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‘POPE INTERESTED IN ITALIAN GRISS (Is Gratified at Stand Taken by Mussolini Rome, Nov 4.~(By Assoclated Press.)—Pope Plus gave Intense in- terest to every phase of the armed but peaceful revolution in Italy which brought the fascistl into power, Dur- ing all the recent exciting days in which the older politiclans passed from the scene and the black shirted ' followers of Mussolin{ took their places, His Holiness received infor- mation every hour from the Vatican' geerotaries ever repeating the desire | thut bloodshed might be avoided. A prelate, who upon viewing the| entry of the fascisti troops into Rome remarked that “the revolution'” had been successful was rebuked hy the FPope, “It is not a revolution it {s merely a change of government,” the Pope is reported to have cald. While no comment is available at 7 the Vatican regarding the advent of » Mussolini to power, those close to the V Pontiff sald that the policy of the Holy See will not be affected by a|a change in the political life of Italy.| M The Vatican policy remains one | dignity, silence and aloofness. Holy See Surprised. The interest of the Pope in the po- «Ilitical crisis was quickened when the jfaccistl adjourned their cong at ‘Milan. The resignation of the Facta | ta (government was a surprise to the th i h u e cl P 15 the prace air YOL Sdce you can save money on Meats, Grocor Holy Bee while before whieh had only little received word that a state of siege in Italy had been pro. mulgated, In the Vatlcan this was taken as an indication of the govern. ment's strength, o king's refusal | to sign the decree was sald to have caused disappointment to the Holy fiee which interpreted Victor Emman- nuel's action as a sign of wenkness, As the fascisti movement gathered force opinion in the Vatican was modified and it was recogi 1 the importance of the movement had been underestimated, His Holiness manifested great con- cern last Tuesday when groups of blaek the city the Pope stood at a wiv'ow at the extreme left corner of the Vat. ican from where he could see thous- Pincian vast maving concourse only a and then returned to his study, fa of Ufl two mir taries of state, elassified Wi faselsti and communists clashed near he Vatican gardens, That afternoon when the hirts swarmed in trlumph fascisti descending witched ' the few minutes nds of ill. He Pope 15 Plrased. The Pontiff looked with ratisfaction nt ohieftain said he realized what chie’tain said he realized fhat and power the 1 thranghart the world and whnt a henafit it waa to Ttalv that seat of tha Haly See, An- of contentment to the tiean s the fact that six memhers generally 'nown the ('atholie party, are incinded in are under-secre- ipoh the recent anor sch delivered emendous avthority hrch wie!s is the r source ama the a the nanular party, ussolini's cabinet, These six ers and four a city Manv peap'e ju section of recommend at the e earnestly ke a look ads L@ ChaL. ies, Fruits, Vegetables SMALL FRESH HAMS SMOKED SKINNED BACK H . HALF OR W.iOLE PORK TO ROAST AMS, Prime Rib Roast Rump Roast ...... ) Boston Rolis Lean Boiiing Veal Cutlet Veal To .19¢ . 18¢c S‘mlt Cut Legs of Veal Rump of Veal R FHESH KiLLED ROASTING CHICKENS Pork .. Chops Spare- Ribd o5 Corned I\ldnev.; 3 Salt BEST PURE LARD COMPOUND LARD BEST SELECTED EGGS BEST PRINT 31 % im 90c We Also Carry a Full Line of Groreries At Low Prices. FANCY MAINE POTATOES From 9 to 11 A. M. LARGE ONIONS CABBAGE California Oranges 35¢ " 79¢ ‘Malaga and Tokay l OC Grapes 20c Large Honeydews . ... Grapefruit 4 for 25 (v ARMY LAST WORK SHOE $2 98 Y < VR SCOUT SHOE ELK. SKIN $2.48 OFFICERS’ DRESS SHOES $4.98 MEN’S & LADIES’ SLIPPERS 98c WO MO! $ $3 .98 NAVY SHOES $3.98 $4.98 L g ke HEAVY MARINE $2.98 T TN T TR SHEEPSKIN Turnips . . 8 Ibs, zsc ": 15¢ o ™ 15¢ : wlggttatfnes 10 lbs.zsc Best Celery Nl loc Spinach . ARMY LAST SHOE vietorious hy the its newspapers. | that you Herald classified s.¢ place where & stepped in. But his hand is out in police headqua;ters for the fingerprint expert. When Fred Hammel, legless, found that dividends on his investments were falling off, 'he stepped from his touring car and began to “earn” a living in }u's old « faghion. Then the police PNEUNATICSTEEL, HOW IT WAS FOUND Late William Kelly Gets Credit for Original Discovery Detroit, Nov. 3.—The late William Kelly, sclentist, hailed as the discov- erer of the pneumatic process of steel making, has been accorded the honors denled him while he lived. 4 The honor is in the form of a bronze tablet placed in the door of the public library at Wyandotte, a suburb, said to be the birthplace of the American steel industry. Steel .men from all parts of the country witnessed the dedicatory cere- monies. The inscription on the tab- let asserts the late Mr. Kelly was the discoverer of the process of steel making that has made the building progress of the world possible. Following the unveiling, Willlam C. Kelly of Charleston, W. Va., a son, told a story that up to that time had been a family secret. He declared that years ago his father had. established a steel mill in Kentucky and began the. manu- facture of .steel by the old charcoal method. One day the slaves ' tforgot .| to replenish the charcoal beneath one of the furnaces. Mr. Kelly investi- gated and saw that cold alr was reaching. the melting iron. and mak- ing it, not colder, as he expected to find, but ‘hotter. [| “My father developed . ‘the air process of steel making from that dis- covery,” the speaker said. The son of the discovefer related that two English workmen later ob- tained from his father the story of the process and that later: when the | elder Kelly attempted to patent his process discovered that the late Sir Henry Bessemer of. England already had obtained the American rights, asserting he had discovered the sys- tem independently. The speaker charged that later developments proved Sir- Henry had been one of the men who posed as English steel workers, obtaining the story of the process from his father. “My father established his priority rights, but a struggle followed and he did not meet with financial suc- cess,” the son said. The elder Mr. Kelly established the first large . pneumatic steel making plant in the country at Wyandotte. Despite the fact that the Detroit sub- urb was the birthplace of the indus- try, Pittsburgh later was selected as the steel city of the country. ITRADES HIS WIFE || FOR AN OLD FORD, trade, according to a Fultoh teamster, now employed by a by a prominent oiticial. deal at Fulton, N. Y., 1921: day of July to Grover Coant for his the present transaction, in which a woman, Coant’s home and is now in Utica, her Both Lose-Woman Runs Away and Gar Is Taken Syracuse, Nov. 3. wife far a used fliv A second hand ¢ It's a fair red R. Woodruff, Syracuse - coal company. The strange deal was disclosed yesterday Oswego county This is the strange docu- | ment that Woodruff executed in the on July 18, “I have signed my wife on this 18th Ford touring car and all the consid- erations, including 1 tire 1 impump and all the toules in thé car at the present time. I let all bonds drop on my ex-wife this 18th day of July, nineteen twenty-one. “sind, Frank R. Woodruff, Grover Coant, Neda Woodruff."” The spelling in the foregoing deed is as it was written. And to make a wife and mother of two | children, was considered as a chat- tel, Woodruff's wife was not €&ven consulted, but acquiesced, tacitly con- senting by silence to go to another man as his property. It was in July, last year, that Woodruff, possessed of a desire to own and drive a car, met Grover Coant, a Fulton laborer, and invited him: to his home, stating that he had a business proposal he believed would be of mutual advantage. Coant, who now lives with his sister in Fulton, was agreeable, and on the night of July 13 ne drove his Iord car to the Woodruft home. Without any pre- liminaries and without consulting the woman, who sat apart from the men, Woodruff, according to’ Coant, pro- posed that the latter trade with him for his wife, giving him the car and its contents as it stood outside the door. The irony of the affair creeps in with the announcement that Wood- ruff has lost the car because he failed to meet certain financial obligations, while Mrs. Woodruff has fled from address being unknown to either of the men who “swapped” her. Why--do so many people use the Herald classified columns?. Answer They are getting results. Ask the man who uses the ads to make known his wants. lll]Yl] GEORGE Wlll RETURN T0 BATTLE Plans to Jump Into Campaign Again Tomorrow | London, Nov, 8 (By Associuted Press)—The report that Lloyd George Is_recovering so well trom his cold and throat trouble that he will be able to fill his engagement to address a meeting in London tomorrow morn- ing shares the confidence of the vot- ers of England today with the pros- pects of labor fu the coming elections. The time limit for making nomina- tions for parllament expires tomorrow 80 there is a keen curiosity over what lloyd George Is going to do about his threat to spread the war against the conservatives. Up to now he has not sald anything definite as to his inten- tions in this matter and his silence has spawned a mess of rumors. There is even a hint that he might be will« ing to weld his rational liberals to the free liberals headed by former Premier Asquith but the proportion of the electorate which takes this report serjously is not large, The sound thrashing labor received in the mumeipal elections throughout the qountry Wi y caused the opponents labor just about as mueh worry as”the laborites them- selves, The leaders are not without fear that the party workers may too readlly assume that the local resulty are prophecy of what will happen in the parliamentary elections, Warn- ings have been sent forth from both the liberal and conservative ecamps urging the workers not to abate their energles to prevent a labor victory on November 15, These warnings ana- Iyze the lssues for the purpose of showing what a gulf exists between municipal questions and issues of parllamentary concern,. Everyone |s reminded that often times in the past defeat In the municipal fights * has been followed by \lcmrv in the gen- eral elections, Lahor Is Hedging. In order to patch up some of its broken down fences, labor seems to be hedging a bit from f{ts ‘first cry for a heavy levy on capital, The Times says that!'this plank in the platform is not rallying satisfactorily support in the constituencies and that even in Glasgow, a stronghold of extreme soclalism, the labor speak- ers have been instructed to make it clear that the levy is “only a suc- cession, not a definite proposal.” One of ‘the two constant contentions of the opponents of the labor party is that the latter has taken its policy not from bona fide workers, but from theorists and doctrinaires, “many of whom ha¥e never done a day's work g M | i! SILK DRESSES UR beautiful Silk Afternoon Dresses have been placed on SPECIAL SALE for Saturday. They are all new— They are all taken from our stock— They are all remarkably low in price— These dresses will be sold tomorrow for MEN'S SHEEPSKIN COATS —ALL SIZES .................... ..............5895 BOYS' WOOL SWEATERS ......... $2. 95| and MEN'S SWEATERS. .$2.75, $3 95, $4.95 up, UNION SUiTS—Part Wool ........ $1.45 ARMY SHIRTS ................... $2.95 FLANNEL SHIRTS ......... 98¢ and $1.65 SHEEPSKIN VESTS .............. $3.48 RK SHOE Men’s Sleeveless COAT SWEATERS. . $2.95 ARMY LEATHER JERKINS ... .. ARMY for their keep. Tt 18 In the view of these antl. lshnr elements that the capital levy fs pet theory of the doctrinaires which does not appeal to the genuine work- ers, On the other hand, however, such unquestioned tollers as John Robert Clynes, chalrman of the parllamentary labor party, and Albert Thomas, director general of the in. ternational labor organization, strong- ly urge the justice and practicability of the proposed capital levy, Writing to the Times, Mr. Clynes recalls that Premier Bonar Law ry- vored such a levy when he was chan- cellor of the exchequer durifg ‘the war, The labor leader says, however, that his own party is not wedded to the levy which it ‘recognizes as un- popular and Ilikely to’ cause labor fo lose many votes, He intimates that labor is willing to consider alternatiye proposals for reducing the debt, READY FOR BIG GAMD Syracuse Eleven Is “All Set” For Bat, tle With Nebraska Tomorrow Syracuse, N. Y, Nov, 3.—Syracuse university's football eleven was getiing its last practice in preparation for the game with Nebraska here tomcers row: as the corn huskers from the west arrived in Syracuse today. The big Nebraskans wore to have a rest of an hour before they donned their football togs for ‘signal practice here. They stayed at Niagara I'alls last night. 0. D. REEFERS RAINCOATS ... $348 MENS CAPS ...................... %8¢ CCASINS 1.00 MEN'S HOSE — Pair ............... 10c 56 CHURCH STREET GENUINE BROWNS BEACH JACKETS SATURDAY ONLY—$4.95. VALUE $6.95 & Pair For § 79¢ FUR LINED COATS WITH FURJ] COATS WITH FUR COLLARS WOOL HOSE 21c i U2DERWEAR $8.75 COLLARS BOYS' LONG WOOL HOSE 00 WORSTED UNDERWEAR 95 c Garment