Search America's historic newspaper pages from 1756-1963 or use the U.S. Newspaper Directory to find information about American newspapers published between 1690-present. Chronicling America is sponsored jointly by the National Endowment for the Humanities external link and the Library of Congress. Learn more
Image provided by: Library of Congress, Washington, DC
Newspaper Page Text
U. S. Homes Open For Child Refugees On British Vessel Care Is Arranged For 200 as Many Offer To Help Program By th» Associated Press. NEW YORK. July 6—Offers to care for children fleeing warring Europe came tonight from business Arms, private schools, religious or ganizations and wealthy individuals as the Arst boatload of child refu gees from England neared American shores. All of the 200 youngsters arriving on the British vessel, whose identity has been kept a closely guarded se cret, have homes and proper care already arranged for them. For hundreds of others, mainly from Britain and France, who will arrive later, however, scores of groups and organizations have vol unteered their facilities. University Women Appeal. Meanwhile, the British Federation of University Women appealed to the American Association of Uni versity Women to help care for their several hundred children for the duration of the war. In Washing ton. Dr. Kathryn McHale, general director of the American group, said hundreds of refugees, ranging from 6 to 16 years in age, would be brought here as speedily as pos sible under the British o.uota, to be cared for by some of the Nation’s 68.000 university trained women. From Dr. Lewis Perry, headmaster of Phillips Exeter Academy, Exeter, N. H„ one of the country’s best known preparatory schools, came the announcement that he would lead a group of prep schools co operating with the United States Committee for the Care of European Children. Bishop Takes 400. The committee said private schools already had offered to provide full board and tuition for a total of about 1.700 children. Th£* Most Rev. Bernard J. Sheil, senior auxiliary bishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Chi cago. has ofTered to care for 400 children of any creed In "a perma nent camp” and to pay all of their expenses. Mrs. Harry F. Guggenheim, daugh ter of Col. Joseph Patterson, pub lisher of the New York Daily News, has offered her estate, Hempstead House, at Westbury, Long Island, as a reception center for 200 chil dren. Other offers received by the com mittee, headed by Marshall Field, included the facilities of the estates of Mrs. Herbert N. Strauss at Red Bank, N. J.. and the Garrison <N. Y.> estate of Miss Janet Fish, daughter of the late Hamilton Fish. Gas Mask for Newborn R. Thrower, air-raid warden of I Ipswich, England, claims a record by delivering a gas mask to a baby 40 second.^after it was born and be fore it had started its first cry. [I ♦ _ i at age? QzXtciiriJlu not— I CAN'T 'AFFORD It! can’t afford it either. So, if you have gray hair, just wet it with Canute Water. A few applications will completely re-color it, similar to its former natural shade. In one day, if you w'ish. After that, attention only once a month will keep it that way. Curl your hair or get a permanent. There’s no interference. Your hair re mains clean and natural to the touch and looks natural in any light . . . even after shampooing, sunshine, per spiration or salt-water bathing. > ^ Safe! Skin Test Not Needed Canute Water is pure, safe, col* orless and crystal-clear. It has a remarkable record of 25 years without injury to a single person. It was also tested and proven perfectly harmless by a Noted Scientist in one of America's Greatest Universities. No Other Product Can Make All These Claims Is it any wonder that we sell more Canute Water than all other hair coloring preparations combined? CANUTE WATER ms 6 application size.___.tJ1" . • . First Floor Cleaning Is Not Enough! Your furs need expert inspection by master furriers before a lick of work is done on them. That means Your furs need cyclones of fresh, pure air blown through them at eighty miles per hour to remove every particle of soot, grease, grime . . . helps to restore the subtle shadings your furs had when new. That meons Your furs need to roll and tumble in a padded drum, filled with forest fresh sawdust, to restore the nat ural, beautiful oil that makes each tiny hair a thing of beauty. That means Your furs need reblowing with cool, fresh air, like the winds in the mountoins, where they first lived, to remove every porticle of sawdust and reveal the origincl beouty recently covered with city film. That means Your furs need their linings rejuve noted with just the right chemicals to restore all their luster—by ex pert spotters who pal and never rub the spots, by expert ironers who re store their original sheen. That means Your furs need gentle patting with rattan stoves, brushing lovingly os you would brush your own hair. Then every bit of fur actually sparkles and gleams with more life than it had even when new. That means HOLLANDERIZING costs no more than ordinary cleaning some times less. Phone District 4400 and say "Please Hollanderixe' my furs" The Palais Royal, Fur Storage ... Third Floor. :.>sr :■■■?: i ■ : ^^G Street at Eleventh District 4400 / Warn stall Tomorrow Only! ♦ Round* Crystals....... T9c ♦ Fancy Crystals.—29c The Palais Royal, Watch Repairs . , 'First * Refresh Your Both With Doggett & Ramsdeil's PINE OIL 6 oz. I Size Poor o spoonful of' Pin* Oil •» your tub while the water is being drawn . . . and you have a delightful, refreshing both! Also use as a fragrant rinse for face and hands. .. a Doable Dollar Value! $2 Dorothy Gray COLOGNE.. *1 ley « watflwr's supply : rfefkote cologne while tbit price font 12-tance botfie, in Jas win, Rose Geranium o«4 Sweet Spice fragrances. T ha Patait Royal', \ Toilatriaa . . . First Floor Treadeasy White Shoes Are as Cool as a Mountain Stream! / Exclusive With The Palais Royal Let hot weather come, your feet won't mind if clgd in snowy white built-for-waiking Treadeasy shoes. Stylish, but with unseen scientific comfort features. We sketch two models from an interesting col lection. 7 he Palais Royal, Footwear , . . Second Floor . ^ Our Air-conditioned Beauty Salon Introduces... AN EXCLUSIVE WAVE That's Your Very Own! • • Individually packed. / • Cool, quick and comfortable. 9 No wirei, no L machinery. The Matchless Permanent "With Preparatory Oil" A Regular $15.00 Wave Special Introductory Price Individually prescribed solutions that successfully wav* every hair texture—from baby-fine to coarse . . . from brittle-dry to limp . . . from dyed and bleached to silvery white! "PREPARATORY OIL"—makes this permanent truly different. Scientifically balanced oils leave your hair ■ silky-salt, lustrous, with natural-looking curls and a wave that is lasting! • The Palais Royal, Air-Conditioned Beauty Salon . . . Balcony i Three Reasons Why I Women Prefer Our 1 T. A. G. Hose $1 VST | Lady Washington Hose arc tested for quality of silk used . . . tested far work manship and durability. 2 Lady Washington Hose are Approved for style . . . meaning that their seams, shape of ankle reinforcement and colors have .passed rigid specifications. ^ Lody Washington Hose ore Guaranteed to give complete satisfaction. i The Palais Royal, Hosiery . . . First Floor SPECIAL PURCHASE Mallinsons Printed Rayon Sheers, made to sell for $1 • Dots • Monotones yard • Multi-color Prints You know how cool and wrinkle-resistant rayon sheers are, you know hew dependable any Mallinson fabric is ... So you know that with a 41c saving on each yard, this is a real bargain. BEMBERG RAYON SHEERS in a wide selection of newest patterns. Yard_69c PURE SILK PURE DYE PRINTS, sold earlier in season for $1.69 and $1.95, SPECIAL, yard___79c A VARIETY OF SHEER COTTON PRINTS Printed Check Sheers, yard_ 39c Printed Dotted Swiss, yard 39c Printed Chiffon Voile, yard, 29c. 39c. 58c Printed Muslin, yard. ------29c Her Ladyship Printed Organdy.. 79r Eyelet Batiste & Pique_ 79c, $1 Fancy Check Dotted Swiss, yard, 49c The Palais Royal, Fabrics • • • Second Floor i m |p MONDAY ONLY ! Boudoir Chair Unusually Large Size for ‘6.95 Just a chair, you might think because it is only , $6.95. But this chair has real comfort, even a spring seat, and has the dainty appeal you want jt for a boudoir chair. Green, blue or black grounds * with colorful patterns. The Palais Royal, Furniture .. . Fourth Floor MONDAY ONLY Any Decorator Would Approve This Classic 18th Century Design Bedroom Suite *69.75 Lines simple, detailing restrained ... the design of this suite is such as might be found in one selling far many times this price. Bed, chest, dresser; mahogany veneers an gumwood. Jhe Palais Royal, Furniture ,., Fourth Floor MONDAY ONLY New Low Price for Secretary in Break-Front Style ’34.95 Plenty of secretaries at $34.95 ... but not plenty in this break-front style. Copied from a fast- ! selling, expensive piece, this one retains all the many shelves and storage spaces which makes it so useful and decorative. The Palais Royal, Furniture .. . Fourth Floor MONDAY ONLY All-American Favorite in Dinette Set ‘29.95 This Duncan Phyfe style table is liked because its center pedestol means no bumping against legs, because its style is even formal enough for a regu lar dining room. 4 white leatherette-covered chairs. The Palais Royal, Furniture .., Fourth Floor MONDAY ONLY An All-American Favorite! Barrel* Chair | x [The barrel chair proves that a chair can give the maximum of comfort and still be as artistic in design at one could desire. Choice of colors in | cotton and rayon damask. The Palais Royal, Furniture .. . Fourth Floor s Solid Maple Twin Beds, REG. $19.95 “<£»* .—$8.75 Maple bed with "worn" edges. Limited quantity Double Deck Coil Springs, REG. $11.95 "oS?" _$8.75 Have stabilizers to prevent sway; standard sizes. Innerspring Mattresses, Special *Onfy * . _ _ _ .$8.75 Have one-piece silent interlocking coils; standard sizes. Foldaway Cot, Regularly $12.95, Monday_$8.75 Has heavy rolled edges on mdttress to hold shape. Compact 30-inch size. Couch, Regularly $34.95, Monday-^.$22.75 Innerspring construction; makes double or twin beds. The Palais Royal, Furniture . , . Fourth Floor \