The evening world. Newspaper, November 17, 1919, Page 13

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‘steamship. Train .third ferryboat “Pollet Strikes Che: SURVIVORS OF SHIP FIRE by ‘) ARE BROUGHT TO PORT Capt. Anderson and Seven of Crew of the Beechland Arrive on the Egori. Capt. w N, Anderson and sven mombe he crew of the American #teamehi atroyed hip F Vs crew fought a fire tor several dayg but it and gas drove They landed on the ‘West Afric: The & ‘ona net, was built at Orange, Te d was bound for New York with 0 of muhog- any log: nty-nine of the crew Were tuken rpool by another GAILLED, 7INJURED IN PHILADELPHIA FOG Crashes Into Hog Island Shipyard Workers—Ferry Boats Collide. PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 17. — Six Hog Island shipyard workmen were Killed and sqven injured to-day when f® motortruck on which they were rid- Ing to work was struck by @ train. The aceident was due to the experienced here in years, On the Delaware River two ferry= oats collided in midstream and a crashed into a tramp Bteamship lying at anchor. No serious damage resulted from either collision, poses Ae HUNTERS SHOOT GIRL. heaviest fog f Woman at Pecks! PEBKSKILL, N. ‘ov. 17—State "Constabulary to-d @ searching for two hunters, one of whom fired a small Calibre bullet that struck Miss Bessie cheek as she was walking with Edith Wright on tte Avenue, two miles east of Peekskill. The men ran into the woods. ‘The bullet was removed in Peekskill “Hospital. Miss Naylor was nos badly injured, CAMBRIA STEEL RESUMES. Thousands of Workers Return as Naylor in the - | American Consul General at Omak, and «| his party arrived here to: EVE government is ‘Admiral Kol- ed T OREO U. $. CONSUL AT OMSK REACHES NOVO KIKOLEVSK Took Five Days to Reach That Point After Kolchak Government Abandoned Its Capital. NOVO NIKOLEVSK, Tuesday, Nov. 11 (Associated Press).—Ernest Harris, 3 foing dil t ink thake, head of the ment, remaing with his armies. ‘olshevikt occupy points on both the railway lines ap- proximately 100 miles west of Omsk. PICKFORD SUIT CALLED. Movie Actress Coming From Lop Angeles to Fight Agent's Claim. Gladys Mary Moore, known to movie fons as Mary Pickford, will be here to- morrow from Los Angeles, to defend herself in the suit for $103,750 brought in the Supreme Court by Cora C. Wil- kening, her former manager, for com- missions. The case was called this morn- ing before Justice M. Warley Platzek and was to go on for before a jury nt 2 o'clock to-day, Moore will be placed on the statid The train bearing the party from Omsk was five days enroute, due to long delays in congested railway yards. The trip was without event Harris has mot announced his #, but it issbelieved that in view of transference of the All-Ryssian government from Omak to Irkutsk he will go to that city. Omsk was evacuated Sunday, No. 9, by: the ministries, the military staff and |! thé missions which still remained in the the = Wilkening commis: in Mary Fic SUTTER LLL ROA LEELA LLL Flint’s Fine Furniture GUARANTEED. THANKSGIVING TIME 4 In all the world there is no appeal so strong as that of the home—particularly at Thanksgiving and the Christmas Season. New is the time to refurnish or replenish; to “do over’ an entire room or to make those minor addi- tions to its appointments whiclt at small expense add so materially to the comforts of life. We are showing many new and exclusive patterns for Dining Room, Living Room and Bedroom at very attractive prices. | IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Orienta EDomestichugs. raperces. Big Plant Reopens. JOHNSTOWN, Pa., Nov, 17.—Cam- dria Steel Co.'s plant, chief unit in the Midvale Steel and Ordnance Co., opened to-«lay for the first time since Sept. 22, when the steel strike was called, Several thousand men reported for There was no diorder., In the The NEW EDISON ©) i020 SHOP Flint & Horner Ce ine 20-26West 36% St. Yohn Wanamaker Store NING WORLD, Te he F “TRIP HERE SINCE WAR BEGAN | Woman Lawyer of China Aboard— Represeated 2,000,000 Women | at Peace Conference. The French liner Lafayette, from Havre, Nov, 8, docked to-day on her | first trip to New York since the war began. She brought 1,104 passengers— 284 first cabin, 110 second, and 710 third. The Lafayette was used as a« hospital and troop ship, plying between England and France during the war. Among the passengers was Mins Soumy Tcheng, & Chinese lawyer and Journalist, who said she attended the Peace Conference as the representative of 2,000,000 Chinese women. Mins Tcheng sald she believed Japan stould WA Twenty-five of these coats from one of the most exclusive manufacturing tailors in New York. 175 are from a manufacturer who wished to give his factory over to Spring merchandise. and fineness that make outevenina Sale of SWITCHES 150, first quality hair. $10 for $15 to $18 grades. 22 in. long. All shades. Guaranteed to be as rep- resented. NOTE, please— —the Salon de Beaute special- izes in the permanent wave. Salon de Beaute— Third floor, Old Building ONDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1919." |THE LAFAYETTE MAKES FIRST! A Sale of unusually beautiful Coats All of the coats have a distinction sonof beautiful coats. The materials are the finest sort of be récompensed for Shanting, but by|einemen: Warren &. Stone, of the en- her recent enemies and not the Ailiés, | fingers, and Ly B, Shepard, of the con- Seven bicycle riders, who Intend to . enter the six-day race at M a - Bi Square Garden, were in the third Peay "ere Bremer ‘Deore Bar SERVE ‘Thibergien, from France, and Aerts, appetizing, nourishing and enjoyable food at every meal by using bin, and nd Beyse, from Befgtum. Bohemian id she had rea, was detained or further questioning by the inunigra- Lea dGe2, . pilipicbaaeniiand Can) HINES’S R.R. OFFER TAKEN UP SAUCE Every bottle is guaran- teed. It is a distinct aid to cooks and cooking. LEA:PERRINS Heads of Brotherhoods Consider ‘age Raise Proposed. CLEVELAND, 0., Nov. 17.—Heads of the four railroad brotherhoods met here to-day to consider Director General Hines's offer of overtime payment on slow freight service. They hope to be be able to give An answer within’s werk SAUCE one “attending. the conference wots cluded 3. Lee, of ‘the trainm Abteab a iBbane-erey hte tasamtala dete Timothy Shea, of the firemen and Refuse substitutes. j NAMAKER’S and Coat Wraps combined, in most of the models, with fine fur $87.50 Tuesday morning In the Women’s Coat Salons are sample | frost glow, duvet de laine, chame- leon cord, bolivia cloth, peach- bloom, and velours. Seventy-five per cent. of these coats are trimmed with raccoon, nutria and skunk. The models are exclusive, the drawings give an idea of the type of coat. The colors are shades of brown and beaver, faisan, midnight blue, beige, and black. second floor, Old Bldg, them stand 200 new Blouses on the Main aisle , At the special price at $10.50 Especially fine grades of Georgette crepe in five or six models. Flesh and white blouses are trimmed with real filet lace or eyelet embroidery. Suit blouses come in suit shades and are more severe of style. Main Aisle, Old Building THE NEW EDISON PHONOGRAPH—“the phonograph with a soul’—was designed and per- fected by Thomas A. Edison, at a cost of three million dollars, for the man and the woman with a soul for good music—for the best music that can be produced with the singer absent. It was housed in a Period cabinet because of a nice sense of the fitness of things—a rare jewel deserves a rare setting. It comes to WANAMAKER’S because it is something that enriches living, and because to the men and women who have dealings with us such things are a necessity. that we are Creations, to This is notice, therefore, prepared, with NEW EDISON Phonographs and Re- supply the need for such, for cash, or on such terms as shall be convenient to each purchaser, in reason, and in confidence. , Have you arranged for your Thanksgiving music? ‘The New Edison Phonograph Shoo. On the First Gallery of the New Building. John Wanamaker Broadway at Ninth, New York suits, but— $49.50 these days? of a kind. and cassimeres—in fancy patterns; no blues or blacks. ; measurements — Larger than 48, twenty per cent. additional. 245 Men can have Made-to-measure Suits Tuesday at $49 50 Just enough material to make 245 sack Who expected a made-to-measure suit at There are 51 patterns—one, two and three Unfinished and finished worsteds, cheviots Every suit will be made to your individual And finished in our usual painstaking way. Sizes 44 to 48, ten per cent. additional. Broadway, corner Eighth Street Why the $6, $8 and $10 Mufflers at $3.65? A slightly raised thread—a very small irregularity in weave—that’s all. couldn’t be sold as firsts, so they’ll go as seconds, with this small price attached. silk and artiticial silk qualities with fringed ends—in all the colorings you've read about. Just the sort of muffler a man usually pays full price for. Burlington Arcade floor, New Building Broadway at Ninth, New York l | But they Pure | beginning Monday, Nov. 17th. Crisp, flavory disks of satis- g sweetness. Delicious! Assorted Flavors, also coat Chocolate, Wintergreen and Cinnamon. ONE OF 300 NECCO SWEETS NEW ENGLAND CONFECTIONERY CO. ,BOSTON, MASS, FLORIDA — Winter Land of Summer Pleasures See Florida this Winter. Yield to the spell of mag- nolias adrift with blossoms, royal palms arching cathedral aisles, orange ablaze with color, Tang of ocean, aroma of pines. The outdoor world . at its best. Great hotels thronged with happy . Dancing and social entertainments. fightful companionship. Days full to overflowing with the holiday spirit. Sail, fish, hunt, swim, golf, motor, play tennis. Whatever itis you seek, whether sport and gaiety ~ or rest and recuperation, Florida’s endless variety offers diversion for all. Attractive Winter Excursion Fares to Resorts in the South are offered by the United States Railroad Administration. For Fares, Schedules, Service, Maps or Booklet, “Florida and Southern Winter Resorts,” apply to or write nearest Consolidated Ticket Office or ‘Travel Bureaa Trevel Buresu Travel Bu: ‘Bul ‘143 Liberty Street ts tranepgrtation Building 148 Liber’ Sires we Hecley Dulding PUM OL "Wiliam, C. Redfield Retiring from the Cabinet On November Ist SPEAKS TO AMERICAN BUSINESS MEN Through The New York Commercial THE NATIONAL BUSINESS NEWSPAPER Vital Facts and Figures About Our Foreign and Domestic Commerce A frank and fearless discussion of present and future conditions. ‘ In six vital installments in The Commercial, MONDAY—-Business and the Government. } TUESDAY —The Democratic Drift in Corporate Ownership. WEDNESDAY—The Present Interest of Labor in the Railroads. THURSDAY—America’s Opportunity: Do We See It? Shall We Use li? FRIDAY—What Have We Learned From Experience At Home and i | SATURDAY—Practical Attack on Prices: Practical Support of Credit, At all leading news stands, 5c a copy. On subscription in the United States, Canada, and Mexico, $9.00 a year. In | foreign countries, $15.00 a year. New York Commercial ‘THE NATIONAL BUSINESS NEWSPAPER | 38 PARK ROW, NEW YORK Russell R. Whitman, Pres jf!

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