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States Appraisers’ Store at Christopher « Gresnwien Streets, *RARCH FOR WITSING BOT, | ‘The parents of Henry Foret, seven: i I fe ghich ton, of No. 194 Elsmere Place the (@ptum and Bron, who disappeared Nov. 98 tant, he gre te te asked aid in the search for the missing Hf boy. Young Frost, who is also } yeltand known as Harry, had frequently en. ol Sewn +] preased a desire to go to New Orleans twenty-three, He is about @ feet 1 inch tall, weighs John Russo about 160 pounds, has black hair and Bireet, and eyes and dark complexion, Any Infor- + ae Rigel mation will be appreciated by his ee ee Se Reductions on Everything 10 to 40% Certainly— Our Libetal Credit S'iishaea, 22" : oe Peas Ts ea -llng In Golden uk | ST MET “Beran Anne ah Dining Room Suite, in Golden Oak Sovieg Table Dane Tab ines Cen esos coe, 329°° This eutit edfere you a strong iron bed, finished in sanitary white proved process cotton tap mattress anda live Englinder Link Fi opr ng that insures greatest comfort. This Bedding Outfit at......... Springs, Couch Beds Singer Parlor Suites De-Beds and Beds POPULAR PRICES OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS. MOTOR TRUCK DELIVERIES WiCon 6" AvER\S"St. When you wash your halr, care- ful what you use, Most soaps @nd pre= Pared shampoos contain t much alkall, whieh is very injurious, as it @tieg the scalp and males the hair ing to use is Mulsified co- poo, for this ls pure and ess. It's very cheap and else all to pleces, You can got Mulsified at any drug store, & few ounces will last the whole family for months, Simply moisten ‘the hair with water and rub in, about = teaspoonful Is all ‘required. It makes an al out easily. Tho ickly and evenly, and is » bright, fluffy, wavy vy to handle. Besides, it loosens takes out every particle of dust, and daniruff, Be sure your drug: sist gives you Mulsified, areola guneo “A Word to the Wise” tt is meant for you: Do your teeth need attention ? Then here's the word: WATERBURY! Advanced methods in every depart. ment—X-Ray diagnosis, skilled opera- tors—with cost than for inferior work. And always QUICK SERVICE, Ex- tractions made—new teeth in a day. All Languages Spoken. Lady Attendania, | WALERbunt wewlaL LOMPANY CUTICURA SOOIHES SKIN TROUBLES |. Ratablished 1897 | W. 34th St., New York 16 Fulton St. Brooklyn “_ 7 4] THE EVENING WoRLD, THURSDA Extraordinary Reductions On These High Grade Blyn Boots---Oxfords---Pumps Savings Average Over % p One-Third / \ Midwinter é and early _ spring ke styles The winter's leading styles in a large variety of models—a few illustrated —all desirable leathers including suede. Footwear suitable for street, sports and dress wear—reduced far below our previously lowered prices. WEST SIDE stones: Bee ww. 18tH BL, West of 7h Ave, om Ave, and 7 My Ave, Btn and 40cm Ota, 442-444 Fulton Bt, ORD. Braye Bt. wr. Hoyt 020-459 Bway, ak, Park Av. & Ellery 80 ted H267 road ¥ Greene Ave. NEWARK STORES: . was Uroas Bt, ope, Military Fark, Special Reductions in Hosiery Women's Extra Quality Sitk Special | Women’s Fall Fashioned Pure Special lose, Former Price jose, Former Price 2.00 Full fashioned. Colored garter tops. 2.49 | Black, cordovan and all leading street shades. 1.35 Women’s Fine Wool Sports Hose, Special | Men's Full Fashioned Pure Silk 3 Pairs Regular Price 2.50 Socks, 98c Pair Leather mixtures, special value. Black. cordovan, blue and gray. 2.50 FRIDAY Fourteenth Street (ESTABLISHED 1827) ‘Went of Fifth Avenue Advance Fashions in Trimmed and Untrimmed MILLINERY Prices recede to lower levels as Fashion advances. Here are two examples of smart Spring headwear as moderate in price as’they are distinctive in style. TRIMMED HATS 10.00 Value $15.00 and $17.50 Illustrated A— One of many styles combining UNTRIMMED HATS 3.95 Were $1.74 Elewhere $5.74 Illustrated B— straw with feathers, Oth : “iy od Charming sport hats of gros models of all straw, or straw and sh wolate are gray, de Londres, braided with pheasant, brown, navy ar combinations, Included a straw of a contrasting color, come in blue, pheasant, brown and Copenhagen. NEW STRAW BRAIDS A large selection of charming colors, including rewest ‘shades of Qray—yard.........e0e 54 secheceusnee WO: AS Five to ten yard pieces..... 67 to 2.95 Frames—of buckraim or wire this price are many high class samples, SATURDAY | Y, JANUARY 13, 1921," Aov M | apvenrisemenr, | Aov marr on \ Personal—but Thip ts Letter. No, 12 of a dustries (the backbone of ow country) and themselves « lot of good, eee ‘The suggestion of President-elect Harding, made to Senator Knox, of Pennsylvania, and to E. B. McLean, in charge of local inaugural cere- monies, that tis inauguration on March 4 be made very simple and thrifty has been accepted very gexi- erally as a wise and patriotic move. Us will certainly be an innovation to inaugurate a President of the United States fm a thrifty way, but it indicates very clearly the trend of the times, Keeping a lot of money in the United States Treasury instead of “a show” is very much large will recognize that President- elect Harding proposes to carry out the pledges he made during his campaign. Governor Miller, of New York, who has a judicial and analytical mind, knows that the need of the hour is economy in the administra- flen of the business affairs of the State, so he has started and will carry through a Thrift Movement in State aflaire. You know, of course, that he has set apart the week beginning Monday, January 17, and ending Sunday, January 23, as THRIFT WEEK for the State—thus indicat- ing his conviction that the NA+ TICNAL THRIFT MOVEMENT is vital to the country. oo 8 All men, apparently, in public life, in professional lile and in busi. ness life aie greatly impressed with the absolute necessity of everybody practising Thrift and investing their surplus in sound securities, which will cause speedy resumption of all business indus. tries it the couniry. Henry L. Doherty & Company are in entire accord with the tions taken by President-elect ding and Governor Miiler—not as Republicans—but as citizens and business men, for they see very clearly that ECONOMY, which is Takitt, is the only thing that will ‘revabilitate quickly the business vi the Nation and put it on a sound asis. They are in entire accord with the NATIONAL THRIFT MOVEMENT. + They want todo Loge in the air with GEKMS Of THRIFT, @o that everybody cam inhale them and get them Into thelr systems, never to come out again. These GERMS will not make anybody sick; they will not make anybody feel mean; on the contrary, twey will be a GkEAT 1ONII They will put PEP and CONFI DENCE into everybody, eee Economy is Thrift Thrift Is Common Sense Common Sense |sProsperity There ie acry going up here, there and everywhere: “ppend your money, buy now, redeve manuiace turers and merchants of their sur- piuy stocks, keep your meney in circulation,” Henry L. Doherty & Company, in urging people to practice Thrift and to tnvesi their money in safe securities, which will carn (Lem, money steadily, are not opposed to WISE BUYING, but they are Ua posed to EATRAVAGAN# BU GING, The Thrift they have in mind ts the kind that, will keep sup. plied with money always, so they can ALWAYS BUY, Steady buying is the backbone of business, and please remember that ONLY Tuk TrikirTY CAN BUY STEADILY, : if all workers were thrifty and owned the solid securities of the ica mati sacl) ait ° not confidential Every Employer. Every School-Teacher Any and Every Organization wil be supplied FREE with any number of the LITTLE RED THRIFT BOOKS tssued by Henry L. Doherty & Company, 60 Wall Street, if they will agree to distribute them among workers, school-children and organization members during NATIONAL THRIFT WEEK, starting Monday, January 17. All you need do is to telephone Hanover 10060, or write or telegraph Henry L. Doherty & Company, 60 Wall Street bof telegraph send message collect), naming the number Little Red Books you want, and they will be delivered to you without charge of any kind. “You ‘may tequest them in lots or more. 100, 500, 1,000, 5,000, 10,000 THE ONLY STIPULATION IS THAT YOU AGREE TO DISTRIBUTE THEM WISELY AND THRIFTILY, Henry L. Doherty & Company are willing to do this to ald the NATIONAL THRIFT MOVEMENT. Now, this Little Red Thrift Boox is a convenient and en- during pocket-piece, which one should carry always and read and re-read, because every time it is read it will emphasize the value of practising Thrift. It contains a reproduction of an interview with Mr. Henry L. Doherty, which was published in the New York Tribune, Sunday, Feb. 29, 1920, and is as follows: The ‘National Vice. Our national vice is extravagance, We have many people who resent the fact that other people have ac- cumulated weaith and they have not, and yet there are dozens of men | have known from boyhood who have consistently spent every- thmg which has come into their hands and were temperamentally so constituted that tney would have spent every cent they re- ceived, no matter how much it might have been. A Foo! Question, It may seem like a fool ques- tion, but the man who has no capita) and resents the fact that others have should seriously ask himself: “How long will it take me to get rich if 1 continue to spend everything 1 get?” Conserving and Spending. A determination to save, if car- ried to fruvtion, teachgs a man how to spend inteuigently and how to get the greatest vaiue for what he must spend. IAnteugent and discriminating buying woud, to a great extent, muse proliteer ing impoasibie, Charity. . If thrift could be made pretty much a general thing througgout this country its effects woud be more far-reaching than must peo- pie unagine. 1t would mean bet- ter moras, less m.sery and yreatly lessened ‘demanas for cnarity. ‘Trace back every dividua case of the need for cnarity and see how far you have to go to find that the need # due to lack of thrift. \ Thrift and Crime. Trace back the history of every crime and évery criminai und see how olten crime ana crimina.s ace Che resuit Of wack us thrut. | asaed B CeeLruved pouce vier severas yeas ago whut woud ve the re GULlLoOD WW crime and picé.tulon it turut were ,enerauy preach: ed. he aid not tuen pbink woud bring @ very great reaucuun, oul he never torut our conye.saion BDL peblerally swerreu Ww ib wued- ever we afterward met, and each time be woud estimisle a greater reduction in crime and prostitutio and he said the ist Lime we tu that if thrift were generauy prac- tied crizhb would be reuuced by 6 per cent. and prostitution by'b0 per cent. Pleasure of Thrift. To gtart and maintain @ Bislent, pan Ol ying By Fey’ Due sedewilh and Geernomeiwo tenn many persons possess = WueD they teach # ered pout, oow= ever, it couses 0 ve & harusuip to them anu yecoues & pease. Lb bes taugol lug OW Ww Barve, HOW ty pene anu LOW to inves, and olen i@iu8 Ww a fortune su vasc as W be unnecessary and (rou. Quiue Bod OL bo! ube cacept tae tun oO} pimying tue yane, Opportugity. . ‘This is the day and age of op « portunity, gnu we live in tae Country of the greatest opportuni tees. Upportunity must pass eaco Mad # GOOF nus once, VUl viva, But cerertanty is not apt to stop and knock at the door of the man who is but an indifferent workman. Most fortunes have been built by laying by small initial amounts, but when opportunity knocks the man who has not prac- tised thrift or who hus no credit must let opportunity go e'sewhere, and opportunity will seek out the man who is known to be thrifty. Rich and Poor. The fact that laying by and in- vesting are first a hardship and later a pleasure, and often become a@ mania, is one reason why, on one hand, we have many people who are quite rich and, on the other hand, a great many more people who never have anything ahead, and this in a country where opportunities are very rf .nly equal. But still more remarkable is the fact that for every rich man who makes a fortune we can all point to a dozen men who had ra natural advantages to make eir fortunes, but did not _ We are told that the rich are getti richer and the r are gettin; poorer, Thit is plain “bunk.” The great majority of the rich people of to-day were the children of the poor people of a generation ago. | = National Resources. * Many people are discouraged from practising thrift in the belief that all of the wealth that can be accumulated has been accumu- lated This is ridiculous, Nobody knows accurately at this time what the accumulated wealth of the entire country is, but rela- tively it is quite small when meas- ured by rational standards. For centuries we have been converting the natural resources of this coun- try, which cost us nothing, into wealth, and yet the éntire amounts laid by which represent our accu- mulated wealth, both private and public, would not be sufficient to support us on our Peeans scale of living for a period of ten years, even assuming we could convert this weaith without loss from the form inf which it now exists into the things we would need to live on. In less than ten years'every- thing, inciuding the house over our heads, would have to be sold to furnish us with what we con- sume. What Thrift Does, Here is another example: If the workers of the country should save 10 per cent. of their salarics and wages, and this were invested at 6 per cent, interest, they would in a single generation accumulate more wealth than has been accu- mulated ip, all of these centur..3 and ail of tnes> generations. Here is stiii anotner example: Mf one family had come to this country at the time Jamestown was settled with a capita f $7,000, and. this fund, toget ver with its proceels, had been con tinually inves.ed at 6 per cent. ever since, this one family alone woud mow have @ greater wealth than our entire accumuiation of wealth. Every one working for better morals, better citizenshi),, better eondi.ions of cnarity subjects, can perhaps attain tne aesred ena more quickly by working to make thrift universal tnan by working along his present lines. Don't you believe that the above message, distributed widely, will do a lot of gvod? Don’t you think it will make workers particularly realize the need of always having some money laid by and safely invested? Don't you think it will have a splendid influence with school children who have yet to Btart the battle of life and who should know before they start that they will get, along in the world much faster and with greater happiness if they learn the lesson of thrift? Letter No. 13 will appear to-morrow, Friday (e good combination is 13 and Friday), in morning and evening newspapers. Sincerely yours, WILLIAM C, FREEMAN, J ~ he A West 46h ate Ne) Clty, a ee