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| | | } Fifth Avenue, 37th and 38th St Will Close Out—FRIDAY Women’s French Voile Dresses Plain color voile dresses, in pastel shades or navy, also white; hand drawn, some embroidered and trimmed with real filet lace. Heretofore $16.50 to $29.50 Women’s Striped Silk Dresses || Dresses of men’s wear silk shirting, with light colored stripes on white ground; white Georgette crepe collar || and pleated jabot; tucked skirt, long self sash. i) Heretofore $19.75 Women’s Organdie Dresses | In pastel shades, also white; embroidered, self fluted, lace trimmed or tucked, some combined with taffeta silk. Heretofore $29.50 to $39.50 WOMEN'S GOWN SHOP.--Third Floor Will Close Out—FRIDAY } Sleeveless coat model or slip-over model with sleeves, in white, coral, pearl, tan, navy, turquoise, purple, rose, || Copen or Nile; tuxedo or roll collars, patch pockets and slip-through or sash belts. Heretofore $6.95 WOMEN'S SWEATER SHOP Fourth Floor | Will Close Out—FRIDAY \ Small Children’s Dresses \| Sizes 2 to 6 years | “White voile, dotted Swiss or colored chambray dresses; | some hand smocked. Heretofore $3.50 to $4.75 \! INFANTS’ APPAREL SHOP Fifth Floor —— Our 6th Ave. Store Closes Saturdays at 1 P.M. Our 3d Ave. Store Open Saturdays Until 10 P. M. Final Week of Our Annual Inventory Sale 10% to 331597, Reductions in All Departments This is the TIME and the PLACE to anticipate Porceloid Side Icer your FALL FURNITURE needs before the Refrigerator, $2'7-98 rush of next month begins, taking advantage of Higa yates our LIBERAL CONVENIENT CREDIT PLAN Dining Room Suite in Mahogany 4 Pieces, consisting of Buffet, 60-inch China Clout, Serving Table, Dining Table, 48 in., 6 ft. extension; as illustrated, Queen Anne $225.00 Period Brass Bed Toilet $1. 2-98 Table American Walnut Mahogany ith Triplicate Mirrors, at $45 Back Up the Boys in France In satin finish, with 2-inch posts; 12 1-inch fillers; in 4 $1 2-98 feet 6 inches only, at SBAVANKERO WW.Con.6"AVEe1S"51. with shelves at Buy W. S. Stamps Regularly None sent on approval, credited or exchanged. Dining Room Suite, Store Closed All Day Saturdays During July and August Franklin Simon 8 Co. Women’s Shetland Wool Sweaters 10.00 12.00 15.00 4.50 1. Table, Fumed Oak, ch ead 75 430 J.BAUMANN & BRO AT 84™ ST. & 3°AVE NAMING OF SMITH HAILED AS ENDING OF HEARST MENACE a on Women Delegates Joined Up-, State Leaders in Forcing Murphy Decision. Democratic leaders home from the Saratoga convention to-day declared that In the indorsement of Alfred E. Smith for Governor and the adoption of a Wilson and war platform drafted by Senator Wagner they had “put the skide” under William Randolph Hearst, and that he was no longer a menace to the party. | ‘They appeared confident that not only would the Aldermanic President | be approved at the party prin September, but that would be in- | dorsed by the voters of the 8 the November election | i} In Mr. Smith they believe they have a candidate who in every way) measures up to the best platform) adopted by the Democratic Party in many years, ‘The plans of Mr. Hearst do not appear to give these leaders | any concern | They believe they have finally ria| themselves of bim and that in the} end he will eliminate himself from the contest for Governor and nurse his wrath secretly over what his agents describe as his “betrayal by Mayor Hylan and the Democratic organiza- tion.” It is not believed that he will carry his resentment to the extent of arraying bimself in opposition to a platform which thoroughly harmon- | lines with the Administration of Pres. | ident Wilson. | | The threa at Saratoga of the Hearst agents regarded is taken of will sup- are not seri Nike vi surface indications | port Whitman | This statement made by Mr. Smith |is expected to prov which to heal all part > man owes more to this country | than I do. ously, and a Ive wi wounds No man has been more | I | benefited by the free institutions of | this State than I have. I know the State of New York, and I know what | | WAR ADMINISTRATION. of placating Mr. Hearst, they are pre- pared for a fight at the primaries. His agents have stated that he would stay in the fleld regardless of any action at Saratoga. To-day they are charging that the up-State move- ment which resulted in an irresistible protest against the designation of Hearst was a Tammany “frame- skilfully promoted by Mr. Mur- of his sto al yet of Facts obtained from leaders who demanded the nomination of Hearst do not justify this charge or the further accusation that Mayor Hylan had been “stringing Mr. Hearst” for the last three months. Reliable in- formation is that Mr. Murphy was friendly toward the Hearst ambitions, if he had not actually pledged himsett to promote them. Some of the in-| Jj dir to litt thi did. WARNED MURPHY, With the exception of Mr, McCabe, | Al not an up-State leader failed to ex- | press opposition to Hearst, Kelley] tle of Onondaga,’ Fitzpatrick of Erie, | © Farley of Broome, Rattigan of Cay- | W! uga, Pall of Monroe, Murphy of Troy, Chedeyne of Orange, Walgh of Weatchester, and Mott of Chatauqua ad delegates to the convention were al- | most unanimous in their uncompro- | mising opposition to Hearst. tu | ‘The women met behind closed doors | thi Monday night and considered the | of Hearst candidacy. every phase of Mr, Hearst's politica! | record, | The determination of the women delegates from all sections of the| hi |State to revolt should attempt be municated to Mr. Murphy. Delegates company with Mr. Hearst on the Gov- ernorship. HHI | And Smith, Born in Old Fourth Ward, Would Rather ¢ There Than Have a $50,000}: “BRIGHTEST MIND His Interesting Career. | its people want. ‘Thirty-five years ago, or there IT keenly appreciate the great) apouts, folks down in the old Fourt |honor of being designated by the| oi! ee | Democratic conference as its choice} Ward around Fulton Mf | for the office of Governor. 1 appreci- to take notice of a fre ate more the great responsibility] youngster who on which that action places upon me. Btpeek dd Who pasned | SMITH PLEDGES A WIN THE|short-clipped name of Al Sa was the liveliest young roost whole ward, said the canny Irist ber. Street, where he now lives, ¢ To be alw: ardent support at time ame of politics so cleanly that partisan antagonist sheer kindliness of BIRTH AND RISE OF FRECKLE- When Tom F< Smi time the young man had a and Alphonso Smith made the close to the Tammany boas sald to-| President of the Board of Aldermen day the threatened bolt by the women | whe cc eve hi eey oe ether than aby other ence | wen 2 large number in Hearst argument in convincing Mr,|0f Fourteenth Street ¢ Murphy that it would be wise to part | lieved his name Ma Live income and Move Away— The story of how the Roosevelt Street rose party's choice for Governor ry of what his neighbors on Oliver slight to 1 “an old-time New York bo ys a Tammany man and mand the hearty t even the to play the res! to col reformers of all stripes rake up @ ty question mark in a cau paign; make a host of friends not for po- cal revenue, but t the one's pers can rou 3 is to be Al Smith, probable can- ate for Governor, FACED AL SMITH. in a little old house at the corner 4 South Streets, Alfred : A 5 cidents in the three days’ battle here | of Roosevelt an¢ ed Congoleum to solve the quesiion of PAYMENT, rm Chair leave little roam to doubt that Mr.|g, Smith came into the world in 1878 ii e 00! a he Floor Coverings r ‘ Murphy was forced to cast away Mr.| His parents were poor an ne ea &* = The Same Low Price—Cash or Credit '» mahogany finish, with |]| riearst to save himeelt, youngster did not have a great chance \ttuapald 69 “ genuine leather 88 98 Hi 3 8 ae vation, Fle was busy in his| see? it je found a@ serious division in the|at an education. at, per yard. .... Ic We Make Terms to Fit FC CRORE party. McCooey of Brooklyn, and|early teons hustling to help support] i in Fi McCabe of Albany insisted that] himself. Ho sold newspapers, worker | Queen Anne Period Plain Figure Tage on Motor Truck Hearst be designated n the old Fulton Market pe gales Everything. Deliveries. WOMEN, OPPOSED TO HEARST, | fish, ran errands: Being of the o Fourth in the very bone of him, youas keep out of politics. could not y, then a young bat political lists, saw fit to lership of the Fouth ho saw in Al] er and| that} rv in the ntest the leac th Patrick Divver th the qualities of a hus organization; at r ded him to his the office of the Commissioner of told Mr. Murphy the one story, They|! not only protested against his sup. | Jurors. | port of Hearst, but bluntl; informed Foley won the leadership and | him that results might almost compet | pushed his henchman ahe ad. Twenty| them to unite in opposition to Mur. | years ago he was first elected to the phy himself. State Legislature and he served thera ‘And then came a new and decisive| for eleven straight terms. First As-| element in the fray. The women|semblyman, then Speaker, then in rn minority and majority leader in the Assembly, he filled one of the most| picturesque careers in the records of | ature. It was as a member Constitutional o Legi the Convention, They discusseq | when ho had to match wits with such as Elihu Root, George W. Wickersham | rT. that mark for Clearwater, highest mself in Albany. ‘As Sheriff of Manhattan, Al Smith made to “put Hearst over” was com-| came back from ATbany and then last autumn, Tammany elected him placed in nomination for the Mayor-| alty. Sunday World Wants Work Monday Morning Wonders g:i.. 3:8 be vem ‘This is the political record of the The human document is far THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, JULY 25, 1918. They All ‘Know Al’ on the East Side And Are Proud of Candidate for Governor T The “I promise all the people of the & wi t 4 from the : One strong human quality of Al| the Board dermen from State that if I become Governor I will,| used to make Oliver and Cherry and ne one ape Weis an , ey - the| Ninth District in place of John Me- | a " eT Street th bailiwick r t $11 h emt is abiding <i fe a es ow employed in the Finance with all the vigor I possess, devote| Roosevelt Streets ir , r Smith an- Cann, ni: r | overy minute of my time to the dutiea|Thia Smith boy was first on the job| swered, and for more than two hours| ” EBERT CON cmb Ere We wep: BOR: Boe So sabeioy tr A rouaber of the Beare J e hing € d young nanhood. He and emocratic Committ a of my office and to the task of bring-|to catch a dime at running errands) je spoke without notes. He did not einai etna dean on| sembly District and a member of the ing this State into progressive step|'® market and always on top in a ke an err tes covers ile 6 down On| (unty Committee from each district. e progressive step ' : eee with the Government of the Nation|two-fsted scrap wita the Cherry I nor did [Oliver Street, not three blocks away] with the exception of the vacancy in pelea den ; 4 aus, could bet from the little house where he w%s|the Fourth Judicial District, the fore- o the end that we may contribute our RISE AES Ave be RIRAGL | born ‘Once a friend asked him why|s0ing list also applies to the Bronz full share to a vigorous prosecution of} To-day not only ubabonideadd 1 kersham dl AP URe ees apeaiibd > the war, the issue foremost, as it/and the old Fourth Ward wut the | said of him that he had the brightest|he did not move uptown among the MOB WRECKS A HOTEL. aOUIA bo, ih (He calade. of allcous | EO Our, Rae ue BIE, BEANS De ie mind in the whole « ntion “silk stockings. NEN » t know this s Al Smit Ke i i “ »ped. * e citizens.” i Lis aha ter beats His ability to familiarize himseit) | “W ue ped. “Quit the old) peragat to Honor sratiwsbllastharlesAaraliare: honetoll Riis Pe liguiskiv andit tely with the de-|Fourth W A man once told me | ee HLANITIVADl | tion to head the |tails of financial matters was not an| that if I ever got an income of $50,000 CITY, Pa, July 2 mob of nly bly, Smith prepared the annual Ap-jto be as democratic as himself. In|foom and damaged the dining room Re propriation Bill, which provided for big public school almost acre iss pe attack followed the retpest sf all the actual needs of the various|* ect from their home, where alth clase his bar during the departu lepartments of the State Govern-| polyglot republic of all the nations| of drafted men for the tr after he had been ord ment—-an enormous t and his|of the east side ig established, each| {hy jocal board. The total was less than the sum required|of the five Smith children either has| mated at $10,000 to run the State during the last year|attended or now is attending) of the Hughes Administration classes, Alfred FB, Smith jr now|as "Al" he is known to them, Whe It has been said that Al Smith de-| seventeen, is a pupil at Fordham Uni-| ever “Al” goes, there is “the gang. feated a bill with twelve words, This| versity. The other children are Emily, | Almost every minute the father has is literally true. It was when the ao.| sixteen; Catherine, fourteen; Arthur, | free from his duties is devoted to the ea Cannery Bill, permitting | eleven, and Walter, seven years old. | Interests of “the gang.” There lie we gang’ Al Smith calls this his dearest interests and ‘dis sole | canneries on Sunday, was before the lusty group of offspring, and merely as t! During his Chairmanship of the Ways] »nd Means ¢ HEARST MAY KEEP ~ PUBLIG GUESSING -ASTOHIS RUNNING | | eae Remembers — His | Belated Withdrawal of Mayor- alty Petitions and Wonders. Although it is not thought likely at William Randolph Hearst will /% nter the Democratic primaries 4. against Alfred 1. Smith for the gu- \ nomination, orial many Tam- | many leaders are wondering how long keep one guessing. | When {t was believed that Mr, Hearst would run for Mayor he did not with- draw his petitions until the eleventh jhe will every | The committee that has charge of |the Hearst petitions has until mid- night of Aug. 6 in which to file them the office of the Secretary of State. The petition must contain at least 5,000 names Should the petition be filed, the candidate still has until Aus. 16 to decline to run, The Hearst committee would then have until Aug. 0 in which to fill the vacancy. Democratic Committee of New anty will meet on Monday at 8 o'clock in Tammany Hall pose of issuing a call for ho will be held on * September 3 from 1 to 9 P, M The coming election will be im- portant aside from the Gubernatorial In New York County the owing Vacancies must be filled: A Justice of the Supreme Court, t Judicial Distr in place of John W. ¢ A Justice of the Bu- the primaries wh ntest F, preme Court, First Judicial District, n of Nathan Ottenger, ap- F » succeed Francis M. Scott, A Justice of the Supreme t Judicial District, in place f Victor J. Dowling. Non-partisan Dowling, who will have already been nen | ring and spoke) ty of permit-| pe women to add to their pit-|ru filed | feelingly IN CONSTI-! UTIONAL CONVENTION.” of the ne ting P for re-ele ance by working nights and Sundays capacity of his mind to absor | they cho: In the end Smith arose] A Justice of the Muntctpal Court, uin details of finance, legista |» th a solemn face. He 1 | igh of Manhattan, Fourth Dis- and po! a tory is been{ “If the good Lord were revise the| trict, in place of Edward F. Boyle, ap- t f wonder to those} Decalogue I have no doubt he would sinted to succeed Hiram B. Kirk, AV Y t tact n Al t these men as a committee to do| deceased. Mr. Boyle will be renomi- und hever cease to mar-| the work, and I have no doubt they] nated. it re t! would rewrite one paragraph to read. Representative in Congress from 4 Remember the Sabbath Day to keep| each district or part thereof in the 5 xcept in the canneries’ | counties of New York and the Bronx. y pul ‘ ' ; Senator for each Senatorial District. eri CAN'T BE DRIVEN AWAY FROM/A meinber of Assembly in each of the gee HIS OLD HOME DISTRICT. stricts, A member of Assem OIL several hundred citizens attacked the, New Jones Hote! at Clarion, Pa., last night, bombarding it with bricks and and smashing windows and The crowd wrecked the bar- ntal or a special gift, but came} ® year I'd uptown, I would rather live downtown than have the] come Smith has brought up his children move result of long preparation stones \ ommittee of the Assem- | rs, n and children to work in the recreation Buy W. S. S. The Most Stable Security in the World. OPPENHEIM.CLLINS & C 34th Street—New York Will Close Out Friday About 600 Pairs of Women’s High Cost Pumps and Oxfords All Sizes Represented, but Not in Each Style This season's accumulation in all desirable leathers. Regular 8.00 and 9.00 Values Reduced lo 5 49 These Are Extraordinary and Unusual Values. Also on Sale in our Brooklyn Store