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CUT IN HALF, ORK 1S ORDERED ESUMED IN ROME Chamber of Labor Issues| Order for the Resumption of Industry. NITTI SOUNDS WARNING. * Cites Peril in Reducing Neces- Sities Below the Cost of Production. ‘ | ROME, July 10.—The Chamber of Yabor has iseued a manifesto saying, that, having received guarantess that | tho prices of necessities will be re-| @uced 60 per cent., it invites the peo- ple to return to work. | Premjer Nitti, addressing Partie: | ment, admonished the Italian people Against the danger of revolutionary | talk and urged them to begin imme- diately their task of reconstruction, Speaking on the recent food agita- tion, the Premier declared it was ab- #urd to demand a reduction in prices below the cost of production. The solution, he said, would be found in inereased agricultural production, expecially of cereals, “Whoever talks of revolution in Italy must be considered an enemy to the people,” Nitti asserted. “In self- Supporting countries revolution is an evil; in a country which must pur- chase raw materials and food from broad revolution is tantamount to eulcide. The causes of disorders must be eliminated. “The present economic unrest is Mot confined to Italy but ds found in every nation emerging from the war.” ‘The premier declared that Britain and France had not given Italy what she demanded at the peace confer- ence, ‘The Italian delegates he said, bad resumed negotiations at Paris under the most difficult cireum- stances, relying only on the justice of their cause. He said the recent incidents at Fiume were greatly exaggerated, but they never would influence good in- ternational relations. DRY LAW MENACES JOBS OF 300 CABARET GIRLS ‘cates That Dépended ort on Liquor and Amusements Going Out of Business, Some 300 chorus girls and entertain- seem likely to lose thetr jobs in the cabarets of the city. Ten days of Pro- hibition has convinced most of the cafe owners that a “dry” cabaret is not profitable. As a consequence the own- ers are ready to quit and allow the big hotels to feed those who prefer to dine to gam music and ragtime gongs. One or two of the large cabarets are closed now and “To Let" signs aro expected e00n on most of the others. Internal Revenue Collector Bawards hag reecived detailed instructions from Washington regarding rules for the en- forcement of the Prohibition law, He declares that only a physician's pre- scription will legalize the sale of “hard” Hquors. He will proceed on this dasis. —————— STATE OPENS CADET CAMP. Gen. W. H. Chapin Supervises Milt- tary Training at Bluefield The Gtate Military Training Commis- sion announces the opening of Camp Biuefields, near Blauvelt, N. Y¥., Sat- urday next, and assumes contro! of the Cadet Corps of the State of New York, which has camped annually at the site. Brig. Gen, Willlam H, Chapin will supervise the military ¢rainin Boys from sixteen to nineteen are ac- ed, the only charge being a dollar | a day for food blankets, a ponoho, athletic shoes, bathing suit and toil Information at the commission Park Avenue and 33d Street; Murray Hill 4760. ease BIG BATTLESHIPS NEED MEN, Navy Recraits Can Sail om New York or Texas. If there is any young man tn New| ‘York with a hankering to join the navy and gee the world here is a little tip for him: ‘The pattleships Texas and } are @bout to leave this port Pacific by way of the I na Canal. After visiting Diego, San Pedro and San Francisco they go to Honolulu, arriving Sept. 7. Both ships need men. andidates accepted at the station, No. 34 East 2 gent aboard either the } ‘Texas {mmediately Pach camper needs two w York for the San d Street, will be ew York or the To Promote Home Comfort, WLTOWA Evans NON-INTOXICATING Ale (Boon, to be named EVANS’ CHECONA BEVERAGE" by Gov't ruling.) SUPPLIED BY THE CASE PLY NEW YORK CITY DEPOT, bd btu VE. AP S5TH 62, recruiting | ALLIES AGREE TO ADMIT AUSTRIA IN WORLD LEAGUE This Will Be Done as Soon as a Responsible Govern- ment Is Formed. PARIS, July 10 (Associated Press). —Austria will be admitted to mem- bership in the League of Nations as goon as the allied and associated Powers consider that she possesses a responsible Government with both the will and the power to fulfil its international obligations. The Aus- trian peace delegation has been 80 informed in a reply by the Suprome Council of the Peace Conference to an Austrian plea for immediate admis- sion to the League. The Austrian note embodying the plea was sent by Dr. Karl Renner, the Austrian Chancellor ond head of the Austrian peace delegation, to Premier Clemenceau as President of the Peace Conference, on Junc 22, and with the reply made public to- day. The reply reads in part as follows: “The principal allied and 48s0- ciated powers note with satisfaction the adherence ef the Austrian delega- tion to the project of a League of Na- tions and to the principle upon which such a League of Nations has been founded by the covenant embodied in the conditions of peace, ‘They are glad to know that the Austrian Gov- ernment shares their view that the establishment of such a league will conduce to the maintenance of peace th these parts of the world which hitherto bave been centres of inter- national frictions and misunderstand- ings. “The principal allied and associated powers have taken into careful con- sideration the demand of the Aus- trian delegation for the admission of their country as an original member of the League of Nations. It has never been their intention to exclude Austria for any long period from the On the contrary, they wish that it is their hope and the League will at ble date include all “an be trusted to carry pted by mem- | League. to reiterate conviction that the earliest pe nations that out the obli bers of the “They on why Austria should not apply for admission to the Leagic, in accordance with the visions of Article 1 of the covenant, At the earliest opportunity that may prevent Itself after the ratification of the Treaty of Peace. “As soon as they are assured that | Austria possesses a responsible Gov- pro- ernment and that this Government Jhas both the will and the power to {eulfil {ts {mternational obligat!ons |they dre prepared to support Au |tria's candidature for admission to the League.” Ger Troops ry Off Farm Stock Fornitor PARIS, July 10.—The German delega tion at Marseilles was requested to-day by the Peace Conference to draw the lattention of the German Goverment to the fact that German troops who are withdrawing from the west bank of the Mistu Poland, in accordance with , are carrying off with them the stock and furniture from farm No U. S. Troops to Occupy Upper Silesia, PARTS, July 10.—Reports re a from German sources that American | troops would ocoupy Upper Silesia were denied in American circles here to-d ‘member of the American peace ation characterized the reports as perfect rubbish Se ES Es Help! or Walkt BOSTON, July W.—Service on the Georgetown Rowley, and Ipswich and the New Bedford, Middleboro and } Brockton branches of E M setts Subet Railway seontinued Sept, 1, unle munities served by these financial aid. — Notices lines ex uid this t were serve: ay upon town and city oficial. DR. DAY'S HERRING SMELL IN HEAVEN, HIRSCHEIELD SAYS Witness at Bennett Inquiry Says Commissioner’s Deal Cost City $25,172. Investigation of the charges brought by former Senator William C. Ben- :' — RED, 13 RURSD Ay, 7ULY Work. ‘The cost is low in lure of France, the Doughboys Wed, Settle In France Aine are Prosper in Business and on Farms; Many Marry Well- to-do Young Widows, Who Know How to Make a Franc wh rural R34 FLYING 80 increase of distance atmospheric statl HALIFAX, N. ¢ from the F naval station here at 11.12 (10.12 Now York time) gave the tion of the dirigble 8., July 10 ere living districts, as 34 received at A latitude degrees 15 minutes north, 63 degrees MILES AN HOUR 1S 630 MILES OUT (Continued From First Page.) and speed and —~A mes- the M., posi- 41 miles nett against Dr. Jonathan C. Day,| Where vin rouge and vin blanc flow] 30 minutes west, a point 115 Commissioner of Public Markets, was |™0Fe freely than water and French | due south of here. A: Wireless message received at 1 started by Commissioner of Accounts to-day in the Municipa) Hirshfield Building. Herring was the subject opening testimony. After tha was much by Dr. Day. W. D. Loudon, sioner of Accounts, seid the showed that Dr. Day had spent $3 636.57 for 811,468 pounds of herring, and that the city got only $7,463.89 in return, leaving a deflelt of $26,172.68 inquiry, concerning sums vf money withdrawn and re-deposited Deputy Commis- sir of the|American Expeditionar; t there Bangor, Me., Manitou. record | France in August, 1918, and widows with dowries eager to marry Americans, will hold several thousand members of the Force, cording to Lieut. Ethan Armstrong of who returned home day as a casual on thb transport Lieut. Armstrong Plattsburg graduate and went He served in the Service of Supply and travelled extensively during and after tho “If an officer or soldier can show that he has @ business or « job in y are time), indicated that at the radiogram was filed the reached a point 240 miles of Sable Island. “Latitude 42.00 60.60 west, sixty knots, ace due to- north, le is a to range at 11 o'clock, Halifax here. annsilipinrntlacllony The message r gitude All well" The K-34 was first reported hy the Sarrington Wireless Station as within o'clook, Halifax time (noon New York time the R-34 had south ds time. Barrington is 127 miles southwest of |WRIT FOR PERJURY DENIED. NEW YORK SEES ‘Though the R-34 departed from her precarious anchora se on the Homp- stead plains near Mineola four hours ahead of the haa announced in this city for her start, the arrangement made through The Hvening World between Major Beott, her commander, and the Sperry Gyro- Company in anticipation of such an emergency, gave of thousands of New Yorkers an op+ portunity see the great greenish- gray air boat and cheer her on her return adventure, It was a minute or two before mid- night when the cable which held the connected ends of the halters at the for ‘d end of the dirigible waa re- leased and she floated up to find for herself the air level at which #he was to sail, It was not for some minutes thereafter that her propellers were started and she was headed towards the great glow of lights which hangs or New York. win pencils time which been scope to of light from the It was brought out that there had| France,” said Lieut. Armstrong, “and Sperry Bulldine in Brooklyn gave the been some correspondence—witn | he bool no ties cailing him back tol. ust Refunes to Commit Coast | Navigator a fairly definite notion of mention of herring—between Dr. Day| the United States he may obtain a Wise Lumber Case Witn the direction he was to take. As pre- and Hirschfeld. Bennett wanted to|dischange and remain, I should 88¥! wu. Government to-day in the case| ViOUsly arranged, the lookout in the put on record Dr. Day’s letter to| that several thousand of the two] > 11, Coastwise Lumber and Supply | cockpit up on the roof of the R-34 Hirschfeld, This was excluded, but|™illton and odd we sent over Will Company, on trail charged with con-| flashed an electric hand lamp tn re- a copy of Hirseheld's answer was|t#ke advantage of the opportunity: |spiraey to defraud the Government, won | ply. given to reporters. One paragraph | Most of them married or will marry] victory when Federal Judge Thoma For most of the time thereafter, of it ds: French women, This is particularly | in Brooklyn decided to admit veral| when low hanging clouds or the I never believed that T possessed | true of members of the Service «| papers showing purchases by the com-| shadows of tall buildings did not in- any sense of humor or power of | Supply force who were stationed In pany of fifteen carloads of lumber. — | terfera, the progress of the airship to eloquence, but if you, a preacher | towns or villages for many months at ee pd eel a and shiP-) Hackwell’s Island, up the east side of the gospel, assure me that my @ stretch and got acquainted with the | Pink : * ; by iy and down again to about th Street Li age and the people. which the Coastwise concern purchased humor and eloquence are only ex- | language and the people, Nunbor spcalled, identified neverat ot; Was visible in glimpses to those who celled by the smell of your herring Many of the Americans hake MAT | he papers admitted ns evidence. He| Tan to the roofs of apartment hoases you almost convince me that after |Fying young widows with farms! coiaeg to shipments made, the amount, When they heard t whistles and al 1 possess, in some measure, | Others are going into business. The) signed and other details sirens sounding the welcoming alarm some of the attributes that make | reconstruction of France calls for thé! Roebuck under — eross-examination |all over the elty and the suburbs. life moro pleasant and worth [service of skilled mechanics and|made some apparently contradictory) THOUSAND$ GET CLOSE-UP while, However, I hope you wifl | craftsmen at good pay, and hundreds | statements regarding the identification VIEW OF AIRSHIP. pardon me if I state you are too |of these have married French girls |of $i!!s of Inding and tally sheets, and) iy tne neighborhood of ‘Mmes kind, for, as you know, Your her- [and are living happily in their new counsel for the defe asked that the| siiare the airship flew very low, ent. Of . 14 witness be committed for perjury, | t . ring smelM reaches all the way to environment. spent severa! aye jge Thi ‘ 4 th t lier altitude waa guessed by many to heaven, while I will not get there |with an old chum of mine who is|JUdse Thomas denied the reduew lo. about £00) Meet: Phousabis who ——»——— : t sands until I have taken my earthly de- | married to a wealthy widow with came out of rettaurants and hotels parture, three children, She has a big entate SPLIT ON ALIEN WORKERS. had og close a view of the hull as Louden said Dr. Day drew $650|in the Marne Valley not far from |did the pilgrims to Roosevelt Field from the funds at his disposal on| Paris. He 1s @ practical farmer and | Commons, M1) during her atay there April 10 of this year and returned it|has taken charge of the property of] | Opposed by ttrong|. TO Many observers the British gas on May 40, drew $260 April 22 and| his wife, introducing American labor- 1 VONDON. | dily, Maluuanite arene |e wwomed In difficulty because 1 returned it June 20, ‘he witness asid | saving methods which are attracting erg moins ¢ nittee to-day passed |DOw pointed down toward the city at the books did not show what the|attention throughout bis district. bye vote of 18 to 120 clause in the Alien| times at a sharp angle, This wae dus money was drawn for, “It ts true that the cost of living In{ gi, pestricting the employment of|to the effect on the great bags inside ‘If you are trying to ascertain | France is high, but an American mar-/ ajjiens in Great Britain oft the varying degrees of heat re the true facts,” sald Jonah J. Gold- | ried to a French woman isa't bothered} The Under Secretary of the Home| flected up from th elty and it was stein, counsel for Dr. Day, “it ts only! on that score, ‘The wife knows the| Office argued before the committee that | 1 ! ; . on that score ne constantly ibeing corrected by the fair that you put Commissioner Day ; iS nclusion of the clause in the bill wou Y on the stand and have him explain | fOPes. She knows how to buy cheaply |! a dhe inhuenes oF the os i sh f the R-34 by shifting the his own books, You are casting in-|a@nd live cheaply. Reports from the pH Ag a nks arranged on runners sinuations at a public official, trying | United States of the exerbitan: prices ™ Fh rcentre for just that purpo to prove charges which Mr, jennett | a, 4 Deitaty oe lth: and Serrchlights from the Brooklyn Mad wtnted hecould rove in’a con, | demanded for necessition ¢ REDS MAKE Boaus MONEY, | Navy Yard and’ trom ships ‘of th erete way, Mr. Bennett knows that | the difficulty experienced by returning navy in the Hudson River alded th this is not fair.” soldiers in getting jobs are factors in| ¢ ‘bccich hee rry liaht in keeping the ship out- ouis Goodgold, accountant in Com. = aia . morican 4 e oc mis#ioner Hirshfield's office, told of a Persuading great many Am: ‘ Terned Or The se lost the R.34 some withdrawal of $650 in March and a | S80Mdlers to remain where they are.| GENEVA, July 10.—The police have | wh: noklyn at 118 ofele return of the money on April 15, All American soldiers marrying \iscovered that the Bolaheviki have € o'clock a sear: “The entry was inserted in the cash| women are carefully invest been operating a counterfeiting plant ytten picked her hook to balance the cash account, | France is glad to have the at Zurich and have made a number of| ! » thousand feet over th "he check was not drawn from either | stay because the country is we arrests, among the pr ra being a |‘ k Gold Club. She was ¢ of the eck books reg urly used by | short of man power German named Brogmaan, who | aid 1 an even keel and hea 1 sout the Department of Markets,” he suid Lieut. Armstrong believes 4 a Ten vutes | ship —_ r r ring or n ver r fermer g place girls are superior in many way na aiatle aby y ' WON'T ASK FOR MRS. SKEELS| © ai''s, of Prance. “ile say 4, large quantities of which were Wey through the glow le French girls make ideal an ond English, were ed tat shts ther - remain at home, He Sit apperes ng Several m her way Runyon Refuses a quisition | be consid ble unha ness oe aT ™ those French brides w re nt out from th TRENTO in back to the United States in Boy Kille sling m Wit 1 «flying flel TRENTON, N. J., July 10.—Gov, Run- | pumpers to set jown communi. | pe | whe hea mt Lieu yon to-day declined to issue at this) ties where the language and customs] ©, ¢yy 1 Abaet: Hedouien : H. W. Hoyt, l A. und his start time a requisition on the Massachusetts] are gtrange and puzzling to them. f oe kis here a load responsibility ¢ authorities for the extradition of Mrs. eeraet Ot ee ee ne were ates | Wee tery peace, tp lone Bessie May Wilkins (Skeelsy Lundgren, | HERE'S JOB FOR 500 GIRLS. |iue,' Brooklyn. ‘The doy Jumped. trom | ungracious hosts litte ‘was, paid. bs a former nurse, recently acquitted at — the truck and dashed In front of an § h B08, GORiee ‘ the United States Navy era who Lawrence, Maas., of poisoning a patient. | Ulater © ate Them to Save [finer automabile owned! by the Martin (iad charge of the British “rig t Miss Florence ay. a school teacher ult Crop because on ora declared the | Roose velt Field about th fleulty of His action was based on the represen-| ‘The New York State Woman's Land | boy was to biame ir task and even that wass safe tatic of her counsel that she was sae han CRA aa ealnited Pe th varded from pubiicat phy ally unfit to be brought to New Army want: TOF a 7 4 i te Hd brute joes not get Jersey for trial on an indictment re-|American young women of good char Dentes =» Company 7 fh within t t hours,” turned in Hudson County ng her |acter" to go to Ulster County and help TON, N. J., July 10.—The State ‘one of n An army. friend With polsoning her brother Albert J./aave the fruit crop, which Is drying up| Board of Public Utility Commisstoners | vesterda ¢ ea are she will Arn eksele on ane wee: Known: wil tom cre aus The must be will |to-day denied ap iw Cor never start ull We just can't make no attempt ‘to eva Xtradition, |ing to go out into camps and “rough |idated ¢ many of New Jersey for] keep her down any longer than that the attorney jl, and appear to | it" they would in the mpleat kind | APProy al equipment sale and to ope @ le wearing us ¢ n and getting answer to” the ‘idictment. when. her| ee ee Kind |property, abandoned aceount from the kier every minute. puewer ae ae of camps in the Adirondacks or Cat- | phockeds” Ap Pie skills > 4 ba a Manchester Cotton Strike Ends, Mrs. Otto hel, tt ANEHOZTASE In Thelfe st 1 in Germany dur LONDON, July 10.—The Manchester ) ways: Becau, WASHINGTON Ju 10, in natance ¥, camps hay ) cotton strike, which has tied up | everyth itt Stamps, w at c ece e industry throughout Lancashire for > ke t n= |é ted § » 6 i § ; ee gen or facts will be given the war, ¥ a ‘bit watt irae ree, bag. BONA A8beG: a the Land Army ollices, No. 4a Jifth b). the. ‘Treasury, four s and especialy under * & long conference, Avenue nounced to-day. auch rageed and baffling air condy CREWS AT MINEOLA EXHAUSTED Strain on Men Who Handled Airship So Great It Imperilled Her, hundreds | R-34 START; tions as play about close to the sur- face of Roosevelt Field, The American offeers on whom was put the task of keeping the air ship safe as well as repairing her had only technical experience and their own resourcefulness to gut them, ‘They filled their job In a way which brought from all the British officers straight from the shoulder ac- knowledgments of admiration for Ldeut. Hoyt and Lieut. Little and his other aide At night the airship floated, halt- ered forward, from two to three bun- dred feet in the alr . A balloon de- tachment of soldiers and sailors, one hundred strong, was always on duty under her in case of emergencies. ‘There were several such when “cup- py” winds, sudden waves of hot and cold alr caused the ship to thresh around or settle irregularly, But the job whieh drove the Amari- can balloon men and their officers nearly crazy was that of safeguarding the great airship when she was pulled down to the ground in the day time. Through pulleys forward the halter was drawn down so that she floated out from it with her gondolas about three feet from the ground. ‘There were always from 150 to 200 men on this halter rope, One hundred ore were at the forward gondola and a similar number at the rear, It was the duty of these gondola squads to hold the airship off the ground by main strength and to keep her from swinging Jerkily when the wind changed. ‘There was a devilish perversity about the movements of the “ frame which suggested a tricky, ma. liclous personality, The slightent wandering of attention by the officer at the rudder wheel forward or those who were in command of the bal- loon men was followed by @ buck or or 4 rear or a plunge. No two whims of the great bulk were alike. At one moment she was lifting the men at the rear gondola ten or fifteen feet off the ground while they cling to her like a swarm of bees. In the next, instead of re turning them to ground after a long semicircular leap, they would be slammed directly down with a whack as decisive an that of an otter’s tall or shot forward so that thelr toes dragged helplessly in the turf. ‘They called her names. They cursed her. They growled threats against her, They bewalled the day they came back from the A. BE, F, to be dis- charged and got themselves into such job as no German dovilishness gave them, Their bad temper was all elusive, sulky antediluvian-like for the reat- tude fi trying task Panel one ee ee 2% a Fb pone et a Tree Surgeon, CCORDING to the Congres — sional Directory—that of the BSixty-aixth Congress, which was issued to-day—most — members of Congress, according to + thelr own designation, are Inw~ yers, but among them are am | iron moulder, banker, stock raiser, tree surgeon, physician, cheese manufacturer, giassbower, bag- @agemaster and “a business =n and « polities! accident.” Severe! trace their lincage back to members of! the Continental ; Congress, and one announced ne i a “direct descendant of the “father of the Hannah Dustin” of Colobial and Indian fame. ‘The shortest biography ts that of Representative James O'Connor of Louisiana, Me merely «m® nounced his name, PRISON FOR RINGLEADER OF FLOUR THEFT DRIVERS Goldstein Gave Stolen Stock of Hecker-Jones-Jewell Co, to. Be Sold to Trade. An Indeterminate prison sentence of from six months to three years wae to-day imposed on Herman Goldstein, aid to be ringleader of the seven drivera and chauffeurs who pleaded sullty to stealing flour and cereal trom: by Judge Wadhames in General Geasions. Goldstein was a loader at the mill aceording to testimony and the stolen goods to drivers and cheulfeurc to dispose of in the trade. ‘The money recetved was divided among Goldstels and the others. ‘There are fifteen othet men held in the Tombs for trial on similar charges. Counsel for the drivers and ehauf fours’ union, told the court that the union would vouch for the character o} the men indioted. The court remarked that this was an oppo: union and ite Heaton Se Suney ieee’ men who are guilty of stealing frow employers. Man Arrested Seeking to Deliver Letter to Prestdent, WASHINGTON, July 10.—A man giv- ing the name of James L. Exekei of Landover, Md., was arrested at the Oap- itol shortly before President Wilson ar- rived to-day. ‘The man had a letter ad- dressed to “Woodrow Wilson, President. ‘Capitol Buflding,” which he said hi wanted to delivér to the President t person, Hy SHOES _ Constructed to the ees. of the foot, yec Harley Low Shoes are stylish, because scientifically designed by ex- pert shoemakers who know'the art of combining Comfort and shapeliness. Hu Made over a special last Has C forepart, B instep and Aheel. Grips the foot firmly, Cannot gap at ankle or slip at heel. Corset fitting at instep, Absolute comfort in forepart. Our beautiful Cordovan shades AES olen *. CGE SE Sa SOM SE. b- BRB. Sie wT v which they were trying to save ‘or the honor of the American na-|| are made possible by using only the tion, ‘The British balloon men who || dest leathers, being treated by the watched the dally atruggle sympa-|| Hurleyized secret process, which in- | thized, with even rdugher words and || creases the life of the | leather, re- vain wishes that corporal punish=/| tgining its rich lustre to the end, ment might be applied to her blawsted and blasphemeously unfeel- | IRRITATION GROWS AS HOURS | R S' 0 s INCREASE STRAIN, 1434 Broadway 1357 Broadway The megaphone orders grew stead 1177 Broadway 215 Broadway ily hoarser and more irritable through | 41 Cottlande St. 254 Filth Ave, the day. The men’s eyes showed the Jatrain. ‘As the importance of the Job Raper Repitend, Meet ! increased with the hours it became more and more necessary to use —— diers and sailors whe had shown “rpHE, electrically sealed, In- dividual Service Carton gives you absolutely fresh, un- toyched Whole Wheat Bis- cuits with your bowl of milk | an the puzzling | n they dropped to the grass when the ship was “put to bed” up in the air at ht and lay there for hours j before ging to their barracks, And, llimping to the barracks, they turned | | to their fists ar ike balliplayers sent from the field by aa | umpire Why, say.” said a non-com to al | grin, to-day, when asked if the men etting over their grouch was never time from Mon | nig intil last’ evening when J you cou have formed a state of the | r ulder that old for v t they are begin- ning to laugh to think how mad | they were with her "GINGE © ARK for luncheon, At restaurants, lunch-rooms and fountains. Ask for them. F, H, BENNBTT BISCUIT CO., N.Y, tsworth a R ALE LING WASHINGTON, July 10. § the Hocker-Jones-Jewell Mill Company, © 4 ¥