The evening world. Newspaper, January 28, 1921, Page 22

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Lice KEP AGG PRICES HIGH: howd nm soe. 1 outs at fr Nati om 16e. to Be. mi With Deep Breaths and a e te on rib and 400. # Class Yell, HINTS 10 BIVERS = pound on to mb chops should be WLLPALDY, Mane. Jan. 28—- |° treme retai! prices. Mutton tm pil-| 4 Coryza closet to enuff the mut " e wholesale murket B80) fey and nip the cokls of Wellestey | Bell ne at Ie; to le, Any retal Meats, Butter em Eggs Down) bute 224 Sunday Dinner Should | to 1 Be Cheap. Choice mili veal tu tn abunde and nel: he Wholesale market Py P.O. Foy: {Speciai Food Expert of The Even- ii a fe: 4% : 6 than | 1 ing World.) : | a few deop breaths, utter a class i : ¥% A drop of 17 cents a duaer he yell and the menace will vanish, [tied Ushtly about hia neck, thes 4 r «© atruck tie lowest! "Pi: rung ta form. A similar closet |[ound Stewart, He had fastened the bcs Wholomais point In. year desirable henyy | ; other ond of the cord to the bed post 4 not denefit ‘Liloralltiy at. Tectoe | Wad Tocently tested in the college [ind alid trom the bed 4. wi sr ate Gant eo whileraiing wt Teh 1 infirmary with good: results, Dr ————_- = — a an » light Joing are selling @ | Katharine P, Raymond, the col- Bestel; Ges Seem FL Wholesale, a nth Light tons cut from aur loge physician, cuya A census il Utotf, forty-five, ar + cg ae oA } shows that $41 4 out of 367 ree of No. 448 Centra 4 Bost dealers Fre wld shoulder: ied thix morning in 43 re colds during t ' | to 85 cenix w retailed wt 1$e. t tani | sis ve mont sie. nickerbocker Hompital from a frac- — The whole *) weighing 6 to 8 pounde bithoad ure of the skull. He went last night - 3 ei liiin OGL (i a o visit his brother at No. 75 West | | - ng. | NOSVY Shoulders should cos - Wholesale market with plates and| th Street, tripped on the stoop and | ; o at chucks solling wt 14 to 17 couts, and fell, striking his head, | : ' butter | i in the not ovér 18 conte on the fines.” Hk 4 je market a for frenh|brew housewives should not be | iat ae a SE | > aw Wednerdu extras, while storage | onary than 2% to 41 cents on | ite ry im welling at fie. The | th: ats of whoulder steak, and | 5400 SECOND HAND * e retailed | a vie can be retailed at 24 x0V E R co TS|! only m pis Bound. | to s. Kosher soup , nis woek y wome|be rotalied at a profit of 20 4h White Ne Weber od anediis of extol | gents, — Kosher dressed tr [h reer 55 Ne Lower ae the finest tabl zt Ube, fe 7 wt 490. to BOC. in (he allied for a maurket at first this te. a pound, while! Kosher beef is again lower c The average sold at w promt and pot roasts and stewing jamb and mutton are cheap. an well legs of fine mutton at and other cuts from 16e. Retailers can creamer THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, JANUARY 28) | BUSINESS WORRIES AIR-TIGHT ROOM FOR WELLESLEY GIRL SNEEZERS | There the Snuffles Will Expire ot cont!) ° College girls ie being installed at Pounders’ Hall, iir-tight little wing and filled with the and disinfecting vapors of euca- lyptus ol) and formaldenyde When @ student feels a snecu on tho way she will rush into the compartment, shut her eyes, take The closet ts ao room, lined with | healing ence Ih ling at » while Ip can be rotailed at 46 to 48) whole- nts, while roasting chickens week uid coat No more than 40 cents a | in the | pound, Clarence Stewart, thirty-five, for brokerage firm of Clarke, Dodge & || 10, No. 61 Wall Street, committed suicide last night by banging him- self in his small fat at No, 1% West 71th Street. Jersey the door. about § o'clock s#he opened the bed- room door and she and the house- keeper entered. Kneeling at the foot vf the bed, the cord of his bath roby CAUSE OF SUICIDE} In ili-teaith and despondent beonuse f business worries, the police gay, ighteen years employed by the || Stewart sent his wife late in the fternoon to visit relatives in New He went to @ bedroom When his wife returned | and locked ‘“" _M. COHEN 195 Tth Av. Cov. 17th Ge Open. hariteee Stew The Penalty of Eye Neglect —is far too serious to ignore. the cost of glasses is a tri- importance compared with the value of your sight. Reliable Eyesight Examination by Registered Eye Ssecialists. Q6hrtich &Sons fi'ng Yotabi Red 69 Yours New York: 184 Bway, at John St. 223 Sixth Av., 15th St. 850 Sixth Av., 22d St. 103 Nasesu, at Ann St. |! 17 Weat 42d Street Brooklyn: 498 Fulton St., cor. maa When you buy muslin ask for FRUIT OF THE LOOM To the Business Men of the Retail Tire Business "ANY concerns in this country will look back on 1920 as the year they <'scovered the American public. They found out thai ? “ead: is not mere mass anu statistics—but people, Right now, every- where, business policies are being re-written— with the individual up- permost. The average American citizen is no longer a market. He is a person. There was never any other way to look at him in the first place. * . * O manufacturer everhad s a better chance to test a policy than the makers of United States Tires had last year. With every temptation to force production —to join the scramble to get the big share of tire demand—the United States Rubber Com- pany stuck to its quality pre- gram. Any suggestion of low- ered standards for immediate benefit were met with the words: “No Compromise.” * * e OUSANDS of motor- ists — average American citizens—independent think- . ers—acted in about the same way as this Company. They had temptations, too. Big discounts. Fictitious bargains. But they went to a legitimate dealer and bought United States Tires. These men had keen noses for economy values — and nothing put them off the track. Somehow or other they fastened on to the sim- ple down-to-earth policy be hind United States Tires—a policy that had never been bill-boarded broadcast but that can be set down in fifty words: “Take the average American you see on the streets of your home town. Never mind the weight of his car or the size of its wheels. Put as much conscience into a 30x 3% tire as any other. Think of the man before any- thing. Trust him to do square-toed, sensible thinking about tire economy.” AT this policy did is now a matter of record. This Company feels that it created the most substantial level-headed tire following in this country. Because of this following, the makers of United States Tires are working with every element at normal. December, 1920, shipments to dealers for early 1921 business were greater even than in the same month of 1919. OREOVER, this Com- pany starts 1921 with an unfilled order balance. Tire users get fresh tires, of current production. And now—this very day— more dealers and more tire users are coming to U. 8S, Tires than ever before. United States Tires United States @} Rubber Company Pack oy Sobor nd Rubber Organisation in tad 32un STREET “BROADWAY -33n0 STREET NEW YORK CITY « find a player of graceful period model—- _1921, FOR OTHER G IMBEL NFWws SEE PAGES: 16 AND 18 -GIMBEL BROTHERS LAST DAY) Saturday Ends the Sale of New Player Pianos 359 And Two Whole Years to Pay | To-morrow—Saturday—sees the end of one of the events of the season—the great sale of brand new player pianos at their | very lowest price—$359. And with terms of two whole years to pay—no one need let the opportunity slip by. Come in this even- “ ing—you’ll have no further opportunity to shop evenings—foi i Music Salons Are Open Till 9 | * Only Tonight and Tomorrow After 5.30 Please Use 33rd Street Entrance, Near B’way. Period Phonographs | LAST DAY AT THIS PRICE ANN Lu ‘ie Terms As Low As $5 a Month. Yes—$129—but just to-night and to- morrow. Come see it at once—you'll Brunswick : Pathe Victor : Columbia Compare all these makes before chuos- ing your phonograph. Compare them in tone, beauty, mechanism. And know that you've thosen the best. with a beautiful mahogany finish. Examine it for tone—you'll find it clear and mellow. Test out motor and me- chanism—al! of the best, A value un- precedented. But not to be had at this price after to-morrow! GIMBELS MUSIC SALONS—EIGHTH FLOOR |

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