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

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: wd * Eggsand Salad Dressing ~ LEAs PERRINS |WILLIAMS’S SALARY IN PERIL B. RR. T, Pre: May Lore $25,000 Paid by Subsidiaries. Col. T. 8, Willlams, Prefident of the Kapid Transit may find hi salary in the near future, accordin; following « operating hy you can greatly improve its flavor by adding \ SAUCE Prior to the appothtment of Lindle: A perfect seasoning for M. Garrison as recoiver for the B. R. Soups, Fish, Roasts, Gravies, Chops, Cheese, tine ro imminent. y eke $30,000, Miss Edna Luby of No. 1607 Avenue O, in the Brook: Be sure it is SAUCE ‘THE ONLY ORIGINAL WORCESTERSHIRE. BONWIT TELLER & CO. FIFTH AVENUE AT 38™ STREET Will Close Out Thursday at Greatly Reduced Prices ‘WOMEN’S EVENING WRAPS é Of Taffeta, Faille Silk or Satin 35.00 Formerly 79.50 to 135.00 Exquisite wraps in light or dark shades, many lined with a con- trasting shade of chiffon or a rich novelty silk. Ww % Ce Oe eee jog 08,00 Exclusive models of velour or tricotine in the season's desir- able colorings. Wi ’ paven'e Coste @ iin 12:60 Long Coats and short Jackets in various fabrics and colorings. Women’s O. i irt: oO Teka 4.80 In white and delicate summer shades. Women’s Odd Skirts Formerly 15.00 to 35.00 1 0. 00 Of faille silk, flowered Georgette crepe or wool Bonbonette. Col ; ored Georgette Re an 10:80 1 Reet Am agg or bright sports colorings, and inset with KELLNER BROS. Fwenty-nine years selling Good Furniture Southeast Corner [5th Street and 6th Avenue William an\« Mary Dining Room Suite in American Walnut veneer—10 pieces course, Kellner furniture means beautiful design, but it includes as well a personal service that is very necessary in the selection of furniture for the homg. Moderate prices always prevail. A visit to the “Twenty-five Rooms” will prove inter- esting and enlightening. You are cordially invited. a favorite one of’ the cleyven luscious Flavors of HARMS are 100% sugar; highly flavored with the juice of luscious fruits. The most delightful con- fection for anyone at any time—day or night. Everybody Likes Them—Everybody Wants Them On Sale Everywhere Buy them by the box THE FLAVOR CHARMS If MAKES LITTLE DIFFERENCE WHAT YOU NEED— A SUNDAY WORLD “WANT” WILL GO AND FIND IT rier rar dia mt ene arte ie Se CRACKED SAFE BUT | Paper Dealers Foiled Burglars i i ! { | | office Friday morning he found that | JERSEY VEHICULAR TUNNEL by Taking Money Out— Two Hauls Net $7,000, ' Burglars who broke into the safe of Colabella and Brother, paper dealers, at No, 181 South Street, last night, were disappointed, The Colabellas knew about the carnival of robberies going on and kept no cash in their safe, The burglars, finding no lovt, amused themselves by doing what damage they could. ot The safe was pried open wit! chisels and a crowbar and although they must have made much noise the burglars’ work was not discovered [> until Colabella opened the office this IF morning, | ‘ The police were silent about the! |... burglary, as they were about four) others they tried to suppress. ‘ | According to Mr. Silverman, Prest- ! dent of Silverman & Stock, clothing manufacturers, robbed of $4,500 worth of women’s ready made dresses on the night of April ,18, the thieves drove up to the ey loft bulld- ing, No. 230 West 2h Street, in an auto truck, climbed! four flights to | |B the offices, jimmied the door and car- iB tied away 300 dresses. When the police were notified they | told Silverman to keep still about the matter, Mr, Silverman explained that his goods were made on a special ma- | © ..8 and were so different from those of any other concern that they could be recognized. It is now nearly three months since the robbery and | the police have obtained no results. Silk worth $2,600 was stolen from S. Rosenfeld, No. 1962 Third Avenue, last Sunday night. Mr. Rosenfeld | said his office is on the ground floor | and the thieves climbed through @ transom, tossed rolls of cloth to the sidewalk, loaded them into an auto truck and drove off. He added that the police told him to keep still, as it would “only increase tne large num- | ber of silk robberies if it got into the papers.” Two other cases where the police have attempted to suppress the facts are those of Charles D. Graff, No, 704 Riverside Drive, whose loss is re- ported to be more than $2,500, and the Westbourne Tailor Manufacturing Company, No. 3430 Broad » whose loss had not been estimated. When Abraham Moses, manager of the New York Wet Wash Laundry, at No. 225 East 150th Street, reached his during the night robbers hud entered the place and blown the safe, They! had entered through an opening above a rear window, jimmied a dur into the office from the anteroom and drilled five holes jn the four-foot safe, That night, or garly next morning, August Day, who has a cafe at No. 698 Melrose Avenue and lives on the| first floor above, was blown out of bed by an explosion beneath, With| him went his wife. Day hurried downstairs and found that burglars had blown his safe. | The cafe proprietor reported the in- cident to the Detective Bureau and| men assigned to the case looked the | place over, Then they went way, after cautioning Day to say nothin, to reporters, BORINGS WILL BEGIN SOON Plans Adopted at Joint Meeting of Committee of Both States, | Plans and specifications for the New York-New Jersey vehi@ular tunnel sub- mitted by Chief Engineer Clifford M, Holland were adopted after some dis- cussion at the joint meeting of the com- mittees of both States, Dr, Edward Levy, a physician of the Public Service Commission, was selected | as consulting physician to the Joint com- | mission and will serve without com- pensation, When the actual construc-| tion of the tunnel is begun it will be necessary to maintain a first ald station with attending surgeons, | The engineer said that by Aug. 1 he! would begin testing the river bottom along the proposed route andy would need the services of the consulting board then. Leper Escapes Second Time, BOSTON, July 16,.—Nicholas Fonia- dakis, a leper wh ped from de- tention here has fled again from the health authorities of Phila~ delphia who apprehended him. several recen days ago, & message received here re- Home Cook Give your family good, old-fashioned, whole- some fare, preptred in the home kitcen— easy to serve and al- ways welcome because seasoned with At Grogers and Delicatessen Store E, Pritchard, 331 Spring St., N. Y. GOSH! 1 AINT LAMPED PRETTY SANE pom We Sell Dependable Herald Square Rochen ire een Than Any Other Store, for Cash Only A jewel box in summertime does not (if it belongs to a tasteful woman) contain the glittering array of gems that the same treasure box does in the Winter season. The more formal jewels with the more formal clothes, are spending their Summer va- cations in secluded quarters. But other jewels replace them. These are of a more colorful nature, far more varied in design, and cer- tainly more individual. For these may be chosen from selections so much more diversified that it needs be a woman without per- sonality who cannot express her personality among them. The jewel box of a fashionable woman might contain such things as these— Shoe Buckles of cut steel in square, oval, diamond or other fancy‘ shapes, sothe set with jet. $1.94 to $17.89 Bracelets have come into their own again with the vogue of short sleeve frocks. Gold filled bands, hand engraved, engine turned, faceted or stone set. $1.94 to $7.94 Flexible Bracelets paved with rhinestones. $5.24 and $6.82 Lingerie Clasps, gold filled, ster- ling silver or enameled, keep those stray shoulder straps in place. 2c to $1.74 Bar Pins, a wonderful variety of them, some hand engraved, others engine turned, set with stones, some with rhinestones set in gallery mountings, also enameled barg/ 34c to $12.89 Pendants of rhinestones, tistically shaped and ar cally set, are hung on slender entirely black silk cords and make dainty pieces of jewelry. $7.94 to $27.83 Powder Cases, some plain, others with dainty flower decorations, Several shades, $1.59 to $12.33 Beaded Sautoirs in every con: ceivable color and color com- bination $5.94 to $34.50 Strings of Beads, of ivory, white or pink coral, all shades of glass, wood beads and pearl beads. $4.74 to $29.75 7S —Main Floor, Browdway. Surf satin —a new shipment $1.09 yd. We needed more to supply the demand. That speaks well for the number of sensible women who are saving by making their own bathing suits of this cotton material with the lustrous satiny surface. It is so practical, and wears so well! Black only. _ 36 inches wide. CGD —Lining Section, Second Floor, Broadway, General Information:— AWERE You SPEAKING «When I was ' a little girl» Tt is a theme on which Grand- mother grows loquacious, encour- aged by the flattering attention of her small listeners. Théy never tire of hearing what she did in school, what games she played, what places she visited, what clothes she wore; the latter, if graphically described, interest them tremendously. he Dear little kiddies, as they sit there, gathered about her knee, does it ever occur to them or to randma what tales THEY will fell to their grandchildren? One thing is certain. On the subject of clothes, at least, they may reminiscence in as extrava- gant terms as they please, for could anything be daintier, “outer,” more deserving of kindly remembrance than the frocks and coats and hats that children wear fow-a-days? ‘The grandmothers of the day after tomorray may feel a right- cous pride in their appearance » now—a beruffled frock of organ- die, a finely striped dimity with fluttering ribbons, « taffeta coat with plural rows of shirring, « fluffy poke bonnet—what a joy to wear them! What tragedy to outgrow them! * * * Clothes for little children . ——Third Floor. Rear, MOTO TSth’ Street . ; Introduce a first touch of black velvet To see the deft way in which it is used is to re perior to any priced around $10.00 elsewhere. $8.50 In sport hats, in large garden hats, in smart dtess hats, there's just a suggestion of it. - 6 The small sport hat, illustrated at the left, has its crown of Llack velvet and brim of inter- woven ribbon in two contrasting shades. $6.49 ‘The large garden hat with natural color chain hody brim has a bla ‘trimmed with a garland of field flowers. $8.50 cognize again that these hats are far su- ck velvet crown and is new trimmed hats at $4.49 and $5.49 | The hats that are constantly being added to our col- lections at these prices prove consistently that they “surpass all millinery elsewhere similarly priced’’ AGE —Second Floor, B4th Street stricted, water after a bath. it moderately. “liquids.” water Eau de cologne— 4-ounce bottle, — 74c 8-ounce bottle, $1.42 16-ounce bottle, 2.14 82-ounce bottle, 3.94 White Rose cologne— 8-ounce bottle, $1.42 purpose. have not yet been laboratories, }/ WELL, 1DON'T MIND A 1F 1 00. HAVE You BOUGHT ONE OF OUR LOVELY SWEATERS? THEY ARE ALL F) HAND: KNITTED, J COLOGNES. . V0 Falhgh ed bats defines them simply as “perfumed liquid.” Judg- ing from our collection of colognes the definition is too re- = (ug —Main Floor, Rear. IH DEAR YES, AND \ F 1 HOPE THEY 1T PROMPTLY. ol importer AND (ama Many women who do not use per- fume do favor the use of a toilet in Summertime, find it an casy matter to choose a lovely one among our large collection. These will Farina cologne— 4-ounce bottle, 7-ounce bottle, 16-ounce bottle, Florida water— 8-ounce bottle, $2-ounce bottle, But the list of Imported and American made colognes is too long to mention here. say that our section for imported toilet waters is the only exclusive one that we know of for this Here you will find all those unusual french and English toilet waters whose per imitated by our Ameri We might SEND It tells nothing of the refreshing effect of a toilet It neglects to mention the distinction that the use of a delicately fragrant cologne lends to a woman who uses It omits altogther the countless number of flowers that have given their delightful odors to perfume these charming 69c $1.19 1,98 T4c $2.89 AROUND You To - Is there a GIRL who can’t use a GINGHAMdress when it costs as little as to 18, The price is so little that even.a modest purse would not feel the strain of the expenditure. It may be had in blue, green, pink, or red and white cheek, piped in white. Sizes 14, 16 and 18 years. Nowe —Third Floor, 35th St, REGU, $. The superiority of Supre- known— this shoe is consistent with the high standards of Su- pre-Macy. Dark tan calfskin, smartly lasted in medium or round Black vici kid the Macy toe models; 3 also bearin; oxfords, quality stamp, Supre-Macy, at $8.89, Oxfords, in tan or white can- vas or buckskin —Main Floor Balcony, BRGYS TE Sireet The General Also Got a “Rap.” OH DEAR, $0 00.2. f° you"(t WANT SOMETHING WARM shoes $6.94? Checked gingham and youth is one of the happiest com- binations we can think of — such fresh, sweet simplicity as characterizes the frock we have in mind is the moste attractive garb for Miss 14 P. Men’s Oxfords $8.49 What more need we say? M_ NOT WORRY ABouT A WRAP “LOR To NIGHT=I} A AT. OFF $4.89 MOET MY FRIEND WILL Store Hours: 9 A. M. to 5.30 P. M.—Store Closed Saturdays During July and August Knock-About. Klothes . for active boys. No red-blooded boy weer to worry about keeping clothes clean when he’s play- ing “detective” or “ z and robbers” or other simi- dar gentle (?) games. A wise mother will wi cordutoy and free her mind from mending worries aud increased laundry bills. Save his good clothes and buy him Knock-About togs here! khaki in patch pocket With pila c+ plosted bnek. 7 to 16 years. ’ Khaki Knickers cut full finished with belt loops watch pocket. Sizes 7 to 1 years, 7 Other khaki knickers up to Corduroy Suite in an dirt-proof shade of drab. folk model with coat and full lined and taste lagen $8. Creerens that will keep dirt off from his neck to-his ankles, Made of heavy tan twill, 4to 16 years. $1.39 and $1.44 ellit brik § Sun Hats for boys of 3to9 Made of peanut straw and at the with blue, brown or black, Name band to match, Sizes 646 to 7. $1.19 Overalls of blue denim, heavy quality, strongly sewn and fin- Sizes 89e ished with lots of pockets. $ to 15 years. Knock-About Hats for boys. Marine or naval style with stitched brim. Of white drill with white or green facing. Sizes 6% to 714. Whe plaids, Finished with pockets and full bélts. to 18 years. Pt Floor, Aigngra —Serond Figer, 346h 8t., rape ht

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