The evening world. Newspaper, May 28, 1919, Page 4

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HO Rat ct recast tins aa mera ae Ae ena ee ee State: y “Bing Bing Prison. Therewar quite 4 finally pale? oieschins, 'afs informed ONG before you were born, Ovington’s were well established .as a china house where smart designs and reasonable prices went hand in hand. To-day it is known throughout America as the pre-eminent place to buy smart gifts, but Ovington’s china is still equaled by few in variety and beauty and by none in value. OVINGTON’S “The Gift Shop of th Ave.” 314FifthAve.,near32dSt. Values to $30.00 Taffeta Hats—Black Dress Hats—Oriental Turbans _Organdy Hats—Milan Hemp Hats—Leghorn Hats Georgette Hats— Newest SportsHats- Batavia ClothHats -Morris Co., 394 Fifth Avenue, at 36th Street GERMAN OFFERS TO SETTLE CLANS FR $2 0,00 00 (Continued From First Page.) which have been removed to other lande. The counter proposals agree to the limitation of the German army to 100,000 men and offer to disarm the large German naval vessels, though insisting on retaining some commer- oinl vessels. They further assert that no changes in German territorial limits should be made without plebiscites in the terri- tories affected. Such plebiscites are asked especially in upper Silesia, Bast Prussia, West Prussia, Memel and Danaig. ‘The Germans agree that Dansig shall be a free port with the River Vistula (on which Danzig is situated) internationalized. It is asked that the Entente withdraw from occupied ter- ritories within four months, Willingness to reimburse, especially Morris 394 Fifth Avenue at 36th Tomorrow—Unrestricted Choice of Any Hat.In Our Stock!! A Never-Equalled Millinery Sale: Highly Fashionable Hats 7 50 THE EVENING wo Guia nDewEDAT? France and Belgium, for damages sustained during the war is expressed, The Introduction to the counter- Proposals quotes speeches by Presi- dent Wilson and others extensively, particularly seeking to show that Wilson's pledges have not been ful- filled in the treaty, which the Ger- mans claim contains provisions con- tradictory to the principles of the League of Nations, Emphasis is laid on Wilson's statement that peoples should not be treated a pawns, and claim ix made that the treaty does that in Danzig, Silesi and even in Alsace Lorraine. ! It is unjust, the counter-proposals set forth, to send a reparations com- mission into Germany without letting the Germans know what they must pay. | meee AMERICAN TROOPS TOLD TO ADVANGE, IF GERMANY BALKS Belgian Borders Are Closed and the Belgian Army Is Re- mobilized, | PARIS, May 28.—That the Allies are preparing for a refusal by Ger- Go. 1 Values to $30.00 B. Altman & Cn. MADISON AVENUE - FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK Thirty-fourth Street Thirty-fifth Street ‘Tardieu Submits a Plan Drawn on | Four of the Peace Conference ts many to sign tife Peace Treaty is shown by « despatch received here to-day from Weindhoven, declaring | the Belgian frontiers have been closed | and that every Belgian soldier on leave of absence from the army has been recalled to active duty with the colors. It is added that @ general | mobilization wiJl be ordered for to- morrow night, the last moment given | the Germang tor replying. From Coblenz comes the official statement from American Army Headquarters that march orders have been issued and the Americag Army prepared fof a further invasion of | Germany, BIG FOUR IS MAKING FINAL EFFORT 10 SATISFY ITALIANS Lines of Compromise Proposed by House. PARIS, May 28&—The Council of making a deterinined effort to effect a settlement of the Italian question to-day, Andre Tar@ieu of the French Dele- gation, after consultations with the Italian representatives, framed a formula which is understood to fol- 5 low generally the lines of a compro- mise proposed by Col. K. M. House of the American Mission ~-hich was considered last week. Col. House, Capt. Tardieu and | Premier Orlando were at the council” meeting this afternoon. There was fs) sald to be a fair chance that an ad- 4 justment might be reached tais ufter- noon. ‘The Italians are linking questions | regarding Austrian boundaries and the Dalmatian coast together, but ¥/the Council of Four hopes to have the Dalmatian problem postponed for subsequent settlement, RULES OF THE AIR DRAWN BY COMMISSION OF PEACE CONFERENCE #| Convention Covers Whole Field of Aerial Navigation—To Be Submitted to Senate. PARIS, May 28,—The Aeronautical Commission of the Peace Conference has agreed to a complete draft of an air convention and its annexes, sub- | Ject to some small amendments. It deals with the following matters: The nationality and registra- tion of aircraft. General principles governing the right of international flight. Certificates of alr worthiness and competency. Principles governing flight over foreign territory. ¢ Rules to be observed on depart- ure or landing and when under way. Prohibition of the carriage of certain objects. ‘The international commission for.air navigation. The marking of aircraft. Certificates of alr worthiness. Log books. Rules as to lights and signals, and rules of the air. Certificates of competency, in- cluding medical requirements. International maps and ground marks. Meteorological information. Customs, The Aeronautical Commission of i) | the Peace Conference grew out of the International Convention on Aerial Navigation, which was called to- gether by the.French Government in March quite independent of the Peace Conference itself, The convention drawn up by it will be submitted to the Supreme Council as part of the Peace Conference work, and, in the case of the United States, to its dip- lomatic representatives for presen- tation to the Senate for ratification. fica setae PHONE GIRL PLEADS GUILTY. Seventeen-¥ 8101.75 Goods at Miss Madeline Griffin, a seve year-old telephone operator in a Ful- ton Street department store, who ran away from her home, No. 29 Spencer Street, Bi because of @ love Old Ranaway Got! BURLESON AGAINST HASTE IN RETURN OF WIRES Says Mackay Prope 's Proposed Reduction in Tolls Would Save Public Only $3,000,000, WASHINGTON, May 28.—Postmaster General Burleson, in a letter to-da: Chairman Bima of the House Com Committee, declared that the present situation with respect to the telegraph and telephone systems requyed the de- termination at this time of a broad Government policy rather than the im- mediate return of the lines to ‘their Present owners, as provided for in the resolution introduced by Representative Steenereon. Mr, Burleson's letter was in reply to one from Mr. Sima relative to the state~ ment sent to members of Congress by Clarence H. Mackay, President of the Postal Telegraph Cable Company, who referred to the immediate passage of the Steenerson resolution and offered to reduce the telegraph rates for his cont pany 20 per cent The Postmaster General said company in 1918 carried only $14,930,596 out of a total of $90,000,000 of the tele- Kraph business,” and the saving to the public “which Mr. Mackay aserts he can accomplish by a 20 per cent. reduc- tion would necessarily be limited to $3,- 000,000 annually instead of $12,000,000," ecnnensieaiipnecciencannss GERMAN DYES TO ALLIES. Will Contract Its Industry tor Five Years U ‘Treaty. PARIS, May 28 (United Press),—A hitherto unpublished portion of the economic section of the treaty gives the Allies virtual control of the Ger- man dye industry, it was learned to-day. This control will continue five years, Qe Doctor Gompers From Work. WASHINGTON, May 28.—Gamuel Gompers, President of the American Federation’ of Labor, has been ordered by his physician to take a complete rest until he recovers from the effects of -injuries sustained in an automo- bile collision in New York, it was said at Mr. Gompers’s office here to-day. ‘phit igin, AY.28, 1919. PADEREWSK! DENIES POGROMS IN POLAKD Says Reports of Them Are German Propagandi—Fears Attack by Germans. PARIS, May 28..—Fears of © German attack upon Poland were expressed to- Jan weki, bate: day by Ignace Poltsh Premier, who arrived in from Warsaw last night, He said the Germans were active in a preparatory way and might strike in several places. The reports of progroms in Poland were denied by the Premier, He de- clared. such reports were purely Ger- man propaganda With regard to the Ukrainian situa- on, the Prenifer asserted that the re- Chnf fighting was brought on by the} Ukrainians, who signed the armistice on May 11 and then attacked the Poles at two places on May 12, foreing the Polish troops to defend themselves pA NON-STOP, HIGH GEAR RUNS. That Maxwell sturdiness is as Prominent in the East as the Far West 1s proved in news just reecived by Harry J. DeBear, Jocal Maxwell man- ager. The first 24-hour non-stop high gear record made by the Maxwell was in Los Angeles in April of this year. when @ record of 734 miles was ms fn twenty-four hours. Several we later @ rival car, in Oklahoma, tempted to beat the Maxwell ‘-hour record and failed by 73 m.les. “The latest Maxwell triumph has been in West Virginia,” stated Mr. DeBear yesterday. ‘In the face of far e serious weather difficulties the ‘0 equal he Maxwell in Los Angeles but did, however, sur- et the mark of its Oklahoma rival 12 miles.” ended May United States totaled 54,619 bringing th» grand total of soldiers returned to 94¢,- 259, Om that date the army streng:h was estimated at 1,610,623 of whom $40,001 were in Europe, 170,311 at sea, en route home, and 464,795 in the United States. Munition factories used by at Kabul and Jelalabad, bombed tribes in the Gendgo Vall tering th British Planes Bomb Afghans, LONDON, May %8.—A news agen:y dispatch from Simla, Indla, reported to- day that British airplanes had bémbed “—and they tived happily ever after” Wedding felicitations become lasting remembrances down through the years when expressed in the form of a Sheffield piece or other Hallmark gift. Gifts that charm and reflect good taste, gifts that are quaint and individual—useful gifts, elaborate ifts—all are found in infinite variety at the fiallmark Jewelers. Here are the unusual originations im Sheffield, quaint witcheries of jewelry and dainty feminine accessories from which to make your selection. Prices, you will find, are distinctively moderate, Call for a copy of “Correct Wedding Customs,” The HAL] LMARK Jewelers Fifth Avenue at 40th Street, Second Floor CASSIUS BAGLEY, President FRANKLIN SIMON Hand-Tailored Suits for Men Ready-Made But Don’t Look It! Hand-Tailored But Don’t Cost It! Ready-made but don’t look it!— free absolutely from the stigma of being made in bulk—cut singly, and not in ten-unit lots —tailored by hand and not by machine—ready-made in fact, but retaining the feel and fresh- ness of their hand-tailored or- and the charm of the custom manner. Fland-Tailored but don’t cost it!— there you have perhaps the most amazing feature of these remark- able clothes—they cost more than machine-made clothes to pro- duce, that is obvious—but they don’t cost you more! We are literally offering you the advan- tages of fine hand-tailoring at the price you pay for all the others, MEN’S GENUINE HAND-TAILORED SUITS '30 to %65 fAen's Clothing Shop Men’s Summer Shoes in shapely models for outdoor dress, golf and general sports wear, include the following three groups, which are of une usual interest on account of the excellent values they offer. White Canvas Oxfords (spiendid quality) with white rubber soles and spring heels ° ° e . Tan Elk Golf Shoes (with golf nails attached), per pair $10.00 White Buckskin Oxfords with rubber soles and heels, and instep-band of dark brown calfskin; a very natty style suitable for dress or sports wear . . e . The latter item is subject to the War Revenue tax. (Sixth Floor) ; per pair $7.00 + per pair $12.00 Bro mn Miss Griffin. was charged with ob- taining $101.76 worth of goods from a ‘department store and. charging rs, Josephine Drinan of No. diy’ Road, Brooklyn, She ntenced Monday, — Fob for Sermt. Doyle. Secretary John J, Doyle in tharge of nights af Columbus Hut at St, 5. L, was this morning pres- th “a gold fob by the Mine Dixision Section, 4 stationed at Tompkinsville, 8. I. The division is about to be disbanded. Bos'n Frederick Neilson made the presenta- tion. Don’t miss it for a day! Every hot weather meat, fish and vegetable will taste the better for | "Eddys Badd MADE IN U. S. A. At Grocers and Delicatessen Stores, aaa Paton E. Pritchard, 331 Spring St., N.Y. Counting both would establish Our Men’s Banister Shoes , Are Running Fine! $10 to *12 all leathers, we have 56 styles in our Banister selections. were no such variety, the quality alone York’s finest proposition in a shoe. filen’s Shoe tbhop high and low shoes, in But even if there these Banisters as New FIFTH AVENUE MEN’S SHOPS—2 TO 8 WEST 38th STREET—LOCATED ON STREET LEVEL Sico Athletic Union Suits For Men $150 but we're leaving them out of this ad- vertisement just to show what we think of those at a dollar and a half! Made in fine madras, stripes or plaids, and made right. / | | SICO Union Suits run as high as $7.50, | | Men's Furnishings Shop

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