The evening world. Newspaper, July 15, 1919, Page 10

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IF BLOOMINGDALES _ S9TH TO 6oTH ‘STREET. LEXINGTON TO aD AVENUE Children Love} Music Any Child Can Play This Ww onderful Player You have often watched children dashing down the street when they hear the music of a military band. You see the boys proudly marching beforé and the girls dancing behind the band. In the parlor you see them cluster around the piano, all anxious for an ity to play or sing. A happy home for both woe grown-ups is one in which music and This beautiful Walters Player which n play will bring a large share of happi- home. Call to-morrow, select your Free With Each Player Poke eee Our tay Weriicie Plan OF ONLY $2.50 A WEEK NO EXTRAS & th oiares, Geaer iss came Ww and inflamed, Work is a terment end recreation each for ie remark- able antiseptic powder thet cools, soothes, and heals— containing ingre- dients of recognised med- icinal value, Perspiration will not readily wash it away. It adheres for hours, bring- ing lasting relief to those who chafe. Kora-Konia has alread geayed its efficiency in hospitals end nurses recommend it, } KORA-KONIA << There ts nothing ike it for the THE EVENING WORLD, ‘TURSDAY, ‘JULY “46, 22-24-26 West “34th St. | ‘6th Ave,, at sth St. TAKE NOTICE Big changes have occurred in the manufacture of furniture, Fac- tories have discontinued hundreds of patterns. Spear is teaturing all these discontinued patcerns and a pleas in a July Sale that is attracting attention. There are opportunities right now that cannot ibly be repeated for years to come. See for yourself. Use Spear credit It takes @ very small first payment and you pay the balance later—a specified convenient amount each month, Cold Storage The Refrigerator with the Glass Water Trap SIDE ICER 16, APARTMENT SIZE sy, ‘, inches wide, 18 Tere? oe tgohes dem, 40 lhe high, with sanitary water trap $39.75 26 inches wide, inches deep, 42 inches high, with metal drain ako, 19.75 oe adn glass rt Summer Furniture Arm Chair in Cream Shellac. Each... $7.75 GREENPOINT IVORY ENAM- KROEHLER "KODAV” DAVENETTE, uphol EL BEDSTEAD, with 1'/p-inch stcred in tapestry. Opens to full size double bed posts and 54-inch fillers, $13.95 (an additional charge for mattress). .... $79.95, Very Special with genu FONIERS, American Wal- Leather mut, Mahogany and Golden . $29.75 Oak finishes; each $19.75 iD dA in BEDROOM SUITE in Antique Ivory finish; exceptionally fa you can buy at Spear's on liberal credit terms as This suite would cost materially $] 4? 50 poor a oie 's prices for labor and materials ee Brooklyn’ sBiggest mest 219, 221, 223, 225, 22 Credit House 164, 166, 168 and 170 Grand Street Smith Street Cor. Driggs Ave. Cor. Wyckoff St. epee DS _\__ BROORL YN _Cor. Wyckoff St. $100 WORTH OF FURNITURE $1 WEEKLY The Old Reliable House of WHALEN BROTHERS caries the by Tet and high grede goods and gives the easiont end beet terme of anti tease in the trode Secssnk (ariel fa A Good. Large 18 49 VA. Fine ete 28.49 \ ae 33.75 FARTHEST BRONK VOIGES TS ANGER AT INTERBORCUGH Clothes Terk ‘Of Women and Girls in Subway. Jam, Say Residents Kesidents of the farthest Bronx at meeting at Public 05 last night returned a an indignation of worse than rotten’ against the Interborough subway service on the Jerome Avenue div- ision Deputy Public Service Comm'r- siioner Edward Glennon was there to hear about it. To tell about it there were many residents of the High- bridge, Woodlawn and Jerome Ave- nue sections, Witnesses said that in the eonges- | tion north of 167th, Street the clothing of women and girls was literally torn from them William Hutchings, supervising in- | spector for the Transit Bureau of the Public Service Commission, said that ckets sold at ata-! tions north of 167th Street numbered $15,138, while in June of this year the cr Was 801,417, ‘The comparativ: 8 fore the’ two’ months at the Fordham Road station, he said, were 66,100 and 146,000. | One of the chief complaints was the lack of through service. Wit- | nesses said that passengers were reg- “dumped out” at 167th Street it for trains from the Sixth Ave- | 1.” branch, and that they were “dumped again” at the Kingsbridge | Road Station to wait for d shuttle. | William B, Brown, formerly an In- | terborough engineer, said that the operating cost of a through service would be less than that of the pres- ent system. Next week there will be a public hearing on the service given by the) Interborough system as a whole. Deputy Commissioner Glennon said | an order certainly would be issued to improve the service on the Jerome Avenue division. FLEET 0 SAIL JULY 19 FOR THE PACIFIC COAST Newly Formed Armada for. West- ern Ocean to Be Reviewed by President and Daniels, | WASHINGTON, July 16.~Tenta- tive plans for the cruise of the Pa- cific Fleet were given out to-day by| Admiral Hugh Rodman, Commander }in Chief of the fleet. The fleet, which will consist of about 100 vessels, in- ‘cluding dreadnoughts, cruisers, de- \stroyers, submarines, supply ships, hospital ships and fuel eni will it from Hampton Roads on It will reach the Panama Canal six days after sailing and will be in San Diego on Aug. 7 or & Going through the Panama Canal, thorough tests wili be made of the facilities of the canal for transport. ing the ships rapidly in case of an emergency, together with all the fuel- ling stations and repair statioi retary Daniels will poard the flagship at San Diego and accompany it on its cruise northwa cisco, He will in bases, the aviation station and other naval establishments on the Pacific Coast, It is not known yet whether the President will boara the fleet at Sen Diego and make the trip to San Francisco with it or will await its ar. rival at San Francisco and review it there, ————— NEGLECT DRAFT RECORDS. Charges No Effort Made to Save Documents Affecting 25,000,000 Men WASHINGTON, July 15.—The War Department has taken no precautions itary draft records sent ‘om the States, Chalr- to pgesery to Washin, man Graham special Hous on wartime expenditures of the War De- March, Chief of Staff, farris, Adjutant General, ‘8 here stored in Without any pro- in the rain and others are. in cellars with the boxes surrounded by water,” Mr, Graham sald. hese records are in the worst shape I ¢ Plate you've been looking for, No Gives comfort. No one suspects on this plate to be other than own, Do all that natural teeth You can whistle, ging, laugh and the hardest food and these Roof- leas Teeth remain in place, when made in The WATERBURY Way Come here in the morning, have your sted! PRBE | WITHOUT home at night with a fectly, Deca but plates, ALL WOKK GUARANTRED 10 YEARS, gums of our NEW ‘Wassily Diao Conny Eoatiched 1897 ae woes & York 1919. | 255,966 Miles of Wire, More Than Enough to Encircle the Earth at the Equatcr Ten Times, Will Be Added to New York City's Telephone Systemg'n 1919. One Quarter Million Miles of Wire For the 310 Square Miles of New York City NE QUARTER million miles of additional telephone wire for New York City in 1919—enough wire to build telephone lines across all continents and between all continents—enough to run ten strands of glistening copper around the earth at the equator and enough, when brought into action with the other features of a mammoth Telephone Restoration Program, to bring peace-time standards of service back to the Telephone Capital of the World! Some of this wire will be brought into play as additional lines to connect subscribers with Central Offices. Much of it will be used to provide additional connecting links, or trunk lines, between Central Offices. Every mile of it will help to distribute and carry the ab- norma! load that is responsibie for the co: tion that exists in certain districts today— and every mile of it as it is placed will help to carry New York City nearer the goal of the Telephone Restoration Program — “The Best Telephone Service in the World” ® NEW YORK TELEPHONE COMPANY Candy Places CHARMING These nice, nibbly candy wafers will charm you with their cool, fresh, crispnese—they will delight you with their flavor. Stop at the next candy place and get a package. In rolls of assorted flavors. Also rolie contain- ing all- peppermint, all - chocolate, all-wintergreen, and all-cinnamon, THREE HUNDRED Necce products, including:— Neece Chocolates—the de luxe creations, packed in fine art boxes. Neceo Lemon Drope—pure cane sugar, finely flavored with lemon. Necco Sweethearls—little hearts of creamy sugar, flavored with pep- permint and wintergreen, Neceo Chocolate Bars—- cream and nut fillings, chocolate covered, Necco Wafers is one of many kinds of Necco Sweets. There are rich chocolate bars with cream and nut centers; delicious hard candies; N ecco Chocolates in artistic gift boxes, All bear the famous N ecco seal and are worthy of it.

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