The evening world. Newspaper, October 9, 1922, Page 6

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a) f sd Sane rs Two Little School Girls Teach Fire Prevention in Simple Words ; vay. "| Champion to Fight Hard for Draw 254 Children Receive Medals : be careful fn uring Experts Say Rzeschewski Has Slight Advantage in Suianetta Mason and Ruth th Phillipe, One Handicap by Blindness, the Other by Being a Lately Arrived t Immigrant, Write Best Essays on Subject. i Gold and silver medals were pinned on the breasts of 264 public and | be careful when we light lamps, never parochial school children at City Hall at noon to-day by Murray Hulbert,| 64° Matches should be kept in a tin President of the Board of Aldermen, who acted in the absence of the Mayor. | ho Thirty of the medals were gold and 224 were silver. Two of the children i SEANNETTOs © MASON: ROTH PHILLIPS picked for signal honors were Jeanette Mason, a blind girl of ‘thirteen years, of No. 4280 Park Avenue, and Ruth Philips, a Russian child in this country from Minska, Russia, but two years, The children marched behind the) ——— Department Band from Engine Com- pany No. 31 at Lafayette and White} °FY- Streets, The parade was led by As- sistant Fire Chief Thomas J. Hayes vention. At City Hall, Fire Commis- sioner Drennan introduced President Hulbert who said in part; ‘No other eity can show sucti remarkable work in, fire prevention by children of your age as can the great City of New York. “Your showing in writing fire pre- or a servant of fire? address in a neighborhood of Russia, and whil improvement over last year. I wish cation for her age, cooking for us. It also runs machin- "In early days fire was more neces- Sary to, man than it is now. One of its most important uses was to keep in charge of the Bureau of Fire Pre-] wild animals away from the huts. “Are you going to make a master Ruth Philips was at the Public Library when an Evening World re- porter called at the Monroe Street tenements where fires are as common- place as the day itself. Through a neighborly interpreter Mrs, Philips vention essays this year is a great Said that Ruth went to school in THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, OUTOBER 9, 1y2z2. ; : i Boy Chess Player Forces Veteran | Gass Cy, HUTT TT | As Ba my, helps us to live. Fire gives us the SIP Samm steam which moves our boats and trains. Long ago people got their Nght from fire; now fire is used to make gas and electricity. 1CaaPs or MMMM Sig, po OL eee ATTA : “OUR NEW ILLUSTRATED SPORTS BOOK | will be mailed upon request | BONWIT TELLER & CO. FIFTH AVENUE AT 38™ STREET, \ Vy, the gas stove. We must keep rub- bish in a box away from the stove and from matches. We must not de careless about matches, throwing them about without looking where All the chess experts who have been discounting the prowess of the they go, especially when they are] Polish ten-year-old wonder, Sammy Rzeschewski, saying he wi good Faron enough player but not in master class,” are recanting to-day because of the boy’s extraordinary showing in his Ninth American Chess Congress game against David Janowskt, veteran champion of France, ‘The game ts not yet finished but un-¢————+————————————————— biased masters who have followed the} at the Chess Club International, in irst forty-five moves say the child has West Fourth Street, near Sixth Ave- a better chance to wi nthan his gra; nue, under the presidency of Mr. haired opponent, who had the ad-| Hodges, and is financed by Carlyle vantage of playing white and the first | Sherlock. move. Other players participating are: Janowski is fighting for a draw,"'| Edward Lasker, the almost perpetual Contest With Janowski—Predict He Will Be World Champion. “In order to prevent fire we should filling them with kerosene when light- The Paris Successes of Jenny, Lanvin, Hallee, Patou, Agnes and Rolande Mirrored in in a safe place. . We should keep a globe on the sas Jet. fires could be prevented by Have the rubbish in a . Keep the cellar clean, every- thing In its place. Have the dumb- walter as clean as possible, with the : ; iso. sh beak Gencueried as Te Ray said A. B. Hodges, former champion of }champion of the middle west; I. pedal hp Ag the United States. And Janowski him-| Bernstein, state champion; and H. R.| 4& 4 @ orm the ges HEN frst thing to do {tlt Without confessing quite so much, | Bigelow. | Lasker has won two Omen Ui oa UME, te'to make it known to the Fire De-|dcclated to @ group of spetcators, This afternoon and to-night] 4 ‘ Tne nae y ending in an alarm, In|‘ This lad is the coming champion of [he is to play the little boy, and tt is the world.'* that the contest will bi 4E | a place where there are many people, e = 5 when a fre breaks out we must not mental strain of nearly six | sensational, fet excited” We mast go out through [ous pay sesterdny Nett the ber 20: | pyrometycONTROIEpicnrr o| (de OF SURPASSING ELEGANCE is the nearest exit or fire-excape, quietly. , ; R R If we do these things many lives will {Untinithod game will be played out! WASHINGTON, Oct. 9. 0 BD/ taunted cacti year Wednesday. At the same time the boy | preme Court to-day dented the appltca- | [ell ~_ will finish his game with Charles | tion of the State of Colorado and others TWO-PIECE TYPES THREE-PIECE TYPES 8. REPRESENTATIVE sN8| Jaffe, former State champion, and he | for rehearing of the original cass KING's BOOK IN ATHE i is said to have a good chance to win | brought by the State of Wyoming, aris- ATHENS, Oct. 9 (Associated Press). —|that ing out @ tthe diversion of water trom . = Jefferson American This congress is the boy’ meheblithidh hy Riel nc ation Migrbebi A 0 95 00 250 00 | 15.00 550 00 y Oe ee poy's initial the rule that ‘priority of appropriation © to . 6 to A ha on coh e test of tour-| was controlled in establishing the right that this dia] Dament play ‘by the clock"’ against}t 9 use water taken from interstate vw ) not Involve recognition of King George] ™en of the first rank. streams, but ordered certain minor} \¥ . aps c -|y by the United States The congress is being held this year !changes in the decree. ARIS this season has glorified the suit-costume and trans- | formed it into the costume-elegant—and Bonwit Teller & Co. have reproduced its elegance as well as its French-ness in these :| two and three piece versions of the suit-costume. The Predominating Silhouette is Bloused and ib) Tight at the Hips, the Short Box : Coat a Close Second in Favor. FABRICS: Duvetyn, diabure, heliosa, marcova, fashona, pandora, icy juina, ardenna, veldyne, marleen, matelasse, caracul cloth, velvet. FURS: Beaver, fitch, fox, squirrel, monkey, wolf, sable gills, skunk, : « black mole, gray mole, lynx. WOMEN'S SUITS—Second Floor old the older people would take the same] mother sald, learn any English until Interest in this subject as you younger] she attended the public school on \ a) folks. Take home “this lesson you] Market Street. Jearned and tell *the older folks what As to safeguarding they/should do to prevent fire, Show| against fite, Ruth wrote this: them the medals uu have received here to-day and teach them why they should be careful." annette Mason and Ruth ips. Jeannette was dressed in a Girl Scout's uniform, and when Mr. Hulbert pinned the medal on her waist she saluted him with true military snap. Ruth Philips came next, and fm turn all the other children received those days they had no guns. Jeannette Mason wrote her crsay on a Braile slate of raised letters and her teacher, Miss Bessie Bluman, FIFTH AVE. ond 67th STREET transcribed the essay into script. It New Yona runs like this: ‘There are a great many fires in New York City caused by the negit- gence of the people. The only way to decreawe the number of fires is through care on the part of our NO BRUSH to clog up the suction or citizens. . ‘There are many ways of get covered with hairs or preventing fires. Some of the mos! important can be observed by ull of wear down ‘the carpet. us in our own homes and in public Powerful suction gets the We can all refrain from embedded dirt. Places. throwing lighted cigars, cigarettes and matches around, and from col- Jecting heaps of newspapers and rub- dish. SLOANE VACUUM CLEANER “Housewives should be careful in lighting their gas ‘stoves, for m fires are due to thei relessi Draperies should never be hung near ® gus jet, because the ‘When we consider that only careless- nees and thoughtlessness cause many of our fires, we should all do our part to prevent them. “Bo far we have spoken of fire as @ bad master; but we all know what @ good servant it is when it is used properly and is under our control. How could we live without fire? It gives us heat and light and does our Those fashionably -sheer chiffon silk stockings now so much in demand— Made of beautifal qualit pers ty thread ailk-= tote af creased ged, unclouded, and delicately strong — With silk 4 atecty Pai ioneed — Centemeri In the smart shades: otter, peedaley, gunmetal and Hose Fashioned with exacting care and endowed with the maximum of durability attainable in such exquisite stockings— 2.95 400 FirrH AVE. Women's Imported Wool New York— Philadelphia Golf Hose, 3.00 to 8.50 Grenable, France “Fire is man’s friend when used in the right way. It protects him from the cold. In early times people Mr, Hulbert then called out the| used to build fires in the woods to keep away the wild animals, for in means of fire we cook the food which err age. ee W.&J.SLOANE Complete with all attachments, Accepted by and supplied tothe United States Government for, use in Government Buildings. i the home fancy for a beautiful slipper is never disturbed by ‘an tg exorbitant price, here, Modan tion is the rule, although one may give full vent to her desire for all that is exquisite and || B. Altman & Cao, For to-morrow (Tuesday) recent in color, design, leather and treatment: ~ The “Opcolco” costume slipper, a style of tomorrow, presented today, in Otter Suede», Brown Satin, Black Suede, Patent Leather and Black Satin, $12 OPPENHEIM, OLLINS &6© 34th Street— New York An Important Offering of Misses’ Paris-made Beaded Frocks for Afternoon and Evening ‘America’s Foremost Specialists OPPENHEIM.CLLINS &@ 34th Street —New York comprising a number of unusually beautiful modéls, fashioned of various silk crepes and elaborately beaded. A very remarkable assortment Speciaf Tomorrow—Tuesday Correct eftsefé, Models every frock a phenomenal value at $46.00 The collection presents & comprehensive range of the fashionable daytime and eventing colors. Misses’ V/ool Jersey Dresses Sizes 14, 16 and 18 Years; Also Suitable for Women to 36 Bust 15.00 T wo-plece model, all-over embroidered Jacquet (Department for Misses’ Frocks, Second Floor) Pladison Avenue- Fifth Avenue, New Bork Thirty-fourth Street Thirty-fitth Street Blouse; pleated skirt. One=plece models; at- teched skirt. Pashionable Fall shades. Misses’ Dep't.—3rd Floor

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