July 12, 1919, Page 5

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$50,000,000 FOND SOUGHT TO MAKE NEW YORK GREATEST than Kaufman, « » Agsiatant Dis Biatsfet at President oft tion, Not a bit of this: splendid food is wasted~it's eat- able to the last atom. “There's a Reason'for GrapeNuts Leaders “of Profession An- New School and Hospital to Be} 1, it became in A campaign for $50,000,000 to make New York the greatest medical cen- tre in the world will be bégun at once. An organization to bring this about has already been formed and now 49 functioning. Wendell C. Phillips, one of the best known specialists in the city, and many other r among the officers. CENTRE IN WORLD The organization is known as the es Now York Association for the Ad- vancement of Medical Education and Nounce Plans for Big Medical Science, with headquarters, Campaign. - Medicine. It intends Iter on to erect there the greatest medica} schooi and TO IMPROVE TEAGHING. | critat in tue world, ‘The movement Was started on April jown to-day, at @ meeting in the Academy of Medicine. Every development was kept secret Built—Dr. W. C. Phillips’ in Charge. until the organization was completely formed, officers selected, a constitu- agreed upon. The constitution was having been withheld in order that certain final corrections could be made. Besides Dr. Phillips the officers are: First Vice Président, Dr. George D. Stewart, President of the New York Academy of Medicine and General Sur- It is headed by Dr. ‘ed medical men are ‘ATE AT AUCTION. ESTATE AT AUCTION. | REAL ESTATE AT AUCTION, Like a Bolt froma Clear Sky ! On Thursday I was suddenly called upon to cy at auction 836 lots, in addition to the 164 lots previously announced to be sold at Long Beach on soupy, July 19th. This makes a total of 1,000 Long Beach lots which are to be sold as a result of a last minute decision to dispose of the property of the Louis Bossert Estate Otto Huber Estate THERE IS ONLY ONE and the Pennsylvania-Long Beach Realty Co., the Estate of Countess Gaston d’Arschot and a large holdin; iano pany, all of which were Long Beach pioneers who when Long Beach was first laid out. Daca oon New York's most popular and most accessible ocean front resort and residential colony. ATLANTIC OCEAN THERE IS ONLY ONE South Shore of Long Island THERE IS ONLY ONE LONG BEACH Absolute Auction Sale 1,000 Improved Lots fronting directly On the Atlantic Ocean and Boardwalk SATURDAY, JULY 19th and thereafter on continuing days Immense Sacrifices Are Involved Liberal Terms Visit Long Beach To-day Frequent Ele from Penn, Statio and Flatbu Send for Bookmap. Express Trains d St. and 7th Ave., e., Brooklyn. Where the most sensational Ever Ordered in the Histo of Real Estate will be hel and adjacent Boulevards are to be sold on at 2 P. M., on premises, rain or shine, under tent UNTIL EVERY LOT IS SOLD. It is practically impossible to promote this sale as it should be in this unusually short space of time, and to hold such a sale after only eight days of advertising means an unheard of sacrifice of values. Still it has been ordered and there- fore every lot must be sold. 60% may remain on mortgage 3 years at 514%. Title policies given free from Title Guarantee and Trust Co. 31 Nassau St., N. Y. C. . Telephone Rector 6600. Auctioneer for the present, in the Academy of tion adopted and a plan of campaign adopted Wednesday night, the news eon at Bellevue; Second Vice Pres- dent, Dr. Glentworth Butler, Chier Medical Consulting Physiolan of Long Island Hospital Medical. College; Sec- retary, Dr. Haven Emerson, former Health Commissioner, recently re- turned from service in Europe, and Treasurer Dr. Arthur F. Chace, etom- ach specialist at the Post-Graduate Medical School. The announcement of the extensive plans of the organization was made by Maaten’ The Mayor, Commissioner of Health, Commissioner of Charities and Prest- dent of Bellevue and allied hospitals are ex-officio members of the Board of Trustees of the association during their terms of office. The other tris- tees are: | Drs. Charles H. Peck, Chief Surgeon of Roosevelt Hospital and President of the New York County Medical Society; William Francis Campbell, Chief Sur- geon of the Long Island Hospital Medical ‘College; Jobn &. Hartwell, surgeon at the Presbyterian Hospital; | Emanuel Libman, pathologist at Mount Sinal Hospital; Frederick. Tilney of the College of Physicians and sur- geons and neurologist at Roosevelt ' Hospital; Otto V. Huffman, Dean of the Long Island Hospital Medical Col- | lege; Adrian Lambert, surgeon at the Presbyterian Hospital; Samuel A, Brown, Dean of Bellevue Medical Col- lege; James Alexander Miiler, one of the leading physicians at Bellevue Hospital, and George W. Kosmak, at- tending surgeon at the Lying-In Hos- - pital, The corporate’ berg he of the association is limited to hy- sicians, teens a no limit pf Beta placed u, its general membership. of the body have been unify the medical pro= “To impro' ramones th mothe prove and amplify the ods of eraduate anid under; teaching. | “To perfect plans for utilising the’ vast clinical material of the city for Pay irposes and to make use of the talent now unemployed, “To bring about a working affilia- tion of medical schools, hospitals, tab- | oratories and public henith facilities of the olty to the end that the best interests of medical education may be served, “To initiate the establishment of a| medical education dation in New York City whereby funds may be secured to meet the financial require- ments of all forms of medical educa- tion and investigation.” The general management of the association is under the contro! and | direction of a board of fifteen trustees who will be chosen from and elected by a majority vote of the corporate membership. Dr, Copeland, speaking for the as- | sociation, said the campaign for $60,- 000,000 would not confined to Now that City, but would be so conducted would reach men of wreaits throughout the United States. | He asserted that the medical pro- feasion as a whole is in favor of the Project and feels this country Is now | justly entitled to the honor of becom- ing the world's medical centre. Commissioner laid stress upon the statement that no college or medi- cal organization need feel in any way that the new association would bam- per or interfere with its work. It would, he asserted, aid in getting en- dowments for institutions known to be worthy. IPANESE BURNED KOREA CHRISTIANS, CHURCH REPORTS Presbyterian Inquiry Reveals | Alleged Atrocities to Men and Women in Far East. A report of alleged Japanese atro- | cities in Korea was made public to- | day at the headquarters here of the | Presbyterian Church in America, as & result of investigations by repre- | sentatives in Korea of the Presby-| terian Church in the United States, | following the imprisonment of some of its missionaries by the Japanese. authorities, The information was transmitted by such means that it! escaped the Japanese censors, | Hundreds of Koreans who had pro- | fessed Christianity are said to have | been driven by Japanese gendarmes | at point of the bayonets into churches, there to be fired upon | through open windows aa they hud- | dled in terror, and later to perish in the flames as the places of worship were put to the torch. Most of these | victims, it 1s narrated, were men, | Surviving women and children were | left in destitution, H, H. Underwood, a missionary, 1 in Seoul, was quoted in the q io Advertiser of April 29, ly, rding to the report, regardi visit he made to Pal Tan, a market town near Buwon. In Kyongkt Province, a fortnight before, Japan- ese troops he said, he was told, burned 36 of the 40 houses in the Village of Chay Amm Ni, two miles from Pal Tan, because the inhabit- ants were Christians. Mr, Under- wood said he was told also that the victims had not figured in any riot- ing or shouted for Korean indepen1- ence, Pal Tan, he said, escaped both fire and sword “because there | were no Christians there.” Preliminary police examinations of Koreans suspected of complicity in the revolutionary movement are said to include “every human refinement | in brutality," men being beaten to| death and women subjected to near- ly every possible form of shameful | treatment. Milder punishment, tt is said, included 90 blows upon the prisoner's body with a bamboo rod and the administering of many boot kicks, at the e f which the victim, if he survived, was sent almost life- lews to av hospit Through cable and mail despatches many of the occurrences »ullined in the report have been made known in America, at the time.of the disorders. _ BIG variety—12}4 to 68¢ a yard. Featuring Monday at One of the sieve special Angast Sele of Future | Down-Stairs Store —sends this Monday message of home and personal needs that are dependable in quality and advantageous in price. ... Lowel sale... tot ocean rae 9 on so, oaght to know,” Tis fe the way: Guest towels, $1.75 doz. Bath towels ‘ Good cotton hemmed, guat dee Tas 36 chen reduced Good, thirsty bath towels $4 towels—$3 doz. . —so many different kinds that everybody can have plenty: $6 towels—$4.80 doz. Part tte ee 65c towels—450 Fancy bath towels. Down-Stairs Store, Old Bidg. ° Toweling remnants 12}4c to 36c—were 15¢ to 45¢ Thousands of yards—all linen, all cotton, part cotton crash. Glass toweling, too, in stripes and checks, INTY. Down-Stairs Store, New Building Remnants of summer dress fabrics—one-third less é bale be 5,000 yards of the fabrics pene are wowed NOW. inghams, voiles, percales, batistes, crepes, skirtings, white weaves, and plain and fancy effects. Not every kind at every price—but a Down-Stairs Store, New Bldg. Silk © ’ Shantuhe Misses —khaki bloomers.......+++.! 91.50 95 cy d. Petticoats rice for imported Fete? stk—many colores Bianteng—pisin spd fancy —32 Feduced ff ee inches wide. Just a special to'clone out, You'll appreciate i “Billie Bur! —of pink batiste... Downstairs Store, Old Bldg. Downstairs Store, New Bidg. Folding cots Women’s at $10.50 Enameled p— with eot- Satin capes ton mattress, They fold up, and can be wheeled into a small closet. Best thing of this kind we've seen, Downstairs Store, New Bidg. eee $1 Underclothes featured —b GOOD. underclothes at i, ‘are snot. plentitul. these days. ninsooks “gavelops chemase, “ieee trimmed; Flesh batiste envelope Shemisen with "colored. sliiching: 3 ema ings a ior peti betticoats with ince edge thea NE Re ombroidery with | or without underlays. Al) GOOD— Downstairs Store, Old Bidg. Good silk Fourth Ave. Side. sloves, 50c nih mode and black— enttt’ ant tips. The saving is | Misses’, $5.75 obvious. Downstairs Store, New Bidg. Linene, voiles and ginghams— ever so many of the dainty styles eee that serve so many practical pur- Women’s silk andl i tmmaeveas | handbags, $1.95 volles make the variety still m Just 72 fine silk handbags that interesting, One of the season's | were $2.50 and $3. lowest. prices for worth-while | moire and taffeta—a few “miser” dresses. Sizes 14 to 20. styles among Broadway Side— Downstairs Store, Old Bidg. a 8.8 Rich black satin capes—silk- lined—that were $23.75. Just 25 of them for this Monday ale. Fine for Fall wear, Downstairs Store, Old Bidg. Women’s, $6.75 bout 150 prett; mee volle aides, 6.75 is an invitation to save. Bowneals 8 uA] Old Bidg. Pearl beads for 55¢ Strings of pearl beads—straight and graduated — with gold-filled clasps, Closing out some of our Tbe grades. Downstairs Store, Old Bidg. eee Misses’ voile skirts, $5.50 One model has wide tuck and cluster of tiny tucks. Another has deep hem and cluster tucks, In rose, Copenhagen, pink. Very dainty for summer, Downstairs Store, Old Bidg, eee Bag frames going at 50c Many calls have come in for these nch gray bag frames with Jeweled and tinted effects, They're special. Downstairs Store, Old Bidg. Boys’ raincoats less at $2.25 Good raincoats, these. Made of army cloth, in sizes 8 to 16. Tan only. Downstairs Store, New Bidg. On the notion table Sew-on supporters.. Women 8 sailors, 75c Good straw sailor and mush- room shapes—in brown, red and white. Downstairs Store, Old Bidg. — — Girls’ coate—a ‘chance! Early next fall you'll be glad you bought a coat like these a third or more underprice. Serge in navy, Copen. and tan; shepherd checks and squares in black and white. First group—reduced to $2.75-—sizes 6 to 10, Second group—reduced to $5.00 and §8.75—sizes 10 to 16. Down-Stairs Store, Old Bldg. ets Nene to = <img sald 33 MB Pk period suites for bedroom and dining- room fa Superb mahogany, walnut and enamel suites designs of Sheraton, Chinese Cobia Cu 0 a an Keane, rae Ranahconn das dete bemdcan area We bought them last January -at 25 per cent. off the price Lgeed Hagens alate gl eth a gp oat evans bones OO ee eesti: CL eee have molting ad toraare paigedekn moan kept back the announcement antl to Ready Monday— and though we figure each suite on its price ticket at un ice, because we ht them, at that that at least two “raises” iture have gone into effect purcham, mating them atleast 40 pe cent. ander thelr 20 bedroom suites ranging in ype 3 for a $576 ‘ive-plece suite it Ba tee earhed out 13 dining-room 8Uites ranging in price from to Exquisite new silks Georgette crepes — embroidered with silk and metal threads which radiate brilliancy under artificiol light— $10.50 to $22.50 yard Advance styles for Autumn, shown earlier than usual because of the large number of visitors in town who may not be here later, and who will appreciate the opportunity of selecting now from the styles that are ready. Silk Rotunda—Main Floor, Old Building We have reduced prices on 1,112 bedspreads Notwithstanding that mill cone are pre sind 120 reduced to Pepe hopin: 2 Dye 244 reduced to $2.50; white corded d £50050 in. 266 reduced to $3; white crochet; ual 120 reduced to $5.50; white satin-finish, hemmed 126 reduced to $3.50; white satin-finish, bmp shag size. 128 reduced to $6; white satin-finish; large ‘ (These two last lots ate scalloped and have cut corners.) Monday, Fourth Gallery, New Building The Wanamaker Superb fireless cook stove will do all the cooking regres in summer and doit better than any other stove we know It is hy od stem fae compartment wells, ing rack, unusually large cookine’ vessels, soapstone baking got roasting discs, dise lifter and aluminum mat. , $15.25. 9-qt. size, 1 well, 2 discs, $18.5 50; 1 14-qt. size, 2 wells, 3 discs, $23. to; at nse size, $29.50. 82-qt. size, 3 wells, 5 discs, $38.50. Seventh Gallery, New Building Occasion! White frocks. at $15 to $42.50 SIZES 34 to 44. Organdie frocks in the pier turesque illustrat painstakingly made in own workroom; $32.50. ach wee ruffle is corded edged with French Valou, ciennes lace. Organdie frocks at $16— in a charmingly si ape modes: skirt has very deep hem. ihe Georgette crepe dresses $42.50 are beaded in aves a distinctive ip na gS ere ergs neta SL ed

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