The evening world. Newspaper, June 15, 1920, Page 17

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LLS METHODISTS |WAR VETS PULL BULK OF $1,000,000] ‘DOWN JEWISH FLAG gebaae td: Hs Wesleyan University, Churches and] emblem Pluttered From City Hall Hospitals Share in W. F. Arm- for Young Judeans’ strong Estate, Convention. William F. Armstrong, formerly Of) party ‘to<day a committees of Veterans) F, Ww, So, 118 West 57th Sjreet, who died on] o¢ goreign Wars entered the City Hall y 2 last in St, Luke's Hospital,|in Jersey City and, mounting to the Ne Butldy Moar ae to tts folds was the]and Public Bylldines, “To the City Commissioners—This flag was taken down by a committee representing the Veterans of Foreign Wars, and if {t is to be displayed on any of our public buikiings again !t| 293 ‘A. “Harry Moore, » said the “flag is ed and not @ na- aw no harm in placing it, tion, ao we on @ public ry building. mist be displayed with the American | om fell from an ub She was clad in a Commander Harry B, Loeyen Post, V.| ona room ‘was open, indicating she from an open window on’ the joor. rector of Parks picago, and whose will was filed for| third oor, pulled down rom the bal- obate in the Surrogate Court here|cony in ¢ront of the ate kel Lib _— terday, left the bulk of his estate,| starred Jewish flag. wi a over the rail of the bancony mounting to almost $1,000,000 ta) Cried Ove ner reading “Welcome, felucational and charitable institut tions, By the terms of the will the restd-|Young Judeans, which has bee in ses- estate goes to Wesleyan Unl-| won in Jersey Clty for several days. Versity, in addition to @ bequest of) ‘The (lag was taken dnside and ieft on $100,000 for the founding of several] the floor in front of the office of the “Armatrong scholarships.” Other bequests include: $100,000 to the New York Kast Conference of the Methodist Lpiscopal Church; $100,000 t Home Missions of DIEO. ZIMMERMAN.—FRANZ MIL, 58 years . ok Rites = C1, “tats OF te tate wisely Raewa Wood Frank E. Campbell, founder of The Funeral. Church, Misdsigniag’ s2b000 each tor the Fas feat it Solon, taj Saumarae Broadway at éoth ‘Street, means Economy. combined SE ao oer a pital | & Co for 86 years, died at his home, with Quality, Merchandise aligned ‘with Service. Brooklyn and the General oclety of Connecticut; and $10,000 228 Madison st., Brooklyn, Funeral sorvices will be held at the Zimmerman residence, At 8 o'clook on ‘Tuesday evening. Interment wit! take place in Lutheran Cometery at 2.80 1° M., Wednesday. He ts survived by his widow, Mra, L, Zimmerman; two daugh- ters, the Misses Ruth and Anna; one e] son, Emil jr., and one daughter-in-law, Tile Zimmerman. and_ $25,000 Of $150,000 to his nephow W. trong Smith of Hartford, Conn. The emnne tt It’s a fact. Virginia tobacco is . mow all the “go” in England and has been for 300 years. British smokers the world over know and enjoy its natural tobacco flavor. What's more, they wantit straight —as shown by John Bull's prefer- ence for all-Virginia cigarettes, / ‘ FUNERAL DIRECTORS, ] ————— _ ,,Economy is not merely a matter of price. Quality is the outstanding feature. Just as Merchandise alone does not form a business transaction. To place a funeral arrangement in the hands of Mr. There is no funeral too small, none too.elaborate, but that it will have the personal attention of Mr. Campbell. No merchandise, no casket, is purchased unless it com- bines Economy with held unless it provides “Campbell Service,” a service of beauty, consolation, peace of mind and of fond memories, \ FUNERAL DIRECTORS, Economy By DR. BERTHOLD A. BAER Service is what counts most. ality. No funeral service is JOHN BULL: “NOTHING LIFTS A LONDON FOG, SAM, LIKE YOUR ‘VIRGINIA SUNSHINE’* England knows a good thing, too! You get Virginia 100% straight in Piedmonts — made from the ripest, brightest leaves of the world’s best cigarette tobacco, unspoiled by blending. Piedmonts have the true Vir- ginia taste—and you can’t beat that anywhere. The Virginia Cigarette January ist has installed 35,418 new telephones in New York City, combined. . when materials were plentiful and quickly obtainable, and when mands for service and equipment were moderate. But to have vide the necessary facilities. 64,843 take all of ten weeks, work to completion in anywhere near the time we planned it. never has been a time when the demand for service was so great today, and never a time when it was so difficult to secure even percentage of the material required to meet this demand. and installation of telephone materials improve. meet conditions to the best of our ability and with every command. That Lasts|{7 Dentistry ic Ay frase Bridge Work is in a class ry, itself, Itvls beautiful, durable and @ble. Constructed on scientific ed, and gives the wearer last ing satisfaction, It does not fall or abble, The WATERBURY Way morning, have your a cayed teeth saved—missing teeth re- placed without plates. OWN ANAESTHETIC applied to the gums to relleve PAIN from ex- tract or surgery. Gas administered if indicated or deatred, | WATERBURY DENTAL COMPANY | Incorporated NEW YORK TELEPHONE COMPANY © 35,418 ee eae Foe In spite of almost insurmountable obstacles, this Company, since almost as many telephones ag there are in Jersey City, Hoboken and Bayonne We would have been proud of such an installation in normel times the de- accom- plished the task in the face of the obstacles to the proper conduct of busi- ness that have confronted this organization, just as they have every other organization in the country for the past six months and more, stamps the work as one of the biggest jobs this or any other Company has ever done. Yet big as this accomplishment is, and regardless of efforts we have made and are making to meet the abnormal and ever increasing demand for service, new applications continue to come in faster than we can pro- Unfilled Applications are now on our books The demands for new service are even greater than they were at the first of the year and the means for meeting them become less each day : because of conditions outside the telephone business which are wholly be- yond ouf control. Shipments for example from factories near Chicago that in normal times took but eight days to reach theit destination now Not only is there a great shortage of the raw materials needed for fabricating telephone facilities, but the transportation of such material is so far behind schedule that it is almost impossible to carry our construction There as it is © a small Applications for service, from doctors, nurses, hospitals, for cases of serious illness and fire or police purposes, will, because of their emergent nature, be cared for first, — service required as a- business necessity second, and thirdly, service that is for convenience only. This policy will be, followed until conditions governing the production, transportation Until then we will facility at our What really explodes in yoar engine FM gasoline tan! Run engine till warm. Lift hood. ‘Turn gasadjustment on carburetor, decreasing gradually flow of gas. ‘When engine slows, turn gas ad- foams back, slightly increasin: get maximum engine speed: Es 1897 ° ‘This is 15 to 1 adjustment, 29W. 3dth St. NewYork | She never ran like |, tyiswi onesie rch wane 414-16 Fulton St., Brooklyn | Houre: 6B te 6 Sundaye Closed | ALL LANGUAGES SPOKEN ~~ | | this before ore alr, Phi at thirty-five an hour, rabbit in front of gun. like this before. he starts out with the 15 to 1 mixture and Tyd: Tydol, the Economy Gasoline, vaporizes fast. Try the 15 to 1 mixture, (See chart above.) up with Tydol. engine—and at the end of the day you'll find y used less fuel to the mile than ever before. when Tydol costs more than ordi i economy, Look for the orange and black sign TIDE WATER OIL Sales Corporation (11 Broadway, New York City, it Sieve ais; Une tuck Ay pad ASSED every car on the grade—topped the old At a touch of the accelerator she lights out like a Talk about engine performance—she never ran ‘That's the sort of a day many a man has the first time ol, Fill Know the real joy of a ‘ive, snappy ou've Even gasoline it isan today.

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