The evening world. Newspaper, September 7, 1916, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

ites » ao ts close to normal ih vere Union of Carmen are planting to € The union employees of the Sitke when called out by Organiver Pitegerald 4 Phoyees of the Queens traction hues men will declare @ sympathetic strike bef ve the da Sitiment of the Queens motorme Sulla: action. Union men The anion beederw gay the Menecement deciares the surthe eo in the Brona a trike the leaden of ¢ . ‘ siend the tre Thet Avenue ti ¢ agreed 1 t the ew has been call ] Third Avem over and th nH and conduct eats Wo ta ) ate Jiog bee The twterber wer, Ie the menntione « greet many famorent bretanders ere taking @ lot of pedestrian exercies ie the open elf and the Public Bervioe ( pmiasion appears to be unable to protect the rights of the pie, who o8n part of the subways Mayor Mitchel foturne © tonight at o'clock Hines, the @trike te effective Only were ie operetion at noun The New the union by gOlne Of etr ike. tow of We individual contracts which brought about the At the same time @ pottoe was sent out stating that all emp! @e Inierdorough and green car wurti Tomain loyal wil! revetve gouble pay until further notice faBGence ia recruiting men for the surtace car service 9,000 MEN OUT, SAY UNION began this afternoon the distr | trike order sot @ lines who en the contra Tite hada HBADS. Organizer Pitageraiéd and other union leaders admit that the subway. Ord “1.” lines are operating quite abundantly and say they did not expect We subway and “L” motormen to xo faq car strike, which mond. ‘The usijon leaders claim 4,000 6,000 on the purtace Jines. the fweway and “L.' they hope to extend to Brovklyn, Queens and Rich. n struck on the subway and ” and These figures are declared too high as regards Not more than 6 per cent, of the men in importan bods on those two systems walked out when the strike was ordered of the Interhorough, while @laiming they have broken the union and won the atrike on the hd “1, Kept demanding additional Pollee protection all day. They pro feared to have information that dis- Sppointed strikers would resort to Viglence and attempt to blow up or heed disable power plaute, They ked for two polloemen for each car, but this request waa 4 SURWAY UNDERMANNED, sav! UNION CHIEFS. Aluion leaders would not admit at] were noon that the subway and ing’ operated at normal capacity. i claimed that the subway was qpaiderably undermanned during the Morning rush, but the true condition did not pear because thousands who ordinarily use the underground System turned to-day to the "I," the Burface cara, automobiles, buses other avenues of transportation. An- other factor that helped the Jnter; borough to handle the’ crowds, ac- cording to the union leaders, was the early departure from their homes of Many thousands who feared delay. ‘The New York Railways Com| Fesumed the operation of the o town lines in Twenty-third and Four-! teenth Streets at 7 o'clock. The cars ‘were star*cd at Intervals of five min- ‘utes, Twelve of the usual twenty cars that leave the barn went into @ervice, each carrying a policeman. Apparently the management of the @reen car lines anticipates a fight of “#ome length, for great truckloads of all kinds of provisions were stored away in the various car and power houses of the systems to-day, Drawn by promise of high pay and Steady employment, scores of experi- enced street car men from Newark, Philadelphia, Peston and New En, cities were signed up at the Read@quarters at Fifty-first Street @nd Seventh Avenue this afternoon, whfle several hundred strikers were being paid off and dropped from the Payrolls in the same building. Hundreds of enterprising auto- mobile and truck ewnera who had equipped their cars for emergency Passenger service were disappointed thia = morning becuuse the usual transportation lines were able to care for/the crowds, However, these jit- Bey adventurers are likely to do busi- iv 5 A Cause ling tHair polag. wiih, Gurieen pee chi wit! Suticura jtinent. | Shampoo with Cuticura Soap. ple Each Free by Mail | th 32-p. Bkin Book. Address “Cuticura, it. " Sold throughout the ‘world. subway | ts of dandruff! : | ceive eas to-night becwuse the n hour crowd will be more oon 1 officials and the policy who can to leave their and shops early to-day tn order to relieve the big pressure that atraing the downtown terminals be tween 5 and 6 o'clock Mifth Avenue, in the absence of regular traMe pol kot into such @ jam at noon t Commis sioner Woods found {1 necessary t send A special force to straighten out the thoroughtar There threa to be an automobdile tie-up in lower Manhattan this evening and poll trafic offtcers ndvise automobile owners and taxioab drivers tou the far east and west aide north and south avenues as much as pbasible in order to relieve the strain on La- fayette Street and Fifth Avenue. ‘We wiit win this strike if it takes a whole year,” General Organtgor Matthew J. Higgins said as he went into a meeting of the Sreen car motormen and conductors at the Plaza Assembly Rooms, Fifty-ninth Street, near Park Avenue. The meeting which Mr. Higgins ad- dressed had an attendance of about 2,600 and there were fully 1,000 men on the sidewalks in front of the hall The American Federation of Labor will hold @ meeting to-morrow at the oMce of Hugh Frayne tn the Amer!- can Art Galleries Building in Twenty- third Street, near Broadway, over which Vice President Frank Mor- rieon will preside, It ts expected that President Samuol Gompers will ar- rive during the week. The reported intent of this meeting is to raise a temporary fund of $1,000,000 for the maintenance of the atrike. ONLY ONE POLICEMAN TO EACH CAR. ‘The management of the surface Mnes asked for two policemen for each car, but only one was allowed. At the car house Ninety-ninth Street and Lexington Avenue, scores of old employees were ready to take out cara all morning if policemen could have been secured for the back plat- forma, Except on the Elghty-sixth Street crosatown line, which passes atrike headquarters at Elghty-alxth Street and Third Avenue, service on the green car surface Mines was about 16 per cent, of normal up to noon Only four cars out of thirty-six usual- ly in operation were used on the Kighty-sixth Street crosstown sys- tem. Very little disorder was reported in the early stages of the strike. Motor- men ou the “L" and subway trains were protected by a cage of heavy wire screen. A policeman rode on the front platform of every “L" and sub- way train, and other pollcemen in uni- form and plain clothes were scatte through the cara, Small police guards Were kept at all express and at im bortant local stations overhead and| underground. avidence of the thoroughness of the parations made for the strike by Interborough was obtainat Brooklyn Bridge station, where serve force of twenty-five experienced electric train men was kept busy on wuard all day. ‘These men were betent to jump in and take charge o at the are any train that might be deserted MEN MISLED BY THE UNION LEADERS. In claiming that @ heavy percents of the subway and “I cent employees wad of the surface line pad to w strike em- wall ders of the Amalgamated Car- men's Union either attempted to de street car workers or were de ceived themselves Motormen, switeh men, winal mon, coyductors and wuards in tne for promotion stuck to the company almost unanimously on the subway and “L" systems All the express trains underground BELL-ANS Absolutely Removes ti and overhead in the morning rush were handled by veteran employees Sirikebreakers — occasionally — w sandw 1 in with the old men on the local trains on both systems to act as guarde They pin thelr faith to the eur- |” for power bh pat would «o ” extent ee | BOSS STRIKEBREAKER DUR IN NEW YORK ON SPECIAL TRAIN TO-DAY CHICAGO. Bept ta r Wad ell, Who holde the distinetion of be tng the bow atrikebe ru world, te due to arrive w York «time thie roon to ta jeharge of the at nt ate engine, & barge car, wie eit | Pullmans and a private car, Hts ride | will cost $3,000, Kutiroad officials | planned to break all speed records and have Wantell in New York for » Joon tocence with the traction magnates thin af The »p a ee ord breaking run to a de spate from Erie, Pas it made th run from Chiewe to Elkhart, tnd | miles, in 100 minutes Waddell, who has bad charge of | similar work in Various big: strikes In the past, said he had nearly 5,000 sirikebreakers already in New York. MITCHEL REACHES NEW YORK TO-NIGHT TO WORK ON STRIKE, | Mayor Miteh St, Jobnsbury, | there this morning on the Srat train | and willarrive int. : thisevening. | The Mayor, motoring back from | Piattsburg with Mra, Mitchel, ways | apprised yesterday morning of the eriousness of the situation, He then arranged to be told last night if the critical stage Was reached, Theodore D, Rousseau, the Mayor's wcretary, early this morning said the Mayor had been told that 4 strike nad been called. The Mayor said nothing for publication ag to the merits of the itrovers his own . ’ tlons. WHITMAN PREPARED FOR MILITIA CALL NOCHESTER, N. Y, Sept. 7.— When Informed to-day that em ployees of the Interborough had begun a strike, Gov. Whitman de- clined to comment, but sald the Ad- Jutant General's office in Albany would quickly inform him of any re- ail jeans pene aH ola‘an eur leus ‘kal’ ile quest for militia to supplement the New York Police Department in pre- serving order, He said if he was notified he would le: New York at once, although his present plans are to go to New York on Saturday, $25,000,000 FOR PUBLIC IN DROPPING 5-CENT LOAF Head of Master Bakers Declares in Favor of the 10-Cent Size, Which Reduces Cost of Production, CHICAGO, Sept, 7.—Elimination of five-cent bread and substitution of the 10-cent loaf was considered cer- taln to-day as members of the Execu- tive Committee of the National Asso- elation of Master Bukers met to take action on the proposition, 8. F. McDonald of Memphis, President of the Master Bakers’ sociation, promised a saving of 000,000 w yeur to the 5 per cent, of tne eon, As- public HOW buying S-cent loaves if they Would buy 10-cont loaves instead ‘The increased cost of wheat, sugar, lard, yeast and labor was g.ven as the cause for the meeting, ‘Three ways to must these dilicuities have been pro- bosxedreduetion, of the siae of the five-cent loaf, increase of the price to either six or seven cents, or baking a W-cent loaf only. ‘The bakers favor the latter way, They say it takes Just 4s much Une and labor to m & five-cent loaf us to make @ 10-c loaf. pnt loaf would pra qual to tWo Hive-cent loaves sae ALUANY, Sept ‘Thirty-four new cases of infantile paralysi and five deaths from the disease were re- ported: to- to the Bute Depart. nent of Health, ‘This increases the tals to 2485 s and 200 deaths in the Stat uisidy New York City Syracuse toed, reported four deaths and Adams Ci Ntre one, Deputy Warden of Sing Sin, Resigua, ALBANY, N.Y. Sept. News of the resignation of Spencer Miller, deputy warden of Sing Sing prison was received at the office of the State Superintendent of Prisons from Ossining to-day vin Der- 4 penologist recently Ment to om California, was ap. Cent, tandard O11 Company of New York has announced another reduc tion of one cent in the price of gapo, line, bringing the price | down to Ze conte, 4 sagoona fat ‘3 ‘MUST WIN STRIKE T0'SAVE THE UNION, CARMEN ARE TOLD m Picke ent Out Atier Core atiize Strong Plea to 4,000 at Lyceum Hall wa your wad wer of Aiwnien ted Ave Hireet and & trie 4 ' . ‘ " ' that this is the biggest and om Important fabt we ever bod W If homie and Hedley be us we ht ae well wind up the remains eth Ameleamated Association and bury them If we lowe here they't HWP Ue everywhere, That in why it sbaolutely ned that we " New York The battle haw just bee “0 very int to beat onton, Mut you must also o We rempect of the publ vid L implore you to be law-abiding and keep wober Kimilar talks were and te and on trains and street carn The employees of the Second Ave- fue line Will meot to-night at Mo: Hail to vote on the question of goin, out on 4 sympathetic airike, Th union leaders have strong & th the vote will be In the attirmativ —-—. SLIGHT DISORDERS = IN TRACTION STRIKE QUICKLY CHECKED Satine from First Page.) trains there by an organi: strikers, The Ninth Avenue elevated line was) interrupted for awhile by the pulling of the emergency stop cord of a train moving out of the Thirty-fourth Street station, source of the trouble could be found and trains were backed up for several blocks, | Maurice O'Leary, a striking guard, | was accused of the mischief by In- spector William Stewart of the Inter- body a borough. He was taken before Magis- trate Barlow in Jefferson Market Court and was sentenced to the work- house for fifteen days. The Lexington Avenue line, on! which only fourteen cara were run- ning at noon, was brought to a stand- still by the spiking of the trolley slots and the placing of cobblestones on the tracks from Ninetieth Street to Ono Hundred and Fourth Street. Two | automobile loads of detectives were | despatched from the Third Branch Bureau to stop this mischief, | Sergt. Hillman and a squad were sent on @ similar errand to Broadway and Forty-fifth Streets, where slot spiking was accomplished several times. Disorderly hooting and the throw- ing of fruit and vegetables at the few cars running on Fourteenth Street caused Commissioner Woods to order two policemen on all crosstown cars | this afternoon and extra policemen seattered along the sidewalks, The Commissioner was among those caught In the tremendous jam of automobiles, indirectly resulting from the strike, on Fifth Avenue in the forenoon, ‘The first thing he did on his arrival at Headquarters was to despatch Inspector Jake Brown and a force of traffic pollcemen to the avenue open. Threats of violence and stone throw- ing on that part of the Thirty-fourth treet line which runs fram ty. ad Street to Thirty-fourth Street, nth Avenue, caused che men op- rating to quit at hoon, Commissioner Woods, after in- ars on the line vestigation, allowed the line two po- men for wm car sent out after the noon hour loiterers along the ave- hud gone back to work, The same action Was taken regarding the nue Ninth Avenue line, which suspended service at 11 o'clock for the same reason, The Commisstoner made public a lotter which ha had sent to William D, Mahon, head of the Amalgamated Association, Aug after Deputy ‘ommissioner Lord had been quoted | aying sirike pickets wotld not | be molested In talking to strikebreak- | ing motormen on cars, ‘Che Commis: | sioner explained to Mr, Mahon that Mr. Lord must bave been misunder. tood, as it Was manifestly unsafe to the public on the str and passen- gers to have car operators disturbed as 8 by arguments while they were at work When a ticket chopper at hty- fourth Street and Third Avenue re fused to leave his post strikers twice pulled him away from the box, Po- licemen finally aided the man to re- main Wt work, ake blebal ne 3 eco deine Pie Tt was some time before the! e TUE RBVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, | SUBWAY AND ELEVATED TRAINS OPERATED UNDER He HOW THE MUTORMEN ON OL” TRAINS AnD SCREENED FROM ATT AC sd PPP eee eee eee | Pree Interbor SUBWAY ABOVE NORMAL, POLICE REPORT SHOWS 178 Cars « 164 on nider- n Surface Klevated and 98 ground, Is Official Count eh | ‘The number of trains being run in the subway and on Seoond Ave nue bh ted line is about to ent ateve norma About cent oof the surface ca operated, according to the police figures On the Second Avenue elevated twenty-two trains are being run; on! the Third Avenue fifty-two aad on the tath and Ninth Avenue lines : 2 PS ninety, The police reported that the At Twenty-first Street and Ninth | | Avenue all of the trainmen excepting Ry Reed aage was taken from cars, he sume situation was “the ont Yo ondred and b Thirty-eighth Street station of the| siumway traffic in ee eg | Third Avenue line. Deputy Commis- | stoner Lord rushed a large force of! policomen to the station to protect the Stabe ‘ There was a demand for stocks in rly trading and substantial recov | eries were made from reaction in late trading on Wednesday, Profit taking brought about an frregular, price movement in some of the spe- | clalties, and declines extended up to 3 points, U eel lost a point, Cuba Sugar 34, Marine preferred 2%, and Kelly-Springfield 4% points in second hour, Railroads were stronger and Reading advanced 4% | points to 10942, Recoveries from the} were quick in nearly all stocks, at 110 up 3%. low Reading sold ning Quotations, Th Hy ing off from the | lined imber of care being operated on Hate than (he crews of several trains Which stopped at the same station, 12¢ Yarlous surface lines was . i low At 1.90 o'clock, when @ southbound | train rolled in, atrikers began pulling ie n Aven ten; wearin the trainmen from the cara, Tho “Mt Hadimon Ave ue, nineteen motorman blew his whistle and sev. | MTeedway and Columbus Avenue, eral policemen responded, but the (Welty; Broadway and Ania erdam | strikers succeeded in taking off all of Avenue, twelve; Biath the trainmen except the motorman thirteen Seventh Avenue, : The passengers on board were anked | Mighth Avenue, twenty-two; by an official of the company nue ni —— & abhi altehe same procedure follow leon 5 ma) Spring and Dee | with tha next train, A third train Hao bh i Aap ot Ea Hebebocks jaye we 0 ree; Fourteenth Street, fo : Carried the delayed Passengers south Twenty-third Sireet, seve ‘Thirty and tho motormen of the first two) fourth’ Street, Nol Liehty a0 trains switched their cara back to the | Street, four; ¢ Hundre and 3 terminal teenth Street, three; One Hund Forty-fft) Street, four. vk tabulations shew a totais of noon in mber of subway and “L" trains 4 and an increase in the nu per of surface cars. Lnterhborough of- ficials said there t# always a drop in the mid-afternoon and the train service ts reduced, A he ine peculiar circumstance has put Thirty-fourth Street. crosstown out of business, Youfg. girls that thoroughfare and jeered he strikebreakers go effectively that none could be found with hardihood hrough the street na car from river to river, They he strikers, but not the contempt of the pretty girls, ————__ arr BOY LEADS CHAMPION FOR GOLF TITLE (Continued from First Page.) a 15-foot putt for a 2 against Gard- ner's 8. This evened the match. Both came to the turn in 42 .trokes. The tenth and eleventh holes were Wik net changes from previous clapiag. Ne: | halved. Jones on the eleventh drove wan tow Tar | into a bunker, but surprised the gal- r 3 lery by recovering clear to the green, os. +1” ] eighty-five yards away to the corner _ 4 | of woods, | Am. +4] ‘The Southern youth forged ahead Fi] om the tweleth, when Gardner's ap- + “| proach putt was short. “The kid” © & practically had the short thirteenth vt Gon, Matin Cae tocatrg Ureat” Nor yareat Ss thaplr tate itgy mos er, Nic i Sgnoce no EPPPPCCR ELSE BPS EP. MARKET, i WHEAT, | wemlay Open. Mia! Ret Ta Tec. 1Bgty RAI Mas. UMN Ths CORY: Watneaday on the The seventeenth was halved, missed his drive on the home hole and won, too, when Gardner made the ‘s{ most sensational shot of the match, a twWenty-foot putt that had to curl } | around tho boy's ball before dropping In the cup. The fourteenth went to Jones when Gardner again showed his weakness green, Jones, short on the fifteenth, made a fine pitch to the hole but missed an easy putt, which gave his opponent the hole, The boy became 2 up on the aix- teenth, when Gardner made a great try, but lost a long putt for a half, Joney followed this up by overplaying the green on his third, rdner went straight all the way and took four to his opponent's five, giving Jones a lead of a single hole at the end of the first round, The cards: Jones~ ‘ : Out coos C8007 8 468 + 44494048 6-86-18 44646994 6-43 ; 685403 437-79 Chick Eyans, the National open had an easy time with Anderson, runner-up in 1915 for the amateur championship, Tikes th Jesse Guilford, of Boston, led Ti ae a ‘Passe Gardner White, of Flushing, by 2 vu, BN up. Guilford played superb golf, 37 t" out, and the sme in for a 74, { Dp. C. Corkran, of Baltimore, was t 2up en C. B, Baxton, of of Piladeiphla t pita. a \) of New York Broker Drowns. PITVSFI Mass, Sept. 7.—Dor- othy Langh: elghteen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. 1 1. Langhaar of New York, was drowned in Lake Garfield, towa' of Monterey, Southern Berkshire, to-day, e was Wading with an older sister and stepped into a_ hole. father, a New York stock broker, owns # one hundred acre estate near the lake. > After a few Www old, | { | | | ours are #0 useful as to counterbal- | merce, the Manchester Guardian says | generally realized here how strong a Ae EEE ee Acknowledging Greeting Prom the’ vot Commission on Mexico, He Wishes It Success WARHINGTON Rept Hremident Wileon to-day sent to the joint Amer en end Metionn Commissioners io oply to (helt menage sending bie erllngs the follew owl eondial Mey I pot express to the erteee Joint Com “my ery Warm appreciation of (he tele » jue Heoeived, my profound 4 1 i the lashes of friendship and scoommedation to which it le ad dreaming Heelf and my confident hope A0d expectation that ite detiberatt Fowned WIth & success which nt the friendship be tween the two ations . = WELLS- FARGO CASHIER KILLS SELF AT POST AF. Hibson, I Two Years, Ends Life With Revolver in Brook. | lyn Office, | In full view of those ebvout him, | Arthur FB Mibaoa, cashier in the We prese Company f nd Street, Brook. ond inatantly killed himaelt roon in his wire-tnel He used the revolver with which the company equipped the of fee for emergency une. Hibson, who was thirty-two years waa married, had two children | vnd lived at No. 466 ¢ Hrooklyn, It was a been tl for two years. BRITISH “BLACK LIST” ASSAILED IN ENGLAND | Mancheste r Guardian Declares Threat of Reprisals by the U. S. Should Be Heeded. LONDON, Sept. 7 (10.20 A. M.).— Commenting on the amendment to the Revenue bill passed by the United States Senate Tuesday aight, empow- tring the President to retaliate against terference with American com- onge.” shat although those who see in it no more than a flourish having a spectal virtue on the eve of election may be! right, “nev: theless we should do well to vote two things: First—these re- prisais are directed against the allies and primarily against ourselve Second—they are popular in Amei | tea." he Guardian considers it ts not nument has ve jout the United Stat |Mst polloy and interference with mails, and asks “if the Foreign Of- | fice is convinced these practises of | en aroused through by the black- ance tho weakening of American | sympathy they involve, or that they | cannot be modified as to meet | American objections without tmpair- ing any utilitios they may have for ourselves.” ——.-____ BELMONT PARK RESULTS. FIRST RACE — For two-year-olds; selling; purse $590; alx furlongs; straight.—Running Shot, 107 (Buxton), 4 to 5, out and out, first; Glanaginty, 109 (J, MoTaggart), & to 5, out and out, second; Velour, 116. (Trox! 40 to 6 to 1 and even, third. Time-1.13 3-5 Radiant Flower also ran. -___—. WINDSOR RESULTS. FIRST RACK--Purse $500; two-) sides palling: five furlongs —Gold 109 (itlee), “straight $7.40; place § show. $8°40, > Reauty ie (Rol plage $6.80, ahow ight and Harly, OF (A. Collin: Time, 1.08156. Sweet Than Bug at Dolly, Lady Rowena Meelogene Dyson’ and: Deve’ Campbell also ran. Gra MONTNEA » Que., Sep’ $500,000 a year will be added to the payroll of the conductors, baggagemen, brakemen and yardmen in the employ of the Grand Trunk Rathvay by a re- viston in the pay schedules panounesd here to-day. ne wrates are ef- fective from’ Bep! — Feund Dead on Tracks. A man believed to be George H. Schwarts, seventy years old, of No. 138 West One Hundred and Fourth d Ninety- ent Juat weat of Balley Aven: Rronx, to-day a train. S ori) for Bh gti SMEAR at ie ston egh WE ALSO OFFER: CHOCOLATE COVERED ROASTED ALMONDS—The name tells the story, but conveys no Idee of the prime, firet quality Almonds beds required jand promulgate it if | the oppoaition should become too v _ 1 = GUARD MAIMED TO WALL 5 YEARS IW MEW JERSEY PRISON Warden Osborne Tells of Discovery He Made at Trenton Inspect 1 uM Kine Mine ot epeshers pened ite twe tion at Newark up of Mavors trom «| eeotone of the United Plater Werden Onve Forte pubseet told of uo visit ¢ «© New Jereey an prison, he vcard 4 ehain rattle the man | chain five ye SETS HUSBA AFTER 7 YEARS’ WAIT Mrs. Witherspoon Hoped Por Recon ciliation, but Now Has Interloe- utory Decree Made Final Th Mra Emily Witherspoon of Charleston, & ©, hae waited seven nee obteining an interlocutory of dvoree Jame: in the supe eranted Mr jpoon an interlonucory deo Hor counsel, in applying to Crane for a final deeree, Vitherspoon has re- ly divorcing her ope that they might in Juatlee gtated thet Mre 4 tro » Witherspoon asked ntered. His on the ground Wan should not be allowed to divorce decree againat him- ong were married In Charleston in 1900. ——— a Ready to Dissolve the D LON DO! Sept. 7.—A Zurich de- spatch says that on account of the violent opposition, Premier Ti has Informed the leaders of the opposition that he has procured from Emperor Francia Joseph a decree proroguing Parliament, and that he would take the decree with him to every sitting he attacks of lent. If you DO NOT re. quire glasses—if your com- fort and general welfare will not be improved by their use —our Oculists will tell you so, frankly and honestly. Take our word for that— please? We have told more than fif- teen thousand people that glasses were unnecessary. We have been twenty years establishing cue reputation — we guard with zealous care. One trial will add your patronage — “forever and anon”—to our present clien- tele of more than 250,000 sat- isfied patrons, rr Friday, September 8th th he gre 1 3c ni echt USD" hox te pits 300 BROAD Way “Weati's “e SThe

Other pages from this issue: