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RYE Rowe pease «gas yah aks api WEDNESDAY, JUNE 16, 1 : 2 ‘tted. Mr. Stern is « wealthy resident of the fashionable Passy district where he owns a fine home which was trans- formed into @ military hospital at the beginning of the war. ‘The prisoner was placed in the Sante Prison without bail. Emi! Stern, who, with Jacob J. con- stituted the firm of Stern & Stern, merchants at No. 79 Fifth Avenue, 6 THE EVENING WOR sctoocm NAVY REJECTED YALE UNWERSITY ** Sen err mF A Stern Brothers | West 42nd Street Between 5th and 6th Avenues West 43rd Street ‘Was sounded by President ‘Warren of Mishican to 3,000 ==) HORSTBPOUNDS | DEGREES TO MANY reas esis must be ready out the following statement this morn- ing: “Jace Julius Stern 1s @ member of our firm. We are in the dark concern- ing his arrest in Paris. Our firm has had no dealings with Germany or Aus- je in all parts of North American citizen, was arrested yeater- — EE ‘ : day on @ charge of commerce with the Furnished by Wilson & Co.,|Crowell,.Dr. Dakin, Hoover, enemy. He was born in Germany in SUMMER BUSINESS HOURS: WOMEN’S TAN, Packers, Capt. C. S. Will- Davison and Earl Read- SGN Ghee |, During June daily 9 A. M. to 5 P. M, including Saturdays. ING See ing Honored. pretier anal she us ov ms tae tooo July and August daily 9 A. M. to 5 P.M. Closed all day Saturday. $5.85 Out of 639,662 pounds of ham de- NEW HAVEN, Conn, June a the anerins Ag. hteengadhel chaire, the French “ Speciat been assisting In Fi work here, left im his airplane for Cleveland at 11.30 A. M. to-day. He this week, | livered to the Goverament by Wilson/| At the Yale University commence-' Stern's American naturalization was questioned by the French authorities in goers, = & Co, 428878 pounda were rejected | ment exercises to-day Prot. Woolty 1915, nut no took the matter into the oalf with either because they were mouldy, soft, not sufficiently dry or sour, ac- or i cording to testimony presented to- . | Gerad Soot ond winded tip. | day before Special Examiner Edward HEF P. Patterson of the Federal Trade Fitting Small Commission, which is hearing charges made against the packers that they Feet wold unfit meat to the Government The hearings are being held in the i gg Bl 4 United States District Court rooms, | | of ultra fashionable and exclu- Woolworth Building. © give designs in Oxfords, Pumps Capt. C. 8. Williams, pay division, and Slippers. We carry all United States Navy, who handles ; meine iY pane Moy food and clothing, his station being 5 tec 4 New York, and Pay Inspector George | ah unusual value at our price, Lown jr, United States Navy, who 1 rejected the major part of the total i LM. HIRSCH ham shipments, were the chief wit- A nesses. ‘They were introduced by W. ei PANY T. Chantland, attorney for the Trade © Ave.at39thSt. Board. On cross-examination by H. 4 Snowden Marstall, for Wilwon & Co., J tir testimony could not be changed. Ham sent aboard the Kittery and the Hancock, in ail over 6,000 pounds, bm ATERNITY oor cestcsocessreten ships came back to this port, it was testified, and a demand made on Wil- son & Co, to make good the amount paid, $1,626. ‘The hams were called moully and bone sour by Capt, Will- jams He added that from December until Aprit he bad endeavored to get the money back and then turned the matter over to the Bureau of Gupplica On May 13-or 14 the check came, he sald. Capt. Williams also testified that there were two deliveries of hams made from Wilson & Co, to the Great Lakes Training Station, and both times a “violent protest” was made by the supply officer there, backed by the surgeon. After the sec- ond delivery no more were sent, he said. Pay Inspector Brown, on the stand, told of rejecting 27,000 pounds for being mouldy and sour, 57,000 pounds for being mouldy, marrow sour, or plain sour, and other lots for being mouldy. Asked if a sour ham was fit for consumption, he replied no, that is, if the meat part was sour, A marrow sour ham could be used, he added, if it was burned out, but could not be used aboard ship. On cross examination he sald he are made had been doing inspection work for fine quality linger. || more than twenty-one years. He ad- mitted that the department had “trouble with all packers.” Mention of mould on the hams led |to the introduction of a telegram from Admiral McGowan, Paymaster General, to Wilson & Co., dated Aug. | 4, 1917. Adaptations from the Latest Models | Differing in no way from pre- ', vailing modes, conceal the condition, and will fit, without alterations, when figure is again normal. Lane Bryant q : OWER’STORE Ware Fashion, Qualty and Economy Reign _ 23 West 38th St., N.Y. 3 Greatly Reduced 95 5, Drewes — Cotton . vote, in dark and ie colors, oo pia and figured efits, Striped cotton SQ, Drew — Pine ‘ quality — figured voile and oa very fine quality wool presented the fifteen candidates for courts and obtained recognition of his American citizenship and the order of sequestration against his property was honorary degrees, These were! Masters of Arts—Alfred Laarence planned to follow Lakes Ontario and Erie, and to make the trip in less Aiken, Norwich, Conn.; Paul Way- land Bartlett, sculptor, New York; Henry Stanford Brooke jr, Chairman Yale Alumni Committee; Benedict Crowell, Assistant Secretary of War; Frank Lyon Polk, counsellor to the Department of State; Robert Scoville, Federal Food Administrator for Con- neoticut, Doctors of Sclence—Henry Drys- dale Dakin, surgeon; Edward Bytves- ter Morse, director of Peabody Mu- seum at Salem, Mass. Doctor of Letters—John Masefield, Pnelish poet. Doctors of Divinity—James Edgar Gregg, head of Hampton Institute; Daniel Sylvester Tuttle, presiding Bishop of the Protestant pal Chureh. Doctors of Laws—Herbert Clark Hoover, Federal Food Administrator; William Renwick Riddell, Justice of the Supreme Court of Ontario, Can- ada; Henry Pomeroy Davison, head of the Red Cross Bureau; Earl of Reading, British Ambassador. Degrees were awarded to 312 in course, There are 243 academic sen- jors on leave for war service and ten from the scientific school. Five sen- lors who died in service were awarded the bachelor of arts degree “post @itum honiris causa,” as follows: Benjamin Strickler Adams, St, Louis; Henry Norman Gribe, Scarsdale, N. Y.; Leslie Malcolm McNaughton, Fort Edward, N. Y.; Holmes Mallory and Curtis Seaman Read, New York City. —s——_ $1,000,000 Fire Sweeps Pembroke, Ont, Business Section. PEMBROKE, Ont, June 19.—The greater part of Pembroke's business sec- tion is in ruins to-day as the result of & million-dollar fire that started early last night. factory. This is not the time to rein- spect any article of food for the en- listed men of the navy, about the ac- ceptance of which there can be any possible question.” Joseph KE. Hanlin, superintendent of the National Cold Storage Company of Brooklyn, was asked about meat that Wilson & Co. had sent there from Philadeiphie. He testified that it wus good when it arrived and, as far as he ba ee“ good now, sked how he knew it was good, he said he could tell by the “smell” when the car door was opened and if its exterior signs were all right. A letter read yesterday from T. G. Lee, district superintendent of Ar mour & Co, in which he spoke of meat purchased by Wilson & Co. that had been “wiped off with water, vinegar and salt,” and commented he thought such should not be sold to The Store is closed daily at 5 P. M. On Saturdays at 12 noon. B. Altman & Co. The Annual Summer Clearance of Lace-trimmed Scrim Curtains Also Fancy Net Curtains Limited quantity, excellent in desirable patterns; 21% yards long, Specially priced at Women’s Low Shoes $1.49 pr. is now in progress on the Second Floor, in a Sale of more than ordinary interest. This unusual offering comprises a large number of desirable styles in Summer foot- wear, all of fine quality and workmanship, and all marked at exceptionally low prices 2 by 2% yards, - Summer Bed Furnishings specially priced will be on sale to-morrow and Friday, in the Department on the Fourth Floor. Excellent Values will be offered in White Blankets $8.50 & 10.00 Satin-finish Bedspreads General Clearance To-morrow In the Upholstery Department Of desirable small lots in Curtains, Lace Bed Sets, Sash Laces and Madras by the yard; English Block Printed Bedspreads and Table Cloths, Tapestries and Damasks, Screens and Utility Boxes. And in addition, these SUMMER SPECIALS: Washable Cretonnes colors for Draperies and Furniture Coverings, Values 55¢ to 90c a yard at 39c to 75c High Grade Table Cloths and Napkins Of Irish All Linen Satin Damask Very much less than prevailing prices. 2 by 2 yards, - $6.75, 8.50 and 9.00 Also Several Hundred Full Bleached Trish All Linen Damask Table Cloths, at $3.75 to 6.75 Trish All Linen Damask Napkins, at $3.95 to 7.50 doz. A Sale of Cotton Dress Fabrics On the Main Floor, will include: Novelty Voiles and Tissues|Silk and Cotton Shantungs, in a large assortment of designs and co.orings, Swinging Couch Hammocks In grey or khaki, fancy trimmings, complete with chains, Attractively priced at $12.75 $8.50, 9.00 and 9.50 2 by 3 yards, - 10.00, 11.00 and 12.00 Napkins to match, at $8.50, 9.00 and 9.50 per dozen 36 inches wide; in several shades, including black an | "Owing to the pressure of public|the Government, was stricken out of (with scalloped edges) the record on order of the examiner, | business,” the telegram said, “it is ] not t 1 prsctionble Uo sendlan oflosr evecialiy (Cinta vemtineeny introatoss Te cars Size2 x2%{yards . . . each $3.95 e ° . each 4.75 ' ; to Chicago for reinspection New York | ence to Wilson & Co. having in their 3 ee eeeeeesy plant has inspected enorrscus quanti. | Possession unfit meat would be Size 214x234 yards stricken out unless it was shown the ties of hams for many years and is|aame had been sold to the Govern. fully convinced hams are not satis-' ment. at 25c to 65c yd. at 75c a yard Dress Ginghams, Semi-made Skirts, Extra fine grade, in staple Stylish models, made from desirabie and novelty effects, fabrics, iv white and colors, at 48c a yard at $2.25 to 4.50 Comfortables (cotton-filled) Silkoline . « +» «© « each $2.75 Figured mull. . «© + each 5.25 Plain Dotted mull . . «© each 6.75 Koch Prices Make Downtown Shopping an Extravarance KOCHEeEG 1251 STKLET, WHST SALE EXTRAORDINARY Smart Suits for Women Final Clearance Sale of Furniture for Bungalows and Summer Homes Begins To-morrow on the Fifth Floor. Lavender and Ivory Suite, | Ivory Breakfast Room Suite 9 pieces, formerty ##u2.265, 8 pieces: formerly $210.00 at $217.00 at $159.00 Verde Green Suite, 6 pcs. | Breakfast Room Suite, 6pcs. Formerly sold at $190.00, Blue decorated; formerly $182.50, at $125.00 at $139.50 REGULAR $35.00; $45.00 AND $50.00 SUITS : : $2 4:50 PO RP Filer Are faire, rw. fi) a ms, at $9.50 & 12.50 : 46 é Ws vory Decorated Porch Tables, - at $12.7: LibknAL CKEDIT TERMS $22.50 Maple and Cane Swing, - - - at $16. fn aetna | Aili $32.50 Willow Swing, - - - - - - - at $26.75 New Jersey, Lone Also Brass and Enamel Sample Bedsteads at reductions averaging 25% Muslin Sheets and Pillow Cases at equally attractive prices Madison. Avene - Fifth Avene Connecticut. The Greatest Suit Offering of the Year | @ COLUMBIA and CORTINA Foreign Language Records for The Models Are Just What Fash- sor, ionable Women Demand, and May Be Worn Far Into the Fall. Write for Catalogue. Mailed FREE, WE SELL ON CREDIT, COLUMBIA GRAFONOLAS from $18 Up. Also Records on Credit with every machine. || Apartments Furnished lr * from $75 up fh There are 128 suits, comprising Eton, belted and box coat models, some with handsome fancy vests, some braid tiimmed, some braid and button trimmed. All i Decorated ii} Bungalow Bed, lined with high grade pussy willow silk. on Credit ach at The materials are men’s wear serges, diagonals, all Honing Machines on Credit. woo! worsted checks, wool jersey and oxford cloth. Third Bloor ETH JOIN A WAR SAVINGS SOCIETY 0) 2 ,