The evening world. Newspaper, October 22, 1919, Page 15

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THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1919, CANTRELL & COCHRANE THE STANDARD Ginger Ale OF TWO rede der e dozen ‘om your dealer for use aft home Sole A BS Wiest Row Yorke SAVE MONEY WHILE THEY LAst, 5.000 PAIRS OF ARMY SHOES A Large Quantity of All Sizes $6 a Pair er ssfeeieis Bi Atmy aad Navy Buppiles NATIONAL EQUIPMENT CO. 19 Madison Ave. (13th Floor) Forty-Eight Girls. present- ing Each Sts’, ieature Exercises i Bronx, PURITY ‘ Corned Beef Hash } ) Asamastor chef makes it oman, qi 5€@ | reached the Bryant High School, patriotic ceremonies was sent to the } AE Be a aN Sem S| Newtown High School at Newtown The forty- on SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK WONDERS. Store hours— ’ 9 to 5.30 ‘Patriotic Schoolgirls Sewing Star MAN OF 103 IN BED sisi 2SNccrscrot Mee mane son us me Sti nb On Roosevelt Memorial Flag in Bronx ware ruqiy iy ice ia ut ene i ae th by Ruth Brower of Revolutionary ancestry, Lillian Hotetz, great grand- jchiid of Gen | Walsh, who father fought in the Spanish-American (Ge | ne Rosevelt Memorial Flag, being} Morrisey, whose two brothers fought relayed from Buffalo to Oyster Bay,|!® the world war, and Bozena 8, Lahey. clals and members of the Roosevelt Long Island City, to-day and after Memorial Committee attended. | at rth star was sewed on! School in the Bronx in the presence! should have come t 105th Street, Hartem, eviction of three more families, but | Janitor spit e | and / the crowd appeared to be interested | Mave no place for the garbage excep! ~ TENANTS: STRIKE almost solely in tho case of Antonio! Me hallways George, one hundred and three, his) A moving van arrived early in the ‘ leo Catherine, and thelr two little day and te ym the sidewalk the 500 Persons, Mostly Women, | tt scons cnitaren of a boy who died | household effects of the Furraro, Alina Waiting in Anticipation of [in France, and a young mother who and Meye placed there by ‘ ait followed shortly afterward as a re-| Marsha ® men on Monday Dispossess Action walt of influensa The tax mittee which guard ‘The family of five Is supported by | &t Ht all night was mado up of David It was hard to tell to-day whether] tne earnings of Michacl Gee son nar isidor BODRom and Samuel the most interesting thing about the} of the old couple and uncle of the | Me¥er ; A complete selection of the latest cron strike of sixty of seventy tenants in| boys, who, it ix said, makes $40 a) A committee of the strikers waited |] ome im Fall Feetwear im shart and week as a chef. The rent, which |Upon District Attorney Francis Mar- aediom the apartment house at No | neighbors say has been increased | tin of Bronx County to-day to find 740-741 Tremont Avenue, Bronx, W458) three times within a year, is $23. The jout If something cannot be done to the old man of 103 waiting in bed for| complaint of the sixty striking fam{- | preserve their right to vote in No- the Marshals to come and evic ies has not been so much about the | vember from thoir present homes, the crowd ow 500 mbled and latest jump of $5 all around as that Twelve families evic lon M Jay family ing in tho st BUSINESS HOURS: 9 A. M. TO 5 P. M. AEARN Fourteenth Strect THe FL. Ax MONT AVE AND 144%" OTREET fe flag at the Bryant High School| of @ large crowd yesterday by five girts representing the school, each girl sewing on one point of the flag. Forty-eight girls, representing each State, took part. The girls taking part in the opera- tion as shown in the picture are, from left to right: Helen Gies, Lyall Ya Dean, Lilla Carmichael, Pearl Simowitz and Ruth Mehrer. Weat of Fifth Avenue Sherman; Veronica Wednesday Thursday War; Margaret Education and county offi- THE LAST AW) (From the Colum Husband—All is go: ing left for me but h Wife (weeping) here Is noth- t work. ink that we ‘The forty-third star was sewed on | the Theodore Roosevelt High | Broadway at 9th, . New York ° e ; ia e isons Eri HEN you come to understand thoroughly that a Wanamaker Down- Stairs Sale offers merchandise of an entirely different character from the ordinary cheap and questionable qualities that are so widely heralded in many quarters, you will appreciate what it means when we say: A happy purchase—a worth-while Quick-Sale of Women’s High-grade Coats 26.77 Our regular $45.74 poss a ee ee Back of which there is a logical, common-sense | reason—and an accurate comparison of qualities | that tells you in plain words just what your saving | $33.15 I. will be: $40 to $57.50 grades—Thursday at First of all—the grades, as stated above, are $40 to $57.50, which means that the nearest comparison we found to these coats in New York was a special lot at $40—ad- vertised as $40 to $57.50 qualities. It may seem unusual —to you that coats like these should be offered under- price at the very beginning of the winter season; but you must remember that the manufacturing season for most of the big coat makers is now over, and samples are being closed out. It was not possible one maker; ‘So we worked along several different line One lot consisted entirely of sample coats, and a very fine lot. In another case, A partnership dissolved —and the floor stock was disposed of. A third instance brought us a small lot from one of the best makers we know, a man who was willing to help us do a real service. You may not realize ~that New York is a great garment manuracturing center, and that a store like this is in a position to find the best opportunities from both a quality and a value viewpoint. 45 styles—sizes 34 to 57 —which naturally means that every woman who really wants a good coat can find it. There is very little dupli- cation of style or color—a fact that adds to the interest ugd value of the sale. —to obtain so large a quantity of sample coats from any | Dressy coats—Motor coats coats of velours, suede cloth, Bolivia, broadcloth, Polo cloth, silvertone and many fine coatings—coats for every use, every occasion—many with Rich fur collars —of Hudson seal (seal-dyed coney) nutria, raccoon. with shawl collars, choker collars, square collars, self Coats with loose backs, fitted backs, belted ba out of every four have— Women who are careful to know just what they are buying will be apngnted with the inherent goodness of these coats, which would be good value at a much higher figure than the con- servatively stated regular price. There is nothing scant or below quality about them. The value is not concentrated in one feature to the disadvantage of the rest of the coat. The quality is maintained throughout, making this offering one that no other sale elsewhere can measure up to. MATERIALS | COLORS Taupe, Reindeer, Ox-blood, Brown, Pekin, Navy and Black. IMPORTANT FEATURES: Coats are lined throughout with excellent plain and figured linings. and generously cut, Coats collars. Three Rich silk linings | plain or figured silk; and most of them are interlined, except the heavy Polo cloths. Plenty of black coats—and plenty of the best colors: taupe, brown, oxblood, beaver, mahogany, tan, green, navy, Pekin, Suedine, Silvertone, Velour, Kersey and Plush. | We have tried to state this proposition as plainly as possible, and to give you all of the important facts in simple words. But keep this point firmly in mind—every coat in this sale is— Collars are large Button trimmed. Large fur collars. At this price also a large assortment o! 32-inch Baffin Seal in black or brown, handsomely lined with striped silk. A high-grade coat You have seen many of them in regular stock at $57.50 and more. They are Wanamaker standard from the first stitch to the last button, A large part of the Fourth Avenue side of the Down-Stairs will be given over to this sale on Thursday. Down-Stairs Store, Old Bldg. ALTERATIONS FREE See also our regular 3 column advertisement on page 27 and other pages for Exceptional Sale of Petticoats. ‘ ®

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