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Secretary of Aero Club Hopes Miss ing Aviator Was Picked Up by Vessel Bound South. Capt. James, the missing Britten ace, = Who has been lost since a week agol) Lg yg Bo bet Tharsday when ne was on his way from Boston to Atlantic City, may nave | His machine would h carried out to sea an Hawker in his Sopwith piane Use it in the Morning And walk all day in comfort. At night, sprinkle it in the foot-bath, and soak and rub the feet. It freshens the feet, t and takes the Friction from the Shoe. - IN big a! 4d WAR 25 ‘{ «Ease STANDARD REMEDY. for ‘te eager rg tender, tired, perspiring, aching feet, corns, bunions, blisters and callouses. Nothing gives such relief. Wherever men drill for military service they find the frequent use of Allen’s Foot-Ease increases their efficiency and insures needed physical comfort. 1,510,000 Ibs..of Powder for the Feet were used by the United States Army and Navy during 1918, + Sold by Drug and Department stores everywhere. FLYER JAMES MAY BE SAFE |:scs.* te" amenon o wen PROFITEERING IN ee: , '%,: x ‘ 1 OOS, POST SAYS |e tact Se J Whit . this morning. Mr. that he saw the missing ne over hit place at 2 o'clock on ‘Thursday afternoon, coming out of the north and making for the southwest to- the se RENTS PROVED BY PLIE REPORTS Submitted to Shows That the Poor Are Hardest Hit. James might and had to Ko Jown in the ocean, unable to make land @ floated for two hours, he saya, and there should have been plenty Boats in the vicinity to pick him wu | Data ‘e bapn out of gasoll 4 picked up Indisputable evidence has been col- lected by the police of innumerable cases of flagrant rent profiteering by property holders of Greater New York in the past few months, Re 8 are being summarized and studied which show that the rent profiteer has infested every section of the city, that he has chosen not only the wealthy, but the poor and middle- class to even a greater percentage. Nathan Hirsch, Chairman of the Mayor's Committee on Rent Profi- teering, now hag two clerks dissect- ing the reports by the precinct com- manders and he expects to show that while, in some districts, the land- lords have kept within reasonable ‘brunds, in others the jump in rents has gone all the way from 5 to 75 per cent. One man who wag paying $2,200 a year for his apartment complained to the police that his rent was raised tu $3,200 on two months’ notice. A woman who has been paying $16 for @ small flat in a tenement house now has been notified to pay $24 or get out of her home, That the home dweller is not the only one to suffer from the increase in rentals is shown by the reports, For ingtance, one man who has es- tablished a little business in a store renting @: $55 a month has been told that hereafter he must pay $85 a month, which, he says, will mean the ruin of lis business. Statistics being gathered by the Mayor's Committee, it is said, will | put im the shade any previous inves tigations in the history of the city. for hot, swollen, smarting, Over Why a HOT SPOT Chalmers is Well Nigh Trouble Proof Mi troubles in a car come from faulty lubrication. lubrication and it will take care of itself.’” free of lubrication ailments. cloud,” so that when the ingenious Ram’s-horn has passed it on to the cylinders it’s finely prepared for combustion, to thin out the lubricating oil. Kam's-horn—raw gas has caused endless trouble: Chalmers and then only through extreme per sonal carelessness. the Hot Spot Chalmers, one of the few great cars of the world. it om \ Witty 1) MMAR Hien , An authority remarked the other day that 75% of all troubles could be traced to this cause. A former professor at Yale said: ‘Give a car plenty of Now here's how the Hot Spot Chalmers happens to be i Hot Spot “heats up” the raw gas, ‘turns it into a vapor i No raw gasruns down past the pistons into the crank case In engines of the old type—those without Hot Spot and burned bearings that cost a great deal to replace; excessive vibration that develops countless rattles; engine knocks that are often taken for carbon knocks; overheated engines, Such things you rarely experience in a See the modern engine in the modern car-- . Quatiry Firee Chalmers Motor Car Company New York Branch, 1808 Broadway Corner 59th St , New York City OPEN EVENI PRONX BRANCH, 175th Street and Crand Concours? ne C rele 5550 Ni cea] Hirsch | oi, refused the request of Natha He SVSNING WORLD, TUBBDAY, JUN] ‘LOCKWOOD REFUSES | REQUEST FOR JOWT INQUIRY ON HOUSING ; Senator Tells Hirsch He Can't See Advantage in Combined Probe. In @ politely worded letter Genator Charles C. Lo Chairman of the Joint Committee on Housing, to- Hirsch, Chairman of the Mayor's Committee on Rent Proftteering, for a joint investigation by those bodies, At the proposed inquiry Frank Mosa, counsel for the Hirsch Committee would have had the right to cross. examine well known tnsurance men and ullders who have already given testimony before the Lockwood Com- mittee, The Hirsch request has created the impression that the Lockwood Com- mittee has been dealing too gently with the financiers and builders. With Mr. Moss conducting the probe under the legislative body, sensations would be looked for, Mr. Hirsoh asked Senator Loclewood that If necessary all “the witnesses called before the Legiqlative Com- mittee be recalled. It te strongty in- timated that if the Lockwood Com- mittee does not agree to the Hirach proposal, the Hirsch Committee, act- ing in conjunction with the General Welfare Committee of the Board of Aldermen, will summon the Lockwood witnesses on its own account. Snch action wowld mean « declaration of war between the State and city rent profiteer hunters. To-day's seasion of the Lockwood Committee was devoted to testimony by Presidents of savings banks con- cerning their financial ability to help the carrying out of a building pro- gramme by bond and mortgage loans, The average amount these institutions are prepared to lend during the next few months is $2,000,000, CHARGES LANDLORD ORDERED TENANTS 0} AFTER RENT BOO Woman, Paying $20 Year Ago, Must Now Give $50 for House. George Schubel, President of the Ridgewood Times Company, has written to the Mayor’s Committee on Rent Profiteering about a six-family house at No. 1868 Palmetto Street, Ridgewood, where, he says, the jand- lord, after raising the rents $ since April 1, has now ordered all the ten- ants to move. ‘The landlord is P. Miller, Mr. Schu- Street precinct, who occupies one of the houses. ants out, knowing that they could get others at higher rentals. A womhn told the Mayor's Com- mittee that one year ago she was paying $20 a month for her house at No. 1056, 74th Street, Brooklyn, and Wag then raised to 5. The house was sold on March 1, she said, to Mrs. A. N. Dreason. Immediately the rent was raised to $30, but the land- lady told her there would be no fur- ther increases. On June 4, the ten- ond says, she was informed that on July 1 she must pay $50 @ month or Bet out, ONE LANDLORD 10 QUIT AFTER TENANTS’ REBELLION Harry Minarsky Says He'd Rather Join Army or Fly Atross y | Atlantic. | Ont New York landlord is going to | quit ‘I have had enough excitement and worry lo last a lifetime,” Harry Min- arsky told Magistrate Groeh! to-day in | Harlem Pollee Court, “and now I'll join |the Army or fly across the Atlantic or lo something else that 19 nice and aulet “T leased the five-story apartment house at Nos. $5-87 ast 107th Stroet, 1 was compelled to r the rent $4 @ nonth, Somebody ead the report Unwt another boost of $5 was coming and | give you my word my family had to remain Indoors to escape violence, A Word With You our Skin HY not make Cuti cura Soap your every» day toilet toap, assisted by Cuticura Ointment and Cuveure Tal- cum, now and then as needed,and have in most cases a clear fresh complexion, a clean scalp free from dandruff and itching, good hair, soft white hands and a wholesome skin free from blemish, without resort ing to tiresome, expensive “beauty” fads? Cuticura ‘costs little and does Sample each free by mail of Dept. G, Beaton,” Sold price 25 cents each, ==Cuticura Talcum Powder oem ‘Do not fail to teat the fascinating fra: grance of thie exquisitely scented face, baby, dusting and skin perfuming pow: der, delicate, delightful, distingué, it imparts to the person @ charm incom: parable and peculiar to imalt, bel says, a policeman of the Sheriff | France. Nathan Hirsch, Chairman of the| an @utomobile. While he was in Mayor's Committee, recently called| prison he read in a Paris newspaper attention to this method, saying that| the story of Leg oy voor arpag of landlords, fearing the publicity of| young MacLeod. decided to im- profiteering, were forcing thetr ten-| Pereonate MacLeod and thus pro- | 7% tenants formed & union. They sel. They went on strike. ) "Yesterday I stepped out of the house and bumped into a tenants’ procession. Its principal feature appeared to be a casket, with the inseription Minarsky’s two boys were charged by laadore Burnstein with beating the lat- ter with clube, Burnstein's head was swathed In bandages, which he removed at the request of the court. hat the bandages for, Magistrate. “Case dismissed. Then the Minarsky giris, Rose and Ada, charged Becky Koennie with as- swulting them, That case was dismissed, said the “De through,” said Minareky; “Tm going to quit and mov Pe MOTHER COLLAPSES OW PER AS SOLDER PROVES ANOTHER’ SIN (Continued From Fitst Page.) lips was ® private in the 1524 In- fantry who had sailed for France with bis unit on Oct. 6, 1918, and was coming home not onty recorded as mentally incompetent but as a mili- tary prisoner, HOPE SHATTERED, MOTHER FAINTS ON PIER. In response to requests from the Macleods and Mrs. Phillips, Gen. McManus directed that Phillips be Drought ashore. Under a military @vard the young man was brought te the corridor outside Gen. Mc- Manus’s room. He had on a slouch campaign bat ard an overcoat pulled ‘Up around his ears. By direction of Gen. McManus, the hat and overcoat were removed. One look was enough for Mrs. Phillips he saw a stout, ruddy visaged youth with vacant eyes and she fainted and fell against the wall. Dr, MacLeod then stepped up to the soldier, Hila grief soon gave way to indignation. “Why did you raise our hopes?” he asked, his face a few inches from that of the stolid Phillips. “In the name of God, why did you cause us this awful suspense, this torture, this anguish?” “T never said 1 was MacLeod,” sald Philips. “You told officers abroad you were my son,” declared Dr, MacLeod, “They are liars!" replied the sol- dler. Dr. MacLeod produced letters signed “Blakely” and asked Phil- Ups why he wrote them. Phillips said they were written by a nurse who took care of him in @ hospital, in Major Craig \earned that Phillips was arrested in France for stealing duced a mix-up in the Mentity of “Roland Phillips” which required a personal order from Gen. Pershing to straighten out No case in the history of the War Department has attracted so much} attention as has that of Private! Henry Blakely MacLeod, won of Dr. | Malcolm James McLeod, pastor of the Collegiate Reformed Church, Fifth Avenue, who disappeared from Camp | Merritt between inspection drill at 6.30 o'clock and taps at 9.30 o'clock on the night of June 27. Private Mac- | Leod is twenty years old and lived | | with his parents at No. 161 Central! Park West, Before he enlisted in | March, 1918, with Company M, 49th Infantry, MacLeod was @ student at Princeton University, MINISTER OFFERS $1,000 RE- WARD FOR LOST 60N., After his enlistment he wag sent to Fort Slocum. He stayed there ten days, later being transferred to Camp Merritt, June 25, 1918, Dr, MacLeod recelved @ telephone message from his son that his company would soon be going overseas, Mrs. MacLeod visited her son June 26, giving Lim pictures of herself and his father, as well as a fifty doMar bill and a steamer letter. Officers in his con:- pany reported seeing MacLeod up to the time of inspection drill June 27 No public announcement of the dis- appearance of young Macleod was made until Jan. 11, when Dy MacLeod offered a $1,00 reward for in- formation concerning his son. Intelli gence ofMclals of the army have travelled across the continent and} thousands of miles uttempting to trace | the lad’s movements. Gen, March Gen, McIntyre, Gen, Shanks and other embarkation officers have tuken the vase up personally | Switching from the original order,| the 49th Company was ordered to Camp Upton at the minute for | intensive training one ‘of the company remembers Ma 4 at Upton. Army officia reassured Mra. Macleod tne }be impossible for Private Maclood | | get lo France. Hospitals and morgue | were visited ally by the distracted |parents, EGery hunting permit issued |in the States of New Jersey, ( necticut und New York was fol |lowed up | Circulars and pictures of Macleod were sen! tw the pe | every eity in the country rd worker in Portland, Oregon formed the police in Marc 191%, that he was positive that Henry Blukely Maclwod had worked with him in the Northwest Shipyards a short tine im since et Cars to! DETROIT, June 10--Officiala of | the Detroit ed Railways Compan |whose motormen and conductors \etruck Saturday night, were served to-day with a mandatory and prohib tory injunction, issued late last night, }to compel the company to resume | operation of part of its system i} “ The New York City Telephone Directory leads all publications in the number of times consulted daily — 3,000,000." “Where the Little Advertisement: Builds Big Business” Footnotes are the little advertisements at the bottom of the’: Telephone Directory pages that help push business to the top They are MAGNIFIED telephone listings coupled with sales; messages that command attention. They are persistent, in-| expensive Business Builders that should be employed by every-; one who has an article or a service for sale that is of interest te telephone users. The best proof that Telephone Directory footnotes bring results is that 80% of those who use them RENEW their advertising issue after issue. Advertising space — for display pages and footnotes — for the October issue of the New York City Telephone Directory is for sale NOW. ‘ It’s not too early to make YOUR arrangements at ence. - NEW YORK. TELEPHONE COMPANY \ Directory Advertising Department 15 Dey &t., New York @& Telephone Cortlandt 12000 New New Victory. Model ry. With 100 New Ideas ' Sixes og Scores of Supremacies | Yet An Under-Price ; They employ a staff of 135 trained ime Spectors just to test and to watch every detail. The crank shaft is twice balanced on news | type balancing machines. The gears are hardened in a new way. Costly steels are used in abundance, are 123, drop forgings. ‘ ear axle stren, is increased 50 ped - cent, frame strength 50 per cent, brake effi- an ciency 75 per cent. Such new values are not showy, but they supremely important, | Its Newness Shows There are new body lines, a new color, new finish and new top. So the newness | appears at a glance. ~ Any man can see that this new Mitchell Six gives most for the money in this class. | The price is below any Six that compares in size and class and power. Yet this new- type Six excels in scores of ways. There are over 100 improvements. All standards have been revised. Strength has been increased 50 per cent. Endurance is increased 75 per cent. Too Much to Miss Remember that Mitchell pioneered the Light Six. Tens of thousands of Mitchell Sixes have won fame and success the world over. : i 1 here are many new features. One is @ ! Think what it means to make 100 im- 4 provements in a car like that, and add 75 ped iia aoa 2a on the Deleed bdr Le a per cent to endurance, Come see what it Hed 6 ae ee ae bye wor H i means. You will find that these new fea- windows ip it, One 3s an des board | tures dre too much to mis: arrangement, One isa ball-bearing stecring } ; gear which does not tire the driver. ; a Mitchell engineers and specialists have ' worked for two years on this new car. They have perfected it part by part. They had many-year records on thou- sands of like cars to guide them. Every shortcoming in this type is corrected. Scores We have to show you in this new Six @'} hundred such improvements. You will see | at once that they give this Six the top place in its class. The demand this season is bound to center on it. Mi There will be a shortage in these cars, ‘ of new standards have been fixed, which The factory is already oversold. Interested rival cars must follow q people should inspect this car at once. 5. Come judge them for yourself, 5-Passenger Touring Car What You Cannot See You will see enough in this car to amaze you, but the best facts about it are hidden, The Mitchell factory spent $250,000 on new machinery and equipment for the build- ing of this car, The result shows in vastly 27-Inch Wheelbase # 48 Horsepower Motor finer workmanship and more exacting tests. $1675 f, 0. b. Factory MITCHELL MOTORS COMPANY, Inc., Racine, Wisconsin NEW YORK MITCHELL MOTOR COMPANY, Inc. BROOKLYN Columkus Circle, Facing South, New York City NEWARK, N. J. Giant Auto Sale Co. TELEPHONE COL. 8000 Fole 1410 Bedford Ave. A DONUT wa MA A AUR a $1475 f. 0. b. Factory 120-Inch Wheelbase —40 Horsepower Motor 3-Passenger Roadster, same price New-Type Touring Sedan, $2175 7-Passenger Touring Car