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| I | Andrew Aloxnndet Sixth Avenue at 19th Street Women’s Boots at $4.75 Many small lots of our finest 7 faces shoes—sold originally for $6 to $10, but incomplete in sizes —now $4.75, Also $8, $9 and $10 Boots—now at $6.85. Gray castor patent leather with white tops and kid with gray tops; all high cut lace on new season lasts. SHERIFF AL SMITH ISRAPID FIRE GUN OFTHE CAMPALG Shafts of Wit in His Oratorical Fusillades Score Hits With the Crowd, Tho gloom which Tammany has shed on the campaign by tho silence of Hylan is being relieved by the glints of humor and shafts of wit of Sheriff Al Smith, the Cloero of the \ THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER I, 1917. sccadaentieseniemmaneneaniaaimmnanentiineattindinatiai ets. cians. baibatilh hii) x haha ada tala eens ’ off the roof when the Sherif? made Wortd building now stands, and T used his appearance. The band played and to whiz through City Hall Park on couldn't be heard. It wae playing roller skates in my boyhood days. I “Hall to the Chief,” but there was the worked in the Fuiton Market when chief himself, not 1 form, but in big New York Inwyers and financiers tlonal cut nd clear ¢ut cam easily the handsomest man fish in on the east side, them home." ‘Well, the demonstration was not to any IN BR be wondered at, for Mr. fmith, the RACKED IN LIKE SARDINES. = fowr afternoons and carried Sheriff, who {s running for President of the Board of Aldermen, is the oniy candidate on the city ticket living south of 14th Street, and he’s lived there all bis life, “L ought to know something about New York,” he says. “My fathor and mother were born within five minutes’ walk of the City Hall. I was born An orator without humor ts like an oyater without crackers, The Sheriff has @ humor with crackers. Do they know him in Brooklyn? The Acad« ‘emy of Music was sardined with hu- man beings to tho ceiling. When the Sheriff walked on the stage the crowd arose and those In the top tiers No cracked their heads against the roof, within five minutes! walk of the City Iiags were waving and hats were Hall, and my wife was bora within waving and people shouting as if they two blocks of where I was I went were just going mad. Then they re« to school with her. All our children membered who was there and they wero born within five minutes’ walk laughed. They knew what to expect, Rast Side, At two big meetings last night, one at Cooper Union and the other in the Brooklyn Academy of Music, the Sheriff was tho shining star, For him alone the calcium shone, ' At Cooper Unton they nearly tere of the City Hall and I etill live within five minutes’ walk of the City Hall; and on nights when there ts a full moon our bome lies in the shadow of the Brooklyn Bridge. “L sold newspapera in front of French's Hotel, where the New York B. Altman & Co. Important Special Sales of Young Men’s Suits have been prepared for and Boys’ Wear to-morrow (Friday) and Saturda and will be held in their respective sections of the Sixth Floor. EXCEPTIONAL VALUES WILL BE OFFERED Young Men’s Winter Suits at $23.50 & $27.50 represent a-splendid investment for the young man who recognizes the importance of being well-dressed. Made of carefully selected woolen fabrics, cut on the lines prescribed by the arbiters of men's fashions, and tailored with the skill and the attention to detail that are usually seen only in hand-tailored garments, these Suits are easily worth considerably more than the modest price asked for them. (Sizes 34 to 42 chest) Boys’ in a smart lace model, made of mahogany mannish last; sizes | to 6 in B, C and Dwidths . ° so. «6 Boys’ Suits, Overcoats& Mackinaws in an entirely mew selection, fresh from the makers’ hands, will be most advantageously priced. Suits of blue serge, adapted from the French middy model and very well made; sizes 3 to ° years . . . . . . $8.50 Overcoats of brown or green kersey, lined with fine sateen; adapted from the Russian trench coat; sizes 3 to 8 years . $11.50 Mackinaws of fine-quality all-wool heather mixture; sizes 10 to 18 years « $8.75 Shoes tan calf (a selected leather) on a fashionable per pair $5.45 A Sale of Men’s Furnishings and Winter Underwear will al80 be held to-morrow and Saturday, on the First Floor t ; The following prices represent very special values MEN’S NEGLIGEE SHIRTS Of madras, with plain fronts and soft cuffs; and of madras or percale, with plain or plaited fronts and stiff cuffs; offering a wide range of choice in patterns and colors . $1.20 Of madras, featuring a variety of smart designs and color effects; with soft or stiff cuffs . © «© «© ‘« o« e« $1.65 MEN'S LINEN HANDKERCHIEFS Initialed . . * « per dozen $2.95 Plain, hemstitched, per dozen 2.65 & 5.90 MEN’S HOSIERY Men's Black Lisle Half-hose, superior quality; per palr © e¢ © «© « «© 5G Men's Black Silk Half-hose, with cotton tops and soles . oe e per pair 65c. MEN’S SILK SCARFS (four-in-hand, with open ends) made of fancy silks of fine quality, in an interesting variety of new and fashionable designs and colors; very special » »« .« «© e« « 85c, MEN'S PAJAMAS of fine cotton materials, per suit , $1.65 MEN'S UNDERWEAR Medium-weight Balbriggan Shirts, with long or short sleeves; and Ankleselength Drawers tomatch . . | per garment 85c. Gray Worsted Shirts, with long sleeves; and Ankle-length Drawers to match, per garment . . .« «© «© $1.25 Gray Worsted Union Suits (ribbed); long sleeves and ankle length, per suit . $2.10 Fifth Avenwe-Madiaon Avene, New York “SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK MONDAY WONDERS) and they stopped laughing to cheer @gain, and to shout again, to yell again. This wos in Brooklyn! | The band wae playing “Hall’—no |"Over’—no “Listen"—"Keep the Home Fires Burning.” And Was @ beautiful woman In stage box four, with misty eyes and @ catch in her throat, the sweetheart of the Sheriff's childhood; the mother of four of the dariingest kiddies in New York who make No. 2% Uliver Street & paradise worth while; the haven vb Sherité Al hies from the of office and t cracks of “Tl take for my text this evening,” said the Sheriff, when ¢ ob- tained, “the jatest ac at of the enemy. It is called ‘6 the | facts and bere is the bun And he proceeded to dispose of the bunk. When he got through the facts were bunk and the bunk was fact, At joast that's the way the audienco jooked at it. . @ had less fires,” says the jess loss of money and joss of Underwriters, through thelr secretary, have reported $1,400,- 000 more in losses than the ‘Fire Commissioner did in his report. They report also 16,000 more fires than Commissioner Adamson, Mr, Adam- gon explains this by saying that the fires not reported by him were those for which the enzines weren't called out. But I think a fire is a fire |whether you put {t out or the en- | gines do, | “John C, MeNulty, an expert, writes that more lives were lost in factory | fires in 1916 than in 1912, when the! bureau for fire prevention was organ-| \zed. That report hasn't been con- | tradicted, and I suppose it must stand.” Fire Commisstoner Adamson ts the Sheriff's rival for the honor of Alder- manic President. When the Sheriff was in the Legislature, though, he wan one of the leaders who put through the new factory laws for the | prevention of fires and surrounding | the factory workers with safety de- vices and methods of escape. “Then,” continued the Sheriff, “they say the streets are cleaner. Well, | maybe they are where the Committee of 250 lives. They say they have done away with white slavery. The only slavers who were convicted were four, and they were given their de- serts by District Attorney Swann, who is not of the Fusion Administration.” And so the Sheriff went down the Mine, demonstrating to his and his audience's satisfaction that every. thing the Administration advertised as facts was bunk and the advertised bunk was “facts.” “All administrations,” he sald, “point with pride to their achieve- ments, That's a great old campaign slogan, But has anybody heard any- body pointing with pride to the ful- filment of the promises of the piat- form of four years ago? Not one. ‘They haven't done a thing they prom- ised to do except put a tax on the electric advertising signs, “Now, as to patriotism, We all love patriotism and we've shown that it's No idle word with us in the boys we've sent to the front. But this is not a national campaign, It's a fight for qunictpai administration, and we should stick to the issues. “No one man has a right to wrap himself in the American flag to the exclusion of all others in this cam- paign. Mr, Mitchel didn't do tt until the eleventh hour. And then he didn’t do it until the returns from the pri- maries were fn. “Well, that's Ike tho call that the cop heard In the middle of the night ‘Help! Murder! Police!’ he heard, and | he ran up three flights of stairs and | there a woman was waiting for him. ‘My husband has been beating me for the last hour and a half,’ she | said. ‘For an hour and a haif?'| queried the cop; ‘why didn’t you call me sooner?’ And she replied: ‘Well, | up to a little while ago, I thought I had the best of It.’ “Of course,” resumed the Sheriff, “I could say a lot more, For instance, there is the Hleventh Avenu road deal, But Mr. Mitchel has d that this be a gentlemanly camps and In com with bis desires can't express mysolt." Then Judge Hylan, Tammany’s first reader, came in descended o Grave of ua Robbed, AMSTERDAM, Noy, 1.—The grave of Grand Duchess Alexandra Pavlovna of Russia in Budape despatch fr has been stripped of containing the an will tell you that sup and a Dewey's ful combt w w manner that absorb, — Olly constipation up, your make rich FER-OL 1 p) bring you quick re benefit, will help you the rigors, of wint buy @ bottle at your druggiet. or dealer +125 a Bottle ay Woy's, or at | Say, and Dr, Fre thera ¥ SIX SEIZED IN AUTO THEFTS; , MAY RECOVER 40 CARS Two Soldiers Hurt in Collision With Doctor's Machine That Had Been Stolen, The police to-day completed a round- up of alleged automobile thieves and from information obtained from pria- oners they hope to recover at least forty expensive cars stolen in recent months in the hotel and theatre dis- triets, The prisoners are Francis Kelly, No. Elton Avenue, Bronx; Harry White. 445 East 16ist Street; Solomon Weberman, second-hand auto dealer at 149th Street and Third Avenue; Walter Krobel, Mills Hotel, who, it 1s said, has @ prison record as an auto thief, and Charies Volk, No, 3 Terrace Place, In addition, Harry Gordon of Tan- neraville, N. Y., ts held on a charge of recelving stolen gools. Cars stolen from George U. V 1. No. 239 Broad. of South Or- ange, N. J., have been recovered, The arrest and recoveries were made by the Automobile Squad, under Detective ‘«:. Hughes, Two soldiers were injured Msion with Dr. in @ col- ‘s Bari Welngarten, @ soldier, suffered @ broken arm. Owen Johnson sustained scalp wounds, thon of the Atlantic deer Molde, The wounded hunter was Ralph Birdéal, @ contractor of this place, who was shot in the left leg by a fellow hunter, The big decr bagged was a buck, wolsbing 26 pounds, killed In the Weymouts Woods. Stit One Man and 7 Deer, HIAMMONTON, N. J., Nov, 1—One man shot and seven deer, one the bdig- mest of the fearon killed by « party of seventeen Hammonton hunters, was the record of to-day'a hunt In thie sec- ~ Rough, Red Hands Softened — and Whitened with Lemon Juice Girls! It costs but a few cents to make a quarter pint of wonderful lemon beauty cream! Surely try it! feagrant and fresh . for iaonths, Any grocer will supply the lemons and your druggist oFsany toilet counter will sell you three ounces of orchard white for @ few cents, This is by all means the best lotion you could use. Massage it daily ees Mag gee mr are ve le containing | hands and see for yourself. It remo lites a it orchard, White. Be tan, freckles, se’ nee sure to strain the lemon Juice (rob and every girl .. ows Cn neal ai ‘a cloth so no pulp gets into the bottle, | usec to leach and whiten the-skimy then this creamy lotion will stay —Advt. To soften, smoothen, and whiten | sweetly the face, neck, arms, and particularly the hands when chafed, red or row) there is nothing better than lemon tree but pure lemon juice is too ighly acid and often irritating. A splendid lotion is Loa tre in @ moment by squeezin, juice of two rere West 42nd Street AILORED UNIFORMS Military Slip-on Vests, Khaki Wool Mufflers, Khaki Wool Caps, - BALBRIGGAN SHIRTS Stern Brothers Men’s Smart Overcoats Form Fitting Models in a celebrated Kirschbaum Aristocrat—a moderate shape-conforming coat. . . . in cambridges, oxfords, vicunas, meltons and mixtures . . .. may be had either full lined or skeleton lined with satin. $25.00 Coat and Breeches of O. D. Serge, - - Overcoat of Heavyweight Melton, - - Young Men’s and Men’s Clothing, Third Floor—Elevators Convenient The Men’s Furnishing Dept. (Located at the Sixth Avenue Entrance) Is now showing large and attractive assortments of Neckwear. Shirts, Pajamas, Imported Knitted Silk Dress and Motor Keefers, Military Sweaters, Slip-on Vests, Mufflers and Hoods, together with Domet and Viyella Flannel Pajamas for Military use, moderately priced as follows: Men’s Silk Scarfs Men’s Knitted Mufflers Men’s Shirts Men’s Pajamas <« Military Sweater Coats, Khaki, with sleeves, Sam Brown Belts, made in Canada, at $7.50 each A Special Sale of Men’s Shoes Formerly sold for $7.00 a pair, Black and Tan Russia Calf Lace Models, on flat English lasts, Also a number of this season’s leading models In sizes 614, 7 and 714 only; worth up to $10.00 A Sale of Men’s Hosiery and Underwear Friday and Saturday, will feature the following most attractive values: DRAWERS, medium weight, shirts with long or short sleeves, orecru... Gl drawers regular or stout, each 65c each SHIRTS AND DRAWERS, COTTON HALF HOSP, in black, natural color, cotton and woo! tan, grey or white; medium 39 mixtures, medium and heavy 1 50 weight, full fashioned pair =C eee ae co i SILK HALF HOSE, in black and UNION SUITS, of Natural Me 9 colors, medium weight, Hib, wedlumvelgit.c teach OO | shin teaiie ane wit 19¢ Between 5th and 6th Avenues. West 43rd Street at $25.00 model—the FOR OFFICERS AT ACTUAL COST $27.00 $30.00 at “ 55e to $3.00 $5.00 to 15.00 $1.50 to $9.50 per suit $1.25 to 11.00 “ at $6.50, 7.50 and 8.75 “ $3.75, 5.00 and 5.75 es $1.50 and 2.50 SS $1.00 Khaki, sleeveless, at $4.95 Sizes not complete. AND UNION SUITS, of Ribhed Bal- briggan,heaty weight, in white 1.35 Ry-