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| : LEMON ICE TAKES OFF TAN Girls!’ Make bleaching totion if skin is sunburned, tanned or freckled St eeeee ee Squeeze the juice of two lemons into @ bottle containing three ounces of Orchard White, shake well, and you have a quarter pint of the best freckle, sunburn and tan lotion and omplexion beautifier, at very, very small cost Your grocer has the lemons and any drug store or toilet counter will aupply three ounces of Orchard White for a few cents. Massage this sweetly fragrant lotion into the face, neck, arms and hands each day and see how freckles, sunburn, windburr and tan disappear and how clear, soft and white the skin becomes. Yes! It is harmless.—Advt. SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK WONDERS Jot Je Yor tot Set Sor IE YeL BE ot Nee et NO Ne EE We ee ARE 3 40 EEA 2 ek 36 38 39K Toe ee SON a8 SE ee THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1919. — | Jean Louis Forain In Autumn Show At Kraushaar’s By W. G. Bowdoin. | The Kraushaar Gallery, No. 260 | Fifth Avenue, opens its autumnal |season with an exhibition by Jean Louis Forain, consisting of three canvases. The Forain exhibit will be continued until Sept. 15. The work of this notable French artist of the Degas circle is per- meated with iconoclastic and acidu- lous cynicism. He is best studied in the Kraushaar exhibition from the canvas entitled the “Picture Dealer,” which stages a “vampire” of ample propor- tions who has visited an artist's studio and “acquired” two of his can- vases, which he 1s about to carry away under his arms. The biustering parvenu Jew, the mercenary picture |dealer, is most delightfully and realis- tically shown, The artist and his wife amidst studio surroundings are “caught” in the attempt to interest their patron fn a third and larger can- vas, The personality of the dealer is superbly pictured, and his self-suM™- clency and inordinate greed stand out sonorously in this painting. Forain’s “War” is a work of art, the lines of which are cast in less Pleasant places. It was painted just Prior to the signing of the armistice that end the world war and deals vigorously, but with infinite sadness, with the return home of a widowed mother and her two bereaved chil- dren. The home-coming is a tragedy, and nothing remains of the one-time home but ghastly ruins. The Rheims Cathedral, in ruins, enters as a spectre into the background. The symbolism of French suffering, both a8 to the people's homes and as to the irreparable loss of their cherished Cathedral, is powerfully registered in a broad fashion, and the situation re- vealed in his broad strokes cries out loudly for vengeance. The third Forain painting is en- titled “The Court.” It shows the interior of a French Court of Justice. The pronounced verdict has gone againat the woman in the case and she has accordingly collapsed. One of the court officers is attempting to revive her and is supporting her in the attempt. The Judge and bis clerk observe the proceeding with all the stoicism that arises from long fa- mitarity with euch scenes. Speech and Accept yesterday. Nothing like it since Admiral Dewey came to the grand old temple of justice and presented it with a set of shiny door knobs from the Olympia, These f disappeared a O* Essox Market was all athrob week later, but that is another story. % #8 The judicial at- bod re} fairs were early ‘ brought toa close : Ie KNOX ca eaahen pect | ser and all pian- % 2 a ned to march to + : the parade. As every one knows, it o4 was originally intended to have the wy G A i 0) AY (0) gay | BAe Market Association, with tts “~ auxiliary clubs, the Bar A: lati % ” $8 Jana Pannandlers’ Loedl, ait ah aH 8 O-, HE ideal soft hat for early $f | of Ronor in the parade. At least that Gg a gy | Was the way they doped it out, and % “Autumn days. Light in perhaps everything would have gone bod i i $f [all_right if something hadn't gone 8 weight, the Gayoso will be Be | Dans, ere wad he saneral tor. % favored by men who desire a dash of Fo} our paticemen from te, hh, Precinct He ORS ‘i . =e Joo Levy, the Duke of Eaecx Betoot, a distinction without sacrificing dignity . | a Deane De ang Beg, i. pee ed Beate Kbeoata tate & Shown in English Brown, x iinet at Ati : Seal and Artichoke Be “oehesta Rata sees sae 4 i] % TEN DOLLARS tt B 8 8 ie # KNOX HAT COMPANY 4 & (mcorporated s & 452 FIFTH AVENUE 161 BROADWAY e © NEW YORK wo! % x 3 ‘308 NOH OE NOE OE OE IE 3K DOE FOE 308 BE BOE BOE BOE IE 3OE OE TOE OE TOE LOE LOT 2OE ZOE 20E IF OE 3OE, QUEEN QUALITY BOOT SHOP S4th Street Stra kot” 3% and 34 West Hi ye E F E E ; { F Fo if “yi i Lt 3 iT Fs! FFETE FE FL e ft ur 5 Raf ttf 1 F ri f i rd £ Tutroducing Queen Quality Creations in Fall Footwear The initial showing of Queen Quality creations for Fall is now on view, ready for Milady's approval. $9.00 f E ef ik L eT [ ; 2 if FF 13 oh itt 12h : Teh if fz bey E3 [ : i § i Ek g j NEW YORK Essex Market’s Old Guard, Its Own Pershing Parade; Strikes a Snag, Loses Hero Principal Feature Was Its Ammunition Train, Which Loses Two Quart Bottles—Three Non-Coms Bribed to Listen to Pete Walsh’s General Never Did Show Up. | the Flowers—But the Another band, (ile pare the aaminion we) Rear Toaie, Tarry Spits, with ory rewntved aint, oir ene He Now if that isn’t a regular parade, with everything that goes with it, and more than xoes with of thom, the Hbations are on Market. Gen. Pershing couldn't have had a more distinguished crowd if he had picked it out himself. Court At tendant Pete Walker had prepared @ little apeech, hed shined up his badge, And everything. Jerry Creedon was elected to hold the papers while Pete tore up the child. The apesch, which was given three times, and can be | obtained on very rough vellum for the small sum of .15 if you buy a frame, | at all fruit stands, went something | like this: “We of Essex Market welcome the chief. This must be a memorable oc- casion for you; it is for us.” At thif point Bill Beirns was mup- | posed to come forward and say, "Sir, | the guard is formed," and then march | up the avenue. Everything went well at first. The | excitement was something tremendous | on the Bowery. Charlie Hirseh- hom was #0 moved by the sight that he de- clared they were on “him when the My boyg got back, The column swung into Fourth Avenue at @ 90-to-the-minute cadence. Here it was reviewed by Chief Clerk Rice and Clerk Kunsli, who applauded vigorously. At 10 o'clock, they sighted Madison Square and prepared to meet the General. | Neckties were smoothed out, coats put on, and ono of the ammunition bear- ers was #o excited that he dropped two quarts. “Where is the General?” asked Bill Beirns of a cop who happened to be nearby. “He ought to be at 110th Street.” “We are the guard of honor,” pro- tested Bill, “Well, you'll have to get out of here, You'll clutter up the street.” Here was a quandary for the legal- est of legal minds. “I got it,” said Bil, euddenly. “We'll make the speech and present the flowers to some one. The General will probably hear about it and come to court to find us.” Three Quartermaster Sergeants | were spied in the offing and were !m- | mediately surrounded. They agreod to listen to the speech for @ dollat | each if they could keep the flowers 1 speech was spooched amid thun- | derous “Cor Mr. Di the affalr | “It won't cost you a nickel,” prom. | ised Senator Cheesecake Then all went back to the court to wait for the chief. He handn’t shown | up by 4 o'clock, but never everything was quiet and peac the grand old tample of justice. In A New Homespun Weave | | FIFTY-FIVE DOLLARS OPEN SATUR if | nd eee us, General,” cried », catching the spirtt of Quatiry tells the dif- ference in the taste between Coca-Cola and counterfeit imitations. Coca-Cola quality, recorded in the public taste, is‘what holds it above imitations. OE Demand the genuine by full name —nicknames encourage substitution. Cea PO 2 Tue Coca-CoLa Co ATLANTA, GA d Everywhe IT MAKES LITTLE DIFFERENCE WHAT YOU NEED— A SUNDAY WORLD “WANT” WILL GO AND FIND IT! FRANKLIN SIMON & CO PRESENTS THE OUTDOOR AUTUMN AND WINTER SUIT FOR MISSES Franklin Simon 8 Co. Fifth Avenue, 37th and 38th Streets | Tal ing Machines, [PEN MONDAY AND SATURDAY OWADAYS, when the months of country life and town lifeoverlap—and many people remain in the country almost up to Christmas—a suit is needed, too, that overlaps the activities of both town and, country. And-here is one for any outdoor occasion, from sports in the country to ‘shopping, in town. Even patient Penelope who, according, ta legendary Greece, for three years unraveled by night what she wove by day, would be puzzled to undo the wenve ofthis new fabric. There is an unexpected cross thread which makes it non-stretchable, and yet retains its non-crushable knitted quality. Add then the smart colorings of the English | mixtures and the stedfast mannish tail- oringand voila—acomposite picture of this new suit. Of homespun mixtures He in Lovett—the English green—,also in dn} an ie MISSES’ SUIT SHOP—Second Floor 4 i i thy DAY FROM 9:00 A. M. TO 5:00 P. M. OTHERS Credit House 164, 166, 168 and 170 Brooklyn’ sBiggest| 219, 221, 223, 225, 227 Grand Street muti Smith Street Cor. Driggs Ave. IKLYN Cor. Wyckoff St. The Old Reliable House of WHALEN BROTHERS carries the biggest stock of medium and high grade goods and gives the easiest and best credit terms of any house in the city. Fall Clothing |: RUGS : CARPETS FLOOR redlt mg When Opening Mi YOUNG HUY RUGS, 33.75 rat amnd medio eaten ‘and yt hes Aki ot low prices “26 CLUES” A Startling New Detective Story of Involved Mystery, Adventure and Intrigue. By ISABEL OSTRANDER | Famous Writer of Detective Stories. , — ——BEGINS IN Next Sunday Worid’s Magazine RA A ORES