The evening world. Newspaper, November 24, 1919, Page 10

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

sa so “Work Being Rushed on Special Late City To-Day. \F Zdeat. B. W. Maynard, the “Flying | Parson,” whon won the recent trans- | ontinental air derby, has been forced | © sdandon temporarily his one-stop Might from New York to San Francisco, @eheduled for to-morrow ‘Léeut. Maynard will fly this afternoon, Bowever, for the benefit of the Actors fund. Using the same machine in hich he made his coast-to-coast-and- geturn trip, he will circle over the city, Groping pamphlets urging aid for the! “The “Fiying Parson” was to have) @Marted his onestop Might in his spe- @ially constructed De Haviland 4, * Because of the heavy inate, P r Ron-stop fight from. Mitchel Field, ym City, to Dallas, pee, a from fatter clty to San Fran Bn BI EN CGI : PROBABLY MYRON'S CREW of Rescue Boats Give Hope That Some of Missing May Be Saved. STB. MARIE, Mich., Nov, 4. if gale which swept Lake Superior y and yesterday, would be res- ‘was held out to-day by Marine men Captaina port, it ventured down from the i ot steamers who i et a shelter yesterday and hast * ria of men being seen Sat Sighs brought repite of, lashed to flot- fam from the Myron, Snow attempts a in midst of ome of the crew ‘escaped from the foundering 2 might drift: ashore i ; the patrolling coas' te pares So DANCE HALL DEATH LIST 28. a i : i : ‘were badly a 4 ion of an oll stove year-old boy was mak- settee in the storeroom beneath ad ‘Two Dead in Gas-Villed Room. Matwej Dorban, thirty-six, a waiter, and sepa Row every fifty-eight, « ‘was filled with eas fro: ‘The police are no’ Site The, Baler ‘Calle the greater clty yesterday to (demon- Wings—“Flying Parson” Circles bX against rene tion and what’ George deh our, & jerers’ arty leader, called “the organiat ion place of the Government.” have been reported, PARIS, Nov. circulation of which 1s forbidden in France because of {ts Bolshevik ten- has |dencies, were seised by the police yee- No | erday, according to the se de thourand copies of the newspaper La Feuille, which is published in Geneva and the Men at Noon Get Van Camp’s Beans Downtown Restaurants buy them to please men, for they can’t bake beans like Van Camp's. These beans are selected by analysis. They are boiled in water freed from minerals, so every skin is tender. They are baked in steam ovens baked for hours at 245 de- grees. So the beans are easy to digest. Yet the steam oven bakes them without crisping or bursting. The Van Camp sauce has a zest and tang like no other sauce you know. And we bake that ‘ into the beans. You can cut your meat bills by serving beans like these. Try them—see how men enjoy them, VAN GaMP's Pork and Beans Baked With the Van Camp oom aul areas Prepared in the Van Camp Sauce—Aleo Without It Spaghett! Peanut Butter Chit seuceretc, Kitchens at Indianapolis There May Be a Tea Just as Good as & “The Quality is Incomparable "” Buy on the Name “SALADA” PACKETS ONLY I ORANGE PEKOE. but nobody ever saw it— for ‘the Boil one cup of BRER. Pb ad preety ara cups of knife or cut round shapes with cup. Tell Your BRER. RABBIT. RABBIT Molasses. Then add three Make These Real South- ern Molasses Cookies Children. icious: BRER RABBIT CABIN STYLE COOKIES Add onetulf cup of sro ea do nl i, apn ten i Roll mixture thinly on floured board. Cut into small shapes with moderately, Bake Beware of the guest who dossn't like ’em. your grocer you want GOLD LABEL BRER RABBIT and you will get absolutely pure, delightfully flavored, real New Orleans Molasses, ees eee, ww: oF een bread for children. * also sells Green Label This is a specially selected molsses for cooking and Rem use and high- embe}—the GOLD LABEL for table Label especially for baking. It costs less It’s for table Do not fail to Hear the $3000,000 Phonograph Before you buy your Christmas Phonograph |O BUY a phonograph before you hear Thomas A. Edison’s won- derful phonograph—The New Edison—is to make a choice which you will be sure to regret. Music lovers and critics the country over have hailed Mr. Edison’s phonograph as the greatest in the world. The phonograph that you buy for Christ- | mas should be an heirloom in your family— as treasured as your solid silver and finest furniture. You do not buy a phonograph for a month or a year—but for a lifetime. The New Edison will give you the joy of perfect music, the greatest in the world—not only this Christmas, but during all the years to come. Have You Heard the Famous Edison Turntable Test? Do you know which is the best phono- graph? Can you tell the difference between the leading instruments? The Turn-Table offers you the only ac- curate and scientific comparison of phono- graphs ever devised. It presents the true musical qualities of three leading “instru- ments and The New Edison. It enables you to judge in the only fair way which phono- graph is best. Come in and ask to hear this remarkable test. Until December Ist can get the Laboratory Model of The New ‘Edison for only $285. This is the instrument on which Edison spent $3,000,000. Tome are other Period Models priced $155 to $6,000. The Edison Shop 473 Fifth Avenue Between 40th and 41st Streets SGD oer KQ ODN Union Suits for Men Warm winter under gar- ments that fit the body with glove-like snugness— Whether active or inac- tive; young or old; tall or medium; you'll find the embodiment of ;under- wear comfort and _per- fection in _ individually cut and tailored Impe- rial Union Suits. Bill Brother 270 Broadway 47 Cortlandt Stree 1456 Broodway 44 Kast 14th Gtreet 1630, Broadway 125th Bt. at 3d Ave, 2 Flatbush Avenue, Brooklyn Cig aheaor Appar $2.50 to $10. In Cotton. Wool, Worateds, Sitk-and- Wool and Sile Mia- ' The Overcoat Y OU want— at one-third less in price! We have the Overcoat you want, whether it be aconservative, double-breasted, form-fitting or any popular style. We haveit in the style you like—the all-wool fabrics you need—the tailoring you want. And the price is one-third lower than what you'll pay elsewhere. Because we produce all our own clothes and have no middleman’s profits to pay—because. our store is on low- rent Walker Street—because our volume of business is bigger than any other store. | | Come down today and choose your Overcoat from the largest, finest assortment in town— and pay one-third less for it. $95 to °75 Kidi/athes $8.95 to $25 4 A CLEAR ONE-THIRD SAVING! A CLEAR ONE-THIRD SAVING! STYLED LIKE OUR MEN’SCLOTHES MADE OF ALL-WOOL FABRICS — PRICED AT ONE-THIRD LESS joe Levy £ Son LL . i 119-125 Walker Street %:: — “Elevated” from Brooklyn and New York transfers direct to Canal Street Station,within sight of our store i“ i Every Subwa 7-4 an ”

Other pages from this issue: