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Success, May Start From Halifax This Week. Detailed plans of Capt etedt, the Swedish aviator, for flight across the Atlantic public by him this morning inierview given to The World. time, as the captain figures it, 21 hours, possibility of is recognized and pt. Sunstedt is will succeed provided confi dent that he he said, “In rn all about the Newark by (o-morre these tests I shall | speedmand altitude ¢ machine. the full weight that I shall carry on the choss-Atlantic trip. This weight will iBclude two mechanics, one pas- senger, 750 gallons of gasoline, 100 gallons of oil, in addition to the food. “The machine in which I shall fly ie éf my own design and I know what it ought to do, It was first assembled ‘at the Newark plant of the Witteman- Lewis Aircraft Company "| shall leave here at 6 o'clock In tae morning and reach Halifax late The flight to Bng- Jand will begin at Halifax at 4 ‘o'clock en the following afternoon. This is Wecuusé in flying over the ocean I ehall want the stars for guidance. “Leaving Halifax at 4 in the after- noon I expect to reach England at about 1 o'clock on the following af- ternoon. If my gasoline holds out 1 shall probably go to London before Janding. “| shall follow the Great track (the northern route followed by steamships), but shall probably ay a little to the north of it. Since 1913 I have been studying all the available air maps of the Atlantic, The best of these maps were made| by the Germans before the war, and I got them in 1914. he cabin will hold four persons yey G Bye? with the food supply. But if an unfoseseen accident ocours br we are obliged to land jm the ocean there will be enough Hugo Sun- his were made in an Evening From Halifax to Engiand the flying will a no-stop flight. accident, of ! “E expect to make test, fights over | The tests will be made witb | Circle | | McCutcheon’s NewDressCottons Spring 1919 SSUNSTEDT HOPES TO FLY 0 ENGLAND IN 21 HOURS Swedish Aviator, Confident of extra food stored in the pontoons to last us at least a week-long enough to last until we are picked up. It will be possible to cut away the superstructure of the machine and float indefinitely on the pontoons." Capt, Bunstedt'’s big plane \s now assembled at the grounds of the Pa vonia Yacht Clun at Bayonne, It has two motors of 220 horsepower each. The motors were designea by Hal ott of San Francisco. Phe date for the start is not defin itely fixed, but it will be some time tis week. Capt. Sunstedt bas not made public the nes of his me | chanics and his extra passenger ——— ATLANTIC AIR RAGE BY APRIL, HE SAYS BOSTON, Feb. 10.—Lieut. Col, Will- jam Avery Bishop of Toronto, American ace, who holds the record for bringing down enemy flyers, says “As soon as the weather becomes suitable—about April, I think—an air- plane will cross the Atlantic; and not one, but dozens, for on the first favor- able day there will be an in| race to accomplish this feat, winner will probably start from Ne foundiand and land in Ireland, m ing the flight jn quite a bit under twenty-four hours and without the necessity of coming down, It is en- tirely possible to carry sufficient petrol and other supplies to do this, and the Newfoundiand fogs, about which more or less has been sald, won't bother, for th aviator will quickly rise above the fog belt at the start” SEAPLANE. BUILT FOR TRANS-ATLANTIC FLIGHT EOPEEEE ODDS Ob ED CEE ODES * ’ bove photograph shows the aplane being built by the Alreraft Cotm- piloted by Capt. Hugo the Swedish aviator OPERATORS’ GREED, FORCING BOYCOTT, HITS MINERSHARD Consumers’ : omeien De- mands Cut in Anthracite Prices to Increase Sale. wis pany, Sunstedt, Special to The World.) POTTSVIL Feb. 10.—"Re duce the price of anthracite coal so that the » Pa, public will buy it again or the direct distress, due to unemploy- ment, will result in the anthracite region,” was the demand made upon the Anthracite Operators’ Associa tion to-day by retary Frank ©. Reese, of the Anthracite Consumers’ Association after a meeting of that organization Reports received by the league tndi- that apparently been started by consumers cate a widespread boycott has with the intention of forcing a re- “This league does not blame the consumer,” duction in the price of coal. declared Reese, “but as between the consumer and the operator, we do not - English Prints DANIAN NAW VO wWwww first time. apparel. Within the past few days we have received from England another large shipment of these charming Cotton fabrics now so much in vogue. The collection is now complete, comprising upwards of one hundred and fifty various color combinations, many of which are shown for the It is the ideal fabric for Women’s, The distribution of ‘English Prints’’ (retail ‘&and wholesale) in the United States is controlled absolutely °F James McCutcheon & Company. every detail. White ¢) of color, such as Pink, Black, and the much grounds with White or | Handkerchief oe Handkerchie sheer quality. wanted plain shade, ai comprehensive checks and novel print: NOTE: Women, | St. Gall | Dotted Swisses | A very important shipment of these fashionable fabrics has also arrived, making our assortment complete in pen, Green, Helio, Red, Navy, Mais, in unequalled assortments. May be had in every collection of Sw i “Organdy with these rounds with dots Light Blue, Co- desired colored contrasting dots 3 L inens f Linens in a fine s well as a most stripes, ed effects, The above fabrics should prove highly inter- esting to manufacturers of high grade apparel for Misses and Children. Misses’ and Children's 88 Organdies The leading fashion authorities predict an unusual demand for Dresses of fine "We are amply supplied materials contains all the fashionable shades in plain, corded chee! as well as the smart printed effects, most of which are exclusive with James McCutcheon & Company. Fine Ginghams D. & J. Anderson’s celebrated Zephyr Ginghams in McCutcheon Gingham (Imported) sup- plemented by practically the entire col- lection of two of the leading American Gingham manufacturers. Inspection Invited, James McCutcheon & Company iy) Fifth Avenue, 34th and 33d Sts., N. Y. our assortment 8, mirage dot, ete.; new _ assortments FEBRUARY 10, 1919. Lt Obee HO OOt EET LE OObOEE ERP OPPDEEO4A64OEEDTEEODEDOD 6 4-946O6-0646 DOERR EEE ED OOOO DESO OOOE EO EO bom > EPL EOD EELS + PEDEDEAEEE EG POEGE DER MDDS PED EOS DEDEDE POLICE HEADS SUED FORS5O,000 AFTER ~TEAGARDEN RAD = | Far East Proprietors Also Want Uniformed Guard Kept Aeeee e25-30< o4e¢ with In connection the suit for BEOF SSE SGE ¢ | $50,000, filed by proprietors of th p |Far Hast Tea Garden, No, 10 Coluin * | bus Circle, against Police % |sioner Enright, Inspector Henry and Sithe City of New York »wing out of the raid on the place a week ago Sunday morning. facts. contained in several aff in possession of the law firm o} some interesting Olcott, Bonynge, McManus & Ernst Z| or No. 170 Broadway. have come to ® |1ight q Argument on a motion for an in junction to restrain the police from standing guard in front of the res-| taurant was postponed until next! separata, from the restaurant pro- brletorat $50,000 suit ording to afiidavits In the hands yers, it is alleged that pout two nH ya man In olvti- 1. clothes entered the restaurant, At lking about the place and in ng every nook and corner, he ane 1h ito Foo, the pro etor, After me a few derog ory remarks concerning the uu rant, it Is charged, he walked out. rding to. I read Domtmck Henry, Inspector of Bo- ‘Two months elapsed without pe nterference, according to the afida- vit, when suddenly on Feb, 2, In- men doors ctor Henry with sever place locked. and told the diners to remain until all question rspicion com- cerning them had been settled It ix alleged that one policeman knocked down a Chinese waiter when he attempted to collect a check from ne of the diners. ‘The affidavit also that when another waiter s head through a door to see wa on, a policeman threw a him Inspector Henry on Monday ordered t restaurant closed, it is said, ‘Tuesday it was closed. Wednesday Inspector Henry, it is alleged, allowed the place to reopen but posted two policemen outside the door. - JOY RIDE IN DEAD WAGON. Lite ‘Tee Siew on Sunday, Se | for- transatlantic flight for the | closed to protect againat the cold | It will carry 700 gallons of gaso- | Monday when the matter came up)" a ay son Mix U | $50,000 Lord Northcliffe prize. The | and will carry three passengera | tine. Photo shows Capt. Hugo | ‘0-day before Supreme Court Justice he took a joy ride in a | plane when rigged will have a | besides the pilot. The seaplane | Sunstedt directly beneath the | Blur. The proprietors assert the a Waben and’ latke, (tls Ota ds, | wing span of 100 fect and nont | is of the pusher type, the propel- | plane, which will have @ tryout |*estauwant le a reapectat William B, Williameon of Ne, | length of 72 feet. It is to be en- | lers be ng Sy i the e rear of the plane to-morrow in Bayonne. SHEL She prenence OF police ;12 Mitchell Place, Frederick Falcone, want to see the anthracite miner door is likely to create a fals “ . | twenty-eight years old, of No, 1608 First the sista wth public ground to distress | “Phere is absolutely no truth in the decla: can be no reduction in the price of |coal until wages of the miners are reduced,” continued Reese. “We are to see any relation between the cost of producing coal and the as charged hia and New York ‘We cannot live days a week work at the present price in Phila- esent cost of the nec the dec- laration we are receiving every day | trom representative mi We are |informed that in one alone in St. Clair this week 1,500 mine em- ployees were idle. This is the condi- tion prevailing all over the region to ome extent. To-day all over the region the operators have practically closed down the washerles, and the means producing the cheaper sizes of coal, but if industry is to be con- tinued on a sound basis cheap fuel ts one of the most essential require- ments, Conceding the cost of producing | coal is $8.56 per average ton as| claimed by the operators, and the tonnage to Philadelphia is $1.90, what justification does that furnish for charging $10 and $11 per ton? And, notwithstanding this alleged cost of coal at about three dollars and @ half a ton, we are informed that the price at the mines for ex- port into Canada and other points has been placed at $7 by the opera- tors before any transportation charged are added, This shows on its face 100 per cent. profit.” Secretary Reese stated that there is no question that a substantial re- | duction can be made in the price of coal without reducing the wages of} the miners, to which action the league is opposed, Just what is happening to the anthracite trade is evidenced in Pottsville, the heart of the hard coal field, as the city coun-| cil is protesting against the smoke! nuisance caused by the burning of soft coal, “Even the locomotives hauling the anthracite miners to work burn goft coal,” declares the league BRONX LANDMARK BURKS; FIREBOATS FIGHT BLAZE Destruction of Former Mott Iron Plant Causes $2,000,000 Loss One of the oldest industrial land | marks of the Bronx—the former (a | tong of the Joraan 1. Mott Iron V |'Third Avenue and 133d & Jon the Harlem River—was d fre that st last midnigh! ssities of life,” ts da fow minutes before The building had been cupied by the serap rubber firm of ary Muehlstein for a year and a a8 ia eatimated at $200,000. y after & desperate fight hat the factory of the Hurlburt Motor Truck Company, next to the burnt builottg, was say From the riv front tie flames were fought by the freboats Cornelius W. George B, MeCle HORSES DIE N ‘ARMY FIRE. Lawrence on Camp Merritt Officials Refase to Ex- plain Blase Th: Twenty-three horses were burned to deat! and four injured so badly that shot, in a fi they had to be partially destroyed one of the s Camp Merritt last night, information furnished by W. J. Mosier of Demarest, N. J., whose home adjoi the camp. 1 was out which sat walking when I were burned to death, and four hud be killed later. Officials at Camp Merritt, from th i KR a Reg. Trade Mark SOSA SS EON Adjutant in charge, to the ter's Department thing about the fire ‘Quartermas Rob I Burglars ent store man drug at No, 857 Manhattan $500 In cast Robbers also got $400 in Li Bonds from the safe ¢ ducts Company at Street, Brooklyn, Avenue yeater tion of the operators that there | on two or three} Jordan L. . troyed by | ing to | remedy ns | skin, saw a huge flame,” said Mosier, “and thought | Veatigated, and learned that during t half hour's bluge twenty-three hor refused to say any- m the ‘POLICE HOLD UP REPORT | nr mraz eae tor arm Lafayette House, the Red Cross con- valescent home for American and allied officers, No. 112 West Fifty-ninth Street, will celebrate Lincoln's birthday with a dance and supper at the Hotel Plaza. The proceeds go to the support of the house, which js maintained by voluntary | contributions, OF DAYLIGHT BURGLARY Brooklyn Woman Was Attacked and Robbed of $200 Worth of Silver Four Days Ago. ‘The police suppressed for four days the story of Mrs, Ethel Asche's experl- ence Inst Thursday morning with burglar who entered her home, No. 1719 Avenue P, Brooklyn, At 10.30 o'clock in the morning she |neard a noise downstairs when she was in an upstairs bedroom, A few mo- ments later she opened the bedroom door and a man was standing there She thinks he was a negro, He tried to hide his features with his coat and She, clad in a nightgown, fled down- tairs and into the street, the intruder following her. She screamed when she reached the street and her pursuer turned and ran away, Afterward she found that he had taken $208 worth of silver. It is iptieved he was after her jewels when went upstairs, If he had got th ms the loss would have wen about $3,000 Mra, Asche is the wife of Albert C. Asche, @ lawyer, eNeoas 3 Broadway. 125 BUSHELS OF SILVER DOLLARS IN MELTING POT $505,000/0001 From Treasury Vaults Turned Into Bullion for Export in Few Months. WASHINGTON, Feb. 10.-More than 125 bushels of silver dollars were | shipped to-day from the Treasury | vaults to. the Philadelphia ntint to be melted into bullion for export to India | The daily ‘Treasury financial state- ment, which deals familiarly with billions and only incidentally with de- | tails like millions, announced in cryptic accounting terms merely that current | |ersots in sliver dollars had fallen $1.- y , *shipments, which $205,000,000 from the vaults 1 recent months to be melted down and qroorted | to the Allies. | SUES DOHERTY rY FOR $450,000. | 8 Baker J suit in the against Henry 1. Supreme Court in la | prooxiye Doherty and | | Frank W. Frueauff, partners in Henry L. Doherty & Co., bankers and broker ofN for $450,000, which | hea 4s commissions on bond & Doherty firm nkers to ey wer interested s valued at was to receive | never received s and sold | 000,000, for which he percent. He said h the money ‘rhe Doherty firm n | nial | for children’s skin | | and scalp troubles | as Cadum Ointment Cadum Ointment can be applied to the tender skin of infants and children suffering from tetter, rash, ecsema, cha’ and similar troubles, It stops the itching at once, and much suffer- Jing from skin troubles may be avoided |by the timely use of this wonderful Cadum Ointment is }good for pimples, blotches, itch, seuly eruptions, s¢ cuts, |burns, ringworm, etc Ointinen scabs, iy a Pr from the a then tried to grapple with Mrs. Asche. | 4 bond salesman, to- | a general de- | There is nothing so good | Li the season’s left-overs and unsold balances, but hundreds of Suits just “Made In Our Own Shops”—and shown now Fabrics from famous looms—the iden- tical fabrics usually absorbed by the most prominent Fifth Models scrupulously true to the art of craftsmen who have the knack of expressing their ideals in Every Overcoat and Suit decisively im- Avenue custom tailors. garments they design. SUITS— for the first time. the police authorities, in agreeing to the postponement, refused to into an agreement with the re ant's attorneys to call off the until the motion is heard. Th plication for an injunction is entirely enter] 40.50 OVERCOATS—regularly 52.50 and 57.50 regularly 47.50 and 52.50 IMPORTANT: When these Suits and Overcoats were marked at the foregoing prices they were actually 5 under prevailing mar pressed with New York’s most perfect style. Made in Our Own § Tailoring that puts “Best” Ready-for-Service Clothes squarely in the ranks of the costliest custom products. All models and sizes are in the display—many light enough i in weight to be worn throughout Spring. mical men will not limit their selections to just one suit, but will provide liberally for next Fall and Winter. NO CHARGE FOR ALTERATIONS Best & Co. Fifth Avenue at 35th Street Men’s Shop—Fifth Floor ig Fore Established 1879 You Never Pay More ( BC —_—_—__ Best & Co. SUITS & OVERCOATS for Hypercritical Men Shops Entrance- preasion Avenue, was held in $1,000 bail to-day Corporation Counsel Walter B.| for examination next Thursday in the Caughlin, representing the city and] Yorky Court According to testimony Falcone and ng ubout the sta- Brunner @ Sons, on terday, when ‘the too monotonous a joy ride. The Wagon en route, Williamson were hang ble of Frederick A 00 to 10.00 et value. thoughtful, écono- 1 West 35th St. h preparation ixtnal formule LE ss ayorAl Advertising| || f printed in The New York World during 1918: (Morning ed Sunday Editions On'y) 93,202 cotumns The TIMES TOTAL during same period was 7,4 10 Columns than The World This is th in any ne gain over 271,256 MORE THAN ALL THE OTHER NEW Yor MORNING NEWSPAPEKS ADDED TOUETH EM —=|Greatest Advertising Record on Earth! The World Printe] During the Year 1918 (2,038,411 Ads. ¢ greatest number of ads. ever printed in the sare period wspaper anywhere, and a last year of 210,712. (Morning and Sunday World Oniy)