The evening world. Newspaper, October 16, 1922, Page 10

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Seas ne Ska ae TW YORKER BAK NERVOUS WREEK Complains of Treatment by complaint to the Government. Mr. Manola said he arrived in not touch Smyrna. He became con- fected with the American Red Cross and American Relief with Secretary Jacob and took charge of transporta- tion. For two days, he said, Greek sol diers were streaming into Smyrna. They discarded their uniforms and equipment, and sold their donkeys and horses for 50 cents each, doing every- thing they could to disguise them- selves. The Armenian snipers, he says, were busy and he was wounded heard the shrieks of the women, It was a horrible nightmare \n real life that is with me constantly. It does Not leave me and it has made a wyeck of me. “Tn all the years that I have been visiting Smyrna I never have se¢n so many ships of ell nationalities in the harbor and everybody could have been saved. The French, English and others refused to take any but their own nationals. The American ships took their own first and anybody after that. The sights on the quay were beyon1 belief. Women unable to be taken off tossed their children into boats going }. they did not know where, “I left on the Winona. She had 2,130 refugees aboard and we were landed at Piraeus, There I was told diaprict. When the bus had gone only a few Poor Working Girl” Better Off Than Professor, Wife Asserts Must Choose Between Childlessness and Humiliation of subsistence, according to Mrs, Dorothy Hart Bruce, wife of H. L. Bruce of the faculty of the University of California. WHY HE ORDERED 57 CARS OF GINGER ALE Chicagoan Says He Thought New York Would Take figure ih the ginger ale mystery in which James A, Pugh, yachtsman cases of ginger ale, confident I could After Another Asleep in Street A municipal bus which carries passengers for nothing and is immune to all injunctions was very busy this morning over in the First Avenue The service was excellent, and yet none of the passengers showed signs of liking it. Patrolman James Shanley, cruising @ down the avenue to 12th Street, found Mary Nelson, thirty-nine, No. 89 St. feet it stopped to take on another un- they are and why. dispose of it in'New York," he was Meanwhile the ginger ale stood un- claimed on a siding in the Bush-Ter- minal, Brooklyn, demurrage charges rapidly affecting its value. ee intinees POLICE SEEK DYNAMITE IN STOVE EXPLOSION Believe It Might Have Been in Coal; Owner Injared. Max Watenberg, No. 9 Fairview Ter- race, West New York, N. J., ts to-day MIND TEST TO SHOW |JEWS OPEN FAIR TO AID CHARITIES Work of Federation’ Institutions on View. tinuance tute. The hospital booths dressed as nurses standing by the sides of beds on which lie other dolls repre- patients. homes show in a similar way the play senting pear, the The The Federation of Jewish Philan- which need $1,000,000 for their con- remaining months of ann Ship Captain In a letter published in the Univer-@ and manufacturer, shipped fifty-seven] 4909, ‘There will be no admission merican Ship Cap sity Chronicle, a faculty publication.) Mrs, Bruce said a budget issued re-| carloads of the beverage to New York! oharge nor will collections be taken. During His Flight. Mra. Bruce takes Issue with the bud-cently by a San Francisco teachor off oniy to find the order was a fake, willl Among the federation’s Institutions 7 in iy Genculetllaat got for household expenses for faculty Semtea fano wear Hee hes te apefsubmit voluntarily to a mental ex-Jare nix hospitals, eight child-caring A nervous wreck from his expert-| members recently announced by the] ie well dressed. “That allowan amination, according to Mr. Pugh. | jomes, five organizations to ald de- «llroom on the first mezza- x of the hotel the work of all Smyrna two days before the entry of 1m | ty diated. oa OT hey the Turks. There was every masut- unicipa us Ic S Dp ne run Analttae W7IEIC) REG Ghaney Hag, saa, fof these organizations is graphically ance, he says, that the Turks would do I know of any Booze Trust."* shown, Dolls dressed to represent every age, from childhood to ld age, are placed in booths, each of which de- picts the work of one or of a series of the same kind of social welfare insti- have children’s dy one of them. The Turks lost all| Mary Nelson, “|conscious passenger, and over by] suftering body lacerations and cute sp{and tasks performed by the boys and restraint when a bomb was throw re tet mall He sniffed her | Second Avenue the fourth was picked ihe hend received when a coal stove ex-| girls ‘iving there. ‘This 18 the ftrst Ve} rkish cavalry- hear x <3 plod el ry that ‘killed seven Tarkien covery [breath and catled the bus trom the] Pe et Gourt tater Mary| sued im the kitchen of his home test | time, 4¢ 1s sald, that this mode of rep- der and pillage. . Fifth Street Station, was sent to the Workhouse for ninety | ‘The explosion hurled Watenberg sev-| resentation has been used. “T am unable aot ee mt pei a nee i: al (troche Latin ra days “for your own good."" She had] cral fect neAinat the wall of the kitchen! special entestamment programmes to sleep, to think,” said Mr. Manola. Fe ieee long and’ inp | ridden in the same bus a few times be-| iy oarent cause for the explosion, and|have been axranged for each after- “My passes permitted me to go/Tenth Street, SS ae YY} fore. Haggh got a suspended sen- © are investigating with a view to dleventtie: Of tt chit everywhere and J rode among the|gown beside the back wheels. He wa8|tence. The other two have not yet rtain whether some dynamite or Ghia ys pda dpient a6 ne hi gear igt at dead, dying and the wounded and |fifted in. sobered up sufficiently to tell whol other explosive might have been in the] hich many Broadway stars will ap s Many dolis EU hak ack rh aha" aha "aha "aka aka ahaha cha ah fa Ae Tf w 1 my THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1922. N. Y. STATE TAX UPHELD |GIRL SWIMMERS CAN’T POWD: BY U. S. SUPREME COURT WASHINGTON, Oct. 16.—The Su- Preme Court to-day upheld article 9-0 of the New York State Tax Law, tm- posing a tax on manufacturing and mercantile concerns. The section was ked by the Plerce-Arrow Motor Rouge Also Is A ban against rouge 764 \t pald under the tax in 1917. Union Hill School Board. been placed on girl swimmers at public swimmer and therefore decided it was unnecessary and impfoper. So notices € to the effect that there shall be no more rouge or powder worn when entering the pool have been tacked throughout the school. Tho girls have also been Instructed to wear graysene-plece bathing suite and there is also an order against the carrying of handkerchiefs into the pool, There is speculation as to whether the ER NOSES Barred by and powder has Car Company, which contended {t was Debt and Drudgery Because of Low Pay. 80,000 Cases. thropic Societies will open this after-]irconnict with the Fourteenth Amend: | school pools in Unton Hill, N. J., by the | TOU women will obey the them aoe ; 5 noon at the Hotel Pennsylvania a} ment *of the Constitutfon. Board of Education. Members of they can swim from ono end of the pool BERKELEY, Cal., Oct. 16—The “poor working girl” has It “all over CHICAGO, Oct. 16.—Earl H. Cum-| four-day exhibition of the work of its cate grew ea ts SETI a Par Board, aner much bles el to the other without splashing a particle ; ‘ - row Company's efforts to obtain a re-| noune ey co ind no real servic heir faces, a college professor in the matter of allowances made by employers for} mins, Chicago chemist and central ninety-one affiliated organizations,| vision and reduction in taxes of $126,-| that cosmetics could render the pre pi et reg Suribee tee — knee-deep. ences In Smyrna, and the sights he| Board of Regents. she declared, “would look big to'af Cummins agreed to go to Ann Ar-| 17) o't«, three homes for the crip- ‘ saw, John Manola, President of th Mrs. Bruce said that the professor's] professor's wife, whose allowance for} bor, Mich., to-day, Mr. Pugh said, to : “deat and one for the aged, Smyrna Produce Company, No. 29] wife must ‘choose between childless-| clothes 1s fixed at the pitiful figure of] submit to observation in the psycho. | pled and dea be ° . . 9 Ninth Avenue, living at No. 42 Kear-| noes or the anguish ard humiliation | $50." pathic laboratory at the University|seven Talmud Torahs, twent ny Avenue, Arlington. N. J.. arrive’ |o¢ many years of debt and drudgery} In the opinion of Mrs. Bruce, $360] 0f Michigan. Cummins said he made} minity centres and six vacation home to-day on the Steamship Prest-\¢ she expects to live on the salary of] a month Is needed to provide the bare | vut the fake order believing he could]. tig supporters regard it as d dente Wilson. Mr. Manola was bitter! hor jnstructor-husband. She sald] necessities for a ,faculty member's|lispose of the ginger ale and help] 10" + affentiew ‘anawart 65 J against the Captain of the steamship | sient other wives of factulty members| family {f he has a wife and three whil- | Push. one of the most ¢ Winona and said he proposed to make | iereed with her, aren: made out the order for 80,000 | Bolshevism Linoleum Jer Every Floor.im.the House November Records--On Sale Tomorrow Every class of music represented in the brightest selection ever recorded under the Brunswick label. * New vocal records by Giuseppe Danise, Theo Karle, 4 Richard Bonelli, Elizabeth Lennox, Margaret Young, Latest dancing numbers by Isham Jones, Carl Fen- Marion Harris. ton, Bennie Krueger. ® For Your Convenience— Gs Clip This List BRUNSWICK RECORDS PLAY ON ANY PHONOGRAPH . ARTIST POPULAR DANCE HITS The World Is Waiting for the Sunrise—Fox Trot. . Eleanor—Fox Trot. ...J Are You Playing Fair?—Fox Trot that I could come home on her hy the agent if I had the money. He the line wanted ‘iron dollars,’ mening American money, and “1 agreed to pay it and produced Ameri- can Express orders. The Captain said come around the next day and bring a couple of bottles of liquor, I did. Then the Captain his mind and the agent sald ad made out his manifest and not change that. In the mean- while I had the permission of Consul Horson at Athens, “I was sick, a nervous wreck, but * gould do nothing. My overcoat was stolen from me. Finally I met my nephew. He got me to Naples and I came home. I am going to luy my treatment by the Captain of the ‘Winona before the Government." peat is Sans ten SENATOR VARE DIES; A marvelous violin rendition by Fredric Fradkin, of that immensely popular waltz “Three O’Clock in the Morning,” with full orchestra. This floor is a part of the room The floor of linoleum is a pleasing contribution to the color scheme 1 a ale afia aha aha i Write for our booklet, ‘‘Deco« rative Linoleum Floors,” which contains twenty-four colorplates showing patterns of Armstrong’s OUcan have color and design on your floors, as well as on your walls. Linoleum gives you this opportunity because it is SELECTION No. Size Price 2313 10 §$ .75 2314 10 75 ‘Isham Jones’ Orchestra. .....+++ Isham Jones’ Orchestra. . MANY YEARS G. O. P. CHIEF PHILADELPHIA, Oct. _16.—State Senator Edwin H. Ware, Republ leader of Philadelphim died at his h in Ambler, near here, to-day at the age of sixty years. Death was due to in- flammation of the cellular tissues of the lungs and an effusion sometimes de- soribed as water on the lungs. . With his brother, Rep- resentative William 8. Ware, headed a powerful wing of the Republican party, Which, despite the o tent opposition of the late Senator Boies Penrose, even- tually came into complete control of the city Republican organization. In the political conference the Ware brothers were always consulted. Bend postal for our own recipe 23 Weet &.. New York Bennie Krueger's Orchestra..... Carl Fenton's Orchestra. . Carl Fenton’s Orchestra......... Isham Jones’ Orchestra......... ARTIST t Giuseppe Danise—Baritcie...... ARtisT Theo Karle—Tenor......s.++00¢ Dorothy Jardon—Soprano....... Richard Bonelli—Baritone. , SONGS—OPERATIC SONGS—CONCERT AND BALLAD Say It While Dancing—Fox Trot... Blue—Fox Trot *e Haunting Blues—Fox Trot . ee 3 I'll Build a Stairway to Paradise—Fox Trot—Intro- ducing “I Found a Four-Leaf Clover,” from “George White’s Scandals” Truly—Fox Trot Panorama Bay—Waltz Thru the Night—Waltz Tricks—Fox Trot Se Dancing Fool—Shimmy One Step... Pabeencne ! SELECTION Zaza — Zaza, piccola zingara (Zaza, Little Gypsy) *(Leoncavallo) in Italian.........++ Zaza—Buona Zaza (Dear Zaza) (Leoncavalto) in Italian SELECTION Snowy Breasted Pearl (Robinson). . Oft in the Stilly Night (Moore-Stevenson H Rachem (Mercy) (Brown—Mana-Zucca) in Yiddish Yom Kippur (Cry of Atonement) (Silberstein-Sil- berta) in Yiddish ons Danny Deever (Kipling-Damrosch).. Clang of the Forge (Vaughan-Rodney) Elizabeth Lennow—Contralto.... { Elijah (O Rest in the Lord) (Mendelssohn) ARTIST Concert Band.. Fredric Fradkin—Violinist......+ Dan Carroll and Mario Perry— Violin and Accordion, . Mario Perry—Accordion., . ARTIST Marion Harris—Comedienne..... Margaret Young—Comedienne... White Way Male Quartet....... Ernest Hare and Male Quartet— Baritone ... seeeveevee Charles Hart and Elliott Shaw— Tenor and Baritone... Billy Jones and Male Quart TONOF eveseecereeeee sveeeeees INSTRUMENTAL Leopold Godowsky—Pianist...+« { Vessella’s Italian Band— { Cavalleria Rusticana—Selection (Mascagni).... POPULAR SONGS Messiah (He Shall Feed His Flock) (Hande SELECTION On Wings of Song (Mendelssohn-Liszt).. Tarantella Venezia e Napoli (Liszt)..... Pans soowiers Chorus (Act IV, Scene'1) (Gou nod) ‘ { Lovely Lucerne (Leigh-Godin).. f Three O'Clock in the Morning (Terriss Irish Reels—Medley No. 2. Irish Jigs—Medley No, 2... Dixie Highway Brother’n-Law Dan "Way Down Yonder in New of 1922”,.... * n True Blue Sam. ° oe . J Come Along—From “Ziegfeld Follies of 1922”..... My Buday cocscccsciccs Call Me Back, Pal O’ Mine.... Mary Dear .....ccsecscscenecevmmesMossseresses | THE BRUNSWICK-BALKE-COLLENDER CO. CHICAGO RNA RL Adu aa. Manufacturers — Katablished 1845 NEW YORK CINCINNATI 2315 2316 2317 2311 10 10 10 10 75 75 75 vp "7 a made in so many different pat- terns and combinations of colors. In addition, the linoleum floor is easy to clean and long-erfdur- ing. It is always smooth, always quiet and resilient, and warmer than either wood or tile. Rugs are laid on linoleum floors as on any other permanent floor, and an occasional waxing and polishing keeps the linoleum fresh and new-looking. It is an attrac- tive floor that never needs re- finishing. Decorative floors of Arm- strong’s Linoleum may be se- lected from a number of plain colors, several Jaspé (two-tone) effects, also parquetry inlaid, carpet inlaid, tile inlaid and printed designs. How to Lay Linoleum on Wood Floors IN summer the moisture in the air causes wood floors to expand. In winter they dry out and contract when the heat is turned on, with a tendency to open up the cracks between the boards, Yourlinoleum floor,there~ fore, should be cemented (not tacked) over alining of builder's deadening felt which has been previously glued to the bare floor boards. The felt takes up ex- pansion and contraction and gives you a permanenty waterproof, good-looking floor, The added service and wear this method gives are well worth the extra cost. Linoleum suited to the different rooms in your house. You can take this. book to any good de- partment or furniture store and show the merchant the color or design of linoleum that appeals to you most. He will Jet you see it ‘in the piece and also give you estimates of the cost of Arm-* strong’s Linoleum laid in your home. ¢ Armstrong’sLinoleumRugs For people who live in apart- ments or who have houses on short leases and consequently do not wish to install permanent linoleum floors, Armstrong’s Linoleum is also made in the form of bordered rugs. Thirty attractive patterns in four sizes from 6 x 9 feet to. 9x 12 feet. = 3 iS) Ge — ew Wd Lette Axmstronc Cork Company, Linoteum Division Lancaster, Pennsyloania New York Office—212 Telephone—Madison Square Fifth Avenue 1700-1701-1702 Lock for the CIRCLE A" trademark on the burlap baa

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