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UPROAR ENDS U PROTEST NEETAG Hecklers in Audience Force Chairman to Dismiss Ses- sion in Deep Disgust. GOTHAMITES RAP FRENCH Resolution to President and Borah Lost in Row on Floor. NEW YORK, March &—Neither .President Harding nor Senatof Borah will know, officially, the feeling of & crowd of men and women who filled the Community Church forum last night at a meeting cailed to protest the occupation of the Ruhr by the French. The meeting broke up With a reso- lutfon being considered, but it was not put to a vote, for hecklers in the audience caused the chairman to dis- miss the crowd before the night's business was completed. { ' Oscar G. Villard, editor of the Na- tion, and Jame: tary of the F mans succeeded in showing that spiritual methods may overcome force it will be the greatest happening since the crucifixion. Mr., McDonald frowned upon & reso- lution, offered from the floor, which proposed a. protest to the President, and suggested that a message be sent Senator Borah urging him to con- Yinue working for a general economic conference. € Thero were cries for and against from the entire audience, When an attempt was made to put the matter to & vote hecklers persisted in shout- ing at the chairman until that official dismissed the meeting, which broke up in an uproar. SEVERAL KILLED IN 12- HOUR MEXICAN DISPUTE Governor of Hidalgo Sends Troops to Troubled Area to Re- store Order. MEXICO CITY, March 6.—Two groups of disputants over agrarian allotments near the village of Mixquiahuala, state of Hidalgo, fought at intervals for more than twelve hours, with a casualty list of numerous dead and wounded, says the Pachuca correspondent of Excelsior. The dispatch adds that Gov. Azuara Las sent sufficient troops to the dis- trict to quell the disorder. _ KILLS PRIEST AT MASS. l Dane Is Arrested. But Refuses to Discuss Crime. BUENOS AIRES, M Luis Perez w while conduc Blanca. Jane, was arrested, iclined to discuss the cri &.—Father From Personal @ cArthur L. Word Lee AVE you ever, in your travels, found a Hotel (probably of moderate size)where the Own- er or Managet, by his personal inter- est in your comfort and welfare, made ‘your stay conspicuously pleasant? 11 80, you are looking forward to another visit—and that is just the stmosphere that now pervades the Hotel McAlpin. If you will write me personally the requirements of yourself or family, [ will see that you are ex- wctly suited. My staff, both male and female, from the Kouse manager to the bell boy, are trained to make the small- est detail of your stay, both in and out of the Hotel.a series of pleasant experiences by their courteous, un- obtrusive interest. ‘The McAlpin equipment, farnish- ings and cuisine are reputed to be unsurpassed, if equalled, by any Hotel here or abroad, But aside from this, if there isany detail, great or small, in which I can heir during your stay, let me know and I shall never be too busy to demonstrate my desire to establish with you the interest of a host with his guest rather than a manager ‘with his patron. ‘Thus do [ believe I will succeed in Jeaving with you the cordial desire to make the Hotel McAlpin your New York home in the future. . Artaur L. Lee, Manager. Dfiéf&h&r; 7{ Cbm/em‘encé Broadway ‘at 34* \REGRETS REFUSAL ARGENTINA CONCEDES MILLIONS TO BRITAIN \Admits $50,000,000 Loan Payment Should Have Been Credited at Day’s Exchange. i By the Associated Press. BUENOS AIRES, March 5.—It is understood that the Argentine gov- ernment will admit the claim of the British treasury to several million gold pesos which represent a differ- ence in exchange rates in the pay- ment of the British loan of $50,000,000 on_January 14, 1921 The Argentine cabinet, it is learned, will accept the British contention that the money should have been credited at the current exchange of the day’on New York. instead of at ar. p The $60,000,000 loan to Argentina was for the purpose of liquidating a previous lo; bankers. . It w understood °that this amount was to - be credited toward the British bill of 100,000,000 £0ld posos which accrued In Argen- tinn during the war. It now is understood that the cabinet will ar- range for the cancellation of the $50,000,000 loan when _the consolida- tion floating debt is effected. TOENTER COURT French Delegate to League of Na@ions Deplores U. S. Action. By tha Associated Press. NICE, France, March 5—“We sin- cerely hope that the fallure of the United States Senate to adopt. Presi- dent Harding’s plan for American participation in the Hague court without the United States joining the league does not mean the withdrawal of John Baseett Moore from the court” said Charles Noblemalre, one of France's delegates to the league of nations to the Associated Press cor- respondent yesterday. “That would be a calamity. ! “We cannot tell from this distance | what motives prompted the Senate's| decision,” Mr. Noblemaire said, “but | it seems to me to he simply another | manifestation of its permanent policy | of opposition to the league and its desire to keep out of Europe's en- tangled affairs. I think the Senate is | Special price this week. $5 and $6 Shell Frame Glasses from American | right in the latter part of its policy, but wrong in the former. “The questions wWhich come u) !2 settlement and solution in the inte national court entall avsolutely no danger whatever of _getting_ the ‘nited States mixed up in iniernal European _politics or “necessitating American Int#fvention.” M. Noblemaire is president of'the supetvisory committee of the league, o which was entrusted the task O setting -up the administratt’ nd financidl organization of the Inters national court. “The -leagu¢, of courss 1 s _be in , Germany _an States are left unfille league are always promptly informed of what the American Senate does not want, but_we, haye never been told what the Senate does want. Perhaps if we were some ground for standing might be reach — “I married my wife beoa: fered from all other wo “How was that! “She was the only woman who would have me!”~From Kasper, ore throat Science says that germs are the cause 6f sore and in- fected throats. Science fur- ther says that Formamint tablets are the most efficient, the most convenient and most reliable method of preventing and over- comingsorethroat. Theyactually killthe germs of throat infection. Pleasant to take, endorsed over 10,000 physicians. At ffi gists. TRIS T T [ermamint Without Strain “See Dr. Berman.” Dr. L. Berman’s years of study of the human eye and the correction of eyesight enable him to fit you with SCIEN- TIFICALLY CORRECT glasses. His thorough examination with the most modern apparatus is FREE OF CHARGE. The SPECIAL LOW PRICE he is now offer- ing will save you many dollars. FREE EXAMINATION You receive a thorough examination of your eyes FREE. The ONLY CHARGE is the unusually low price -of $2 for the lasses. The examination oesn’t cost you a penny. FISCHER'S [\ S5 hine Hy & rox Biscuits Better than you imagine Imagine two crisp chocolate cakes with a layer of vanilla icing between! That is Sunshine Hydrox Biscuit. Popular? More sold than any sweet biscuit, of world. its kind in the Be sure to get the genuine, In bulk—any amount you want at _ your grocer’s. Branches in Over 100 Cities Soastine Bscuit 'P. 0, MONDAY, MARCH 5, 1923, Fiie Spring Showing of FASHION’S FABRICS The Oriental Influence Figures Brilliantly— The Vogue for White—Expressed in Woolens— Cottons, both French and American, are Gaily Colored— Other seasons, we may have thought fabrics were gay—and comparatively speaking, they were; but this season, they are gayer than for many, many seasons—they are almost vibrating with vivid color, traced with all sorts of intricate designs, on backgrounds of new and wonderful textures. And the Wood- ward & Lothrop showing of Fashion’s Fabrics for Spring features ali of these—and many, many more: we can tell you only of the most striking novelties. - Printed Silk Crepes of New Higher-Keyed Color Motifs, which were fashionable three thousand years ago, appear this spring in marvelous guise and lend indi- viduality and a wealth of rare color and design to the printed crepes, fashionable today—tomorrow—and all summertime to come. : This oriental influence figures brilliantly in these printed crepes—some of them curiously delicate— others gay, vivid, bizarre—drawing upon Egypt, Persia, Indo-China, with their wealth of color and design, for the motifs in their making. No doubt the interest.oc- casioned by the discovery of Tutankhamen’s tomb— and the wondérful objects of art which it contained— * fanned on this fervor for things Egyptian—and those quaint little figures and hieroglyphics which might have meant anything in “Egyptian”—now mean the last word in smartness, for the costume on which they appear. ( In this collection of printed silks—one finds all that is smart and new—among them these— Krinkle Crepes Printed Radiums Printed Foulards Paisley Crepes Printed Knitted Crepes Figured Silk and Wool Crepes Egyptian Bordered Crepes Striped Crepes Prices begin at $2.75—up to $6 yard 8ilk Section, Second floon Woolens Introduce Novelty in Weave Woolens seem divided between the all-one-color idea and the gay border or stripe—but there is much that is gay, too, in the loosely woven woolens that will ap- pear in Spring's smartest sports clothes. THE VOGUE FOR WHITE may well be met in this great collection of white woolens, which includes every- thing from a fine twill cord to the spongy, rough surface . eponge so beloved of Paris. CHALLAIN—An exclusive fabric with us; just new: has a softness not unlike the real camelshain and appears in a mottled brown, tan, or gray with blue; $6 ymfpu BOCHNEILLE, with its little raised cube design, is smart for the short jacquette; $8.50 yard. BOCHENETTE, a wool eéponge, vividly striped, for sports skirts; $6 yard. SV . KROSSHINE, a smart basket weave, -in cadet blue, tan-and white; $4.50 yard, - : . Thess are just novelties among-the many, many-others, which inelude the ever popular . Wool Jersey Cloth, $2.25 yard. Velour Checks, $4.50 yard. Pliid Eponge, $3 yard, * Casha Cloth, $4 and §5 yard, Velour and Camelshalir Plaids, $3.50-and $4.50 yard, ‘Woel Drass Goods Section, Ses- ond floen, Cottons are Gay-colored Whether Printed or Plain —and they are among the first to express their ap proval of color, design—and quantities of it, whether it be embroidered, printed or woven into the fabric itself. Trailing flowers spread delicate tints that recall old Dresden china—on fine, sheer voiles—many hem- stitched-like materials appear—an especially attractive one is eponge, with blocks or stripes seemingly hem- stitched right into the fabric. One is glad to welcome the printed crepes, some cotton—others silk and cot ton, in gay, Persian and Egyptian designs—and color ings as vivid as the mode demands. Embroidery is very popular—and some of the extremely delicate voiles are exquisitely embroidered—in all-over wavy patterns—in indefinite ovals, circles—and squares —some contrast their lovely colorings with white— others with a harmonizing shade—one smart voile is of navy blue with red embroidery—another gray with orchid. Even ginghams—ever and always in the scheme of things. when it’s summer frocks we are speaking of-——contribute to this gaiety of color—and the summer girl finds in these ‘ovely David and John Anderson ginghams her most practical summer frocks. Ratine—Paris’ own fabric, claims much attention for it self—and you may choose the most attractive ratines from ourt large collection—either two-toned, singly colored, or beautifully plaided and striped. Embroidered Crepes and Voiles, $1.50 to $6 yard. Dropstitch Crepes and Voiles, $1.75 to $2.25 yard. Sheer English Cotton Crepes, $2 yard. g Fine English Voiles, $1.25 yard. Novelty and Plain Frise, $1.50 and $1.75 yard. Plain and Novelty Eponge, $1 to $2 yard. David and John Anderson Gingham, $1.25 yard. Voiles, 38¢, 50¢, 75¢ yard. Printed Voiles, 50c to $1 yard. Printed and Plain Crepes, 85c and $1 yard. Cotton Dress Goods Saction, Second fioor. In the Making, These Notions Will be Wanted Boned Belting, 15c to 30c yard. White Twill Tape, 10c to 20c piece. Linen Tape, 7c plece. Embroidery Edg- ing, 3 yards, $5c. Lawn Bias Fold, 6 yards, 10c to 25¢. Colored Bias Fold, 6 yards, $5c. Bias Trim Binding, Sc yard, Rick Rack Braid, 2c and 3¢ yard. Hook and Eye Tape, 20c Basting Cotton, 40 to-70, 5c. spool. Kleinert’s Garment Shields, $3 pair. Dress Linings, 45¢ to $1.30, Ready-Made Inside Belts, 35¢c. ~Mercerized . Cotton, small-spools, 20c dozen. Light-weight Dress’ Shields, 3 pairs, 50¢. Eng- lish Needle Books, 25¢ to $2.50. Colored Cotton, in all the newest shades; 100-yard spools, 5¢c. Col- ored Silks—spring’s love- liest colorings; 50 yards, 10cs 100-yard spools, 18 - Notien Section, First floor.