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VEADETTA URGED . AGAIST ENELAND Harry Boland, de Valera’s ! Secretary, Would Start “Race Revenge.” L i LENIN SAYS U. S. IN REVOLUTION, - REFUSING PASS Cross-Atlantic Cable Sesvice to The Star. COPENHAGEN, January 7.—That Lenin is seeking to persuade his followers America is in the throes of a revolution and all Europe in a ferment more serious than the discontent in Russia was t6ld by Maxim Gorky on his arrival at WANTS EYE FOR AN EYE Declares 4,500,000 People Have | Fought Losing Fight Against ' 56,000,000. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, January 7.—Harry Boland, secretary to Eamon de Valera, “president of the Irish republic,” de- clared at a mass meeting here last night that “if England does not stop its campaign of murder in Ireland we will preach a race vendetta among the mil- lions of Irish throughout the world and exact an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth.” “The time has nearly passed.” he added, “for a little race of 4,500,000 peo- ple to continue putting up a losing fight against 56,000,000, and we will urge that when they see anything Briti strike it Continuing, Boland urged recognition of the “Irish gepublic” by the United States. He exclaimed: “With the| Trish race so strong in America how can | they see their kin murdered by the British. If 1 had my way, I would tell them to rise up and tear down every- thing British in America. The meeting was held for furthering the campaign for relief of the suffering | in Ireland. Other speakers were Miss | Mary MacSwiney, sister of the late lord mayor of Cork: former Gov. Smith and Frank P. Walsh. Protest Alleged British “Acts. Protest against certain alleged unlaw- ful acts of the British military in Ire- land was made in a letter which has been addressed to all foreign represent- | atives in the United States by Patrick McCartan, “Irish envoy in the United States.™ The letter was made public by Mr. McCartan through Harry Boland, secretary to Eamon de Valera, “pres-} ident of the Irish republic. In the protest McCartan calls at- | tention particularly to a statement said to have been issued by British military authorities in Ireland, “or- dering the destruction of certain residences in the neighborhood of the | ambush on police “The order ex-! plained.” he said, “that occupants of | the houses were bound to have known of the ambush and had neglected to | notify the authorities.” De Valera's Proclamation Deferred. DUBLIN, January 6—Eamon dg Valera, it became known here today, | ‘has decided to defer his intended | proclamation several days longer, presumably - until he has further studied recent developments and the sentiment in various sections of the republican party. Government oflicials continue to as- sert there is‘ no desire to interfere ith de Valera's movements, but the | Sinn Feiners express distrust over such assurances, pointing to the con- tinued raids and searches as proof they are trying to discover and ar- rest hitn. Auxiliary police and “black and tans” appeared in the streets in large numbers today. holdinz up and searching pedestrians. No reason for | this was given. It was reported tonight that Father Michael O’Flan: ice president | of the Sinn Fein,” who has been in correspondence with Premier Lloyd George relative to a truce between England and Ireland. has gone to London for a conference with the prime minister. Patrick Sheehan, at one time secre- ! tary to Famon de Valera, was ar- rested last evening. The whereabouts of de Valera has not yet been dis- closed. To Release Newspaper Diréctors. General headquarters has notified the Freeman's Journal that its di- rectors, Hamilton Edwards and Mar- tin Fitzgerald, will 5& released from prison tonight on medical grounds. P. J. Hooper, editor of the Freeman's Journal, who' last month was sen- tenced to twelve months' imprison an Wick i | eanor Wood, all’ colored, Helsingfors. Lenin is refusing all men of ability permission to leave the country. Gorky himself was able to cross the boundary only by pretending to undertake a bolshevik mission. Immediately before he left the fa- mous _physiologist, Prof. Pavlov, one of the winners of the Nobel prize a few years ago, applied per- sonally to Lenin for permission to go to another country to continue his researches. He pointed out that, because of advanced age, he W exempt from the conscript labor laws. He added that his strength had been lost chopping wood, carrying water and doing other menial tasks for two years. In refusing his request Lenin wrote him that the United States was in revolution and Europe in chaos. PLAN FOR HIGHWAY MEN. Drafting Committee Meets at Hotel ‘Washington Today. Members of a drafting_committee met today at the Hotel Wasl gton to draw up proposals to be considered by the national conference on high- way traffic regulations, to meet, be- ginning Monday, for three days at the hotel. Legislation by all the states for uniform trafiic regulations through- out the nation is the object of the conference. Concrete proposals look- ing toward this end were being mapped out today by the drafting ‘committee. The committee is composed of David R. Faries, general counsel of the Automobile Club of Southern Califor- nia- David Van Schaack of the Work- men's Compensation of Hartford, | | Conn.; W. H. Maltbie of the American Slectric Railway Association of Bal- | timore, and Harry J. Meixell. jr.. of the motor vehicle conference of New York. Forty organizations from all parts of the country are to attend the con- ference beginning Monday. PROVED GUILTY OF ASSAULT. Raymond Davis, Lucy Wood and El- were con- icted latc yesterday afternoon by a jury in Criminal Division 1 of as- saulting a_deputy United States mar- shal in_the discharge of his duty. | Deputy Marshal Eskridge was struck on the head with an earthen vase when he attempted to serve a writ of replevin for a sewing machine at the Wood home. ment for ghe publication of an article alleging ill treatment of a prisoner in the Porto Bello barracks, also was ordered released. In the cases of all three men the releases were uncondi- tional. Directors Fitzgerald and Edwards | were sentenced early in December to six month’s imprisonment on the charge of “spreading a_ false report | thorities. intended to cause disaffection.” e = Tl Se DR. REINSCH TO LECTURE. CORK, January 6.—A military court Dl Paull Reinsch. former United ] todoy found that the Rev. Drother Finnbarr Darcy of the Twyford Ab- bey Nursing Home of London, who was killed in the course of a military raid on the Imperial Hotel here yes- terday morning, had been shot by the military in the execution of their duty. An army lieutenant testified that he was told by an auxiliary police- man that Darcy had jumped out of a back window of the hotel. He found Darcy stark maked, and the .prisoner, while dressing., made several attempts to get the officer's revolver, and had to be knocked down. An order was then given that if he attempted to escape, the escort was to shoot him. Soon afterwards the lieutenant heard two shots, and found Darcy lying in the middle of the street in a dying condition. The escort said that Darcy had tried to grab a rifle, and, failing in this, had attempted to escape, whereupon the escort had fired at le Piano Co. JURY 1S SECURED INTHOMPSON TRIAL Courthouse Crowded in Dy- namiting Case Before Court at Rockville. From a Staff Correspondent. ROCKVILLE, Md., January 7.—In fast time today a jury was obtained here to try the case of Guy Vernon Thompson, "charged with the murder of James Bolton and the two small children of his housekeeper, Mrs. Hattie Shipley, by dvnamiting Bol- ton’s farmhouse in the early morning of November 18. The case now being tried before Judge Urner and Associate Judges Poter and Worthington in the Mont- gomery county court was expected to be held up for many hours to select a jury from men. none of whom had formed or expressed opinions on the case. Seventy-five extra talesmen were summonad, but twelve men were picked from the first thirty-eight citi- zens called. Montgomery _county court was crowded today long before the trial started. Windows and do were jammed; people were pushing and crowding right up to the judge's desk; Rockville is swarming with out- of-town visitors and hundreds of au- tomobiles fill the streets. John A. Garrett. attorney for Thompson. pleaded “not guiltv.” and State’s Attorney Thomas L. Dawson then outlined the case against Thomp- son for the jury. He told them how he would prove, by statements made to him and his associates, by Thomn- son and his wife, Hester Thomn- son: v evidence of his having stolen the dynamite; by his footprints leading to the Bolfon farm. and hy many other alleged proofs, that the crime_had been committed by Thomp- son. He concluded by asking the jury to return a verdict of first-degree murder, with proper and justified pun- ishment. Twenty-nine witnesses will Re.called by the state. Thompson was brought to Rocl- ville last night by Sheriff George E. Nicholson and ex-Sheriff Gaither, and spent the night in the local jail. Notwithstanding the fact that Thompson was taken from the jail to the courtroom this morning under heavy guard, the police maintain that | they fear no danger of any acts of violence against the prisoner during the trial. P. C. K. SURRENDERS TO POLICE. Albert G. Raymond, twenty-five years old, surrendered to the local police and said he wanted to be returned to his home in Allenstown, a suburb of Con- cord, N. H., where, he declared, he was $500 short in his accounts as an assistant to Alexander J. Morency, state automo- bile commissioner. His duty, he said, was to isste automobile tags. Raymond said he left home the day after Christmas with the $500 he said he had taken. He had spent all the mone: he admitted, and was anxious to get home. Being without funds, however, he was unable to pay his car fare home and was willing to be returned to meet any charges the state authorities should prefer against him. His detention w: requested by the New Hampshire au- States minister to China, will lecture tonight at 8:30 o'clock in the Na- tional Museum on “The Far East and Africa as Factors in the Development of International Relations.” The lec- ture is the third of a series of public meetings under auspices of the School of Foreign Service of Georgetown University that is being addressed by prominent experts on foreign af- fairs. THE EVENING STAR, FRIDAY, JANUARY I YOUTHFUL APPAREL FOR EVERYWOMAN F atr Tenth St. 7, Takes Wife and Forces Husband To pay $100 For a ‘Honeymoon’ Police Search for “Spanish Gramleé” Who Claims He Wed Woman Thirteen Years Before Present Spouse. “Framed” Enoch Arden Plot Charged. then, he declared, that he was the fictim of a “framed” Enoch Arden lot. PCHICAGO, January 7.—Mrs. Paul Auther tonight saiq she did not be- lieve Auther ever was married to any one but herself. “Why, Australia is the only country he has not been in,” she said, “so he couldn’t have married any one there; thirteen years ago. That story about being married in Australia sou much like one of his romantic yarn Mrs. Auther echoed the latter view iy husband flew into a tantrum when I first accused him of improper conduct with Mrs. Franzen.” she said. “He told me then that he had v By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, January T7.—Search for Pierre Paul "Auther, missing “Spanish srandee” chemist of Highland Park, 1L, and Mrs. Charlotte Franzen of Madison, Wis., shifted today to Phila- delphia and other eastern cities, on unusual charges of larceny preferred by the woman's husband, Philip 1. Franzen, chief decorator for the Uni- versity of Wisconsin. The warrant obtained by Franzen accuses Auther of “stealing Franzen's wife at the point of a pistol and fore- ing him to hand over $100 to pay for| ed | the honeymoon.” Franzen says his| T b ed | wife tements lead him to believe | SVETY continent cxcob FE iy the couple may be in Philadelphia. | Which makes me Deleve Bo '8 (OIS On New Year day Auther disap- :n:‘»r%"r peareq from his home in Highland 5 v i & Mrs. Auther said her husband had B encAnns iz wife and YWY ETL| gissipated her savings of $2,000 and zen home last Tuesday night, accord- | that he left only ‘?‘:"'\:h dh“"‘:” when he ing to Franzen, he declared Mrs. Fran- | “e\?:qa“,\fn‘m»r:“m et LIS zen was the woman he had i Mrs. s 2 s oirtonn yenrs e Ao aaymarried | planche Ellen Harvey Tregelgas. She b was born in Edinburgh, Scotland, but | “I have searched for her for ten { anzen quotes Auther as say- | orphaned as a child, and e : ing, while pointing a pistol at Fran.|ed under the guardianship of a priest | zen's head, “and now I mean to have | in Montreal, Canada. She graduated as a nurse from a New York hospital, Went overseas with the Canadian i troops, and was decorated for bravery by the English government after she had won a licutenancy by hospital | work in Belgium and France. A bursting syringe impaired her sight and she returned to America. She met Auther while both were em- ployed by the du Pont Powder Com- pany at Pompton Lakes, N. J. They were marri»d in Atlantic City on Au- her.” 5 Documents waiving claims to each [other were signed by Franzen and his t Auther's command ‘and then the visitor stood guard s. Franzen went out to cash 's check for $100. ned to the when he ved letters from Mrs. Auther de- claring intercepted letters convinced her that Mrs. s trying to steal her convinced ' gust 13, 191 ELECTS J. H. DOYLE. | CHARGED WITH FORGERY. Holy Name Society of TrinityECnlwred Youth Arrested After Chooses Other Officers. |- Claim Check Presentation. John Hadley Doyle was selected | Presentation of an alleged forged oly Trini claim check of the Casualty and Life presicont of the Holy Trinity Chureh | 1pqyrance Company at_the United | branch of the Holy Name Society for|States Savings Bank, 14th and Uj the eighth time at the annual meet- | Streets, led to an investigation. which ing held in the parochial school hall resulted in the arrest of a young col- Y ored man giving his name as Samuel : last night. Jones, to answer a charge of forgery. Other officers elected were Joseph | It is charged that he forged the yame Murray, vice president; John G.]°f I C Hollins, superintendent of the | L v : - | insurance company’s business, Rickart, secretary; John G. Schom-| Detective Barbee of the eighth pre- bert, treasurer; Col. Frank P. Mc- | cinct arrested Jones, who was work- Cann. marshal; George Herbert Wells, | ing in a barber shop oy 14th street, and, it is stated, searchsd his room at { id check books in, choir lead- | organist; W m Cu) }er, and Joseph Kuhn, sacristan. The i following were named as delegates to the convention of the District Holy i Name Society: George Potter, Frank Ward, Joseph W. Freeman, John Gil- e 'and William Bowman. peeial Holy Name services will fea- | ture the Sunday mass at § o'clock at the church, when Rev. John C. Geale, the rector, will preach the ser i A charge of havifig forged Hollins' | name was preferrell against the pris- oner, copies of whose photograph will | be sent to the police of other cities. Jones told the folice he was from Al- bany, Ga., and thac he had traveled through sevifal southern states. The! police are jffaking a further investi- | gation of hjs alleged fraudulent check | transactioy’s here and clsewhere. QUITS RED CROSS POST. David/ H. Brown has resigned his po- sition &s associate manager of the Po- | tomac/division of the Red Cross and will enter the business field in Baltimore. Mr. Brown, who has been connected with the local division since October, 1917, tendered his- resignation more than a month ago, but staved on until the | first of the ye: because of pressure of business at divisional headquarters. MISS BRILL AT “SING.” Miss Katherine Brill entertained the many War Department employes | who attended the finance division | “sing” in the Munitions building Wednesday afternoon. 1210 S street and foy and a_typewriter. d/‘ mon. , Addresses were delivered by Father Geale and Rev. Charles J. Hennessey, S. J. at the meeting. The latter sketched the history of Ireland dur- ing the reign of Henry VIIL of Eng- |1and. URGES DROPPING OF SUIT. The minimum wage board has an- swered the suit for an injunction re- cently filed against it by the National Laundry Company to prevent aileged contemplated prosecution for faiiure| to comply with the order of the board fixing a minimum wage for laundry workers. The board points out that the order does not become effective until February 20, and that when the suit was filed the board had no inten- tion to prosecute the plaintiff, and, therefore, the suit should be dismissed. SHOP FOR YOUNG FOLKS AND 1921, GALLAGHAN GOES TON.Y. TOMORROW Demonstration for Lord Mayor and MacSwiney to Be Given in Metropolis. NORFOLK, Va, January 7.—With Feter MacSwiney and J. L. Fawsitt, consul general of the “Irish republic.” Lord Mayor Donal O'Calla ghan of Cork, Ireland, who arrived at New- port News as a stowaw: on board the American steamer West Canon 11 leave Norfolk tomorrow night for exw York, where a demonstration will be given in his honor by the American Association for the Recogni- tion of the Irish Repubiic. Tt is expecteq that the party will pass through Washington, where Judge Joseph T. Lawless, counsel for the paroled lord mayor and-his com- panion, will file an appeal with the Department of Labor in their behalf. The visitors are devoting today to sightseeing ané receivi i sightseein eiving hundreds Disguised as Dock Laborer. Donal O'Callaghan, _youthful _lord mayor of Cork, last night dropped the veil of secrecy which has shrouded his movements, and told how he had eluded the vigilence of the British soldiers, Dy the West Canon and made his to America, where he is now secking an opportunity to submit Erin's brief before the com- mittee of 100 in Washiniton. _How he boarded the ship, remained hidden seven days in a bunker until driven out by s kness, was told tersely by Mayor O'Callaghan. Con- ditions in his blood-stained cily were also told, although he remained firm in_his determination to say that would anticipate his evidence be- fore the committee, at whose invita- tion he made the perilous trip. MacSwiney Put to Work. That Patrick MacSwiney, brother of his predecessor_irroffice, was also, a stowaway on board the West Canon 2 vas stated by Mayor . MacSwiney, three days ship sailed, ‘came out of 1o Stle. Through him Wwhen the pangs of sea-sick- caused by the excessive rolling the ship, which was in ballast, drove him out of the bunkers into a bunk, where he was found by a member of the crew. Seated in his room in the Monticello Hotel, Mayor O'Callaghan broke the | silence that he has maintained since his arrival at Newport News. Friend- ship only induced him to talk, = while he was perfectly willing to be quoted, he rigidly refrained from saying anything that would cause embarrassment to the committee which invited him to_testify. MacSwiney, according to Mayor O'Callaghan, was the first to board the West Canon, which was,at the quays, 100 yards from the rhins of Cork’s once” magnificent city hall. Awaited His Chance. “Getting ‘aboard the ship was not as difficult as it may seem,” he said, “Dressed as a laborer 1 hung around the quays for about an hour. watch- ing my chance. Many of the crew were absent from the ship, and when I saw my chance I climbed a ladder and slipped aboard and into the hold. “When Mr. MacSwiney made his presence known. calling himself Mul- gan, our smail store of food was about out. He was put to work at once, and it was comparatively easy for him to reach the bunkers with food and water for me. I would have made out all right, but the ship was| rolling very bad after being out a week, and I succumbed to sea-sick ness. Finally, I determined to lie down awhile where the air was bet- ter, and went to a bunk where the watch was on duty. One fellow, how- ever, came down and discovered me. nothng | hiding /And was put fo work in the| HOTEL MEN AGREE ON RESTORATION |OF PRE-WAR RATES CHICAGO, January 7.—Restoration of pre-war rates on rooms and food was declared imperative by members of the Chicago Hotel Men's Associa- tion today, following their annual mecting, at which virtually all agreed that hotels should lead the wi in readjustment of price levels. Imme- diate reductions were recommended, the members were not pledzed to a definite plan of concerted action. Gradual abolition in hotel menus of charges for extras, such as bread and butt d lowering of prices on meat orders in kes with market conditions were ed. It was on hotel rooms reduced 30 per estimated that rat eventually will be cent. | TWO AUTOS IN CRASH. Both Badly Pamaged, No One In- Jjured—Girl in Accident. Two automobiles were badly dam- aged as a result of a collision that oc curred at Massachusetts avenue and 18th street about 1:45 o'clock this morning. Their occupants escaped in- jury, the police reported. One of the automobiles, owned and driven by George G. Travers, 1906 G street, was going south on 18th street, G. W. Mason, 2500 Nichols avenue, costia, was being driven west on 3 usetts avenue by Mack Wise- man, colored, twenty-six years old, 107 Howard road, Anacostia. Police arrested Wiseman, alleging that the collision resulteq from his failure to give Travers the right of way. Louise Womersley, fifteén years old. 133 11th street southeast, walked against a rear fender of the automo- bile of William H. Coxen, 1309 Penn- sylvania avenue southeast, at South Carolina avenue and 7th street south- east yesterday afternoon. She was )':nocked down, but was not seriously urt. P C— Reduce Wages in Philadelphia. PHILADELPHIA, January 7.—Wage reducuons varyviig trom iv to 25 per cent for Philadelphia textile mills were announced aiter a meceting ot delphia Textile Manufacturers’ soc.ation. As- Despite my sickness, I went to work witn_ Mr. Macdwiney.” We disclosed our true identity I'when the West Canon was two days off Nortolk. When we told who we were, the officers and crew couldn't do enough for us.” Tells of Cork Conditions. Conditions in Cork simiiar to those re- i lated scores of Limes i1n recent months | were told by Mayor O'Caliaghan. { * No persons identified with national re- { publican movement sieep 1n their own ! uume, Mayor U Cailaghan stated. Atter sSpendiuig a night in one piace, they go {to anotner thc next and depend upon { tricnds and comrades tor sheter. No comment on the Sinn Fein movement or_its chance of success was made. Mr. O'Callaghan was highly pleased with the manner in which Jeremiah J. Hurley of Boston, special immigration agent, and representative of Secretary Wilson, treated him, giving Mr. Hurley full credit for his releise on parole. The lord mayor was the guest at a dinner last night given by friends of the Irish cause hcre. Among those present were J. L. Fawcett of New York, mem- | ber of the Cork Industrial Association; Peter J. McSwiney, Judge J. T. Law- less, his counsel; J. J. Hurley of Bos- ton, M. J. Lyons of Norfoik, James Gordon, Norfolk, and six officers of the Friends of Irish Freedom. After the dinner he received a delegation of 225 persons, men and women. He wrote his name on cards as souvenirs. Two governors of states were among those who have sent cogratulatory tele- gram while the other car, the property of | ASK'GAS' STATIONS OR BUSINESS ZONE Real Estate Board Passes Resolution Advocating Amendment. { FAVORS EXCLUDING SHOPS Committee Announces Readiness to Give Advice to Members on Regulations. An amendment to the zoning regula- | tions so as to permit the operation of | service stations in connection with auto- | mobile salesrooms located in the first commercial zonc was advocated in | resolution adopted last night by the ‘Washington real estate board, at a meet- ing in The Star building, Board of Trade 1 rooms H. L. Rus president of the board, presided. John L, Weaver, who introduced the resolution, said that while it was proper to exclude automobile repair shops from the principal business streets, the regu- lations should not tend to prevent the establishment of car salesrooms on high- class commercial thoroughfares. The he said, excluded pair shops, and thereby placed an cle in the way of motor car agen wishing to open display rooms and operate in conjunction therewith neces- sary service shops. A copy of the resolution will sent to the zoning commission. Regulations Are Studied. H. L. Thornton, chairman of the committee appointed to study the zoning regulations, reported that his committee had conducted a prelimi- nary investigation of the laws and that the committee was at the service of any members of the board. Announcement was made of a mid- winter banquet. Attention was called to the annual meeting of committee- present regulations, all rej 3 : Mayor | the excecutive committee of the Pnila- men of the’ National Association of ghan received food for four' j Real Estate Boards. to be held Janu- jary 11, 12, 13 and 14, at Atlanta, Local realtors who will attend clude Charles W. Fairfax, John Weaver, George Y. Weedon, Lee D. Latimer, H. and William E. Shannon. The board adopted resolutions of condolence on the death of Theodore Friebus, member of the board. POWER PERMITS WANTED. Federal Commission Will Consider Niagara Falls Projects. Hearings on various water power projects involving developments in the vicinity of Niagara Falls will be held by the federal water power commis- ision January 24. | The commission now has before it 1143 applications for permits to under- {take developments in various parts of ithe country. Among new progosals |received at the close of last year was ione for a 33,000 horsepower develop- !ment in Amador county, Calif., and a 129,000 horsepower project’in Alaska. —_— NAVY SEAPLANE LOST. !Craft of F-5-L Type Sinks at Sea; Crew Saved. A haval seaplane of the F-5-L type sank at sea between Coco Solo, Canal Zone, and Cartagena, Coiombia, Tues- day, according to advices to the Navy | Department. The plane was being tow- jed by the destroyer McCormick. The crew was saved. L. vorthington, J. C. L. Rust i { BRADBURY PLAYER-PIANOS, VICTROLAS AND RECORDS 1217 F Street N.W. New Victor Records in Big Demand Secure these before they are sold out. 18717 Margie—Fox Trot; 85 Palesteena, Fox Trot. ... -$1.35 “Grieving for You”, Fox Trot; “My Wonder Girl”, Fox Trot.. .- 35701—~Avalon — Just Like a Gypay,” Medley Fox Trot; “Best 18700—«Alice Blue Gown,” Waltz; Ever Medley,” One Step, $1.35. “Tripoli,” Medley Walts, S5e. 18708 — “Feather Your Neat,” 64566—“Nightingale Song,” Alma Gluck, $1.25. or TOtS = to-Teens Inventory Sale Now comes the Big Opportunity to replenish boys’ and girls’ Wardrobes at exactly 509, of for- 35703 Campbell-Burr; “0Old Pal, W Don’t You Answer Me?” Buri 356h%—~7Zlexfela Follien of 1920, it i i e 4 ollien o ,” Cormick-] sler, . z o 2 Medley Fox Trot; - “Cuban | 74163 rHumerenque Mischa El- mer prices. And bear in mind that substantial re- Moon,” Fox Trot, $1.35. man, $1.75. Player Roll Hits Just Received e gic TN e Enels “Girls of My Dreams (Follles 1920), Fox Trot. . My Dreams,” Waltz. “Look What You've Done With Your Dong-Gome Damgerou Eyes,” Fox 'Trot. ' A “Crazy Blugs.” Fox Trot. How to Arrange Furniture You have your own ideas—of course you have—and no doubt these are good, but here at Mayer's Lifetime Furniture Store, we have men specially trained in the art of placing the right article in the right place. ductions have already been made. Saturday will be a great day cn the Third Floor—with many lots marked at 15 orr No thought of cost, value or former price has been considered in making these drastic reduc- tions. Mothers will find it to their advantage. to shop early Saturday and make their selections . ‘promptly from these items. All Winter Coats for Boys and Girls. All Girls’ Serge Dresses. ... ...... All Sweaters and Sweater Sets. A All Boys’ and Girls’ Bathrobes. . . . All Girls’ Tailored and Fancy Hats «Under Hawalian Skien,” Trot. Take a living room, for instance. You'd think it was an easy matter to so arrange a davenport, a table, a lamp and three or four chairs, so as to give an artistic effect—and it is, but \\u}it: Our men who sell you this furniture can suggest half a dozen different ways for placing the pieces around in the room so that they will show up more homelike, stylish and comfortable—a rare combination, you will admit. : d Christmas avings Club —and begin to accumulate a fund for Christmas. P77 7227, Why not give us a chance the next time you are thinking of buying furniture? We'll gladly send one of our experts to your home without charge or obligation; will be delighted to have you go over our store, use our time as if it were your own, and come as often as you wish and for as long as you may care to stay. next .3 off .3 off .3 off ..3 off .3 off Y 27 Four Classes 50c, $1, $2 and $5 weekly the MY 7 72 Seventh Street Select class tomorrow. and start Mayer & Co. ' betweenD8E you want,